Nobody can deny that Windows 10 has changed a great deal in the latest feature updates, and there's without doubt that the next releases will bring even more improvements.
But at the same time, there's also features that some would think they just make sense in Windows 10 but for unkown reasons, Microsoft has ignored them until now.
One of them concerns the Microsoft Store, Microsoft's very own bet that the company struggles so hard to help make the one destination for all things in Windows 10.
As a side note, should you really hope that people would start using the Microsoft Store, you have to keep close track of every single piece of feedback about this, then when a particular request reaches thousands of votes, it's pretty clear you have to make it happen.
In Windows 10, this isn't really the case, even though this isn't the key reason some users steer clear of the Microsoft Store, it's among the factors that contribute to its rather slow adoption.
I'm talking about a control button, a very simple button, whose purpose would be to uninstall a credit card applicatoin which has recently been placed on your system.
The Microsoft Store has indeed evolved to supply easy installation of not only apps, including games, ebooks, themes, and Microsoft Edge extensions. And while it's pretty simple to install them, users have to visit the Settings app to uninstall them.
Initially, this doesn't sound like the kind of inconvenience that makes you remain away from the Microsoft Store, however i determined how much sense this kind of option would make when one of my colleagues using Linux, and new to Windows, asked why he can't remove apps in the Store.
After all, it is possible to see your app library in the Microsoft Store, including the listing of installed apps, so why not providing a choice to get rid of them easily?
I'm not the only one wondering why this kind of option does not exist. A Feedback Hub suggestion is getting nearer to 2,400 votes, and lots of users explain that such an update would actually make the Microsoft Store a bit more useful.
"It is a nice addition to the Microsoft Store. And will be one small step to finally be a mature store," one user explains. "There should be a "My Apps" page, much like "Downloads and Updates", with the exception that you can manage the installation state from the app from the "My Apps" page. The "My Apps" page must have usage and resource statistics, along with other useful information, for every app," another user added.
On the internet Play Store, when opening an item page, near the option that allows you to launch the app, there's additionally a second button to uninstall it. This really is the way it should focus on Windows 10 too.
The Microsoft Store should allow users to get rid of apps not just in the main listing of the app, but additionally from the library, because the latter is useful particularly when attempting to delete multiple items at once.
To be sure, you will find easy ways to remove apps installed from the Microsoft Store, but why not offer one more exactly within the place where users would expect so that it is?
Unfortunately, it doesn't appear to be the upcoming Windows 10 version 1903, currently codenamed, comes with this app removal option within the Microsoft Store, but let's just hope Microsoft gets the message and implements it inside a future OS update.
Windows 10 version 1903 is projected to go reside in March for insiders as well as in April for production devices, so technically, Microsoft could actually have the time to get it done.
Head over to the Feedback Hub to make yourselves heard if you would like this selection to be part of Windows 10.
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