Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 18th Nov 2007 15:46 UTC
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RE[4]: Desktop space is a scarce resource
by hobgoblin on Mon 19th Nov 2007 05:24
in reply to "RE[3]: Desktop space is a scarce resource"
there was plenty of third party type and run apps for windows.
here is one i have used before:
http://www.donationcoder.com/Software/Mouser/findrun/index.html




Member since:
2006-02-05
I still wait to see a better way than a handy start menu to show, browse and get access to all the available applications? A start menu - of some sorts - seems like a necessity as far as I can tell. Running commands would be another way to browse, find and open apps - but not very newbie-friendly. The place where the start menu is located or can be opened is not essential. Some window managers have a "start menu" that can be opened by right-clicking the desktop background, but that is still the same start menu, and is also more difficult to reach if the desktop background is hidden under open windows.
I dont have a problem with the start menu as sort of an installed software directory, but I don't like it as a main application launcher. On OSX i used quicksilver (now i use spotlight), on linux I use an embedded run dialog (which has been replaced by deskbar in gnome which I don't like at all), and on windows it always bugged me that there was nothing similar (until WDS on Vista).
Currently, I do all my work on vista. I have 7 shortcuts in the quicklaunch that I use several times daily. These require one click.
I have 20 items "pinned" to the start menu (or panel, I guess you would call it now). These are apps I use semi-regularly. It consists of the Office apps, some adobe apps, terminal, powershell, Safari and Opera (for website testing), torrent software, IM software, etc. These take me two clicks. Usually I will use several, but not all of these every day.
So far so good, but what about the hundred or so small apps I use infrequently? Stuff like regedit, defrag software, server config utils, backup software, dvd authoring software, calculator, virtualization software, burning software, etc. That is what most people use the start menu for. These I will use a few of every day, but always different, and not frequently enough to put it in an easy access location.
Start menu requires up to four clicks with a lot of sifting through folder names to get to what I want. Considering the size of the items in the list, the amount of items there are, and the bad organization (ESPECIALLY in windows), it is significantly more of a pain to find what I want. Some people just litter their desktop with hundreds of launchers, so they can quickly find what they need. This is a symptom of the start menu problem.
Nowadays, the only time I open the start menu (or application menu on linux, or the applications folder on OSX), is to see what is installed on a computer I am unfamiliar with. I know this may seem like nit-picking, but IMHO it is a badly designed UI element and I find it frustrating to work with as long as any alternative exists. The fact that so many exist kind of points that I am not the only one to feel this way.
Sorry for the huge response, I figured I may as well be thorough, as it is a hard thing to articulate