Remove redundant TouchFlo Start Menu with WkTask

TaskbarSince get­ting a Touch Pro a cou­ple weeks ago, I’ve been try­ing to fig­ure out to best to opti­mize the Touch­Flo inter­face. HTC has done some nice things with this device (the Touch Pro on Sprint or out­side the US, the HTC Fuze on AT&T, as well as all the vari­ants of HTC Dia­mond), and in a lot of ways they’ve brought the ease of use from Win­dows Mobile Standard’s slid­ing pan­els home screen and sim­ple Home and Back but­tons to Win­dows Mobile Pro­fes­sional. It’s nice, but there’s one prob­lem. By default, the Start Menu is still up there in the upper left cor­ner, poten­tially con­fus­ing mat­ters by offer­ing a com­pletely dif­fer­ent and con­tra­dic­tory way to launch pro­grams and access sys­tem set­tings. For­tu­nately, you can get rid of it, sim­plify the user inter­face and get a nifty way to switch between run­ning pro­grams in the process. (While one of Win­dows Mobile’s strengths is that there’s more than one way to do almost every­thing, a design goal for an effi­cient user inter­face is to have as lit­tle over­lap in func­tion­al­ity as pos­si­ble; a place for every­thing and every­thing in its place.)

Settings WkTask is a free shell util­ity that par­tially replaces your Win­dows Mobile Pro taskbar. By default, it leaves the Start Menu and noti­fi­ca­tion icons alone, and puts icons for your run­ning pro­grams where the win­dow title would nor­mally be. But for our pur­poses, since Touch­Flo 3D (or 2D, if you’re using an older device and can remap the Win­dows but­ton on the phone to show the Today screen instead of the Start Menu) dupli­cates and expands on the Start Menu func­tion­al­ity, we’re going to get rid of it.

In the set­tings, notice that the off­set from the left edge is set to 0 pix­els. This moves the run­ning pro­grams all the way to left, cov­er­ing the Start Menu com­pletely. With the clock changed to the ana­log clock (you have a huge dig­i­tal one on your home screen any­way), this also gives the entire taskbar a nice “all icons” uni­for­mity fit­ting to a phone user expe­ri­ence. You can enhance this effect by telling WkTask to dis­play only task icons in the Design tab of WkTask preferences.

So how can you use a Win­dows Mobile Pro­fes­sional device with out ever touch­ing the Start Menu? Pretty eas­ily, as it turns out. Here’s how it breaks down.

Start Menu Touch­Flo with WkTask
Pro­grams All Pro­grams soft but­ton on the Pro­grams tab in TouchFlo
Set­tings All Set­tings soft but­ton on the Set­tings tab in TouchFlo
Recent appli­ca­tions Run­ning appli­ca­tions in WkTask
Pinned appli­ca­tions Pro­grams tab in Touch­Flo (except now you have 18 slots instead of 7)
Start Menu Home key
OK but­ton Back key or OK screen button
Kill appli­ca­tion via Task Manager Tap and hold app icon on the taskbar to close or forcibly terminate

PopupThere are a cou­ple of gotchas. For one, you’ll notice the run­ning apps area, from pix­els 0 to 225 on a VGA screen, com­pletely cov­ers the noti­fi­ca­tion icon if you have Blue­tooth turned on as well. I get around this by mak­ing sure all the noti­fi­ca­tions I have enabled dis­play a mes­sage onscreen in Win­dows Mobile’s love-​it-​or-​hate-​it pop up “toast”. That way I don’t have to tap the now-​hidden noti­fi­ca­tion icon in the taskbar to get clear an alarm. Also, on my screen I only have room to dis­play 5 run­ning tasks at a time. I can run more than that, but when I do, the fifth icon is replaced by a dou­ble right chevron ( » ) and the rest are dis­played in a lit­tle drop down menu.

Over­all, though, this has greatly improved my ease of use on the device, mak­ing it easy to switch between apps with­out going to the home screen, and mak­ing the home screen the one and only way to launch appli­ca­tions. This dra­mat­i­cally cuts down on con­fu­sion when it comes time to do some­thing, and makes Win­dows Mobile Pro­fes­sional feel more like Win­dows Mobile Stan­dard; that is, makes it feel more like a phone. Give it a try and let me know how it works in the comments.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

3 Comments »

  1. jeb Said,

    January 8, 2009 @ 11:18 am

    i used it but did not like the noti­fi­ca­tions being cov­ered — i’ve used pBar with my 6700 and magic but­ton, but so far i’m just using the stan­dard HTC task man­ager — i wish pBar would work with touch pro, but hon­estly i haven’t even tried it — i should, since it dis­plays the bat­tery up top (like vista hide bat­tery gauge) and has fea­tures like soft reset (i hate using the sty­lus)
    i’ve tweaked my touch pro quite a bit to get some good func­tion­al­ity while keep­ing the TF3D inter­face (HTC Action, Dia­mondTweak, TF3D con­fig, etc.) i was com­ing from a 6700 with HTC home which was fast and func­tional. TF3D is not as fast, but it’s a much more enjoy­able user expe­ri­ence.
    my $.02,
    jeb

  2. Rangie Said,

    January 15, 2009 @ 8:17 am

    How do you change the clock?

  3. Phlip Said,

    March 30, 2009 @ 2:12 pm

    I was using Magic But­ton on my WM2003SE-​based Toshiba e830. It didn’t work prop­erly when I brought it over to my Touch Pro. This is exactly what I was look­ing for. Thanks!

Leave a Comment