Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 25th Sep 2008 17:57 UTC
Windows Back when Microsoft's Julie Larson-Green demonstrated Windows 7's multitouch framework during the All Things Digital conference, many noted the different taskbar that she was using on the demo machine. When Walt Mossberg asked her about it, she smiled and replied "It's something we're working on for Windows 7 and I'm not supposed to talk about right now, today..." Personally, I was quite intrigued by this revamped taskbar, seeing how static and old the current one already is (Windows 95, people). Microsoft has remained mum on the issue ever since, but last Tuesday, the silence was broken when Microsoft's Chaitanya Sareen posted a detailed entry on the taskbar on the Engineering Windows 7 blog.
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RE: Bad lesson
by CPUGuy on Thu 25th Sep 2008 21:37 UTC in reply to "Bad lesson"
CPUGuy
Member since:
2005-07-06

People don't want it because the taskbar is already filled up with other stuff and it just doesn't scale well. I would gander to say that quite a few people would love to have their media player at their fingertips like that, just not at the cost of making their application buttons that much smaller.

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RE[2]: Bad lesson
by WorknMan on Fri 26th Sep 2008 16:15 in reply to "RE: Bad lesson"
WorknMan Member since:
2005-11-13

I would gander to say that quite a few people would love to have their media player at their fingertips like that, just not at the cost of making their application buttons that much smaller.


Media players that don't suck have global hotkey support, so you can control them across the OS. Plus, most keyboards these days have the media keys built right in, which kind of makes the toolbar unnecessary.

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RE[3]: Bad lesson
by Bill Shooter of Bul on Fri 26th Sep 2008 16:23 in reply to "RE[2]: Bad lesson"
Bill Shooter of Bul Member since:
2006-07-14

Media keyboards are always poorly implemented. They require a resident service running in windows to interpret the key presses into media commands. Most computers i see that have them, don't work due to crappy software or media player incompatibility. Most people queue up a playlist and go. Not much of a need to have a series of short cuts. Any adjustments that need to be made usually require more of the full interface to choose a different playlist or what not.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1