Seemingly unable to improve the inner workings of their software products, Microsoft has taken to screwing around with user interfaces in order to market the same old code as a “product upgrade.” Although the first interface change – Windows 95 – really was a product upgrade that radically improved operating system function and performance, the subsequent interface changes since 2007 have been nothing more than cosmetic: the application of “new paint on an old whore!”
The first major interface change in their downhill slide was the “ribbon” interface, making it’s appearance in the Microsoft Office 2007 product line. Previous Office versions utilized the familiar drop-down menu bar, which allowed almost any function to be executed in two or three mouse-clicks.
In addition to effectively re-booting the user learning curve, the ribbon interface ate up display real-estate by using an ever-changing graphical “ribbon” which failed to make access to all functions readily available. Under this interface it requires many more mouse-clicks to accomplish the same work that was much easier under the old interface…if they can be accomplished at all now.
Did Microsoft bother to submit their interface design ideas to any experienced user over thirty? How about their bread-and-butter corporate users? Those folks buy licenses by the millions, and are keenly aware of the cost of change. Go into almost any established corporate office and you will probably find that the rank-and-file workers are still using the WindowsXP operating system and Office 2003.
Much like the so-called “master-planned community” where the
developer limits homeowner options to the developer’s idea of appearance, taste, lifestyle and means of recreation, the pimple-faced geek developers at Microsoft are now attempting to “master-plan” the way users are to access computer applications. They don’t even have the decency of giving users the option to select between the ribbon or the ”classic” drop-down menu interface.
Of course Windows 95 through 7 afforded the user the choice
to stick with Office 97 through 2003, or use the free OpenOffice software option: all with the older, familiar interface. For the average user, the older versions of Microsoft Office does everything they need, often much better than either Office 2007 or 2010!
Now all of that may very well change. Now Microsoft wants to give the personal computer interface the look, feel and functionality of a cell phone! Instead of the usual “Start” menu and familiar desktop icons, Windows 8 will “master-plan” the operating system, providing large, ugly tiles as the graphical user interface. Moreover, it has been rumored in the technical press that this new operating system will not be “backwards compatible,” and that many of the older software applications, such as Office 2003 and earlier, will not be able to run under Windows 8.
What’s with all the screwing around with user interfaces? Is Microsoft really being managed by idiots, or is there a corporate death wish? I don’t know about you, but if this is the wave of the future for Microsoft, the Apple Mac is looking better every day. At least when Apple finds a good thing, they seem to stick with the concept, with each update being an actual improvement while maintaining the old familiar user interface.



