Forum Discussion
How to enable 'Never Combine taskbar buttons'. Windows 11 ?
This weekend I rolled-back to Windows 10 in order to resolve multiple Windows 11 productivity issues. The missing "Never combine taskbar windows" option impacted my workflow dramatically. There are multiple other Windows 11 changes that make my day longer but this is the only one I can't get past eventually without installing 3rd party solution (not an option for me). Dell's Support Assistant software made the move back to Windows 10 relatively straightforward, though definitely not easy. The overall rollback effort was very large (copying files, reinstalling and reconfiguring applications, fixing a driver issue).
This Dell is about 5 years old. I missed the opportunity to buy a new computer before the Microsoft mandate that all new computers must ship with Windows 11 from January forward. I will either need to live with the performance issues or buy a new Windows 11 Dell and reimage it with Windows 10, after confirming there are also Windows 10 drivers for everything, and then deal with driver update issues until I can move to Windows 11.
My comments after 30+ hours spent dealing with this:
- Did Microsoft really believe that users don't rely on features that have been in Windows for over 30 years?
- Who wanted this change? What customer asked Microsoft to remove this option?
- I don't blame the engineers who built this. They did not hire themselves and they don't make product decisions. Likewise, design teams only propose design changes; they don't make these decisions. A decision like this was reviewed by a Program Manager (or Product Manager) and approved by the business, and the decision is consistent with Microsoft's long term plans.
- This whole experience tells me that Microsoft is now an 'echo chamber', where the business only hears what they want to hear. Long term I can't rely on Windows to support my business needs, or even my personal computer means.
- I hope Windows 11 goes the way of Windows ME, a similar failure from many years ago. Beyond that, I hope Windows 12 is much better.
>> Beyond that, I hope Windows 12 is much better.
Forget it! š
There are screenshots around of Windows 12 that clearly show: They didn“t get it. It seems to be the next step in a greater move to make Windows more of a tablet OS.
I fully agree with you perspective on corporate decision processes Someone had the clever idea to give Windows a desktop & tablet UI again (didn“t learn from Win 8, obviously) and now they are feeding us this in small bits. The tanker is on it“s way and I doubt it will turn within the next years So we will have to work with this **** or move away from Windows, I“m afraid
Also agree with the tricyle picture. I didn“t invest in 4K screens, good mouse and keyboard to be limited to the usability of a smartphone. It“s so crazy: Years ago we used to be limited in hardware, which was expensive and less powerful. And now devices of all sizes are available and we are more and more limited by the lack of software - which is cheap to distribute and already written!
Btw: Privately I now use a touchscreen notebook with KDE for desktop scenarios and Gnome for mobile and touchscreen use. Different tools for different tasks!
Imagine that, Microsoft!
- FunkhauserApr 22, 2023Brass Contributor
windows have engaged on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/omersayli/status/1630659602848133120?s=46&t=3LVxCl6jMK9xcI8WszQm5g
- psykiApr 22, 2023Copper Contributor
its coming back
https://www.windowscentral.com/software-apps/windows-11/a-highly-requested-classic-taskbar-feature-is-coming-to-windows-11-soon-heres-a-first-look
- ChristianG_Apr 24, 2023Brass ContributorFinally! Please bring back the Quick Launch Bar next. It's incredibly handy to have a possibility to Pin frequently asked application to a dedicated place, especially an huge screens where there is absolutely no reason to mess up your taskbar with this. One click opens App X... Wheter 0 or 10 instances are already open. So simple, so good.