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2 weeks ago |
uxmatters.com | Anamol Rajbhandari |Pabini Gabriel-Petit
Microsoft believed a touch-first, mobile-inspired user interface (UI) was the future…. When Microsoft launched Windows 8 in 2012, I installed it on my computer and used it for a while, then spent the next three days trying to revert back to Windows 7. Windows 8 boldly did the unthinkable: it removed the Start button from the Windows desktop after it had been a fixture for nearly two decades. The Start menu and button had been mainstays since Windows 95 in the ’90s.
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