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Windows 10 Start Menu Wins IDSA Design Award 249

jones_supa writes: Despite some criticism, it turns out that the design of the Windows 10 Start Menu isn't bad at all, as a designer organization has recently decided to give Microsoft its own Digital Design 2015 award for the feature. In a description on their website, IDSA (Industry Designers Society of America) explains that the design of the new menu makes it easy to access files across platforms, as it comes brings together PCs, tablets, and phones. More, the Start Screen and the Start Menu look similar, so it's easy to adapt to the interface that suits best to your device. There are plenty of Start Menu customization options and if you have a look in the Settings screen, you will find plenty of choices to tweak the default look and feel. Live tiles can be removed completely as well.
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Windows 10 Start Menu Wins IDSA Design Award

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  • Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:14AM (#50261537) Homepage Journal

    Seems about as credible as that thing Homer Simpson won for being fat and falling in a hole.

    • IDSA: See you only hate it because of how good it is. Like a Porsche.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by rudy_wayne ( 414635 )

      Seems about as credible as that thing Homer Simpson won for being fat and falling in a hole.

      yes, we now have confirmation that the ISDA is a bumch of clueless morons.

      The Windows 10 Start Menu is an abomination that has almost none of the functionality of a real Start Menu (ie, Windows 7 and earlier) and all of the bad things of the Windows 8 Start Screen now crammed into a smaller space.

      • Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @09:23AM (#50262195)

        Seems about as credible as that thing Homer Simpson won for being fat and falling in a hole.

        yes, we now have confirmation that the ISDA is a bumch of clueless morons.

        The Windows 10 Start Menu is an abomination that has almost none of the functionality of a real Start Menu (ie, Windows 7 and earlier) and all of the bad things of the Windows 8 Start Screen now crammed into a smaller space.

        Bullshit. I haven't had to go to the internet once to find out how to do something on W10, unlike the abomination whack-a- mole administration method of Windows 8. I installed and started using and started supporting all in the same day. Can't ask for much more than that.

        And lest ye call me a shill, look up my other posts.

        • Seems about as credible as that thing Homer Simpson won for being fat and falling in a hole.

          yes, we now have confirmation that the ISDA is a bumch of clueless morons.

          The Windows 10 Start Menu is an abomination that has almost none of the functionality of a real Start Menu (ie, Windows 7 and earlier) and all of the bad things of the Windows 8 Start Screen now crammed into a smaller space.

          Bullshit. I haven't had to go to the internet once to find out how to do something on W10, unlike the abomination whack-a- mole administration method of Windows 8. I installed and started using and started supporting all in the same day. Can't ask for much more than that.

          And lest ye call me a shill, look up my other posts.

          So what you are saying is that Windows has finally become borderline usable after a mere 23 years of varying degrees of FUBAR?

          • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

            by Anonymous Coward

            No, what he is saying, is after 15 years of coasting, waiting for Linux to be anywhere near reasonable for the consumer market to use, Microsoft just got tired of waiting and released W10 to put Linux out of it's misery.
            It probably had something to do with systemd.

            • Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @12:05PM (#50263329)

              No, what he is saying, is after 15 years of coasting, waiting for Linux to be anywhere near reasonable for the consumer market to use, Microsoft just got tired of waiting and released W10 to put Linux out of it's misery.

              It probably had something to do with systemd.

              Um - no. I have OS X, Linux, W7 and W10 now.

              Have no plans to abandon any of them.

              I like the tools that work best - I don't demand only one tool.

          • So what you are saying is that Windows has finally become borderline usable after a mere 23 years of varying degrees of FUBAR?

            It's something.

            I guess I take different approach. I don't see anything with W10 to make me switch away from my Unix-y OS computers, but give 'em credit, they are moving toward something better. Early, I think that now that Ballmer has left, they are at least listening to people instead of telling people that they have to like whatever shit they sell.

            I'll do support for it at any rate.

    • Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @10:31AM (#50262695) Homepage Journal

      The Windows 10 start menu is actually okay, once you let go of wanting a carefully organized hierarchical menu structure. I realized that I was wasting time keeping the old Windows 7/XP start menu organized, so I stopped and used search and pinned a few favourite apps.

      The old start menu is actually quite a bad UI when you have a lot of applications. The menu gets huge and you have to scan through it or remember where things are with muscle memory. You can organize apps into subfolders, but that just wastes your time and when you update an app it will inevitably re-create its start menu entries at the root again.

      On Windows 10 there is an alphabetical list, but it's easier to just use search and pin your favourites as tiles. The old start menu has limited room for favourites and they are a simple vertical list. Windows 10 lets you arrange them in groups on a 2D grid, a bit like how people arrange icons on their desktop. You can now uninstall directly from any app icon too, which saves time looking for the uninstaller or opening the separate installed apps window.

      I'm not bothering with Classic Start Menu any more, Windows 10 is fine. You can just remove the live tiles and use it as a launcher, much like a phone with organized home screens, or more commonly by simply hitting the Windows key and typing a couple of characters.

      • I'd like it if you could just have icons or widgets though. I.e. a calendar widget would be nice, along with regular icons that show ACTUAL TEXT, unlike tiles configured to their smallest setting. The tiles are plain fugly, and you're stuck with a choice of "no text" or "too fucking big."

      • by PRMan ( 959735 )
        I've pinned my top 10 apps to the taskbar since Windows XP. And with searching in Windows 7, I've never needed anything else.
      • The problem is the goddamn hierarchy in the first place. If they just offered a simple alphabetical list of applications (NOT folders you have to navigate through first) it would work great. Which is exactly how MAC OSX's application folder works.

        I cut my teeth on Commodore and DOS, and do plenty of command-line work these days, but I prefer two quick clicks to launch an application, over having to type part of its name, thanks. It's 2000-fucking-fifteen, if you have to type in order to launch something,

      • I may be missing something, but my Win10 start menu still shows folders as, well, folders. Which you can expand if you want to, exactly the way it has been since Vista. It doesn't lump everything that's inside those folders into the top level list. So aside from the tiles (which you can just remove, and then resize the menu to reclaim the wasted space), I don't see what exactly is actually different from Win7, aside from the theming.

  • Me: Gnome shell designers, put the fucking Open/Save buttons back at the bottom of the dialog where god intended them to go. God: yeah, what up wit dat? Fuck me. Oh yeah, windoze suck.
  • Live tiles (Score:5, Interesting)

    by goarilla ( 908067 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:20AM (#50261561)

    Live tiles can be removed completely as well.

    Shouldn't live tiles be removed/disabled by default since they pose a security risk ?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 )

      I find them annoying as hell, and utterly pointless.

      But given that Microsoft has tried this live content crap several times before, and had to pull them precisely because they were security exploits ... I was surprised to see them be such a prominent feature of Windows 8.

      Not only do I think the widgetification of the desktop is annoying as hell, and nothing I want, I fail to see something which they've deprecated (in XP, Vista, and I believe Windows 7) as a security risk should be deemed safer now. It's a

      • But given that Microsoft has tried this live content crap several times before, and had to pull them precisely because they were security exploits ... I was surprised to see them be such a prominent feature of Windows 8.

        Microsoft could safely do this because the Windows Runtime sandbox used by Universal Windows Platform applications is more stringent than the user account separation used by Windows desktop applications.

        • Right, because I trust every vendor when they tell me how the new hotness is 100% safe and secure.

          We'll see what time and reality bears out.

          If it's secure, awesome. If not, well, my cynicism will be well founded.

          Over the long term, my cynicism has proven to be established by what happens in reality. So you'll excuse me if I don't simply take that claim on faith.

          Microsoft is not someone who I take their security claims at face value, they'll have to earn that over a lot of years, because my distrust is a l

          • You know, Microsoft has said many times for each of it's new Operating Systems, "It's the most secure Windows ever". They said it for Windows XP, Windows 7, and Windows 8.

            ...But not for Windows 10. They know it's not secure. It wasn't intended to be secure. It was intended to leak all your information to Microsoft.... And it does.
      • by PRMan ( 959735 )
        And deleting all the live tiles and shrinking the start menu was the first thing I did in Windows 10.
    • What security risk is that? Is there anything specific that live tiles can do that can't be accomplish while the app is running? Are they any less secure than running native apps? What about native apps that leave an old school notification icon running or native apps that install services?

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by gstoddart ( 321705 )

        Why wouldn't it be a security risk?

        It's a widget which grabs content from the internet. It was insecure when it was "Live Desktop" in XP, it was insecure when it was "Gadgets" in Vista and Windows 7.

        Microsoft claims the apps are more secure, but honestly, who really knows?

        My assumption is, like all new stuff, it's probably got holes nobody has identified or admitted to knowing about.

        They keep trying to have these things, and then they subsequently discover they've got giant security holes in them. I just

        • Why wouldn't everything be a security risk?

          You could basically say the same thing about any new feature. "We don't know if it's secure yet, so we just shouldn't use it" is a ridiculous way go about life. If we all took that view, we wouldn't be able to add new features for anything.

        • I think the reason MS says this is because the tiles have the same amount of access as the applications. If your application has admin access it can do admin when tile information is requested by the OS. So the live tiles themselves don't do anything. The call to get the rendering is where all the code is executed and it's no different than running the app itself.

        • You seem to be under the assumption that there's actually some code running behind those tiles. There's not. Unlike Android widgets or Vista/Win7 gadgets, tiles are passive in a sense that they don't pull data, data is pushed onto them. It can be done by a background task within an app (in which case the tile is basically just another rendering surface), or it can be a push notification. Either way, the communication is one-way - the app, directly or indirectly, tells Windows what should be displayed on the

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

        What security risk is that? Is there anything specific that live tiles can do that can't be accomplish while the app is running?

        Display a slideshow of your pr0n stash to anyone walking past the machine?

        They're just more stupid hipster shit.

  • by kooky45 ( 785515 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:20AM (#50261569)
    The machines I use most are running Linux Mint or Android, but I've updated two Windows 7 desktops to Windows 10 and I like it. The Start menu is especially nice.
    • by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @09:12AM (#50262139)

      Where as as soon as I finished installing windows 10 I typed "Why is windows 10 so ugly" into google. Perhaps I really am getting old but this is how I use my desktop and start menu. I put short cuts to the programs I use all the time on my desktop. I put shortcuts in the task bar to programs I use continuously. And I use the start menu to browse everything else. I find the windows 10 start menu unintuitive. But perhaps that is because I haven't used windows 8 at all so I missed a generation of training.

      The other thing I was a little confused about is the app store thing. If I install the VLC app from the app store wtf am I actually getting? I'm assuming I'm getting some random winRT thing and not "proper" VLC. But there is nothing there that explains it. God damn I'm getting old.

      • If you think installing apps from the store is confusing, try installing the exact same app from the web and the store.

        I installed the Kindle app from the store and the Windows Kindle program from the web. They are two completely different apps. The one in the store is build for mobile (i.e. tablets and phones, touch menus, etc.) and the other is built as a desktop app (mouse/keyboard menus, full screen, etc.).

        I would recommend that if you have a Windows tablet or touchscreen laptop, and you use touch a l

      • Where as as soon as I finished installing windows 10 I typed "Why is windows 10 so ugly" into google.

        You should have tried that search on Bing instead. Then the top hit would have been "Why is Mac OS so ugly?" or "Why is Android so ugly"?

  • Finally (Score:5, Funny)

    by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:24AM (#50261583) Homepage
    It's nice that Microsoft is finally considering good GUI design. Linux has has extremely functional GUI's for years and now it finally seems that for the first time, Microsoft might be following suit, after all if Windows 10 sported Gnome 3, you'd have the single most powerful desktop in the world.
    • Meaningless award (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:43AM (#50261649)

      It's nice that Microsoft is finally considering good GUI design.

      Just because some design association threw a meaningless award at Microsoft's way-too-late attempt to fix their stupid decisions in Windows 8 doesn't mean they are "finally considering good GUI design". Let's see how good it is when the General Public gets their hands on it. Their recent track record has been less than brilliant to say the least so I'm pretty confident they haven't had some sort of design epiphany. Basically it looks to me that they got their ass handed to them over Windows 8 and they're scrambling to fix something that they never should have broken in the first place.

      • If you read the forums and the news pieces with comments, you'll see opinions are really divided: Some people (I guess old farts like me who have used the tradiional desktop for many years) find the new touch-oriented interfaces and apps in a desktop computer out of place and a horrible interface for keboard + mouse use. Many other people (I guess the young kids who've grown with smartphones and tables) seem very happy with that.
        IMHO they tried to make a unified interface for all form factors and they've f
        • If you read the forums and the news pieces with comments, you'll see opinions are really divided:

          Opinions are almost always divided. Some people think Windows 8 is great even though the consensus seems to be that it's crap. (I agree with the consensus opinion for the record) I agree that Microsoft is trying to make a single unified interface which isn't a dumb idea in principle but hard to pull off in practice. I haven't tried Win10 yet so I'm reserving judgement but I haven't been impressed with their design decisions so far so I'm not optimistic. Of course every other version of Windows is crap

    • My first thought was: I wonder how much this award cost MS?

  • Fixing 8 (Score:4, Insightful)

    by puddingebola ( 2036796 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:27AM (#50261591) Journal
    If they fix the UI, then they fix 90% of the problems they had selling Windows 8. I don't know what IT departments opinions are of the spyware features in the OS. I'm sure they can find a way to configure it to their liking. Does a uniform UI across all devices translate into sales of tablets and mobile devices however? I am skeptical. The iOS and Android trains left the station a long time ago.
    • More important, iOS and Android established that users are completely happy using different UIs on different types of devices, Windows or Chrome on the laptop, iOS or Android on their phone, some hideous barely usable travesty on their smartTV... and so on.

      Methinks the value of the Win10 on everything is massively less than Microsoft needs.

    • I don't know what IT departments opinions are of the spyware features in the OS. I'm sure they can find a way to configure it to their liking.

      If they have the "enterprise" version they can disable the snooping features that people currently know about. Everyone else gets the MS knows best and knows all versions that make these decisions for you. But the Win 10 start menu is less horrible than the Win 8 journey down the rabbit hole.

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:37AM (#50261629)

    I'm getting REALLY tired of "designers" making pointless, needless and often-as-not counterproductive changes to user interfaces. I'm particularly sick of the game of hide the menu which is particularly in vogue lately. Good design is about making things useful first and beautiful second and it seems we have a lot of self anointed UX "experts" who have that backwards. We seem to have too many art school graduates claiming to be "designers" even though they clearly have no particular skill at user interface design.

    • by iONiUM ( 530420 )

      The issue is people want different things. "Older" users who grew up on Macintosh, UNIX, Win 3.1 etc are used to menus being at the top, a central place for all applications, and the command line.

      Much younger users grew up with "apps" and websites looking like apps, which is the hamburger menu (that's the real name) in the top-left, expanders, jQuery carousal, etc. What's natural to them isn't natural to you, and vice-versa.

      In the end it's about sales, and "new and pretty" sells, and the changes aren't all

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        I really don't see younger users "clamouring" for anything. If anything they are far more adaptable to the point where they don't even acknowledge the existence of distinct platforms. You don't really have to pander to them at all.

        It's certainly retarded to do so for a desktop platform that's being marginalized by those same tablets whose primary strength is business desktops and legacy applications.

        it's like taking the one branch remaining on an dying tree and sawing it off while you're sitting on it.

      • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @09:47AM (#50262409)

        The issue is people want different things.

        Wrong. The problem is that Microsoft tried to cram a touch based interface onto a keyboard/mouse based system where it was wildly inappropriate. It has nothing to do with expectations and EVERYTHING to do with usability. Age and experience of the user is irrelevant to the problem. I'm perfectly comfortable getting used to a new interface despite being relatively older but Windows 8 just makes NO sense on a PC. All the interface conventions are for a touch based tablet which does not and never will work well with a mouse/keyboard.

        In the end it's about sales, and "new and pretty" sells, and the changes aren't all that big of a leap for the younger crowd. It is what it is, adapter or die.

        Microsoft gets virtually all their Windows sales through OEM channels where there is minimal or no choice in operating system. This wasn't users wanting new and pretty, it was Microsoft trying to integrate two different interfaces so they could get in the game for tablets and mobile devices. And they blew it. They didn't allow for the fact that the requirements of a PC are different than those of a tablet. Any system that wants to have both touch and keyboard/mouse input will need to be designed with that in mind from the ground up. You cannot take one or the other and cram them together. Microsoft didn't learn their lesson from their earlier attempts for tablet PCs where they attempted to put some touch features on a bog standard PC. Windows XP wasn't designed for that. Then they went 100% to the other extreme with Windows 8 and took a tablet interface and tried to cram it onto a PC which (predictably) didn't work either.

        • I'm perfectly comfortable getting used to a new interface despite being relatively older but Windows 8 just makes NO sense on a PC. All the interface conventions are for a touch based tablet which does not and never will work well with a mouse/keyboard.

          And it makes even less sense on a server OS. WTF, Server 2012??

      • by PRMan ( 959735 )

        The irony is that if you read the Metro design document, Microsoft tells you to make sure that everything is discoverable. Show a value and make a click that allows you to set the range where that value sends an alert. Stuff like that. Make things discoverable at first glance.

        They said this while simultaneously releasing Windows 8, where NOTHING is discoverable.

    • I'm getting REALLY tired of "designers" making pointless, needless and often-as-not counterproductive changes to user interfaces.

      I really, really dislike the current "designers" trend of placing very light grey letters on a white background. I'm sure that style wins design awards for looking hip and cool, but it is less than readable. Much less than readable.

      .
      I wonder if the design awards ever take into account functionality, or is it all prettiness and form for them?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 06, 2015 @07:38AM (#50261631)

    If you don't like the start menu and prefer the old Windows 7 style start menu, then there are alternatives.

    http://www.classicshell.net/
    There are also other alternatives, like Start8 and whatever.

    • If you don't like the start menu and prefer the old Windows 7 style start menu, then there are alternatives.

      Yes there are and that is the clearest indication that the interface sucks. There should be no need for a third party application to make the default interface useable. I had to buy a few machines with Windows 8 on them for work and I absolutely loathe the interface. Might be fine on a tablet (haven't tried) but on a PC with a keyboard and mouse it is just horrid. The UX people at Microsoft that let that monstrosity out the door should never be able to find work in "design" again. Dumbest design decisi

      • by CastrTroy ( 595695 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @11:26AM (#50263069)

        Are you saying that because there are alternatives, that the interface sucks? Maybe it's just that people have different preferences. Linux distros often (or used to) come with 4 or 5 different window managers, and all were extremely different in how they went about managing the UI. When this happens in Linux, it's awesome, look at all the choice we have. When this happens in Windows, it's because Microsoft is stupid, and the interface they created sucks.

    • Yes, I know that, and I do use an alternative.

      https://www.enlightenment.org/... [enlightenment.org]

  • Start 10 (Score:2, Insightful)

    Didn't I read a couple of days ago that start 10 was downloaded by gazillions because win 10's start menu is crap, not tried it, not going to. just saying.
    • It's not crap, it's ok once you remove the live tiles. Not sure why I'd want them in the Start menu of all places, it'd make much more sense to have them on the desktop. On Windows 8 the first thing I did was install ClassicShell to get a Windows 7 style start menu, but on 10 I haven't even bothered looking for a replacement menu. It's close enough to the old start menu as to make no real difference.
  • Just hold your horses. Just check the 10-K filings of the past and the coming quarters to see if IDSA is a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft run from the garage of the home of some Redmond executive.
  • by Stormwatch ( 703920 ) <`moc.liamtoh' `ta' `oarigogirdor'> on Thursday August 06, 2015 @08:40AM (#50261953) Homepage

    This reminds me of how the DualShock won some supposedly important award, even though it's among the worst gamepads ever, and its design issues are glaring for anyone with half a brain.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      Both remind me of the examples of bad design in Donald Norman's classic textbook on usability design: The Design of Everyday Things [wikipedia.org].

      Each example got the note "probably won an award".

    • You piqued my curiosity. What is bad about the DualShock? I thought it was pretty nice. What is flawed?

      Had no idea it won an award, though. They make awards for controllers? heh What is it called? THE THUMBY AWARD? :-P

      • What makes the Dualshock 2 a bad controller, is 3 issues:
        1. The shell is designed for a stickless version, and the grip is as well. This means you can never get a good grip on it, because the handles are non existing, and there is nothing to wrap your hand around
        2. The PS1 dualshock controller had extended handles, because adding analogs did take up valueable grip space. The extended handles was lost in all successive versions
        3. And there is minor wear/tech problems on it. Notable faults includes the deadzo

        • Ah... the Dualshock 2 was the one from the PS2... I actually skipped that system (I got the Dreamcast instead), so I guess I missed the pain. heh ;-)

  • by MacTO ( 1161105 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @08:47AM (#50261987)

    Place me in a mental institution if you like, but I actually preferred the start screen. At least the start screen acknowledged that the new way of presenting programs as live tiles is hugely space inefficient and needs to take up the entire screen. Indeed, enlarging the start menu was the first thing I did. Then I made the mistake of using all apps. Once again, this is a feature that can use full screen due to the enlarged icons. The problem is that Windows 10 only allows you to enlarge it in one dimension. After a bit more fussing around, I simply gave up.

    The new start menu may be great for some people. For me, it felt like a patchwork of features that were poorly thought out. Even though the start screen was much hated, at least it was relatively well thought out. The Windows 7 start menu was well thought out, and had the benefit of well over a decade of refinements. Taking the ideas from two well thought out ideas does not necessarily make a third well thought out idea. On the contrary, it has a huge potential to make a mess. At least Microsoft lived up to that potential.

    • I had no idea you could scroll the shitty start screen on Windows 8. Not one single hint lets you know, not an arrow or scroll bar or anything. I installed Office on a new Win 8 box and couldn't locate any of the icons. Started googling and found there is actually a knowledge base article letting people know the menu scrolls. Again a design fail.

    • by wbo ( 1172247 )
      Windows 10 defaults to the start menu style but there is a checkbox that will make the start menu full screen much like it was in Windows 8/8.1.

      Indeed, it was one of the first settings I changed when I started using Windows 10 because it just makes much more sense to have the start menu cover the entire screen and make use of the extra space since you can't interact with anything else that may be open on the desktop while the start menu is open anyway.
    • Even though the start screen was much hated, at least it was relatively well thought out.

      I disagree pretty strongly. I mean, you shared your opinion, which is fair, and I'm just giving mine back in return, no disrespect intended.

      But first, I find the whole Metro/Modern design to have been a bit misguided. It looked very nice, in my opinion, and it was smart to make bigger buttons that were touch-friendly for Windows tablets, but as many people will argue, I don't think it made sense on the desktop. But

  • Or, is it a matter of shills giving an award to the people they are shilling for?

    Visit the world of *nix. There are start menus galore. Take your pick. Someone actually gave Microsoft an award for theirs? Phhhhtt.......

  • Try browsing for a specific app that is not in tiles or recents. It's a mess, and the list has tiny width and long scroll down, while the menu has huge space it could use for that when it's obvious the user is browsing installed apps.

  • by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @09:03AM (#50262083) Journal

    Since I have several machines to play with at home, I decided to go ahead with the *cough* upgrade *cough* on one of them. Here are the problems I've encountered in just a couple hours of usage.

    1. Windows Explorer has been replaced with MS Edge. I often VPN into work, and attempted to do so with Edge, but had no luck. The good news is that Explorer still exists somewhere on the system. From Edge, there's an option to open one of your favorites in Explorer, and I was able to pin explorer to my bottom bar to avoid having to launch edge. MS seems to have hidden Explorer...it doesn't show up in the list of all apps.

    2. iPad no longer charges from USB ports. Other devices, like my Garmin GPS watch does. The iPad still syncs up with iTunes, but refuses to charge.

    3. My Nvidia graphics driver crashes occasionally, but relaunches. I am running the latest driver, and they claim they're working on it.

    • Since I have several machines to play with at home, I decided to go ahead with the *cough* upgrade *cough* on one of them. Here are the problems I've encountered in just a couple hours of usage.

      1. Windows Explorer has been replaced with MS Edge.

      No, you mean Internet Explorer has been replaced with MS Edge. Windows Explorer is the file manager, which has been renamed to File Explorer, and like everything else in Windows 10 they've made a number of stupid, pointless changes that make it just a little worse

      The good news is that Explorer still exists somewhere on the system. From Edge, there's an option to open one of your favorites in Explorer, and I was able to pin explorer to my bottom bar to avoid having to launch edge. MS seems to have hidden Explorer...it doesn't show up in the list of all apps.

      This is one of the big problems with the Window 8 and 10 UI. Some things don't show up in the list of all apps. So for example, you have to know to navigate your way to [C:\Program Files (x86)\Internet Explorer] where you will find Internet Exp

      • Since I have several machines to play with at home, I decided to go ahead with the *cough* upgrade *cough* on one of them. Here are the problems I've encountered in just a couple hours of usage.

        1. Windows Explorer has been replaced with MS Edge.

        No, you mean Internet Explorer has been replaced with MS Edge. Windows Explorer is the file manager, which has been renamed to File Explorer, and like everything else in Windows 10 they've made a number of stupid, pointless changes that make it just a little worse

        Yet another example of how stupid it is to call your file manager and Internet browser almost the same thing. I have had to get into the habit of telling users to open a "computer window" because everyone thinks an Explorer window is the Internet browser.

      • by Zarquon ( 1778 )

        It's probably to do with smaller notebooks and their lack of a numpad... I had one user that failed to log in a number of times and it turned out that they had last changed their password on a notebook where numlock was turned on at login and some of the alpha keys got remapped.

        -R C

      • Every computer I've used forever has a BIOS setting that tells the computer to always turn on the numlock key at bootup. Windows 10 ignores this and every time you boot you have to remember to manually turn on the numlock. If you use the number pad a lot (I do) it's extremely annoying. There's a registry setting that fixes this, but Jeez, how do you fuck up something that has worked forever.

        Windows has done this at least since Windows 2000. Yes, it's annoying. I imagine it's because Windows can't actually

      • by PRMan ( 959735 )
        Or just type "[Windows key]Int". Oh, there it is. If you look in All Apps, it's there in Windows Accessories.
        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          Yup, I would never have thought to look for a browser under accessories, though I should have looked under the program files.

  • Yesterday Kim Jong Un was awarded a peace prize for "peace, justice and humanity."
    Today Microsoft gets a design award for releasing a UI ever slightly less crappy than Windows 8s, and nowhere near as good as Windows 7.

    We somehow ended up on htraE (aka Bizarro World) this week.

  • by BenJeremy ( 181303 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @09:28AM (#50262227)

    What sort of morons put an arbitrary limit [microsoft.com] on the number of items your menu has?

    Apparently there is a fix in the pipeline, but it's a bit stupid to have released this with a known issue that should be a simple fix. In this day and age, there is simply no excuse for an arbitrary limit on the number of items in your start menu. I easily have 1500 unique items (Microsoft being one of the worst offenders of dumping lots of useless entries into my start menu) in my Start Menu->Programs folders, so it's likely something important will be displaced by some application's web URL or an uninstall link.

    • Focus group research has confirmed with a great number of users that people's memory for applications they could possibly want to find in a menu only has a 9-bit index, so "512 should be enough for everyone", right?
    • 512 should be enough for anybody.
    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      512!?!?! That just shows how the start menu has been abused since Windows 98. Microsoft can redesign the start menu / start screen / quick launch bar / pin to taskbar 100 different ways, but they can never sole the problem of stupid installers that create:

      FooCorp Software\
      FooCorp Software\Foo\
      FooCorp Software\Foo\Launch Foo
      FooCorp Software\Foo\Uninstall Foo
      FooCorp Software\Foo\Readme.txt
      FooCorp Software\Foo\Other great offers from FooCorp

      512 ought to be plenty, if it weren't for this kind of garbage.

      • Yup, Microsoft themselves are plenty guilty of this:

        =========[Programs->Microsoft Visual Studio 2012]==========
        Blend for Visual Studio 2012
        Microsoft Feedback Client
        Microsoft Help Viewer
        Microsoft Test Manager
        PowerPoint Storyboarding
        Visual Studio 2012

        =========[Programs->Microsoft Visual Studio 2012->Microsoft Visual Studio SDK]==========
        **WEB** Download Visual Studio Visualization and Modeling SDK

  • Some say it’s awesome, others hate it and want the Start screen back

    No. No they don't.

  • IDSA? (Score:5, Funny)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @10:05AM (#50262515)

    It Doesn't Suck Anymore?

  • '...the new menu makes it easy to access files across platforms, as it brings together [Windows] PCs, tablets, and phones...'

    The criteria for the award is that that the interface is effective at locking users into Windows hardware devices they don't want? Did it make the desktop interface better? No. It just compels you to buy other Windows devices.

  • by guacamole ( 24270 ) on Thursday August 06, 2015 @11:09AM (#50262941)

    I have used Windows 10 for a couple of weeks, and so far the Start Menu the way it's shipped is more of a hindrance. The Start Menu becomes somewhat usable once you remove all or most of those tiles from it, remove all the defaults, and then add a bit of your own customizations. The end result is not much different from Windows 7. Why should Windows 10 get any big awards for it. Who is funding IDSA right now?

  • Classic Shell [classicshell.net] just works and it still works on Windows 10 even as a release candidate.

  • The IDSDA's origins can be traced back to the legendary industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss. The geek is only kidding himself if he thinks these awards are not to be taken seriously.

    The best designed products of 2015 [businessinsider.com]

  • ... but still sucks on any one of them.
  • Still no cigar. And to make matters worse, if you had classic start menu installed... it removes it.

  • Awards are a sham anyway. To award Microsoft for fixing the monstrosity known as Metro is like naming the 1960 Ford Comet Car of the Year because it's not an Edsel.

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