Windows 8 The Return of the Start Button

Gman496

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Staff member
Windows 8.2 / 9 Will Finally Include Start Menu And More for Desktop Versions of the OS

Windows-Start-Menu.png
As more information emerges about the next Windows update, we’ll likely hear more tidbits regarding this Start Menu


A couple of weeks back during Microsoft’s annual BUILD developers conference, we got wind that the software giant would be reinstating the traditional Start Menu for those running desktop versions of the famed OS. At the very least, it was said, the option would be there for traditionalists looking to restore a sense of familiarity to proceedings, and although we knew that it wouldn’t be arriving with the just-released Windows 8.1 Update 1, it seemed almost certain that a subsequent release would reinstate one of the operating system’s longest-serving features. Now, a new report has indicated that said feature will indeed re-emerge this fall.

The scoop for this particular revelation goes to Wzor, which states that the highly-missed Start Menu will return in a release likely to be called Windows 8.2 / 9, or rather ‘Windows 8.1 Update 2′. Up until BUILD, we were lead to believe that the most recent update would be called Windows 8.1 Update 1, with Microsoft curiously opting to remove the numbering at the eleventh hour. At the time, this was seen as an implication that no further updates to Windows 8.1 would be forthcoming, but irrespective of the moniker Microsoft decides to select, the Start Menu now looks very much like it’s coming back.

Microsoft has done a lot of back-tracking with Windows since 2012, which saw the release of the touch-optimized Windows 8 OS. Despite the fact that the ‘Metro’ tiled interface worked fluidly on touch-screen devices such as the Surface, the multiple millions on desktop were essentially hung out to dry, and although there’s always a degree of resistance to major changes in software, the backlash from Windows 8 was quite unprecedented.

It is also being stated that the upcoming major release, which is Windows 8.2 / 9, will be a cloud-centric OS, much like how Chrome OS is.

Windows 8.1, as well as its subsequent update, have refined the experience for those using the keyboard and mouse combination, and when that Start Menu does finally arrive, users will hopefully be able to put the rollercoaster ride since Windows 8 behind them.

As you can see from the shot of the Start Menu, it still incorporates the modern, tiled UI, combining elements of old and new to create a look and feel that will seek to suit everybody.
 
Its still Sh*t.

I often wonder what the developers at MS do be thinking of.

What's the first thing any savvy user does when they get a new machine or do a clean OS install?

If it's a new system they run something like Ccleaner to remove all the bloatware crap. Once that's out of the way users install stuff that's nearly always needed but not part of the OS, stuff like 7-Zip\Winrar, free versions of Antivirus\malware Progs, a decent Browser + Addons, maybe a useful media player and codecs, not to mention a platter of nifty little utilities they've become accustom to using that makes life easier in there every day tasks etc, etc.

Wouldn't it be so much more beneficial if the likes of MS included all the little everyday utilities that must users need and make it more productive out of the box instead of taking perfectly well established methods of doing every day tasks & totally changing their location & how you access them just so they can call it a new OS. Look at the tedious learning curve everyone has to go through just to do what they used to do for years without having to think.

I know people will say you can't cater for all the different needs of every user but, you could incorporate all those every day utilities into the OS in the form of check boxes that would give the user the option to select or deselect their preferred choices during the OS installation, something similar to what Ninite do.

For fook sake, Windows 8 won't let you even view a gif file now without installing a 3rd party viewer :dunno:
 
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The new start menu in Windows 10 is a mixture of what I would class as a windows 95 style classic start menu combined with the metro ui. Classic Shell however still works on Windows 8 and 10 and provides a far better experience and its free.
 
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