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I'm not holding my breath waiting for MSFT to migrate them to Settings. However, the Control Panel one does allow for uninstalling multiple fonts in a single operation with Settings it's one at a time, so Settings seems positively user-hostile.However, that leaves the items still in Control Panel which run in the same window, e.g., Credential Manager. To be honest, both SUCK compared to several 3rd party font managers I've used.
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There's also Fonts in both Control Panel and Settings.
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Then there's all the remaining items which launch separate windows/dialogs, e.g., Indexing Options, which could just as easily be launched from right side of the window links from Settings. On my Insider build system, the System and Taskbar and Navigation items in Control Panel > All Control Panel Items already launch Settings, so why bother with the Control Panel items? OK, maybe System needs to remain until Control Panel is fully removed, but no need for the other given all the other stuff which has been removed from Control Panel. Is it fair to complain that it's MSFT's fault how it looks?As for File Explorer's Drive Properties dialog, should it look radically different? How, precisely, would you change it to make it more modern while preserving as much usability as possible?Are there things which Control Panel could and should shed? Absolutely. If you have a 3rd party mouse, that applet wasn't developed by MSFT. I suppose we could call that tradition rather than all too common MSFT inconsistency.Back from the tangent, Device Manager appears to use the new drive icons, just at 16×16 size.As for additional mouse options from Settings, that should launch your mouse hardware maker's configuration applet. Since Devices and Printers also appears there along with Keyboard, Mouse and Sound, and since Device Manager is view-only launching it from a standard user account, it's a mystery why it should be considered a normal Contol Panel item rather than one of the Windows Tools.
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For that matter, it's the only item which appears in Control Panel > All Control Panel Items which uses the Management Console. Device Manager may be the exception, but the others are things fewer than 1% of users would ever try to use.Tangent: fascinating that Device Manager doesn't appear with the other Windows Tools (as they're now labeled). In reply to Winner:Device Manager uses the Management Console, same as Component Services, Computer Management and a few others of what used to be labeled Administrative Tools. You are certainly entitled to a different opinion. So yeah, I feel it's important to ding Microsoft every chance I get for their misplaced priorities. Somehow when Apple updated THEIR OS, it was changed and updated throughout! A much smaller company at that time!Microsoft is the same company that was informed in January of a serious Exchange security flaw (per the Security Now podcast), yet couldn't get it patched for at least two months, until it was exploited in the wild, likely by a nation-state actor, in March – and over 100,000 servers with this flaw are now infected – likely including most of the US Fortune 500 corporations. The facade.This screams that Microsoft, one of the largest companies in the world, found it important enough to update their already fine UI in say Windows XP to a newer sparkly coat of paint in Windows 10 - yet didn't have the time to even complete the job! Yet they had time to add an advertising ID, send new telemetry, add inking for web pages even - but the completeness of their UI was NOT a priority! And that says something about their quality, their thoroughness, their commitment to a quality job, and completing things. It was only important enough to put that paint layer on the top, more visible sections of Windows. It's not like they missed a spot or two – they didn't even TRY. Voilà! We are transported back twenty years in time!Similar all over the place. Choose "This PC" and then choose your C: drive. From there on down it is good old times, baby!Or let's go to File Explorer, with it's pretty new Ribbon on top and pretty side panel. The circa-Windows 98 window opens up and is still called "Mouse Properties". But then go to the right side of the window options and choose "Additional Mouse Options". But then you go to Device Manager and it's Windows 98 all over again.Or how about Settings>Mouse. In reply to dftf:Can you actually outline where in the UI you are seeing them on such a regular basis it causes you such irritation?Sure!You go to Settings and it is all fresh paint and lipstick.