Posted on October 28th, 2008 by Barry Collins
Windows 7: multitouch controls
One of the few things we knew about Windows 7 prior to PDC was the existence of multitouch – using multiple fingers to swish around the Windows menus and applications instead of the mouse and keyboard.
Sadly, our test laptop isn’t touchscreen, so we’re forced to rely on the demos and a brief play with a HP Touchsmart PC to form our early opinion on the multitouch features.
Touch works well on the Windows desktop. As soon as you tap the screen with your finger, the now redundant mouse cursor disappears, and images of water droplets appear underneath your finger, providing an intuitive visual guide to the accuracy of your finger jabbing.
The new larger icons on the Taskbar are much more touch friendly that the slender bars of XP or Vista, making it effortless to switch between different open windows. As we mentioned in the interface section, the new Taskbar jumplists can be activated by swishing your finger upwards, instantly spooling out a list of recent items or commands that are available to that application. Microsoft has sensibly made the jumplist text 25% larger when it detects you’re using the touchscreen controls, making it easier – if still not easy – to select the desired entry.
Touch-friendly applications?
The novelty of the multitouch controls starts to evaporate when you start using them in regular Windows applications, however. In Microsoft Word, for example, you can swish your finger up and down the screen to scroll through documents, with the entire window visibly shaking when you reach the top or bottom of the page, providing a clever visual cue. Word documents can also be zoomed in and out using the now familiar pinch controls. (Incidentally, PC Pro’s Jon Honeyball asked Microsoft if it was confident of avoiding legal action from Apple over the use of such touch controls; the question was elegantly sidestepped).
But applications such as Word will always, always require the use of mouse and keyboard. And frankly, scrolling through documents with a flick of the mouse wheel is just as simple as daubing your fingers across the screen, and potentially smearing the display. It’s touch for touch’s sake. Ditto Internet Explorer, where you can manually drag down the address bar in IE8 with a swish of the finger, but need the digits of an eight-year-old child to accurately pick out the tiny URL required from the drop-down menu. Swishing the finger left and right to replace the back and forward buttons in the browser is reasonably satisfying, but hardly necessary.
The multitouch controls are more at home in applications such as photo editing and drawing, especially now that the new Paint application has an Office 2007-style Ribbon interface, but we can’t help feeling that Microsoft needs to put a lot more thought into touch-friendly overlays if it really wants this feature to take off.
Tags: HP Touchsmart, Internet Explorer, multitouch, Paint, Windows 7, Word
Posted in: Windows 7
Follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
2 Responses to “ Windows 7: multitouch controls ”
Leave a Reply
Categories
- About the bloggers
- Green
- Hardware
- How To
- Just in
- Microsoft Office 2010
- Newsdesk
- Online business
- Random
- Rant
- Real World Computing
- Software
- View from the Labs
- Windows 7
Authors
Archives
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
advertisement
Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk




























November 29th, 2008 at 6:41 am
If Oct 2008 internet rumours are correct, windows7 has yet to come up with a facility that can reasonably supplant the mouse for business users. To do so, Multitouch must manipulate text with 1) efficient gestures that replace commands presently requiring to click on menu and then submenu, 2) a graphic interface that enables the finger to be as accurate as a cursor, and more efficient than the mouse-based left/right click menus in manipulating text-based formatting. This should be possible given the countless gestures that multitouch could use to represent various commands. I refer the surfer to the extant company website http://www.fingerworks.com/gesture_guide_editing.html for a concrete examples. Surprisingly, I have yet to see any hint of a product that addresses this second point.
Given the non-ergonomic requirements of a touchscreen upright monitor configuration, multitouch would also seem more practicable if the finger interface were a large touchpad rather than touchscreen.
Many people dislike the inefficiency of the mouse-keyboard alternation paradigm and preferentially use hotkeys whenever available. Ultimately, if multitouch can make gestures that provide a more intuitive, accurate and physically efficient interface than the mouse or current touchpad paradigm, it has a reasonable chance of being favourably adopted by the business user.
January 22nd, 2009 at 6:14 am
hp touchsmart laptop…
It is amazing that you wrote a decent blurb regarding Fujitsu LifeBook P1630: Another Ultraportable Laptop | Laptop …. I just did a quick search on hp touchsmart laptop and was surprised how accurate you were. Nice job!…