this post was submitted on 28 May 2025
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Well, yes, in some cases, but the start menu is something you interact with very often. The average user (and I mean office worker in their 40s)doesn't even pin items to the taskbar. As such, the main way to open apps is through the start menu. Think about this way. In this situation on a laptop, you either save ram or battery. Constant cpu spikes aren't good for energy efficiency. This also means hogging your ssd, which might be an issue in specific situations. On the other side, keeping the start menu fully in ram could be perceived as a waste, it really depends on how often you use the start menu and how much you value energy efficiency.
I've been trying to help my parents use Windows since the '90s. They still to this day have no idea what the Start menu is.
Quality teacher!
but, how do they turn PCs off? win-d alt-f4? think win-d was not a thing in early windows... please don't say by power button.
Power button is a perfectly valid way to turn off a modern PC. They don't kill power the way they used to, they send a signal to the PC to shut itself down. Exactly the same as using the start menu.
Sure, the keyword is "modern" though we used to talk of 90s'.