Microsoft has published a very detailed blog post about the new
Explorer in Windows 8. It brings the ribbon interface well known from
the latest MS Office packages. Many of you may not like it, but wait
until you hear all about it.
The Explorer in Windows 8 brings at front a lot more functions thanks
to those ribbons, there are a lot more customizable settings and even
some old goodies back from XP are brought once again to life.
According to Microsoft, the new Explorer has three major goals: to
optimize the management tasks, to create a streamlined command
experience and respect the Explorer’s heritage. Well, all these sound
like a big advertising talk, but it’s not. Those three goals have been
taken very seriously to create a better Explorer.
So, the ribbon UI. Many people still disapprove the MS Office ribbons
and use older version just to avoid it. I have to admit the ribbon UI
is awkward in the beginning, but then you get used to it and starts
feeling natural. The new Explorer utilizes exactly the same UI.
The ribbon UI has four tabs that should concern you the most – File,
Home, Share and View. Clicking on File opens a sub-menu (just like in
the office) where you find some trivial functions plus Open Command
Prompt Menu where you can run the CMD in the current folder as normal
user or admin. Thank you, Microsoft, for listening to our request.
The Home tab hosts almost every of the most important elements of the
Explorer – Copy, Paste, Cut, Properties, Delete, Rename, etc. Some old
fellas return from the past too – Move to and Copy to. There are also
Copy Path and Paste Shortcut keys. As you can see, the Home tab should
be the place for the average Explorer user.
The Share tab allows you to Email, Zip, Print, Fax, Burn to CD and Share things with just one click.
The view tab will spare you the right clicks – it hosts all the
viewing options from Windows 7 plus switches for navigation and preview
panes, groups and columns, file name settings (hide extensions, show
hidden files, etc.), Refresh and more.
All those tabs are fully customizable and all functions in there have a dedicated keyboard shortcut (also customizable).
If you think the ribbon UI is a mess, you can rearrange, add or
remove items in the tabs, assign them your own shortcuts, so every tab
can fit your needs. But there is more – you can minimize the ribbon UI
in a lot smaller line of shortcuts. It can look much like the previous
Windows versions and have all this functions still available for you.
This should satisfy those who are not fans on the ribbon UI.
There are additional tabs that appear at some occasions – picture files, libraries, etc.
I mentioned something about panes above in the View tab. There are
three of them – navigation (the left one), preview and details. The
preview on details are now on the right instead at the bottom (as in
Windows Vista/7) and show all the available file info. This way
Microsoft fully utilizes the wide aspect screens.
Have you have ever heard about the Quick Access Toolbar (QAT)? It
includes a few small shortcuts at the very top left corner (on the
opposite side of the Minimize/Maximize/Close trio) of a window. For
example the QAT in Office 2010 has Save, Undo and Redo shortcuts by
default. The Explorer 8 offers the a QAT in every window. It’s fully
customizable too, you can add whatever you want there.
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