Oh, good. I haven't heard much about Win 8 before this, and I was worried they'd made another Vista. I really like Windows 7, though, so if Windows 8 is "Moar Windows 7, but with Tablets" then that's cool.Hoplon said:Sort answer, No.
Long answer, it's a reskin of win 7 for tablets and ARM architecture which frankly has nothing to do with desktop users.
It's pretty much the way to go, it isn't an ME or vista, just that most of the new features won't really do that much for you.Bara_no_Hime said:Oh, good. I haven't heard much about Win 8 before this, and I was worried they'd made another Vista. I really like Windows 7, though, so if Windows 8 is "Moar Windows 7, but with Tablets" then that's cool.Hoplon said:Sort answer, No.
Long answer, it's a reskin of win 7 for tablets and ARM architecture which frankly has nothing to do with desktop users.
I won't upgrade, but I won't avoid it either, if I happen to get a new computer where it comes pre-loaded. Not like I did with Vista. Ick.
Win key plus typing the name of the program is much faster and easier, why fumble with all those clunky menus?Signa said:Says who, and why? I use it every time I want to do anything! All my most used tasks are on there, anything I need to search is there too. The only thing that has become dated about it is browsing the program folders in it. I only do that a fraction of what I use to in 95/98.Rack said:The biggest complaint about 8 seems to be replacing the start menu with metro. But the start menu has been completely pointless for years now.Signa said:What?Rack said:Oh and if you're complaining about the lack of a start menu then why the hell are you using the start menu?
Just because you're happy doing that doesn't mean everyone else is comfortable with it. There's several different ways in accessing the Task Manager, yet I would never say "nix the Start Bar option" just because I'm used to hitting Ctrl+Shift+Esc with only two fingers.Rack said:Win key plus typing the name of the program is much faster and easier, why fumble with all those clunky menus?Signa said:Says who, and why? I use it every time I want to do anything! All my most used tasks are on there, anything I need to search is there too. The only thing that has become dated about it is browsing the program folders in it. I only do that a fraction of what I use to in 95/98.Rack said:The biggest complaint about 8 seems to be replacing the start menu with metro. But the start menu has been completely pointless for years now.Signa said:What?Rack said:Oh and if you're complaining about the lack of a start menu then why the hell are you using the start menu?
Start Screen tiles are there to have your most used features right there in front of you along with live updates of information that is useful to the user. It is a combination of pinned taskbar items and the widgets that actually were useful like email and news feeds. A lot faster than having to dig through the Start Menu. Microsoft have no reason to keep the option of using a feature they have replaced for something that works better.mad825 said:It's the overemphasis with icons that people are hating. Even so, why remove it completely? Why not leave an option? Why are we being forced to use Metro?
I wouldn't having it but if it meant removing the start button then I would rather do without.
I figured it out very quickly but I suppose I will be kind enough to give a helpful link. [http://www.ampercent.com/organize-app-tiles-windows-8-metro-start-screen/10184/]Andrew_C said:It's a vast improvement over the default layout, but it still wastes huge amounts of space. How do you do that, though? I used Win 8 (Release Preview) for several days before giving up in disgust and never managed to find how you customise the Metro screen.
Also, Live Tiles? Just another reimplementation of desktop widgets, which have been in Windows in various forms since XP (earlier if you include 3rd-party implementations).
EDIT: spelling, formatting
thanks for explaining the features :/. I know.SpAc3man said:Start Screen tiles are there to have your most used features right there in front of you along with live updates of information that is useful to the user. It is a combination of pinned taskbar items and the widgets that actually were useful like email and news feeds. A lot faster than having to dig through the Start Menu.
Now you're talking shit. The reason they gave us was because apparently not many people used it based on their "statistics". They never gave an accurate breakdown.Microsoft have no reason to keep the option of using a feature they have replaced for something that works better.
OH god, the Winkey is a cancer.For times where you want something that isn't on your Start Screen you just start typing from the Start Screen to use the really good search functions or from anywhere in the system you can use winkey+Q to search apps, winkey+W for settings and winkey+F for files. Anyone who uses Win7 regularly should already be using the search box to quickly access things.
Have a rundown of how to use Win8 search
You could almost argue that the search screen is the real start menu replacement.
I see your point but from the brief experiences with the OS I haven't had a problem running anything such as Steam so all this Windows 8 is bad for gamers is blown way out of proportion. I'm not planning to upgrade if it's restrictive but from what I've seen it's Windows 7 with a new GUI so it's not going to be as bad as a lot of people are claiming. But then again there are some people who are still on xp that refuse to upgrade, even though 7 is a good OS (once you disable the annoying "Are you sure?" style messages) and it has good backwards compatibility (I've come across 1 program which wouldn't run, and even then there was a work a round).Blablahb said:If it's true what game developers are saying that it will kill their games, then Windows 8 is unsuitable for anyone who's not exclusively whoring with the usual AAA titles from EA.devotedsniper said:It's amazing the amount of people on the other thread who think Windows 8 is going to be the downfall of Windows and such (a lot of long live linux talk on there too). So far from the couple of times I've used it on my virtual machine (both dev preview and release) it's not a bad OS really, it ran fine even on just 2GB of my RAM.
I mean, I game, use word/excel and I surf the internet. If windows 8 takes most of those games away, I have a powerful incentive never to use that. I already disliked upgrading to Windows 7 because of the problems it gives with older games. The only thing that could keep me from sticking with older OS or switching to Linux would be support for one or two study-specific programs I sometimes need to use.
Ahem.extent said:The media along with microsoft tried to make out that 7 was so much better compared to vista. There are benefits of using 7 over vista, but there are also benefits of vista over 7-you only need to google to find out why for each case.
Okay, I'll admit that it does look nice for a tablet. And the notifications and such would add to the experience. Maybe I was overreacting...SpAc3man said:I will be getting a free copy through MSDNAA so I will be upgrading as soon as I get a good look at the stability of the final release. Metro is amazingly efficient when you actually stop whinging about it being different and learn how to use it properly. I don't use the start menu any more because I've actually figured out it's faster to use things pinned to the taskbar and the search functionality to get to anything that isn't on the taskbar. Start Screen is just an expansion of the best way to use modern Windows. Of course all the idiots who have been saying there is no reason to upgrade to 7 from XP are going to struggle to make the switch from a 11 year old OS (Seriously that's like still using Win3.1 two years after XP was released). All this crying over change reminds me of what happened when Microsoft introduced the Start Menu in Win95 to replace the Program Manager. I can only imagine it was the same with the change from a CLI to a GUI.
Have a look at this image. Obviously the top portion is what all the Metro haters think its going to be like. Bottom portion is what it is like when you actually use it properly. Everything organised into tidy, well spaced out, readable, custom groups.Another thing to add is live tiles. Some tiles are able to give you information. You can see news updates, email notifications, RSS feeds, social media notifications, weather. Anything developers care to integrate into their app tiles. You could check everything you would normally check by looking at the one screen instead of having to open whatever apps you normally need. Even the login screen has notifications.![]()
It all sounds great to me. Can't wait.