Steven W, 2014-02-19 04:26 »
A great example is multiple desktops. This has been something that power users have been asking for for over a decade now. OSX has it, Linux has it, even OS/2 Warp has it. But Windows doesn't. The reason for this is because every time we try and add it to the desktop, we run user tests; and every time we find that the casual users - a much larger part of our demographic than Apple's or Linux's - get confused by it. So the proposal gets cut and power users suffer.
I remember showing a friend, that I'd hardly call a power-user, KDE. One of the first questions out of his mouth was, "What are those four little screens in the taskbar?". I demonstrated for him. I remember his astonishment and declaration that he'd use that all the time, going on and on about how he downloaded all this third-party stuff, like Taskbar Shuffle, etc. to help keep things organized in Windows.
This also demonstrates that Microsoft is only concerned with the lowest common denominator, I spoke in another post here about the consequences of being a publicly traded company. Another case in point.
[quote]A great example is multiple desktops. This has been something that power users have been asking for for over a decade now. OSX has it, Linux has it, even OS/2 Warp has it. But Windows doesn't. The reason for this is because every time we try and add it to the desktop, we run user tests; and every time we find that the casual users - a much larger part of our demographic than Apple's or Linux's - get confused by it. So the proposal gets cut and power users suffer. [/quote]
I remember showing a friend, that I'd hardly call a power-user, KDE. One of the first questions out of his mouth was, "What are those four little screens in the taskbar?". I demonstrated for him. I remember his astonishment and declaration that he'd use that all the time, going on and on about how he downloaded all this third-party stuff, like Taskbar Shuffle, etc. to help keep things organized in Windows.
This also demonstrates that Microsoft is only concerned with the lowest common denominator, I spoke in another post here about the consequences of being a publicly traded company. Another case in point.