Originally posted by k1e0x
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I will presume you didn't read my second post, which was two posts after the one you quoted, and explained some of my quick testing in latest-public-build-Windows 10 and latest-public-build-Cinnamon/Nemo. I loathe trackpads in general - the IBM TrackPoint was/is infinitely superior for actual usage as an input/control device. Sadly I've only ever owned one laptop with one. I find using trackpads a terrible experience, so I try to avoid it if possible.
If I want to do complex file manipulation in Windows Explorer, I will use the keyboard. Shift and up/down, or Ctrl and up/down (hitting space when file highlighted to select), then Delete, Ctrl+C/V/X or the function button normally to the right of Alt Gr for access to the right-click context menu if needed.
Blame nVidia/ATi/Intel for the "right click to adjust graphics settings" abomination. I don't even think there should be a "Share with..." option in that optimal menu.
Originally posted by birdie
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Originally posted by k1e0x
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Anyway.
I think the positioning of Taskbars, given the aspect ratio of modern screens is poor. Horizontal real estate is plentiful, vertical is not. The 95/98/2000/XP/Vista Taskbar was narrower than the 7/8/10 one, so did not have as much of an impact (also screens were 4:3 or 5:4, not 16:9) but if it wasn't for the fact I struggled to retrain myself with a Taskbar on the left edge I would think that is a better idea. Still not perfect, though.
Classic Taskbars, like 95/98/2000/XP/Vista gave a single location (albeit a little spread out) which instantly allowed you access to: a) a menu allowing you access to anything in the system, b) critical shortcuts, c) user-run programs and d) a clock and system notification area. Modern Taskbars, where lots of icons can be visible regardless of whether the program is running, with a (fairly minor) UI tweak to indicate it is running feels like a design regression to me - especially since the Taskbar got taller to fit those icons better.
I've been experimenting recently with an (almost permanently hidden) Taskbar in Cinnamon, with a plank dock at the top for my most used non-terminal applications and Conky telling me the info I have classically demanded (Time, Date, CPU/RAM/Process/Disk/Network info...) it is working well enough that I could get used to it longer term. It's harder to do in Windows due to lack of a good equivalent to Conky (yes, I know, Rainmeter, but to get any significant system information out of it requires different system monitoring tools running in the background too, and custom scripts are more work for even a minimalist sysinfo panel) and the fact that even now doing anything in the terminal in Windows is more troublesome than it needs to be.
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