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I've noticed there are many hate threads on Windows 8, with people downright disrespecting the OS. As an app developer for the Windows Runtime and daily user of the Release Preview with mouse and keyboard I want to do the opposite in this post and tell you why I love Windows 8.

UI

Windows 8 is all about change and that change is the Metro environment. While Metro is certainly touch-first, it works well with mouse/keyboard, and some apps look absolutely great.

Many people seem to hate how Microsoft crammed the ?Tablet UI? in our throats but I find it a clever move. No OS has changed how apps essentially worked on traditional PCs (windowed, resize buttons, dull controls, static icons,?). With the Metro UI, people will have to learn a lot of new gimmicks. Many people desperately want that start menu back, or want the Metro environment shut off. I don?t get them. People should embrace change if it?s for the better and give things a chance. I had trouble using the Developer Preview, but I?m blasting through the Release Preview now getting things done faster and loving some Metro style apps.

This day and age everything that?s different seems to be regarded as bad. I see friends automatically installing Firefox/Chrome without them being aware of IE9, I see friends going to Google instead of Bing. When I ask them why, they reply something along the lines of ?Internet Explorer sucks, Bing sucks?, without them knowing about any of the features. People are having similar reactions with Windows 8, not knowing what it is. The only thing they know is that a tablet running Windows 8 crashed during the Surface announcement, because that YouTube video went viral on Reddit or some other site. Microsoft isn?t cool, it?s disregarded and won?t be given a fair chance unless it has an Apple or Google logo. Microsoft barely makes it into the news and when it does it talks about ?Microsoft announced (x), trying to catch up to [apple product here]?, together with a lot of footage from the Apple product, and few of Microsoft.

I fear that it?s too late to change anything about that impression, partly because Microsoft hasn?t been very forthcoming to the general audience of Windows 8, and their corporate identity isn?t exactly inspiring.

On the note of the UI, it?s certainly premature but together with the pre-installed apps it?s pretty powerful. For now. Microsoft can?t wait another 3 years to update the framework or add features, but I think they know that. I?d love to see an improved file picker/save dialog, 2 snapped apps for large screens, a decent Metro desktop, and some improvements to built-in apps.

In my dreams, and this will never happen, I?d like better blending between desktop apps and metro apps. I?d love to see desktop apps being chromeless and appearing in the multitasking bar on the left, with the ability to close them by dragging them down. The taskbar and desktop mode should be removed and desktop apps just run on top of Metro apps.

I really love how people will be able to buy a PC, and thanks to the built-in apps/Flash be ready within minutes to get great experience (without needing to download an email client or Flash installer)

Back-end

As a developer who invested many hours in learning WPF and Silverlight for Windows Phone, I?m having a blast developing for Windows 8. I?m able to port lots of my code. WinRT neatly integrates with C# and feels really great to use. The APIs feel familiar and expose some great functionality like easily roam settings or set up data sharing. The templates are handy and often a good starting point. Rich online documentation is also super handy.

Hands-down, WinRT might be the coolest platform EVER. It feels like home if you?re familiar with WPF/Silverlight/XAML, is super powerful and really extensible, making me believe business apps (like Photoshop, 3DSMax, Office) can be rewritten to a Metro app. What surprised me most is how much online information is available, from tutorials to guidelines, blog posts to case studies to an entire collection of sample apps. Together with the Windows Store and possibly having the largest customer base on day 1 makes WinRT the coolest framework.

I?m seeing lots of badly written software out there, often with a crappy UI, others rely on Access/Win32 as environment/API. Many people [unlike us] don?t have lots of IT knowledge but have to learn awkward gimmicks or awkward UIs to get around. PCs are generally still hard to use for some and that?s why they?re transitioning to tablets. I think Windows 8 is, like iOS, easy to use and bringing the UI to PCs as primary interface might result in something great in the future. It?s on all levels better, easier, faster and more powerful than what iOS or Android has to offer today, and I really hope Metro becomes mainstream.

Bottom line about Apps is that there won?t be any bloatware-quality apps, and they will finally look good. The technologies Microsoft carefully crafted over the years can finally be put to use by a broad audience.

People don?t like change, some people don?t like the Windows 7 taskbar or Vista settings re-organization and want the classic Windows XP way back. Metro is a much more major change and many people will hate it and will have a hard time using it at first. I believe that eventually they?ll adapt and get a better, richer and faster experience. I really hope Metro style apps and ways of working become more refined and (in the longterm) mainstream (with less to no desktop apps anymore).

Windows 8 is a bold risk and even though the above is possible, I have my doubts and hate things as well. I?m wondering whether it will be marketed right so people will get to know it and the Intel vs ARM differences. I?m wondering whether OEMs will trash it with bloatware. I?m wondering whether Microsoft can flush out the remaining bugs, improve apps and get their identity and logo straight for Windows 8. (Official website shows classic Windows flag instead of window, Surface website has 2 Microsoft logos). I wonder whether Microsoft gets around the issue of updating their OS and framework)

Nevertheless I see Windows 8 as a phase, it?s the beginning of a new Windows, the beginning of a new era of PCs thanks to bringing this UI to the mainstream audience. It?s more than an iPad in every single way, and with a good form factor it can be a tablet device. I feel like I?m witnessing the release of the SNES, the iPhone. I feel like Windows 8 is going to change a lot of things, and I can?t wait to see if people will adapt and embrace it.

I really don?t get how people can outright say ?I hate it?, and sometimes not even give it a chance, while Microsoft clearly explained their reasons for doing certain things in their blog posts on the Start Screen and File Explorer. I really hope that those people will give it another shot and ultimately use desktop and Metro apps concurrently.

It?s 3AM so I?m going to stop writing and post this thread. It came out to be even lower than my lowest expectations (been thinking about this since the D9 announcement and I suck at writing). I?m no Microsoft fanboy, just a user who uses and loves some of Microsoft products and someone who feels like Windows 8 is a risk in the right direction.

Bear with my grammar and thanks for reading, do you also think Windows 8 is a step (or risk) in the right direction?

I'm Not a fanboy, I like somethings about Apple and dislike others. Same goes or Microsoft and Google. So It's not that i'm against Microsoft I just dislike Metro

Now you do make a good point and one that I have agreed with from the start. From a developer standpoint being able to write once and compile for many is fantastic . I'm just not crazy on the Bla looking UI's. Sure 3D studio max could be made for Metro, but what I've seen thus far of the metro UI, it would be one ugly looking application and 2 steps backwards .

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Great read, and I agree! Windows 8, Office 2013, and Skydrive are the beginnings of a Microsoft come back. They're finally unifying their products and services in ways that no other competitor has done, which clearly has Apple nervous enough to lash out at.

Indeed these next few years will be quite interesting, but I love where it is going!

So those of us who dislike it should just forget all our reasons why we came to the conclusions we did and just use it because you don't understand why we came to the conclusions we did. That's about all I got out of the OP.

I don't need to keep using the metro start screen to know I don't like an obnoxious full screen menu with bright tacky colors and headache inducing animations. That is never going to change.

Not a fanboy either, but I see Windows 8 as the next Vista, for the most part. You points are all good for some one who doesn't mind change and a learning curve, but most regular people don't want that and that definitely is no reason for any business to upgrade!

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No, Windows 8 isn't even a start of something, just two steps backward in the computer UIs evolution: the MetroUI-powered Windows Phone isn't selling at all, so it's pretty clear to me that, regardless of its value, nobody wants to deal with the new interface Microsoft is trying so hard to push up our throat.

P.S.I'm a Windows Phone user, I like Metro on my smartphone, I will never welcome it on my PCs.

This is the first version of Windows people are resenting, numerously.

And this vocal group are the die hard techies. Introduce Windows 8 to the average user (girlfriend, mom, uncle Fred) show them the new ways of navigating, present Windows 8 neutrally as the new OS and see the reaction. For me average folk love it. Average people will only hate Windows 8 without trying it because their "techy" friend tells them to. Much like what happened to Vista.

Some people will just never get over the fact that individuals have subjective reasons for liking or disliking things. Reasons that may not lend themselves well to some sort of reasoned deconstruction, or be swayed by facts, figures, charts, or graphs.

Generally people who cannot accept this fact tend to have little capacity for empathy, embroiled as they are in dispassionate code or the latest hardware. That is to say simply, they don't have the capacity or the concern to see or feel things as another might. With this type, only their perspective matters, and no one else's. My way or the highway.

By the way, how does one "disrespect" an operating system?

  • Like 3

And this vocal group are the die hard techies. Introduce Windows 8 to the average user (girlfriend, mom, uncle Fred) show them the new ways of navigating, present Windows 8 neutrally as the new OS and see the reaction. For me average folk love it. Average people will only hate Windows 8 without trying it because their "techy" friend tells them to. Much like what happened to Vista.

I agree - the wife instantly liked it even after i'd warned her it'd be quite different. She's had zero trouble using it which surprised me and I suspect even my parents will take to it OK. The metro apps plugging into her email, photos and social data were a massive hit - she literally went "cool". I suppose they are, they look good and the whole way they work together with the live tiles is impressive.

I think it could have been great. I loved the original Metro UI paradigm, but to me Microsoft have managed to lose what it was about somewhere along the line. Perhaps too many compromises to make it work on both tablets and desktops... I can't help but feel it would have been better if it was "responsive" like many web designs are becoming now. That is, the general UI is the same, but it "morphs" according to form factor.

I'm not giving up on Metro as an idea - I'll see where we are at come Windows 9 (it is early days afterall) - but as it stands it comes across as a bit of a mess to me.

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Many people desperately want that start menu back, or want the Metro environment shut off. I don?t get them. People should embrace change if it?s for the better and give things a chance.

There's the key point in this argument, though. Embrace change if it is a change for the better. Who is to say what is better? You might consider the start screen to be an improvement over the start menu, others will disagree. You might find yourself to be more productive in Windows 8 than previous versions, and others might feel the opposite.

This is why these threads keep coming around. Someone wants to write their opinion on the subject thinking that they can change everyone's mind. At the end of the day it's all subjective, and you telling me that Windows 8 is more productive for you doesn't change the fact that I feel the opposite when it comes to my productivity levels.

Sure 3D studio max could be made for Metro, but what I've seen thus far of the metro UI, it would be one ugly looking application and 2 steps backwards .

What would be the point in that? Metro apps is software designed for one solution. It is very limited, compared to desktop apps.
  • Like 2

do you also think Windows 8 is a step (or risk) in the right direction?

That was a really interesting read compared to all the other "It's ****" "It's amazing" threads, thank you!

I don't personally like the interface how it is, it feels like something that's getting in my way. I do however think it is certainly a step in the right direction.

For me average folk love it. Average people will only hate Windows 8 without trying it because their "techy" friend tells them to. Much like what happened to Vista.

Lol, if this is true Microsoft is ****ing doomed :-P Guess what? Techies are early adopters of new technologies, not wives, husbands, grandmothers, parents, siblings, dogs, cats, pets or whatever you have in your household. The iPhone became a mass phenomenon AFTER the apple fanatics broke their bank accounts to purchase the phone....

Lol, if this is true Microsoft is ****ing doomed :-P Guess what? Techies are early adopters of new technologies, not wives, husbands, grandmothers, parents, siblings, dogs, cats, pets or whatever you have in your household. The iPhone became a mass phenomenon AFTER the apple fanatics broke their bank accounts to purchase the phone....

Not really. People will get Windows 8 the same way the vast majority always do - with a new PC. The number of upgrades always pales in comparison, even when the original OS is horrible (XP->7 for example). It's part of the reason why the rumoured 'dropping' of retail versions makes a lot of sense for the company (and for us too since they were always overpriced). Upgrades are non trivial for most users - even now when Windows is really easy to install it's still beyond the average user.

As a "techie" i'll get asked if it's ok etc and personally, so far, I'd say there's nothing to fear - it's a tighter better featured version of 7 with a rather divisive new UI which I don't find a hindrance even at my advanced age ;)

Not really. People will get Windows 8 the same way the vast majority always do - with a new PC. The number of upgrades always pales in comparison, even when the original OS is horrible (XP->7 for example). It's part of the reason why the rumoured 'dropping' of retail versions makes a lot of sense for the company (and for us too since they were always overpriced). Upgrades are non trivial for most users - even now when Windows is really easy to install it's still beyond the average user.

As a "techie" i'll get asked if it's ok etc and personally, so far, I'd say there's nothing to fear - it's a tighter better featured version of 7 with a rather divisive new UI which I don't find a hindrance even at my advanced age ;)

You are on a technology forum. You are not part of the normal population like my grandma.

Sure casual users might be able to use Windows8 fine. But people are going to have serious issues using WIndows 8 Metro at home and Windows XP at work. I have to deal with people complaining that their Windows XP is not working because it cannot do the Windows Snap feature.

This is the first version of Windows people are resenting, numerously. (millennium was an exception but didn't really change much, awareness of issues was also not that high att)

BS... I've used every version of Windows, and ME was a giant **** show of epic proportions, mostly because it was dropped on computers without people being aware, and it's main feature was that it could BSOD in record time. With no explanation or support from MS, either, and many people had the option to use 2000 or ME at the time, which was like choosing between a pick-up truck or a dead horse, but since MS played the "oh, ME is better for home use" up, too many people went with it.

And, it wasn't even the worst of the Windows OSs. Vista was a complete disaster... I tried running it once years after it came out (during the Windows 7 beta), and hardware support for the PC I had built was the worst I've ever seen out of an OS (and that includes some random Linux distros).

Windows 8? It's actually pretty nice. And that's coming from someone who mostly uses Macs.

I would rate Windows 8 about a 6.5/10. I open quite a bit of stuff and I get headaches going back and forth between the Start Screen and my Desktop.

I would rather go back to Windows 95 if I had a choice. This is the first OS I will not be upgrading to.

XP: I was young, so I got it within the first few months of release.

Vista: I bought two copies the week it was available in a local store.

7: I bought three copies, one within the first week of availability in the Microsoft Store, then another for my Mac. The last one I bought was for my brother.

I was excited about every OS up until now. Go ahead and tell me to "deal with change" all you want. I will deal with it by having Microsoft lose a customer.

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My Mom took to it, but with an "eh" kinda reaction, she figured it out on her own, after a few minutes of exploring. Even though her reaction was lackluster there was no HATE, HATE, HATE, WHERE'S MY START MENU!!!!!!! Her favorite part though, were the live tiles. Specifically, the weather, mail, and MSNBC News apps I have installed.

I would rate Windows 8 about a 6.5/10. I open quite a bit of stuff and I get headaches going back and forth between the Start Screen and my Desktop.

I would rather go back to Windows 95 if I had a choice. This is the first OS I will not be upgrading to.

XP: I was young, so I got it within the first few months of release.

Vista: I bought two copies the week it was available in a local store.

7: I bought three copies, one within the first week of availability in the Microsoft Store, then another for my Mac. The last one I bought was for my brother.

I was excited about every OS up until now. Go ahead and tell me to "deal with change" all you want. I will deal with it by having Microsoft lose a customer.

I agree with every word of this. WONT be upgrading. First thing I did when I downloaded to see what the fuss was about was click the desktop tile and never went back to Metro UI - for the desktop, it simply doesnt work as well as I thought it would. Mutlitasking is horrible (exit one app to load another full screen... WTF??)

Yep... Windows 8 = Windows ME.

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I agree with every word of this. WONT be upgrading. First thing I did when I downloaded to see what the fuss was about was click the desktop tile and never went back to Metro UI - for the desktop, it simply doesnt work as well as I thought it would. Mutlitasking is horrible (exit one app to load another full screen... WTF??)

Yep... Windows 8 = Windows ME.

Luckily, I was too young and we did not purchase Windows ME. So I went from Windows 95 to XP :)

Great read, and I agree! Windows 8, Office 2013, and Skydrive are the beginnings of a Microsoft come back. They're finally unifying their products and services in ways that no other competitor has done, which clearly has Apple nervous enough to lash out at.

Indeed these next few years will be quite interesting, but I love where it is going!

First off - SkyDrive. While it's been available, it didn't integrate well with the rest of the operating system (Windows 7); however, third-party cloud integration tools (from anybody) have similar issues - it isn't unique to SkyDrive. Now, thanks to Windows 8 itself, improvements to SkyDrive on the back-end, and better mesh with application frameworks (especially Office), SkyDrive storage is almost indistinguishable from local storage.

Next - Windows 8 itself. I had my doubts about Windows 8 ever since I first saw the Metro UI, and I was, in fact, seriously concerned about backward compatibility with Win32 applications and games. To repeat what I said before; I - WAS - WRONG. In fact, I've never been so happy to BE wrong. Yes - it supports touch better than Windows 7; however, it also has better KEYBOARD support than Windows 7. (Kind of an odd thing for a supposedly touch-biased OS to get right.) I haven't used the touch support; however, I'm leveraging the keyboard in a way I haven't been able to do since Windows 2000 Professional. I'm not THAT addicted to mousing around, thank you very much.

Now - Office365 2.0 and Office 2013. The original Office365 was based on Office 2010 (which was a safe choice), and I was initially expecting Office 2013 to be minor improvements considering how much new ground 2010 alone broke. Again, I was wrong. Majorly wrong. Office 2013/365 2.0 is breaking yet more new ground - I haven't seen back-to-back Office releases for Windows break new ground before to this degree.

1. While a local install of 2013 is faster than a C2R install of O365 2.0, even O365 2.0 is faster than locally-installed 2010, let alone O365 1.0. The cloud is no longer an afterthought at Microsoft.

2. I commented before on the improved SkyDrive.

3. Theming in all of Office is consistent, and is now user-based - not version-based. Your Office is now *exactly that*.

And we're not even close to done.

You are on a technology forum. You are not part of the normal population like my grandma.

I'm pretty sure I didn't claim to be 'normal' - I said what my view would be when asked by the 'normal' people. I'm well aware what users are like on average - and how many call IE "google" because I set it as their homepage..

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The company is seeking clearance from the Trump administration to purchase memory from ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT). This week in Meta news Image: Meta Catch up on some of the latest Meta, WhatsApp, and Instagram updates that arrived throughout the week: WhatsApp gets a new final boss: Mark Zuckerberg announced that CRED's Kunal Shah will become the next global head of WhatsApp, as Will Cathcart steps down and moves to a new role at Meta. The social media giant invested money in CRED through a Series H funding round. AI glasses in 26 styles: A new line of Meta Glasses launched in partnership with EssilorLuxottica. Starting at $299, it comes in more than two dozen styles across different colors, lenses, and frames. More ways to doomscroll: Instagram for TV is now available on Samsung smart TVs launched in 2020 and later years. The company also announced that it's testing several new features on Instagram for TV, bringing it closer to YouTube and Netflix. This week in AI news Image: Microsoft Catch up on the latest artificial intelligence news updates that arrived throughout the week: Water-saving data center: Microsoft is building a gas-powered AI data center with a capacity of 2 gigawatts. The company will deploy a closed-loop cooling system, saying that its total lifecycle water use will be "only a fraction of that consumed annually by a typical fast-food restaurant.” OpenAI beats Claude Mythos: GPT-5.5-Cyber got a limited release for verified defenders. It scored 85.6% on CyberGym, compared with 81.8% for GPT-5.5 and 83.8% for Claude Mythos 5. The AI giant also announced a limited preview of its new GPT-5.6 model series, whose flagship model, GPT-5.6 Sol, is targeted at demanding reasoning and agentic workloads. Proceed with caution: The Trump administration instructed OpenAI to limit the distribution of GPT-5.6 to a small group of government-approved partners rather than the general public, as has happened in the past. Claude Tag: Anthropic launched its new AI teammate for Slack, enabling teams to delegate tasks to Claude directly within Slack channels. What makes it different is that it's designed to operate as a shared assistant for an entire team rather than a single user. Challenging US dominance: The UK government has funded £60 million ($70 million) to Oxford and UCL to keep the country in the AI race by building open-source, low-hardware alternatives. The two organizations will share the money over six years. Paying for AI development: One cost is the loss of human jobs. Oracle laid off about 21,000 employees (13% of its workforce) amid increasing AI adoption. The software giant said that AI advancement and adoption "may continue to result in reductions to our workforce." GitHub strips features: It removed the ability to manually detect an AI model from its Copilot Free and Student plans. In other words, its automatic routing system is the only way to choose a model. Are you a copycat? Anthropic accused Alibaba of creating about 25,000 fraudulent accounts to copy Claude's capabilities at scale. It told US lawmakers that operators linked to Alibaba generated 28.8 million exchanges with Claude between April 22 and June 5, 2026. Reserve my memory: The semiconductor company Micron revealed that AI companies are spending billions to lock up its memory years in advance. Its customers have locked in $22 billion worth of memory supply commitments. Another AI battle: A publisher group that collectively owns 400 newspapers sued OpenAI and Microsoft for scraping their content to build AI chatbots such as ChatGPT and Copilot without compensation. Anthropic AI ban: The US government partially reversed the Anthropic AI ban, allowing it to restore Claude Mythos 5. However, it can only be deployed for a limited set of US organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure. This week in Microsoft News In some of the hottest stories of the week: Windows 10 quietly gained a year of support and updates, Windows 11 KB5095093 released with a long list of features, and Windows 11 26H2 is finally getting the ability to disable web search results in Windows 11 Search. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in science news Image by Pascal Küffer via Pexels Catch up on some of the latest science and out-of-this-world updates that arrived throughout the week: 13 billion-year-old secret: Scientists found that the universe's first molecule (helium hyride) reacted with hydrogen much faster in cold temperatures than previously believed. It's a new breakthrough that changes our understanding of early star formation. Cosmic Living Fossil: Astronomers found CR3, a surprisingly pristine 11.5-billion-year-old galaxy dubbed a "living fossil." It suggests the universe's first generation of stars formed much later than previously assumed. Einstein's 100-year-old theory: Thanks to relativity, researchers calculated that clocks on Mars tick 477 microseconds faster per day than on Earth. This minute gravitational difference is crucial for synchronizing future interplanetary space missions. Don't panic: NASA's James Webb Telescope finally eliminated the threat of asteroid 2024 YR4 striking the moon in 2032. The rocky giant will give us a safe fly-by without causing any harm. This week in gaming? The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition and Voidwrought have replaced the old titles in this week's Epic Games Store giveaway. For Xbox Free Play Days, the new titles include House Flipper 2, Blades of Fire, and Assetto Corsa Competizione. Steam Summer Sale 2026 kicked off with discounts for everything from the newest games and retro gems to all sorts of DLC packs, until July 9. Meanwhile, NVIDIA GeForce NOW added support for several new titles, including Dark Scrolls, SAND: Raiders of Sophie, and EMPULSE. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Age of Empires Mobile comes to PC, here's how to carry over progress from your phone Xbox Insiders get Xbox 360 achievements and Gamertag character upgrades Grand Theft Auto VI pricing revealed alongside Ultimate Edition and pre-loading details Sony announces Bungie layoffs that will affect "significant number of employees" From the review corner This week, Steven published a review of the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro AI-powered NAS, featuring an all-metal exterior on the lines of the four-bay F4-425 series. Powered by the octa-core Intel Core N350, the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro is highly energy-efficient, operates quietly, and offers three M.2 slots. On the flip side, OpenClaw support requires removing security hardening (SPC), AI requires a paid subscription, the software feels like a beta, and the rubber feet constantly come unstuck. ZimaBoard 2 1664 Starter Kit Another NAS setup reviewed this week is the ZimaBoard 2 by IceWhale Technology. It comes in a small footprint with great modern hardware through a combo of Intel N150 and DDR5 memory support. On the downside, the memory is not upgradeable, ZimaOS is a bit barebones, factory reset requires USB flashing, and there is no automatic backup via the mobile app. Synology's BeeCamera software Christopher wrote his review of the software that powers BeeCamera Plus and said "the BeeCamera app is a great way to add private home monitoring to your network but there are some limitations." It's free with an easy setup process, fast response time, and good AI and detection features. However, there is no desktop version; it only works with Synology cameras, some configurations are difficult to set up on a phone, and it lacks the features of the surveillance station. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: Onkyo Dolby Atmos AV receivers are really solid deals 4TB TEAMGROUP MP44Q, 2TB T-Force G50, and 2TB WD My Passport SSDs drop to great prices Edifier S3000MKII hi-fi audiophile grade bookshelf speaker is at its lowest price now The best controller for XBOX and PC is down to the lowest price Limited time Prime Day deal cuts price of this Hisense 65" 4K smart TV in half To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
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