Because Microsoft does not provide a 'Navigator' control for third party applications and basically every programmer has to duplicate this effort. Why haven't we updated the Navigator to have a more modern layout? It just hasn't been a priority for us or our customers. Believe it or not, but you're the first person to mention the issue.
BTW, there are several ways to open folders in Photo Mechanic and that includes drag and drop, right clicking on a folder from within Windows Explorer (and choosing to open it with PM from the contextual menu), and the Open command on the file menu. Also you can take your favorite locations and drop them into the Favorites and then you don't have to navigate at all.
-Kirk
I believe it, I haven't found any reference in the forums to the issue that afflicts me. You are all so weird
The problem is not to have a "modern layout" or not ... or how many differents ways there are to open a folder ... the problem is that the visual tree structure showed by PM has NOTHING to do with the one showed by Windows Vista and/or Windows 7 and that forces me to use more steps, more clicks, to go the same place. And it's unnecessarily confusing.
Even more, I use a custom "Hot Folder" shell folder that I placed just under Desktop in Windows 7 to be the first object I find ... and it doesn't even exist in PM ...
(Maybe you should hire the guys who develop FastStone Viewer. They don't seem to have to wait for a "users' demonstration" requesting them to enter the XXI century...)
Regarding the Favorites ... are you aware of the fact that, in windows Vista and even more in Windows 7, the name showed on the Windows Explorer is not neccesarily the real name ? "Localized Names" has any meaning for the PM programmer/s ? I ask it because the program ignores them completely .. and if I were to add the Pictures folder under C:\users\UserName\ and the one at C:\Users\Public\ ... they would show up in Favorites with the exact same name, the real one for both of them, "Pictures"
Yes, it's Microsoft's fault ... but you're programming for the Microsoft OS, so just ... deal with it ?.
P.S. ... Reading the message again I guess I came across as a jerk. Maybe I am ... but that doesn't mean I'm wrong