> So yes, it will be fixed, and the fix is easy. They just have to accept the fact that the "liquid" part
They tried it in betas. De-emphasizing "liquid glass" just turns everything into a dirty blur.
The difference from Aero is that Microsoft was smart and never applied the effects to contents of things: it was always in windows chrome, and never in the controls or toolbars.
Liquid Glass boasts glass/transparency/translucency/distortions basically everywhere. As betas show, they didn't test it even with the most basic real-world scenarios, and they cannot easily fix it without turning it off or making it quite ugly.