While I like that vertical taskbar here is scrollable instead of being split to pages (native behavior in windows 10 and prior), there's a lot of room for improvement: 1. Currently, the only indication of taskbar overflowing is a faint scroll bar on the side, which blends on top of the accent line in Windows 10 style of icon rendering, so it only becomes clearly visible when you hover the cursor over it. there needs to be some sort of edge with shadow casted on nearby icon, at the top
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Ok, I just realized that you actually can have scrollable tiles, I just needed to expand start menu vertically so I could have space to drag new stuff, and then shrink it back so now it has scrollbar and can be scrolled with touch (which also makes tiles less prone to accidental drag, as immediate vertical motions aren't treated as drag'n'drop), but still I think tile editing should be implemented with tap/click and hold, before you can drag them around. You wouldn't do this too ofte
[quote who="pelaird" reply="2" id="3951636"] This sounds like a good idea. Even on the PC with a mouse, moving tiles usually tries to group with the adjacent tile if you're not careful. As a workaround for now, you could lock the tile positions. [/quote] yes, I know about locking, but still I'd prefer Windows 10 behavior [quot
For some reason in Windows 10 style we can't have scrollable tiles section, instead there's only a page view similar to Windows 11. While I'm not against having extra pages, I'd like to define on my own where each ends, instead of just size of whole menu being a limit. Originally in Windows 10 start menu we can scroll tiles as deep as needed, this behavior is one of the things I was looking for beside using tiles instead of icons. I wouldn't mid also having options for pages, but this