It is very important to point out that while the Start
Button has returned to the place where it has live on the desktop since 1995 it
does not function the same way in terms of opening a Start Menu. The Start Menu essentially is still
dead.
The “new” Start Button allows users to click what they have been
used to clicking for decades in order to access their apps but instead of opening
the Start Menu it simply takes you back to the Start Screen. The same thing could be accomplished by
pressing the Windows button on the keyboard or by tapping or clicking the Start
icon on the charms menu. Again, it just allows users to have the familiar icon
to click on.
The real value to this new button however is the right
click. Right clicking on the Start
Button brings up an improved system menu.
You could access this same menu in Windows 8 by pressing Windows-X. The new system menu includes the option Shut
Down or Sign Out, which expands into the familiar Sign Out, Sleep, Shut Down,
and Restart options. This is an improvement
because now with the mouse, I can log out or I can reboot like I used to by
clicking on the Start Button without having to get the charms menu up or go
back to the Start Screen or lock screen.
I think this will make it easier for desktop users to make the switch to
Windows 8 as a familiar routine has returned.
The real treachery though is that the use of the Start
Button is not consistent throughout the Windows 8.1 experience. It only appears when running the desktop or running
desktop apps. It does not appear on the
Start Screen or when running any of the Start Screen apps. In that experience, you have to use the
Windows key or the charms menu. That
means the user has to be more aware of what mode they are using the hardware in
– for some users that isn’t a big deal but for others it may be very
confusing. Think about your grandma.
A unified operating system experience should be unified, not
just between devices but also between operating modes for the same device.
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