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The real question is who uses the actual start menu, as in tiles and program list. I've only ever seen people type the program name
I use the tiles to "pin" programs that I use semi-regularly and can't be bothered remembering the name of. Or that share an inconveniently long prefix with the name of another program. Or that I have multiple versions of installed, with a specific version I usually need.
I don't like pinning such programs to the task bar because they add unnecessary clutter while not in use.
I imagine some legacy users who cut their teeth on Windows 95 or something and never changed their ways. I was a Mac user through the mid 2000s and switched back when I got my gaming rig with Windows 10 so I don’t remember when the search bar was implemented—never used the start menu since.
I prefer OpenShell, since it unfucks the start menu and makes it usable. It's just like Win7 but easy to customize.
I only ever see the real start menu on other people's computers. Openshell is like ublock, without it your face tends to contort and twist like you ate a lemon.
The Windows start menu is inexplicably a huge mess. Like all MS products, they cram their interface with as much as possible.
I preferred their nested menus to what is there now, though I started using search as soon as it became a thing (Windows 7?). They should have really implemented categories (like in Linux) early on rather than having every suite have it's own sub-menu in the Start Menu.
You can do that yourself, since Chicago first debuted in ~1994.
I don't want my OS categorizing stuff for me.
My start menu is categorized on the root (where "pinned" items go), and I leave the rest of the menu alone.
The maintainer of the application chooses the categorie(s) but manually organizing things as an end user... is kinda dumb. Maybe I don't understand your workflow (or why the Start Menu is the way it is now with all programs barfed into one list, I figured it was for touch devices). It doesn't really matter, though, because search is used primarily now, anyways. Forgetting the name of the application is the only reason I can see digging through the Start Menu now.