N_LaRUE
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- Apr 3, 2013
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Step 1: STOP POSTING and this thread will vanish and the OP will have to think of something new
Yes, a new complaint about some small issue... like most of their complaints...
Step 1: STOP POSTING and this thread will vanish and the OP will have to think of something new
I have pop-up blocker turned on, all the web safety features that come with Windows, Windows Defender and Windows firewall turned on, and STILL this adware sneaks on to my PC? Have MS gone the Lenovo route? It's this kind of approach, forcing W10 on people, that makes me annoyed about Win10 and the general 'lack of choice' direction it's going in. If you really and truly feel you need to resort to adware to get people to take up W10, Microsoft, then what's the harm in adding a 'No thank you, please bog off and stop pestering me with ads' option, hmmm? Or at least allow Windows Defender to clean it out. It's supposed to be able to remove adware, and it can't even find the stuff Microsoft's written? How poor must Defender be at finding adware that's actually trying to get around it?
I've uninstalled the darn thing of course. I'm not getting forced into a reservation for anyone. My choice, if you get it right at some point MS. Not before, and looking at it right now not for some time. I don't appreciate your attempts to strong-arm me MS. It feels very Google.
Ok OP you have a few options. Option 1. Buy either a Linux system or a iOSX system. Linux is complicated and iOSX is expensive.
Feel like someone needs to defend the OP lol.
Honestly speaking, Latest distributions from Deepin and Ubuntu are simple to install on most devices. Moreover, tonymacx86 is real))
I still find it mind blowing that people don't understand that the purpose of the "menu" icon is an attempt to make apps mouse & keyboard friendly. Windows 8 apps simply didn't attract desktop users. And whether you realize it or not, getting those desktop users on Windows apps is the only way Microsoft can increase consumer app usage, thus attracting more developer support.
Yeah, because the entire future of Windows rests on MS putting hamburger buttons into every app. :grin: Please explain how a menu icon (can be anything) in the upper left corner is more friendly to anyone? I never heard anyone say "Windows Phone is good but it needs awkward placed menus to succeed".
Why am I not surprised you opted to use phones for an example just to try proving a point, when it was clear that I was referring to app usage on desktop PC's.
Xbox Music, Xbox Video and OneNote among others make use of the Splitview control aka meat feast menuWho said it was stolen from Android? I sure didn't.
Convincing argument against hamburger menus: visually clunky, looks out of place in a OS, hard to reach, and the best one: we already have the ellipsis which looks better/takes up less space/much better area to touch
Convincing argument for hamburger menus: people know what it is since they saw it on Android or iOS and some mobile websites. That's about it. Also some guy from MS says we need them now for universal apps even though there are universal apps that don't have them and function fine.
Okay, no more hamburger talk. I'm hungry now.
Agreed. I'm content with 8.1 (mobile and desktop) for now. That may change later on.
The icon stays there even when you reserve your upgrade; it is no clever solution for sure and evidently annoys some people but this is by far not so interesting to justify this uproar.
For Microsoft this transition is seemingly as important as a Windows Update which would also put an icon into the system tray until I install the updates.
Maybe this icon (a component of the "Get Windows 10" app as Microsoft is calling it) vanishes after 29 of July but stays there until then as a daily reminder of this important transition.
Xbox Music, Xbox Video and OneNote among others make use of the Splitview control aka meat feast menu
I have pop-up blocker turned on, all the web safety features that come with Windows, Windows Defender and Windows firewall turned on, and STILL this adware sneaks on to my PC? Have MS gone the Lenovo route? It's this kind of approach, forcing W10 on people, that makes me annoyed about Win10 and the general 'lack of choice' direction it's going in. If you really and truly feel you need to resort to adware to get people to take up W10, Microsoft, then what's the harm in adding a 'No thank you, please bog off and stop pestering me with ads' option, hmmm? Or at least allow Windows Defender to clean it out. It's supposed to be able to remove adware, and it can't even find the stuff Microsoft's written? How poor must Defender be at finding adware that's actually trying to get around it?
I've uninstalled the darn thing of course. I'm not getting forced into a reservation for anyone. My choice, if you get it right at some point MS. Not before, and looking at it right now not for some time. I don't appreciate your attempts to strong-arm me MS. It feels very Google.
Because phones/tablets are the ones that are going to suffer the most from shoehorning this garbage into it, that's why. The one size fits all philosophy that MS is smoking nowadays is a joke.
I still find it mind blowing that people don't understand that the purpose of the "menu" icon is an attempt to make apps mouse & keyboard friendly. Windows 8 apps simply didn't attract desktop users. And whether you realize it or not, getting those desktop users on Windows apps is the only way Microsoft can increase consumer app usage, thus attracting more developer support.
Like some one else mentioned, app design and menu icons are subjective, I personally was never too crazy for the way Windows 8 apps looked. There were only a hand full that actually functioned well with the metro design language.