For those who dislike Unity intensely but do not want to leave the
Ubuntu community (yet) here are couple of possible workarounds that
might offer you the familiar look-and-feel you require.:-

1. sudo apt-get install kubuntu-desktop
This will install the beautiful-looking and Windows7-like KDE4 desktop. The 
start button is in the right place. The pop up applications menu, the task bar 
and status area all make sense. And you can have the desktop as a desktop or a 
folder or an app or widget or slideshow - your choice. In fact most people I 
show it to ask if it's a new version of Windows! Most of KDE's notorious early 
issues have been resolved. Basically KDE4 was released long before it was 
ready.  But it's OK now.

pros:- Familiar look-and-feel; very feature-rich; very pretty; highly
customisable; shed-loads of eye-candy; lots of extensibility; super KDE
apps available (though you can run these on other desktops too); ; my
girlfriend likes it - so does my bro.

cons:- Can be a bit resource hungry; you really need a decent machine,
especially if you want to use all the whirling desktop cubes and wobbly
windows and stuff;  there are still a few annoying minor bugs that
remain unresolved.

Not sure if this is a pro or a con:- After you have used KDE 4 for a
while, and customised it to your liking, all other desktops, including
Macs might seem crude, or lacking in functionality. My g/f has to use a
Mac at work and frequently comes home complaining about all the "Things
the bloody Mac won't do!"

2. sudo apt-get install xubuntu-desktop
This installs the simple but stable XFCE desktop. This is fairly customisable 
but generally has the look and feel of a plain vanilla Windows 95 desktop. XFCE 
can be beautified. However, my experience is that many XFCE users are not 
interested in beautiful desktops. They just want to look at the web or read 
their email etc., with the least amount of hassle or delay.

Pros:- Very stable, very simple; very familiar look and feel; does not hog 
resources; doesn't get in the way; Linus Torvalds uses it; my mum likes it. 
Cons:- It's a bit plain-looking.

FWIW, I chose option 1 (KDE) for my desktops/laptops and option 2 (XFCE)
for servers, for most of my customers and for elder family members. I
have just one customer still determined to give Unity a fair go, and
even he's considering dumping it.

HTH, best wishes, G.

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