But Microsoft never got the memo.
Except that's not what Windows does. Just about every app has a different place where you can find the menu (if there is one). Looking at a couple Microsoft apps on Windows 11:
- File Explorer: menu in an ellipsis in the toolbar; toolbar is left aligned so the ellipsis menu is in the middle of the window for a reasonably wide window.
- Edge: menu in an ellipsis to the right of the address bar.
- Windows Terminal: menu in a tiny down-facing caret next to the new tab button.
- regedit: Old-style menu under the title bar.
- Office: you know the ribbons.
I miss notifications on my work computer all the time because the flash color just doesn't stand out very much with my dark theme, and I can't even expand the width because...well it feels like they released an unfinished and unpolished product, again.
I hate that there's trade-offs that shouldn't need to exist with every new version.
Meanwhile my mac I don't think has ever lost functionality or customizability in the last..8ish years I've been using it as my daily driver.
edit: caveat...this is a work computer and obviously has group policies/etc that might affect things. I will correct this post if I'm wrong :)
(I’m not really the target market for any of these things, to be clear, gimme the screen space back and don’t make me touch the mouse).
Not only that but Fitt's law is dying as mice become less and less used as a means to interact with a device. Touchpads and touchscreens have usurped them.
And I do not get what a global menu bar has to do with window switching and monitor switching. Tiling WM fans all know that focus-follows-mouse is saner than alt-tabbing like a maniac, and this doesn't invalidate the role of a global menu-bar.
To make matters worse, I have progressive lenses and the "sweet spot" for the text to be in focus within my field of view is relatively narrow. So not only would I have to move my mouse quite a bit if I had a global menu, I have to move my head quite a bit as well.
I think Fitt's Law is something like Moore's Law: both couldn't be counted on to go on indefinitely.
Fortunately for me, I use KDE and could switch between the two if I wanted.
There are extensions to add one to GNOME and XFCE, and KDE has it as a built in option, which is great. Problem is, this feature relies on programs advertising their menus via dbus, and a lot of them don’t bother at all, meaning that it’s sitting up there blank half the time. The only reason that this is even possible is because the desktop paradigm moved menus into the space of the app UI, which I think is a mistake. Menus are such an important accessibility feature that even if they’re glued to windows, it should be a standardized system owned widget so overzealous IKEA-minded designers can’t screw with them.
This is very frustrating to me because with hamburger menus and window attached menus I feel like I’m chasing a frequently used widget around the screen.