by Workingman » 09 Jul 2016, 18:09
Touch-screen tech is the way things are going, for a whole host of things, and not only mobile devices.
If I want a ticket at the railway/airport the non-human dispenser is touch-screen. If I approach a 'Where am I?' map in the city centre it is touch-screen. To register for an appointment at the doctor's or hospital it is touch-screen. It is everywhere and Microsoft had to keep up.
Microsoft's approach was to take the road to touch-screen with a slight fork in the road to allow the old legacy hardware, and us dinosaurs, to still work, somehow. It is OK, but not ideal. I also note that some websites are now optimised for mobile devices and touch-screen, the BBC, for example. Some functions simply do not work on laptops/desktops, or when they do they are a nightmare to navigate.
This step change is like the move from the command line to graphic user interface, GUI, (Windows) and the mouse. It took some time to get used to, but we got there and it is now the norm. Touch-screen will go the same way, and, again, we will get there.