It's that cheap if you upgrade before January I think. The normal price will be higher and the cost of getting it on a system that doesn't already run a version of Windows will be higher. This is just a way to get people to upgrade to the new system in order to make a faster transition to the new OS.Andrewtheeviscerator said:Huh only $40 I thought it was way more like over $100 more. Well really the only thing keeping m away was the price, but if it's that cheap then I might upgrade this Christmas.
As far as I am aware, it does, but there are some resizing issues. You may have to manually edit where things are, or just set them to draggable and give them the ability to go off-screen. The help section of the rainmeter site probably describes it better than me thoughResonanceSD said:That's awesome! does it work on surround? =DTK421 said:I don't know why anyone would upgrade.The only changes I observed were aesthetic, with the exception of some things that made using my computer more annoying.
If you're really wanting a visual change that bad, just install Rainmeter.
See? Better than Windows 8.For the curious, yes, the wallpaper is a dreamscene. All of the shortcuts work, and the meters are in realtime.![]()
Menu 8 costs 5 dollars, but it's so worth it. You can also get a 30 day trial for it.Netrigan said:Given how easy it is to bring back the Start Menu with a third party app and how everyone says the performance is so damn good...
What the hell. I just bought it and have started the update.
Did use Rainmeter untill it started nagging that there was no disc in the disc drive, everytime I started my laptop.TK421 said:I don't know why anyone would upgrade.The only changes I observed were aesthetic, with the exception of some things that made using my computer more annoying.
If you're really wanting a visual change that bad, just install Rainmeter.
See? Better than Windows 8.For the curious, yes, the wallpaper is a dreamscene. All of the shortcuts work, and the meters are in realtime.![]()
TK421 said:As far as I am aware, it does, but there are some resizing issues. You may have to manually edit where things are, or just set them to draggable and give them the ability to go off-screen. The help section of the rainmeter site probably describes it better than me thoughResonanceSD said:That's awesome! does it work on surround? =DTK421 said:I don't know why anyone would upgrade.The only changes I observed were aesthetic, with the exception of some things that made using my computer more annoying.
If you're really wanting a visual change that bad, just install Rainmeter.
See? Better than Windows 8.For the curious, yes, the wallpaper is a dreamscene. All of the shortcuts work, and the meters are in realtime.![]()
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Already there.Jazoni89 said:Menu 8 costs 5 dollars, but it's so worth it. You can also get a 30 day trial for it.Netrigan said:Given how easy it is to bring back the Start Menu with a third party app and how everyone says the performance is so damn good...
What the hell. I just bought it and have started the update.
Yeah I like a few of the apps, but some of them are indeed rather basic, or just a load of empty space. Like it was only designed with tablets in mind.Netrigan said:Already there.Jazoni89 said:Menu 8 costs 5 dollars, but it's so worth it. You can also get a 30 day trial for it.Netrigan said:Given how easy it is to bring back the Start Menu with a third party app and how everyone says the performance is so damn good...
What the hell. I just bought it and have started the update.
I tried it out without the Start Menu and found the desktop part to be crippled without it. With it, it functions just like Windows 7.
The Metro side... has some potential. I'm not crazy about all the flat colors everywhere (I don't want to live in an Apple ad), but there's quite a number of programs that work very well as an app and it looks to have a pretty consumer-friendly interface underneath a handful of stupid, stupid mistakes.
Anything would be an upgrade from vista. Even OSX.Rack said:Nope, Metro is locked down but no serious user will use it. Other than that it's exactly the same. Of course while this is no problem directly to consumers it is pretty anti-competitive which is probably where the fuss comes from.L0dest0ne said:I heard that it was really locked down. Is this true? That could be bad for developers of all types of programs.
Anyway I've been using the Consumer preview for a while but technically it's an upgrade from XP/Vista for me.