Windows 10: What you'll need to relearn - Part 3



Install applications and you'll discover other issues. In the past, if programs added ten items to the Start Menu, say, it wouldn't matter as they were neatly hidden in a Start menu folder. Now, though, many are automatically pinned to the Start Screen as separate tiles, so you're likely to spend rather more time manually removing any you don't need (right-click, select Unpin).

And even figuring out how to close Modern UI programs can pose a challenge. There's no "x" top-right, no "File > Exit" option, no visual clues as to how this might be done − although the answer turns out to be reasonably simple.

To shut down apps with your mouse, first move your mouse cursor to the top of the screen until it changes to a hand icon, then click, hold, and drag it to the bottom of the screen. With Windows 10 you can release the left mouse button right away, but with 10 you have to wait until the app flips over. None of this is exactly obvious, of course, so the best approach might just be to press Alt+F4, which always closes the active program, whether you're on the desktop or the Start Screen.


This, and many of the other Windows 10 problems we've raised, are mostly just a matter of familiarity. They may be confusing at first, and perhaps take an extra click or two, but once you've learned the basics then life will mostly return to normal.

But other concerns still remain, in particular with the Start Screen, which just doesn't feel like it belongs on a desktop. If someone has a 27-inch monitor, will they be happy that they're restricted to displaying a maximum of three apps at the same time? Are they really going to look at the messy Apps View (which ditches the Start Menu's customisable folders and fills the screen with icons you don't really need), and think, "this is a step forward"?

It's important to keep this in perspective, of course. Whatever its interface issues, Windows 10 delivers a stack of worthwhile improvements to performance, security and reliability, more than enough to justify an upgrade. And bringing back the Start Menu with a tool like Classic Shell might simplify the migration process. Be ready for some frustrations, though: there are many significant changes, and it'll probably take quite some time before you have the system configured to suit your needs.

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