3/14/2023 0 Comments Mac taskbar for windows 7![]() ![]() This is different from the dock paradigm in Mac OS X, where each application gets an entry in the dock. Each window (except some dialogs – sadly) gets its entry into the Windows 7 taskbar, just like in previous releases. The taskbar in Windows 7 is still the taskbar that you know from Windows 95, 98, 200, XP, and Vista. If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and talks like a duck, it’s probably a duck, yes – but this one only looks like a duck it doesn’t walk or talk like one. However, that doesn’t mean it also behaves like a dock. There certainly are a number of changes in Windows 7 that vaguely bring the Mac OS X dock to mind – jump lists, for instance, resemble the right-click menu on dock items, and the removal of text labels and increase in icon size make the taskbar look like the dock (you can change to small icons and text labels if you so desire). Are a few changes to the taskbar enough to make Windows OS X-like? Bloggers like Mary-Jo Foley, Paul Thurrot, and others seem to think so. ![]() While superficially they may have a point, the differences between Windows and Mac OS X are still glaringly obvious. Is Windows 7 leaning too much towards the Mac side of life? Many Microsoft bloggers are saying that it does, that Windows 7 is too much “form over function”, something they accuse Apple of.
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