9

I've been spoiled by my ability to control the volume (or mute) any individual program running on my computer. I just tried a Modern-UI game from the store and it was shockingly loud, so I did what I normally do - go to the audio mixer to mute it.

It didn't show up in the system volume control! Is there something I'm missing? Is it truly up to every individual application? Can I mute all Modern-UI apps without muting all audio?

1 Answer 1

12

There seems to be no way to control the volume of individual Metro apps from a single interface, which certainly seems like a step back to me.

All you can do (in most cases) is select Settings from the Charms bar (Win+I) and click the speaker icon, or use the desktop volume control from the tray/notification area.

However, if an app does provide its own volume control you should be able to locate it by looking under its own Settings in the Charms bar.

Edit: Apparently, not only is the lack of a Metro audio mixer by design, Microsoft is also discouraging devs from including per-app volume controls as per this MSDN blog post:

There is no audio mixer in this environment as there is in the desktop. It still exists for desktop applications, but your app won’t show up here because we felt it was not a great experience to pop out into desktop to adjust relative app volumes. Instead, we are encouraging apps to not include volume controls. This way users are focused on the master volume control which helps simplify the entire volume experience as well – but that’s a different story.

(Note: Substitute "simplify" with "dumb down").

Edit 2: While a third-party volume mixer called EarTrumpet has enabled this functionality on Windows 10 since July 2015, it has shamefully taken Microsoft nearly 5 years to finally add Metro/Modern/UWP app support to Windows' own volume mixer in the Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 16193:

We’ve updated the Volume Mixer to now include UWP apps (like Microsoft Edge, or Groove Music), so you can set their volume without impacting the overall system volume. ... Note: UWP apps will only appear in the Volume Mixer once they start playing sound. To open the Volume Mixer, right-click on the speaker icon in the taskbar.

1

8
  • I don't feel it's a great experience for you to have to breathe in AND out so we're just going to disallow it all together. Guessing there is a real technical reason behind this one that they didn't want to admit yet.
    – Andy
    Feb 25, 2013 at 15:50
  • 1
    Irrespective of the AppContainer sandbox used, I see no technical reason why they couldn't have app-specific volume sliders for Metro apps just like Desktop apps. I think it was purely a design decision, or maybe a business one to reduce time/money spent and get the product out of the door. Maybe v2 of the UI in Windows "Blue" will have it...
    – Karan
    Feb 25, 2013 at 16:00
  • It makes sense to do it this way... if your apps are running on a device. My PC is not a device, though, no matter how much anyone wishes otherwise.
    – Mark Allen
    Jun 20, 2013 at 2:39
  • 1
    @MarkAllen: I would argue that it doesn't make sense even on a "device". Say I have a full-featured Win8 tablet or laptop. Why should it not have app-specific volume sliders? (BTW, Win8.1 "Blue" has no changes in this respect.)
    – Karan
    Jun 20, 2013 at 2:42
  • 1
    Great. Try skyping while using a game. You'd better hope that the game has its own volume control. Simplify as far as you can BUT NO FURTHER, and they certainly went overboard, completely killing the super-awesome feature of adjusting the relative volume of two apps.
    – RomanSt
    Aug 22, 2014 at 19:54

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .