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Opinion

Can’t we just let the desktop die?

Philipp Rüegg
23/6/2021
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

Windows 11 wants to bring back widgets. Great! Maybe this will finally make the desktop useful again. A desirable return to form, as since its inception, it has increasingly degenerated into a glorified dumping ground.

I remember the first time I saw Windows 95 at a friend’s house. Out of sheer excitement, I threw together something akin to a desktop on my Windows 3.11. The result was completely unusable, but I felt quite satisfied with myself. Today, almost 30 years later, the desktop is supposedly the central element in Windows or even macOS. Yet it’s hardly more useful than my Windows 3.11 mutation.

Bye-bye desktop, hello start menu

Windows 7 couldn’t assign any relevant meaning to the desktop either. It existed to provide a pretty background image, remaining visible only while my machine was booting up.

With Windows 8, the desktop even disappeared completely for a short time – at least, that’s how Microsoft envisioned it. But users who had installed this version on their PCs, like me, quickly found a workaround. This way, Windows booted directly to the desktop with the traditional Start menu again. Thus, nothing much changed surrounding our old, neglected app shortcut dump.

Windows’s appendix

But now, with Windows 11 just around the corner, first leaks indicate that Microsoft will bring back widgets. It isn’t yet clear whether they’ll be part of the taskbar like the new weather and news menus, or whether they’ll be located on the desktop like in Windows Vista. But even with this, I have little hope that the desktop will ever become more than a cubbyhole for forgotten shortcuts and unread PDFs. Maybe it’s just destiny.

Can the desktop be saved? Or are you one of those users who find it useful even now? Let me know by commenting below.

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As a child, I wasn't allowed to have any consoles. It was only with the arrival of the family's 486 PC that the magical world of gaming opened up to me. Today, I'm overcompensating accordingly. Only a lack of time and money prevents me from trying out every game there is and decorating my shelf with rare retro consoles. 


Opinion

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