Windows Sets/Tabs
-
Just cant imagine why I was would need... 3 photoshop tabs? When there are tabs in the app. Am I reading this right?
I get the windows folder tabs I guess. But there are saying now I will have, by default, tabs in every app.
-
@bigbear said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
er tabs I guess. But there are saying now I will have, by default, tabs in every app.
That's what it looks like.
-
It a logical step in UI design. Instead of having multiple Powerpoint windows you'll just has one with multiple tabs for each presentation you have open. I'm curious about the comment about tying things from different applications together. It wasn't clear where that was going or what it was about.
-
@kelly said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
It a logical step in UI design. Instead of having multiple Powerpoint windows you'll just has one with multiple tabs for each presentation you have open. I'm curious about the comment about tying things from different applications together. It wasn't clear where that was going or what it was about.
Yeah, if you can have "tabs" of different applications in the same window, this is amazing. If it's just tabs in Explorer, then that's nice but not ground breaking or anything.
-
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
-
@stacksofplates said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
Depends on what you use to browse files on Windows and Linux. Linux file browsers aren't really part of the OS like explorer.exe or the built-in file browser.
The file browsers in Linux are all separate projects, just like how Clover3 and Explorer++ allows you to have multi-tabbed file explorers.
So I guess you could say that we (we being Windows) have also had that for how long now, too.
P.S. I like Linux more than Windows, so I'm just saying...
-
@tim_g said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@stacksofplates said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
Depends on what you use to browse files on Windows and Linux. Linux file browsers aren't really part of the OS like explorer.exe or the built-in file browser.
The file browsers in Linux are all separate projects, just like how Clover3 and Explorer++ allows you to have multi-tabbed file explorers.
So I guess you could say that we (we being Windows) have also had that for how long now, too.
P.S. I like Linux more than Windows, so I'm just saying...
In the same vein, Linux isn't an OS. So at the kernel level, neither Linux or NTKernel have that now. Both have OSes built on top of them with file browsers. So the Linux eco-system OSes have had this for eons, WIndows just got it. Using Linux is bad here, but using Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu or whatever makes more sense.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@tim_g said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@stacksofplates said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
Depends on what you use to browse files on Windows and Linux. Linux file browsers aren't really part of the OS like explorer.exe or the built-in file browser.
The file browsers in Linux are all separate projects, just like how Clover3 and Explorer++ allows you to have multi-tabbed file explorers.
So I guess you could say that we (we being Windows) have also had that for how long now, too.
P.S. I like Linux more than Windows, so I'm just saying...
In the same vein, Linux isn't an OS. So at the kernel level, neither Linux or NTKernel have that now. Both have OSes built on top of them with file browsers. So the Linux eco-system OSes have had this for eons, WIndows just got it. Using Linux is bad here, but using Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu or whatever makes more sense.
Yeah, that's a good point...
But you know what I meant. No need to nitpick here. In that context, I was referring to Linux as distributions of Linux, not the kernel.
So in that respect, the "Windows eco-system" has had it for a long time too...
-
@tim_g said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@scottalanmiller said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@tim_g said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@stacksofplates said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
Depends on what you use to browse files on Windows and Linux. Linux file browsers aren't really part of the OS like explorer.exe or the built-in file browser.
The file browsers in Linux are all separate projects, just like how Clover3 and Explorer++ allows you to have multi-tabbed file explorers.
So I guess you could say that we (we being Windows) have also had that for how long now, too.
P.S. I like Linux more than Windows, so I'm just saying...
In the same vein, Linux isn't an OS. So at the kernel level, neither Linux or NTKernel have that now. Both have OSes built on top of them with file browsers. So the Linux eco-system OSes have had this for eons, WIndows just got it. Using Linux is bad here, but using Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu or whatever makes more sense.
Yeah, that's a good point...
But you know what I meant. No need to nitpick here. In that context, I was referring to Linux as distributions of Linux, not the kernel.
So in that respect, the "Windows eco-system" has had it for a long time too...
But the Linux distros have had it, haven't they? Unlike Windows which has needed it added from the outside. The main Linux distros had it as part of the core OS.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@tim_g said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
@stacksofplates said in Windows Sets/Tabs:
We've had that (we being Linux) for how long now?
Depends on what you use to browse files on Windows and Linux. Linux file browsers aren't really part of the OS like explorer.exe or the built-in file browser.
The file browsers in Linux are all separate projects, just like how Clover3 and Explorer++ allows you to have multi-tabbed file explorers.
So I guess you could say that we (we being Windows) have also had that for how long now, too.
P.S. I like Linux more than Windows, so I'm just saying...
In the same vein, Linux isn't an OS. So at the kernel level, neither Linux or NTKernel have that now. Both have OSes built on top of them with file browsers. So the Linux eco-system OSes have had this for eons, WIndows just got it. Using Linux is bad here, but using Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu or whatever makes more sense.
Ya it was just easier to say Linux to reference all of the distros.