Microsoft Improves Vista UI for Low-End PCs
In the beginning, there was Aero Glass. And it was good. But Microsoft also begat a crummy, ugly user interface for Windows Vista called Vista Basic. And it was bad, really bad. We complained vociferously. And Microsoft listened. How sweet is that?
July 9, 2006
In the beginning, there was Aero Glass. And it was good. But Microsoft also begat a crummy, ugly UI for Windows Vista called Vista Basic. And it was bad, really bad. We complained vociferously. And Microsoft listened. How sweet is that?
Over the weekend, two Microsoft employees blogged about the change in Vista's low-end UI, which will appear on machines not graced with Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM)-based drivers. These include many older PCs, especially Tablet PCs and any machines that use previous-generation integrated graphics chipsets. The original version of the Vista Basic UI was pretty grim, a horrific grayish thing that was far uglier than even Classic mode. Now, all is well with the world.
"Many community members have expressed concerns over the visual experience of the Windows Basic theme, and we heard you loud and clear," a posting on the Windows Vista Team Blog reads. "In fact, we too wanted something better, and we've overhauled this theme with an all new version .... This is a good, clean interface called the Basic or Standard theme, but lacking the glass window frames of Aero."
Microsoft reports that the new low-end UI will appear in a future prerelease Vista build, but the company won't specify when. I'll post screenshots and a discussion of this UI on the SuperSite for Windows later today.
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