Space_Chief
Honorary Master
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2012
- Messages
- 12,949
- Reaction score
- 4
Windows 7
Click start button
Click all programs
Scroll to the program group you want
Click on said program group
Click on program to open it
Windows 8
Hit Windows key
Type in first letter of the program you are looking for
(optional) type in second letter of the program you are looking for
Click on program to open it.
There you go, despite you PMS induced ramblings I still managed to show you that it is easier. If you would like to, I can draw a pretty picture in MS paint (that I can open in 3 key strokes) to show you how I did it.
If MS wanted you to keep on using the start button they would have included it but how dare they tell you what is easier. The bastards. I guess it is true that there are none as blind as those who don't want to see.
You haven't shown anything. The first method is easier for me, while the second may be easier for you. Secondly muscle memory dictates that first method is always attempted whether I like it or not, I'm human after all.
"If MS wanted you to keep on using the start button they would have included it but how dare they tell you what is easier."
That's right, Crowley. How dare I not know what's easier for me. After all I am the only person who inhabits my body. But since MS knows better what's easier for them then what I find easier for me, I must be irrational. Gosh MS must be plugged into my mind or something. And MS would admit to making mistakes, right?
And FYI why should I care what MS wants? Who is MS anyway? They designed Windows for who exactly? Who's the customer here?
You need to learn the difference between
1. What's easier for you and for others.
2. What's easier for MS.
3. What "easier" means. It need not mean fewer steps. When the steps are done automatically, new ways of doing things are not easier at all, especially when you have to use a keyboard too and you've been using the Star Menu from 1994 .
4. MS does not have monopoly over behaviour, tastes etc.
5. MS does not have a unique view inside my head to know what I will find easier.
6. Is MS really after ease of use or just forcing customers to adapt to a new way of doing things to limit on support issues by eliminating extra ways of doing things? Is this cost cutting?