Microsoft says that adding the ability to move the taskbar in Windows is very complicated and would require too much effort from its engineers.

So, I just read that Microsoft is still struggling to figure out how to let us move the Windows 11 taskbar to the top or sides of the screen. You know, that "groundbreaking" feature we've had since... 1995?

Apparently, Microsoft "rebuilt the taskbar from scratch," and in the process, they forgot to implement the technology required to rotate a rectangle.

It's "too much work" and "technically complex."

I know it's not directly related to gaming, but... we're talking about the world's largest publisher and the leading gaming operating system, and those who have committed to improving Windows for gaming.

Source
 
Dude Wtf GIF
 
I do wonder if things like that are similar to a mouse cursor. Even when my PC goes all wonky the mouse keeps on mousing. Like it's an extreme foundational always running thing.
 
The article says they used a data driven approach to prioritize features, and that wasn't used enough to make the list.

The rest is a product owner BS'ing who isn't an engineer.

It's shitty but honestly what's up with the "quotes" in the OP that aren't actual quotes of what anyone said? Just quote the damn article.
 
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The article says they used a data driven approach to prioritize features, and that wasn't used enough to make the list.

The rest is a product owner BS'ing who isn't an engineer.

It's shitty but honestly what's up with the "quotes" in the OP that aren't actual quotes of what anyone said? Just quote the damn article.
I quoted from memory because I did it from my phone and it's a pain, but nothing I say is a lie. Anyone who wants to read the article can find the source in the link.
 
Windows shell + explorer is such as mess (a backward compatible mess)

everything is connected it seems. Windows File Explorer is a part of the shell and integrated with core functions such as extensions for antivirus , cloud drives, network servers etc.

Very much not modern, more component style, design - but it makes it easier to understand why stuff never changes. Everything Is connected and would need a complete rewire of core stuff. And this will not happen since Enterprises use Windows and they very much prefer stuff to just work as before

Basically Windows needs to be split between Home and Enterprise with two compteley different branches before stuff will change at a somewhat fast level. And Ms never fully committed to this path - they resuse 99% between Enterprise and private usage
 
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When you have a monopoly on the global OS paradigm.

There's a reason they were giving this thing away for free early on, forcing upgrades if you didn't watch it like a hawk on 10, etc..

I REALLY wish devs would enable anti-cheat on Linux, because fuck me im tired of running windows just to play some of my favorite online games. I'm willing to put up with cheaters just to ditch the IndianOS.
 
The article says they used a data driven approach to prioritize features, and that wasn't used enough to make the list.

The rest is a product owner BS'ing who isn't an engineer.

It's shitty but honestly what's up with the "quotes" in the OP that aren't actual quotes of what anyone said? Just quote the damn article.
Yeah, when I read that I immediately thought that it was probably a rarely used feature so they decided not to support it in Windows 11, not that it's "too hard".

Every feature comes with a cost no matter how "easy" it is. It means another requirement that needs to be tested, validated, maintained, regression tested, etc. and the opportunity cost along with that.

If your building a new product, and there's some feature that 99.5% of current users don't use and the other 0.5% think it's "nice to have" but not important… yeah, that is going to be really far down on the priority list and probably never make it in.
 
As a developer myself, I get it......but it's still dumb. They poorly coded it at the start with no intention of ever changing and now it's a pain in the butt to change. They probably just want to start over with whatever the next version is and not waste time with it.
 
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So, I just read that Microsoft is still struggling to figure out how to let us move the Windows 11 taskbar to the top or sides of the screen. You know, that "groundbreaking" feature we've had since... 1995?

Apparently, Microsoft "rebuilt the taskbar from scratch," and in the process, they forgot to implement the technology required to rotate a rectangle.

It's "too much work" and "technically complex."

I know it's not directly related to gaming, but... we're talking about the world's largest publisher and the leading gaming operating system, and those who have committed to improving Windows for gaming.

Source

Sounds like complete bullshit. The guy that made StartAllBack had to rewrite his own "classic task bar" from scratch after MS removed legacy code in 2024. StartAllBack has always been able to move the taskbar to the top and the sides.

 
I want to bring some hate to Windows 10 on this too, because though Windows 11 has managed to cast Windows 10 in better light, it's still far from a good OS.

In Windows 10 you can move the task bar anywhere you want, but the pain comes in if you also want to auto hide it. So that you believe it should stay hidden unless you hit the Windows key or push your mouse cursor to the side of the screen the task bar resides.

But no. Whenever an app pushes a notification, you get the handy bubble pop up giving you a digest of what is notifying, such as a Discord message, and the task bar then unhides itself to flash the icon of the notifying app. The task bar will now stay on screen until you click on the app or press the Windows key. There are no settings to change this behavior. There are tons of posts going back 7+ years asking Microsoft to provide a solution, all fobbed off and shut down. Instead they went ahead and built the, from scratch, abortion of the Window 11 task bar, and INCLUDED the same issue in it.

God, I wish I could switch to Linux as a main OS.
 
I know it's not directly related to gaming, but... we're talking about the world's largest publisher and the leading gaming operating system, and those who have committed to improving Windows for gaming.

Source
You understand Microsoft has like 50 levels to determine your job position in the hierarchy and some people do not move more than 2-3 levels over their whole career at Microsoft (10-15-20 years)?
 
Outsourcing plus Copilot make an amazing team! Somehow small companies like Stardock can figure out yet a $4Trillion MegaCorp…

Here is a picture of Microsoft Product Manager preparing for work.

gravewalker-nuncamorto.gif
 
Maybe if you had hired americans to build it instead of H1Bs from a country that has never invented a fucking thing then you would have figured out something so simple.
 
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