Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 7th Sep 2010 18:11 UTC
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It’s not fake—but it is beta.
I think Microsoft have been experimenting with saving vertical space, betting on that fact that the average screen is now quite wide, and [because Windows’ window management is so bad] the browser is always maximised.
I think Microsoft have been experimenting with saving vertical space, betting on that fact that the average screen is now quite wide, and [because Windows’ window management is so bad] the browser is always maximised.
Uhm, you do realise it is PEOPLE who maximise, right? Why on EARTH would Windows' window management have anything to do with it? Put any random Windows user in front of any UI and they will maximise.
Put any random Windows user in front of any UI and they will maximise.
In my opinion a big part of the reason for this is that the Windows UI strongly encourages maximisation of windows. It's how Windows users learn to use the GUI, but that doesn't mean it's a particularly efficient way of doing things.
I never used to maximise windows when using RISC OS, or other GUIs with similar window management and application design. Back then I normally overlapped windows and dragged and dropped between apps; usage made easy and efficient by those interfaces.
It's only when using Windows, with its MDI apps, primitive window management, and massive toolbars/sidebars/panels attached to application windows, that I started feeling the need to maximise everything and alt+tab between windows.





Member since:
2005-11-10
It’s not fake—but it is beta.
I think Microsoft have been experimenting with saving vertical space, betting on that fact that the average screen is now quite wide, and [because Windows’ window management is so bad] the browser is always maximised.