Not only will Microsoft return the Start Button to the taskbar in its forthcoming update toWindows 8, Windows 8.1, the company will also let users boot directly into the Desktop interface.
The changes may be seen in the preview version of Windows 8.1 next month at Microsoft’s BUILD conference, according to All About Microsoft. They will also include other features and UI tweaks that are designed to address the concerns of users that don’t enjoy Windows 8’s Metro designed interface.
These changes will reportedly include a way to allow users to forego the Live Tiles in today’s Start Screen for a view that only displays the currently installed applications on the machine whenever they navigate to the Start Screen.
While Microsoft will restore the Start Button in the desktop to its previous place in Windows 7, users will possibly, only see this button based on how they use the computer, according toWinSuperSite (an outlet that has been mostly accurate in the past). It believes that the Start button will only appear in the desktop if a user clicks it. If the user chooses to use the physical Windows key on their device, the software button will disappear. Users will also be able to manually turn the button on and off.
Both sites also believe the Windows 8.1 will allow users to specify the same background for the Desktop environment and Start Menu, with the thought process being that users found the current situation of choosing one for each to be too “jarring.” It’s more likely that users were more annoyed by the fact that they could only choose between a somewhat stale slate of patterns and colors for the Start Screen.
While Microsoft has already announced that it will make Windows 8.1 available free to users through the Windows Store and that users can expect a preview version of the operating system at its BUILD conference in late June, it has yet to officially detail what changes are coming in the update.
Leaks have indicated that smaller Live Tiles and support for smaller tablets may be in the cards for the final release to consumers later this year.
Microsoft could announce as soon as this week how it will implement the two most important user experiences inWindows 8.1 “Blue”: Boot to desktop and the return of the Start button. But there’s no need to wait: Mary Jo Foley cites very reliable sources who explain exactly how it’s going to happen.
First, be sure to check out Mary Jo’s post, Here's how the new Windows Blue Start Button may work. She’s right to qualify it, as things change. But let’s be clear here. This is almost certainly happening exactly as described.
Best of all, there are additional details about the UX changes coming in Windows 8.1. Here’s the rundown.
Boot to desktop
In the so-called Milestone Preview (MP) version of Windows 8.1, which I know was issued internally at Microsoft about two weeks ago and could be released to the public as a “release preview,” Microsoft has added the option to boot directly to the Windows 8.x desktop. You may recall that this was one of my key concerns in the Fixing Windows 8 series of posts. (I’ve also explained how you can add this functionality to Windows 8 with third-party utilities.)
Start button
This one is interesting: According to Mary Jo’s source, the Start button will be enabled—on the desktop only—by default. It will look just like the Start charm in Windows 8, and be positioned in the same place as it was in Windows 7, but will of course trigger the new Start screen when clicked, and not the legacy Start menu. When you mouse into the lower left corner of the screen in any “Metro” experience, you’ll see the new Start button instead of the Windows 8 Start tip.
But here’s the trick: If you do click this button, it will remain displayed on the desktop going forward. If you don’t, and instead use a hardware Windows key, the Start button will disappear and things will work as they do in Windows 8. You can of course manually enable and disable this button as you prefer.
Start screen
According to Mary Jo, users will also be able to replace the stock Start screen with the All Apps view, where you see tile-like icons for every installed application, but no live updating functionality. But there are changes: “Users will be able to arrange the icons by usage, allowing the most commonly used apps to be first,” she writes. “This view is the closest users will get to the Windows 7 Start Menu, even though it will be full-screen, instead of a list.”
Common backgrounds
Addressing another common complaint, Windows 8.1 will also apparently offer the ability to set the desktop wallpaper as the Start screen background too, making the transition between the two environments less jarring. This is an important change, I think, and I’m surprised it wasn’t part of the original release of Windows 8, where you can only change between a bizarre set of supplied background choices.
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