• MudMan@fedia.io
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    6 months ago

    Wait, so this is not about the power menu, it’s about the pop up when clicking on your account picture bubble if you’re signed in to a MS account. They aren’t adding a step to logging out of your local Windows user, just to logging out of your Microsoft account if you’re using that as a login for Windows, OneDrive and Office365.

    The “Lock” button also has a new home—it now sits in the power menu alongside “Shut down,” “Restart,” and “Sleep” options.

    THAT is where the Lock button was? Not gonna lie, I’ve been Windows-L-ing so long I didn’t even know they had moved that to the account bubble.

    I’ll be honest, the article is a bit overdramatic. Yeah, they are surfacing your services there to upsell you on the ones you don’t have, but it’s actually not a useless piece of info (currently finding your subscriptions is an ordeal) and none of the functionality is gone. It is true that a lot of UX things around Win11 have gotten worse, though. I’m currently using additional software to replace the taskbar (which will do the Start menu, too, if you want) because the inability to move it to the sides is ridiculous on the OS you’re most likely to pair with an ultrawide monitor.

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I’ll be honest, the article is a bit overdramatic. Yeah, they are surfacing your services there to upsell you on the ones you don’t have, but it’s actually not a useless piece of info (currently finding your subscriptions is an ordeal) and none of the functionality is gone.

      Look up “boiling a frog”

      They count on this exact reaction.

      Every time they implement these little bullshit changes, people inevitably go “It’s annoying but it’s not that big a deal.” And then they do more of it a few months later.

      The article isn’t being hyperbolic because it’s reacting to the overall trend that this is yet another step forward in. Because the writer and everyone here knows it will get worse and worse over time.

      Dark patterns are, by design, slow and incremental so as not to trigger too much pushback at once. People need to start being more aware of it and pushing back on it when they see it.

      And yes, that information is probably useful to some people, but that doesn’t in any way justify hiding the options that used to be there.

      • elvith@feddit.de
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        6 months ago

        Do you know the term “trust thermocline”?

        Basically it described a problem with the boiling the frog technique. There’s a point for every user at which they’re fed up with the bullshit, lose all trust in you(r company) and are hard to impossible to get back as a customer. Every customer leaving has a little unnoticeable effect on you, but with time there will be so many people that you lost that all your tactics to lock your users in will fail.