The Vista screenshots I've seen look
ugly to me. The GUI is inconsistent and horribly designed, with browser style buttons where they shouldn't be. Even Paul Thurrott, Windows Fanboy Extraordinaire, is driven nuts by it.
http://winsupersite.com/showcase/winvista_rc1_worst.asp
What? You don't see the Back button? Oh, it's that weird blue thing in the corner. Why does Vista use a graphical browser-like button for Back and an old-fashioned text-based button for Next? I can understand why Back is on the left, and why Next is on the right, but why is Back on the top of the application while Next is on the bottom?
UI guys are going to have a field day with this one. For some reason, Microsoft's software designers have decided to use the Web browser's navigational scheme in many of Windows Vista's application (and not just wizards). But since this is Microsoft we're talking about, they did so in a completely inconsistent and even partial fashion. So now Back is graphical and on the top of the window, while Next/Forward is textual and on the bottom.
Smart!
Or not. Most stupidly, there's nothing to suggest that the two buttons are related in any way. So it's not really clear that they offer similar functionality. What's really amazing is that the functionality underneath is often even more insidious than it appears at first glance. Let's use Windows DVD Maker as an example. Assume you're busy making your first DVD movie. You're in the second stage of the wizard (which is stupidly called Ready to Burn Disc even though there are at least five other things you can do in this phase). You click the Customize menu toolbar button to navigate forward to the "Customize the Disc Menu Style" phase of the wizard, adjust some properties, and go back to the previous phase to preview the changes. Deciding you want to visit "Customize the Disc Menu Style" screen again, you type ALT + RIGHT ARROW, which is of course the keyboard shortcut for "Forward," as we've all learned after several years of IE usage. Clearly, this will bring us back to the "Customize the Disc Menu Style" screen.
Nope. Instead, this keyboard shortcut is the equivalent of clicking the Burn button for some reason. Instead of changing the menu style again, you just started burning your disc. Or a coaster, since the disc you're now making isn't what you wanted.
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
But wait, there's more. Oh there is so much more.
Why can't we have the Up directory button in Explorer windows anymore? I get that the new breadcrumb functionality in the Address Bar is more powerful, but sometimes you just want to go up one level. (On the flipside, Microsoft did finally implement the ALT + UP ARROW shortcut I've been asking for since the Windows XP beta. Thank you for finally listening to that one.)
And speaking of Explorer, why isn't the first item in the current view always selected when I open a new folder? If you double-click on a folder in Explorer, or select a folder in the Favorites Link list or folders list, it's not clear at all where the focus is. What's selected? Why is nothing selected? The behavior is different almost every time, and it's never clear what the reason is.
How come the special shell folders are less intelligent now? In Windows XP, when you went to My Documents, for example, you'd see links to related locations like Shared Documents. In Windows Vista, there's no such intelligence. Every single folder simply presents the same exact list of Favorite Links. And here's the best part: Sometimes they're actually presented in a different order. Yeah, that's just good stuff.
And what's up with the glaringly inconsistent UI across Windows Vista and all of its applications? Some windows have menus, some don't, and some have hidden menus. Some have these new black toolbars, some don't. And so on. Why isn't there a team of people just working on consistency issues?
Why does Internet Explorer want to download stuff to a Downloads folder? What is Downloads? Where is it? How do find it? (Yes, I know it's in the home folder, but the average user won't know that.) When I download something, how come it disappears? Why doesn't the Downloads window open when the download is complete? Why isn't Downloads on the Start Menu if it's the default in IE? Was the desktop too logical and commonly-used a destination?
How come Windows Vista has this great search feature but most of the bundled applications still use an old fashioned Find dialog that often gets in the way of what you're trying to find? Open up Notepad or Wordpad and try to find some text. Why isn't there a Search box right up there in the top right corner of the window? Duh.
How come x64 is so horrible? Does Microsoft want Apple to make it look silly again? Those foolish enough to install an x64 version of Windows Vista will become pretty surly when they realize none of their applications will work, none of their existing drivers mean diddly-squat anymore, and, most humorously, that x64 PC you bought probably doesn't support more than 4 GB of RAM anyway. OK, that last one isn't Microsoft's fault, but seriously. It's all part of the malaise that is the x64 "ecosystem."
...
I guess I can handle the notion that Vista's Sidebar is nothing like the wonderful front-end for system notifications we were promised back in 2003. I can even handle that it's a half-hearted rip-off of Apple's Dashboard (which was itself a ruthless rip-off of Konfabulator, but whatever.) What I can't handle is that this bloated, semi-useless strip of screen real estate-stealing UI is enabled by default on Vista, that it takes forever to load, causing your effective boot time to almost double, and that it takes multiple steps to actually kill it.
And there's just too much transparency...it looks like a bad Windows XP skin. Almost like they're trying to throw every shiny effect they can into it.
http://winsupersite.com/images/showcase/rc1_01.jpg
http://winsupersite.com/images/showcase/rc1_03.jpg
http://winsupersite.com/images/showcase/rc1_09.jpg