Tribun wrote:I just found this:
Power8
I find it interesting that someone managed to create this competent replacement for the start menu that doesn't even need installation. It even adds the option to shut down these annoying corners, meaning you only see Metro if you really want to by pressing the Windows key. It should also be a warning signal to MS that users actively work on changing to UI to their own needs.
To rub even more salt into the wound, another programm that doesn't need to be installen,
Classic Starter, even allows you to skip Metro at startup and goes directly to the desktop.
What I find embarrassing for MS is, that it obviously is very easy to implement these options, making me wonder why they refuse to do so in the first place, as it would certainly make the whole thing more acceptable.
One theory I've seen is that the whole exercise is basically trying to force a critical mass on the Windows App Store. Since that's apparently supposed to be the same thing for desktop and mobile, apps written for one should work on the other, especially since they have the same interface. Given that large numbers of people are going to have desktops with metro on them, that means that there's a large market for metro apps. That, so the theory goes, means that developers will
write a lot of metro apps to satisfy that market. If there are a lot of metro apps, that will make a Windows phone more attractive.
If you allow people to turn off metro entirely, then that market gets smaller, probably a lot smaller, because people don't like learning new UIs when the old one worked fine. If that's accurate, then I think that Windows 9 would introduce an option to enable or disable metro; at that point, either it's created a metro ecosystem and boosted Windows mobile, or it's failed to do so and another iteration of the same thing probably wouldn't have any more success. They could spin it as 'listening to customer feedback' or something.
Or, of course, it could all be hot air and waffling.