▲ | mjrpes 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Is this always the case? I prefer what Windows 11 has done with settings being a simple two panel window with categories on left and scrollable settings on the right, with a search/filter bar at top. As you drill deeper you have a breadcrumb at top allowing you to see the levels you are in and click to go back up. This also allows space for descriptions of what each setting does. It could even be improved by allowing users to pin commonly used settings. This seems overall more simple and cohesive compared to the old Windows control panel with icons and nested settings being popups within popups within popups. It also allows easier scaling and viewing depending on DPI, screen size, resolution, etc. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | naasking 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Windows 11 settings are worse than they were prior to Windows 10. Before I could have multiple windows open for settings to monitor progress (like of windows updates) or check settings against each other. Now it's a monolithic interface that forces me to back out of something I'm looking at to look at something else, like a website that doesn't let me open multiple tabs to browse it. Terrible UX IMO. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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