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lloekiyesterday at 2:13 PM2 repliesview on HN

On "regular computers" I think it was flawed in two fatal ways:

- there was already an extremely heavy expectation that clicking the start button or pressing the windows key would bring up a menu, not a full screen takeover where all contextual sense of place (that you had in the past experience) was lost.

- the UI being a full-screen takeover on a phone (Windows Phone) or a tablet (10"-ish tops at the time) was OK but on a 21~27" desktop it's absurdly overwhelming.


Replies

HPsquaredyesterday at 2:17 PM

Especially with such a low information density. It was clearly just a massive amount of wasted screen space on desktop.

show 1 reply
fluoridationyesterday at 2:40 PM

The start screen is something you just had to get used to. I think it's more comfortable than the menu. Effectively it works as a second desktop to put application shortcuts on. I have about 30-40 on mine (on Windows 10, mind you), which is way more than would fit on a menu without submenus.