From Tony Bradley at PC World's web site on Nov. 21, 2013:
How to find everything in Windows 8.1
It’s inevitable that upgrading to a new version of an operating system or application comes with a bit of a learning curve. With Windows 8.1, though—and its predecessor Windows 8—the curve is steep, and just finding simple tools and features can be a challenge.
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This is precisely what I am talking about. There is no valid, logical reason why Microsoft has to design these programs so that NEW versions force the user to have to start almost from scratch to figure out how to use the "simple tools and features" they were using in the earlier version of the program.
Bradley continues:
Windows 8 isn’t just a new version of Windows, it’s a completely different OS [operating system] in many ways, with its own unique features and conventions that may confound even the most ardent Windows users. Under the hood, most of the familiar Windows tools are still there, but they’re buried in strange places where they can’t be easily located, especially not when Microsoft took away the coveted start button.
When Microsoft launched Windows 8.1, it solved much of the dilemma by bringing back the concept of the Start button.
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In other words, Microsoft screwed up, and then realized it had screwed up. Microsoft then added back a button they should never have deleted in the first place. And, why "bury" useful, familiar features in new, strange places? Certainly, they could have improved the program without doing that.
It [the Start button in Windows 8.1] is not identical in either form or function its predecessor, but it does provide simple access to a wide variety of common tools and functions.....
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2066020/ ... s-8-1.html
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That's what I want: simple access. There is absolutely no marginal net benefit to me or my clients for me to have to waste time to learn a NEW way of doing exactly the SAME things I was doing in an earlier version of the program.
Look, I'm a Baby Boomer. Our generation was brought up on CHANGE. I grew up in the 1950s and 1960s. Talk about change! But the folks who implement changes need to be rational about it.
There are ways to improve these computer programs without throwing the baby out with the bath water.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet