He complained about the design of Microsoft Edge and posted a mockup of what it would look like with an acrylic Title bar and round corners. The discussion fired up as more users contributed with other arguments about the same issue.

What is the Microsoft Fluent Design hurdles?

We all hold our breath when we see new design additions or design promises that sometimes never come to fruition, but things are not that simple as they seem. An allegedly Microsoft employee that describes himself as a person with insight at Microsoft replied with a very long post describing the inherited problems with Windows design: The technical issues, unfortunately, don’t stop there but continued with Accommodating Island wood iOS app ports and Centennial legacy Win32 apps: Then came 10. And oh boy are we still dealing with this issue. 10 had some further changes done with WDDM under the hood and some more stuff removed and replaced. But came the dev bridges for apps and figuring out how to hodge podge Win8 apps that were full screen intended to be multi-windowed but still accommodate the Charms calls in a new UI form.

What’s the situation with Fluent design right now?

CokeRobot user, who is potentially a Microsoft graphics team member, continues in his Reddit post to describe the Fluent Design which seems to be a complete overhaul: The user ends his post by saying that they are working on this constantly on our glacial pace. WDDM is a very low level process and tapping into that to stay within bounds of modern UI programming is a challenge. This is why seemingly trivial things like the Settings app take builds to see changes because it’s a weird mix between modern programming but also taps down into low level system calls. Henceforth, it requires an OS feature upgrade to change. Fluent is also a fully different design language no one has done so it’s also challenging in of itself. We’re trying to design a UI across touch, mouse, and holograms, AND mobile devices from Google and Apple. Getting things to look right and be understood by the average end user takes soooooooo much God damn time. Seeing some mock up concepts that get posted here, they’re nice to see but put that in front of an office worker and see how well it works. Sometimes it will sometimes it won’t. Of course, we are very eager to get all new and shiny things tomorrow, but all these are done by humans, office workers, people like us. What are your thoughts about this? Let us know in the Comments section below. The article Windows 10’s Fluent design is a complete overhaul appeared first on WindowsReport.com.

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