Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 3rd Jun 2012 22:04 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 520846
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RE: Nelson misses the point
by nt_jerkface on Tue 5th Jun 2012 14:08
in reply to "Nelson misses the point"
The reality is that when Microsoft thumbed their noses at their own usability studies, instead letting engineers make the calls, they screwed the pooch with the designs.
I agree with everything you said except for the part about engineers.
Engineers at Microsoft would not vote for Windows 8.
The problem is that Microsoft is ignoring usability studies and letting a Steve Jobs-Wannabe named Sinofsky make the calls. This is really the result of two people (Ballmer and Sinofsky) so please don't blame engineers in general.
RE[2]: Nelson misses the point
by Thom_Holwerda on Tue 5th Jun 2012 14:13
in reply to "RE: Nelson misses the point"
The thing is - Metro in and of itself a good idea on tablets, and maybe as an optional extra on laptops. For desktops, however, it would have made far more sense to offer an extended, desktop-oriented version of Metro, with proper windowing and multitasking, a proper dock/taskbar, etc - and keep classic the way it is now.
This would have made far more sense.
Edited 2012-06-05 14:19 UTC





Member since:
2006-02-17
The whole reason that iOS and Android environments are successful is usability. They are far simpler to use that Windows anything. You can scoff and otherwise act like a pompous ass in these discussions, but the reality is that the majority of the market doesn't want what it sees in Windows anymore. And to think that Windows 8 - moving further away from the public's tastes - is an improvement, you are being disingenuous.
I am the IT guy at home and the fact is that very little productive activity gets done on any of our machines unless I am around. I can figure the shit out relatively easily. But why shouldn't it be intuitive in the first place?
The reality is that when Microsoft thumbed their noses at their own usability studies, instead letting engineers make the calls, they screwed the pooch with the designs. They need to get back to what the public wants and how they want it, even if that means dumbing it down.