this means that you no longer have a non-moving, static target for your mouse click, that you may click any number of times without having to look at it and read stuff. now you have to reach for the backspace key for that.
at least, the windows file manager is keyboard-friendly (windows is in general, sometimes more than a linux desktop ) but mouse is useful for file selections.
I do use copy/paste buttons too. it allows better use of the mouse, spares you going through a menu layer (edit menu or file properties)
mind you I most often use the file manager with keyboard only under XP, but when I'm mousing I don't want to do ctrl-c, ctrl-drag'n'drop etc.; I still have to do ctrl-clicking (even though I've used three-button mice for the past 15 years)
It's the same location, always. You can click on it in your sleep. The address bar is not always the same due to directory naming, etc. Clicking on the same location multiple times is faster than having to observe the address bar and click.
My feeling with Win 7 is mix bag at the moment. The only plus for me is that it's 64 bit that is better supported. But still legacy hardware there is no driver for it. Aero interface screw up my version of Maya. Actually quite a few softwares that I have seems to mentioned compatibility problem with Win 7. So when I have to switch over it's going to be a little more pricey than just the cost of Win 7 for me. I am going to stick with XP a little while more.
It's the same location, always. You can click on it in your sleep. The address bar is not always the same due to directory naming, etc. Clicking on the same location multiple times is faster than having to observe the address bar and click.
My feeling with Win 7 is mix bag at the moment. The only plus for me is that it's 64 bit that is better supported. But still legacy hardware there is no driver for it. Aero interface screw up my version of Maya. Actually quite a few softwares that I have seems to mentioned compatibility problem with Win 7. So when I have to switch over it's going to be a little more pricey than just the cost of Win 7 for me. I am going to stick with XP a little while more.
It's the same location, always. You can click on it in your sleep. The address bar is not always the same due to directory naming, etc. Clicking on the same location multiple times is faster than having to observe the address bar and click.
My feeling with Win 7 is mix bag at the moment. The only plus for me is that it's 64 bit that is better supported. But still legacy hardware there is no driver for it. Aero interface screw up my version of Maya. Actually quite a few softwares that I have seems to mentioned compatibility problem with Win 7. So when I have to switch over it's going to be a little more pricey than just the cost of Win 7 for me. I am going to stick with XP a little while more.
I recently put Win7 on my main rig so I could have a gaming machine again...moved my Linux distro to my old media server for work. Having a gaming rig again is great, but I'm surprised at how slow W7's interface is compared to gnome/beryl/compiz. The old media server (Athlon x2 5050e) with Ubuntu 9.10 is snappier than my main rig (Q9550) which was a real surprise. Not doing much other than gaming, skype and email on it though...
I recently put Win7 on my main rig so I could have a gaming machine again...moved my Linux distro to my old media server for work. Having a gaming rig again is great, but I'm surprised at how slow W7's interface is compared to gnome/beryl/compiz. The old media server (Athlon x2 5050e) with Ubuntu 9.10 is snappier than my main rig (Q9550) which was a real surprise. Not doing much other than gaming, skype and email on it though...
It's only in the same location in case you always use fullscreen windows, and even then I would argue that quick look at the address bar and clicking on the directory you want to once (twice (1st click for the list) if it doesn't fit to address bar) is faster than multiple clicks on 1 button.
Indeed.It's much slower to take my hands off the mouse and hit the backspace key to do a directory up than it is just to click with the mouse I'm already using.
Which is why I hate the grouped/pin to taskbar buttons & do like quicklaunch/pin to start menuClicking on the same location multiple times is faster than having to observe the address bar and click.
I know they try to make the Win 7 experience as similar to web browsing as possible and that's a right idea, but I still want my customisation of the UI at least. I really do hope I find a way to customise Win 7, when I have to move on to it.
Why would I want the file copying UI to look like XP? That doesn't even make sense, I'm not using XP anymore on my main rigs and whenever I do it looks like the dated crap it is.The second is Classic Explorer, a plugin for Windows Explorer that adds a toolbar with buttons for Up, Delete, and Copy/Paste, changes the file copying UI to look like XP, and a number of other changes.
Q: Do you love me
A: Yes you do
Why?
because I found this:
"Start menu replacement utility Classic Shell adds back some of the missing features in Windows 7 or Vista that used to exist in XP—like the Classic-style Start Menu.
During the installation process, you can choose to install two optional pieces—the first is the Classic Start Menu, which is a full-featured replacement that includes drag and drop, recent documents, and keyboard navigation. The second is Classic Explorer, a plugin for Windows Explorer that adds a toolbar with buttons for Up, Delete, and Copy/Paste, changes the file copying UI to look like XP, and a number of other changes. You can install one or both of these components, so if you want the start menu but don't want the explorer plugin, it won't waste resources on your system."
You have to give the system some time for superfetch, indexing etc to get everything done, and even then you'll see a clear difference between a fast and "average" HDD.
Win7 GUI is definately snappier than Vistas, which was snappier than XP's (assuming it was used on modern hardware)
You can actually turn that off.I'm too obtuse to ever accept a dynamic list of applications I probably want to run because your crappy algorithm knows better than me.
I suppose I can blame the average 1 TB Hitachi deskstar then. The Q9550 & 5870 certainly aren't slowing things down. 640k should be enough RAM, right? (j/k)