Read more.And the new Chrome-OS rival won't provide any option for upgrading to Windows 10.
Read more.And the new Chrome-OS rival won't provide any option for upgrading to Windows 10.
The only place live tiles made sense was in mobile/touch devices. As soon as windows phone 8 died so should live tiles.
Live tiles are not a problem, just right click and select "turn live tile off". How difficult is that?
The weather app makes good use of a live tile.
Not a fan but don't dislike them either
Old puter - still good enuff till I save some pennies!
I don't know about you, but none of my desktop shortcuts show updated information from the application they launch. Am I just doing it wrong?!
I've got nothing against live tiles in and of themselves, and some of them are quite useful (like the Email and Calendar ones on my Win Mo work phone), but then you've got things like contacts that just scrolls variations on a head silhouette around because I'm on a work phone and no-one has a contact picture. As with so many things, they were a niche benefit that everyone jumped on and ruined.
On the laptop/desktop, I never look at them ... all they do is take up space and occasionally run a distracting animation. They'd be better replaced with desktop gadgets (IMNSHO, of course ).
I'd probably highlight the part where I said they aren't that dissimilar. I mean they are slightly different in size by default to a desktop shortcut, they display information by default unlike a desktop shortcut and they are actioned with a single click. But you click them and then run stuff and they display an image/icon, I don't understand why people say they belong in a tablet/phone environment.
I use the email, calendar and weather ones on my desktop/tablet/phone. All the others I've turned off because I don't need the information from them. I suppose they could remove the animation for the tile, then it'd be less distracting for you, but I'd find widgets and live tiles equally distracting personally, which luckily is not distracting at all. I understand that not everything needs a live tile - groove music, photos, MS store etc, but for those they can just be turned off. Maybe off by default should be the way they go.
I don't dislike them either .... providing I can turn them off. If, as stated earlier, they can be (quickly and easily) turned off, then I don't see a problem. Those that like them can use them and those that don't .... don't. No problem.
Then again, as I don't use W10, what do I know? Or care?
OK, we're working towards "aren't that dissimilar"...
So by your own reckoning that's 3 differences and 2 similarities? That's 60% different. I'd say that's pretty dissimilar.
It's mostly situational. On a phone/tablet where you have a tiled homepage they're right there when you go back to your home screen. OTOH how often do you open the start menu on desktop? I have almost everything I do regularly on a desktop shortcut or pinned to my taskbar. I hit the start menu maybe twice a day. That's why I'd go more for desktop widgets, or even the old Vista sidebar. I look at my desktop way more often than I open the start menu...
When I go to the start menu it's because I'm looking for something I don't often use. The last thing I want is to be distracted by numerous smart tiles trying to give me "useful" information (surely that's what the notification bar is for?). I just think there's better ways to present the information the live tiles are normally used to convey, without intruding into parts of the UI where they're more often than not distracting.
Never in the start menu long enough to notice any live tiles, just hit the windows key type what I need and hit enter
I have no great issue with live tiles. What I don't like is the lack control and organisation around the rest of it. I want a full screen start, with organisable and expandable menus.
Saracen999 (30-01-2019)
I see what you're saying, however I'd throw in they're both quadrilateral, they can both change size, now it's 4:3 in my favour /jk In all seriousness though, the few pixels difference in height/width is a non issue. Anyone that has tiny desktop shortcuts would be better served with the small live tile, people who have massive shortcuts would be better served with the large tile. Actioned with a single vs double click is a bigger difference I'll give you that, luckily for me I don't accidently randomly click places by mistake so this isn't a problem for me, IIRC desktop shortcuts have the option to be either 1 or 2 clicks to action, they should have left the choice in IMO. As for the info, they can be turned off (woo go choice!), making them like a shortcut.
I think this is more down to use patterns, when I open my start menu i always briefly glance at the email tile, but that's it tbh.
Live tiles were just UI clutter.
Feels like it's all been a big firkin experiment. Windows 10 showing signs of getting sensible as the end of Windows 7 approaches?
Who knew?
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