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Why the Windows 7 Start Menu is Going Out of Fashion

by - source: Tom's Hardware US

It's the start of the end of Start.

Windows 95 Start Me Up

Remember what Windows 95 was all about? Besides a whole new platform, it also brought us the Start menu, which was big enough to get its own Rolling Stones theme song.

The Start menu was where all the action was at, making it easier to access programs now without having to dig through directories to find executables (back when we called them those things instead of folders and apps).

Even with the most useful of technologies, however, time evolves usage models and eventually we find a better way. That appears to be the story of the Start menu.

In a new B8 blog post written by Chaitanya Sareen, program manager lead for Microsoft's Core Experience Evolved team, we find out that a new feature of Windows 7 dramatically reduced Start menu usage since Windows Vista.

"It is striking to see how dramatically different the use of the Start menu is in Windows Vista vs. Windows 7. Some of the Special Folders (what we call those items on the right side of the menu) dropped in use by over 50%. Likewise, people accessed pinned items on the Start menu half as often in Windows 7 than they did in Vista. People also access All Programs and the MFU [Most Frequently Used] far less often," wrote Sareen. "Finally, we see an 11% drop in how often people are opening the Start menu at all. While 11% may seem like a small number at first, across our hundreds of millions of customers it is eye opening to see such a drop for a universally recognizable element of the Windows interface. We’re not talking about some hidden setting that is tweaked by a minority of people—we’re talking about a fundamental piece of Windows that people are using less and less."

That new feature was the ability to pin programs to the taskbar.

"To really bring this all home, let’s take a look at where people are pinning their apps. Figure 4 [above] reveals that 85% of people have three or more items pinned to the taskbar compared to a mere 23% who have the same number pinned to the Start menu," Sareen noted. "Although the taskbar and Start menu have different pinned defaults, many people do customize both of them when they want to. The message is clear that the majority of people want most of their apps on the taskbar rather than having to dig into Start."

So what's wrong with the Start menu? This is what Microsoft thinks are issues with the one in Windows 7:

  • The menu feels cramped relative to available screen real estate when you try to see and navigate the full catalog of your programs.
  • Search doesn’t have the space it deserves to quickly show you rich results across all sources of information, especially on larger screens.
  • It’s hard to customize the menu to make it feel like it’s really yours.
  • Icons and shortcuts are static and don’t leverage more of the pixels we see in modern graphical interfaces to surface connected scenarios.

With these lessons learned, Microsoft is transforming a Start menu into a Start screen – and that will be in Windows 8. Microsoft promised to share details on the Start screen soon.

Of course, those who won't be using the Metro UI will still get the Start menu, but it'll look quite a bit different: The First Glimpse of the Windows 8 Start Menu

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chechak 05/10/2011 21:22
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i think by Right clicking on mouse bring "all programs" will be better !

may1 05/10/2011 22:44
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The advantage of the start button is that I could see all the applications I often use in one screen - with the dev release we're not entirely sure whether that's possible with Metro.

silver565 05/10/2011 23:01
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I like my start menu...

I don't understand why Tom's has been windows bashing recerntly :s

acer0169 06/10/2011 12:14
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I have 40+ applications pinned on my Win7 start menu (filling a 24" monitor). I love being able to click start or press the windows key on my keyboard and start typing a program name to quickly access it. I don't think Win8 will be any good for my day-to-day computer usage (of 14+ hours a day) and will only be good as an android rival.

Anonymous 06/10/2011 12:45
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I agree Silver565, Toms seems to be a little un objective and almost trying to sell Windows 8 etc. I hate it when personal opinion is stated and most people disagree with it. Tomshardware, get some polls and opinions before you wag that sometimes useless tongue.

Dandalf 06/10/2011 01:50
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...So am I the only one who is worried that Microsoft has collected information about where we click, how often, and how many programs we have pinned where???

jakjawagon 06/10/2011 03:16
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That was something I disliked about the Windows 8 developer preview. The start search function was awkwardly implemented. It would probably be fine with a touchscreen, but with keyboard and mouse, it was unpleasant to use.

mactronix 06/10/2011 09:02
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Of course, those who won't be using the Metro UI will still get the Start menu, but it'll look quite a bit different: The First Glimpse of the Windows 8 Start Menu

So is there a link missing here then ?

swamprat 06/10/2011 13:13
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Dandalf :
...So am I the only one who is worried that Microsoft has collected information about where we click, how often, and how many programs we have pinned where???


Hopefully it ought just to be a survey of a reasonable sample rather than 100% of users.

Dandalf 08/10/2011 20:15
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swamprat :
Hopefully it ought just to be a survey of a reasonable sample rather than 100% of users.



"Finally, we see an 11% drop in how often people are opening the Start menu at all. While 11% may seem like a small number at first, across our hundreds of millions of customers it is eye opening to see such a drop for a universally recognizable element of the Windows interface. We’re not talking about some hidden setting that is tweaked by a minority of people—we’re talking about a fundamental piece of Windows that people are using less and less."

Quote by Microsoft, not by Tom's! So they have been measuring MILLIONS of customers!

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