Just how many people hate Windows 8?


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Touch is far from a fad. There are many benefits to having a touch UI. A more dynamic UX is one of them. I yearn for a more dynamic computing experience, and Metro is delivering just that. It's 2013, to suffer through a bland, static UX is insane, computers can do and offer so much more, but we'll never get there cling on to an old paradigm. It's not 1995 anymore, the computer has matured, and now it's time for the next level.

Many of you want to claim ergonomics, but grasping a mouse isn't as ergonomic as you may think either, nor is sitting down, and being sedentary but many here claim they do anyway. Touch offers a new way to interact with our data and our machines, ways the mouse will never offer.

If mice can be moved across the screen in a millisecond, why do Windows 8 haters always go on about how they have to move their mice larger distances in 8?

I never got that argument. It takes basically no time and by using the whole screen to display apps vs the tiny menu in the corner you can have way more items displayed which are still just as easily clicked on (or more easily because they're HUGE).

Thank you so much for pointing out the hypocrisy here.

When talking about touch vs mouse: "I can move my mouse across the screen so much faster than my finger!"

When talking about hot corners and controls: "It takes way too long to move my mouse alllllllllll the wayyyy across my huuuuuuge screen! I grow grey hairs every time I invoke the charms bar!"

So which is it?

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It's true, ten years from now we'll just be using things like Kinect, or retina scanners. In the mean time, touch screens are a pretty good compromise.

Kinect for PC is interesting. On a desktop I think it would be better received than touch. Touch is great for the kitchen PC, basic tasks etc. No doubt. And Kinect, you'll always have to activate recognition or have really good AI to determine if you're picking your nose, swatting a fly, or trying to move a window (of course, in Modern UI MDI isn't much of an issue). Like touch, for workstation computing, it will have its nice but never be the primary.

None of these things are new, just better. They have evolved to where they are best suited. k/m just doesn't work on phones and tablets even though trying a k/m UI on them anyway is what dug MS into the hole they're in. They do have a better shot with a touch UI being well implemented on a Desktop than they did putting a Desktop k/m UI on tablets and smartphones.

If mice can be moved across the screen in a millisecond, why do Windows 8 haters always go on about how they have to move their mice larger distances in 8?

Because making selections and clicking in a specific area you are working in is different than accessing the Charms and App bars which are always at the extreme left and right, and the context menus, instead of being in-place, or where you click, they are always at the extreme top or bottom of the screen, no matter what size your screen is.

If you could have those same bars expand beneath the mouse pointer where you clicked, it would completely eliminate this issue. (Much like the Office 2013 format bar when you right click text or in an Excel cell, optimal!)

Edit: This is not really an issue for me, I'm just sayin', I understand it.

Touch is far from a fad. There are many benefits to having a touch UI. A more dynamic UX is one of them. I yearn for a more dynamic computing experience, and Metro is delivering just that. It's 2013, to suffer through a bland, static UX is insane, computers can do and offer so much more, but we'll never get there cling on to an old paradigm. It's not 1995 anymore, the computer has matured, and now it's time for the next level.

Many of you want to claim ergonomics, but grasping a mouse isn't as ergonomic as you may think either, nor is sitting down, and being sedentary but many here claim they do anyway. Touch offers a new way to interact with our data and our machines, ways the mouse will never offer.

I'd like that too. But what I want to know, is what are you doing in Metro that's delivering that right now? There's nothing meaningful there really. There's One Note MX and a bunch of basically tablet apps. I mean I have a handful of applets I use and like but nothing close to delivering a more dynamic computing experience. I'd like that too, and at times I see the potential for it in the Modern UI.

TBH, if Zune or WMP were Modern UI with cloud sync (as long as they used in-app search) and synced Desktop, Surface RT, and WP8, then I'd say that right now.

When talking about touch vs mouse: "I can move my mouse across the screen so much faster than my finger!"

When talking about hot corners and controls: "It takes way too long to move my mouse alllllllllll the wayyyy across my huuuuuuge screen! I grow grey hairs every time I invoke the charms bar!"

So which is it?

Its clearly both. If so many people here weren't being such obstinate n00bs they would understand that simple example by now. If you want a hint its about three pages back + MorganX's post above.

One regards the physical movement range of your hand and arm and its associated time and fatigue.

The other represents the distance the mouse cursor must travel to target.

Or MetroIE Morgan. ;) (Per the context menu)

You have to consider this, is the Desktop + Metro more or less disjointed than OSX + iOS?

The comparison doesn't make any sense given that OS X and iOS are two separate and distinct products with any sort of cross pollination resulting in an idea being re-crafted for the desktop rather than just dropping it on the desktop. In the case of Windows 8 you're going to have to use Metro in some form or another whether you like it or not - it isn't like some sort of feature that you can avoid given that the start menu has been replaced, if you want to use the bundled applications then you're going to have to deal with the metro interface etc.

I think the OSX to Windows 8 comparison is interesting, as I use both, and from a high level perspective, the desktops are pretty similar these days. What isn't similar is their mobile platform, and I have always said that by starting now, Windows will have an advantage over OSX by the time Windows 9 / OS 11 comes out. Consider that Ubuntu is also planning on going to the desktop / tablet / phone interface all in one, which will really leave iOS as the odd man out.

And what is wrong with having two distinct user interfaces which target a specific way of doing something? the future of the desktop and tablet are pretty clear; touch pad gestures for the desktop and touch interface for the tablet.

Or MetroIE Morgan. ;) (Per the context menu)

I actually didn't know that. Just tried it. Perplexing and inconsistent, lol. They should definitely do this in the mail app! I never use metroIE. I find it wastes too much space being landscape. I wouldn't mind if the web shifted to landscape orientation but that will not and is not happening and MS doesn't have than much influence on the web dev community at this time. I would definitely enjoy browsing with the Surface RT more if that were the case.

I yearn for a more dynamic computing experience, and Metro is delivering just that. It's 2013, to suffer through a bland, static UX is insane, computers can do and offer so much more, but we'll never get there cling on to an old paradigm.

Why not just get an iPad. It was released 3 years ago. In 2010. ...Oh, I forgot. "Static grid of icons", huh?

I can move my hand faster than I can drag my mouse from one part of the screen to an other. Detractors are always complaining of having to move their mouse large distances.

What a load of nonsense. Never heard of increasing the tracking speed of your mouse and/or trackpad? On top of that I remember you claiming you knew basically nobody with a screen larger than around 20-inch, which seriously makes me wonder how large the distance can be to begin with.

post-128385-0-05707900-1364853039.png

Touch is far from a fad. There are many benefits to having a touch UI. A more dynamic UX is one of them. I yearn for a more dynamic computing experience, and Metro is delivering just that. It's 2013, to suffer through a bland, static UX is insane, computers can do and offer so much more, but we'll never get there cling on to an old paradigm. It's not 1995 anymore, the computer has matured, and now it's time for the next level.

Many of you want to claim ergonomics, but grasping a mouse isn't as ergonomic as you may think either, nor is sitting down, and being sedentary but many here claim they do anyway. Touch offers a new way to interact with our data and our machines, ways the mouse will never offer.

Please explain to me how Windows 7 and below are so incredibly boring? Why do we absolutely need something different?

Windows 7 does what it should, let you run programs. It does not need to be anything else. The same with Windows 8. I do not need all of this live tiles crap on my desktop. Outlook 2010, Skype, and other programs give me notifications just fine.

What is so bad about a static UI? It does what we need it to. Allow us to be productive without getting in the way. Windows 8 fails at this.

Mouse and Keyboard have been around for well over three decades, no matter how much you worship windows 8, they are going nowhere.

this simply isn't true. They are already working on more vocal, hand/body gesture, and even eye based control devices. they are the future, and the keyboard and mouse are simply hold-over and 'safe' technologies that some technical and non-technical folks just can't seem to let go of that readily (a la start menu).. but they will have to one day.

keyboard and mouse are simply hold-over and 'safe' technologies that some technical and non-technical folks just can't seem to let go of that readily (a la start menu).. but they will have to one day.

They really won't (you want to force them?). But they will probably want to, once there is a superior alternative for all use cases. That time is not now.

this simply isn't true. They are already working on more vocal, hand/body gesture, and even eye based control devices. they are the future, and the keyboard and mouse are simply hold-over and 'safe' technologies that some technical and non-technical folks just can't seem to let go of that readily (a la start menu).. but they will have to one day.

While I agree all these things are being developed, they will be niche or specialized task specific, as they always have been. Particularly voice, hand body gesture, and eye control. Though I'm sure call of duty players are chomping at the bit for eye control. You think people at an office or a bank are going to be making hand/body gestures all day, or speaking confidential information and numbers.

Think someone is going to speak to create a complex spreadsheet, we have built-in voice rec now no one uses, and it's pretty good.

They really won't (you want to force them?). But they will probably want to, once there is a superior alternative for all use cases. That time is not now.

hmm I happen to disagree on that first part. Also, I never said to force them, only that it WILL go somewhere, and yes, probably without people really wanting it to do so.

I think that the time will come when it will be forced upon folks. heck, look at all the technology changes that have been forced on folks beta, 8 track, vhs, old computer screens, atari joysticks paddles, yadda yadda legacy hardware that is obsolete and while you can dig it up in your parents or your basement in a box, doesn't mean it is still viable or able to really be used with today's technology (simple analogy, but sticks based on showing hardware changes).

While I agree all these things are being developed, they will be niche or specialized task specific, as they always have been. Particularly voice, hand body gesture, and eye control. Though I'm sure call of duty players are chomping at the bit for eye control. You think people at an office or a bank are going to be making hand/body gestures all day, or speaking confidential information and numbers.

Think someone is going to speak to create a complex spreadsheet, we have built-in voice rec now no one uses, and it's pretty good.

Haha yeah, I'm not sure if we're going to get anywhere with voice recognition anytime soon. Instructing a person step by step to make that spreadsheet for you is already a pain...

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While I agree all these things are being developed, they will be niche or specialized task specific, as they always have been. Particularly voice, hand body gesture, and eye control. Though I'm sure call of duty players are chomping at the bit for eye control. You think people at an office or a bank are going to be making hand/body gestures all day, or speaking confidential information and numbers.

Think someone is going to speak to create a complex spreadsheet, we have built-in voice rec now no one uses, and it's pretty good.

I think you missed the point... what if that eye or voice recognition would know it was you, or even not and you could enter your pin code and bank numbers via eye or hand control.... no one knows what you enter but you and the computer, and as technology accelerates, it would be faster than a 10key, keyboard, etc.

I don't think these things are niche at all, and if they can be tailored for specific things, the more the merrier. I for one would welcome a huge spreadsheet once technology allows me to sit there and look at the screen, or wage my finger around and have the computer build it faster than I can type.

Don't think in terms of limited software or lack of embrace by comfortable people now.. that's the issue even back to win8.

hmm I happen to disagree on that first part. Also, I never said to force them, only that it WILL go somewhere, and yes, probably without people really wanting it to do so.

I think that the time will come when it will be forced upon folks. heck, look at all the technology changes that have been forced on folks beta, 8 track, vhs, old computer screens, atari joysticks paddles, yadda yadda legacy hardware that is obsolete and while you can dig it up in your parents or your basement in a box, doesn't mean it is still viable or able to really be used with today's technology (simple analogy, but sticks based on showing hardware changes).

But the stuff we have now are quantitatively better in just about every relevant manner. You'd have a hard time convincing mouse and keyboard folks otherwise at this point in time.

What a load of nonsense. Never heard of increasing the tracking speed of your mouse and/or trackpad? On top of that I remember you claiming you knew basically nobody with a screen larger than around 20-inch, which seriously makes me wonder how large the distance can be to begin with.

there's only one issue with that, I know where my finger is at all times, my cursor gets lost quite often, especially when working with multiple monitors.

You have also answered a common detractor complaint against Windows 8 with the mouse. ;)

hmm I happen to disagree on that first part. Also, I never said to force them, only that it WILL go somewhere, and yes, probably without people really wanting it to do so.

I think that the time will come when it will be forced upon folks. heck, look at all the technology changes that have been forced on folks beta, 8 track, vhs, old computer screens, atari joysticks paddles, yadda yadda legacy hardware that is obsolete and while you can dig it up in your parents or your basement in a box, doesn't mean it is still viable or able to really be used with today's technology (simple analogy, but sticks based on showing hardware changes).

one of the problem with your analogies, is that they were not forced, they were welcome as there was so much room for improvement in all those things. People do not see the improvement in Windows 8, and in fact, many see areas of regression. Something Windows has never done in the past.

Say cassettes provided marginally better sound than 8-tracks, but you had to put the cassette inside and 8-track shell, and a lot of the time it would jam. Lots of people would say, why bother, it doesn't actually sound "that" much better anyway.

there's only one issue with that, I know where my finger is at all times, my cursor gets lost quite often, especially when working with multiple monitors.

You have also answered a common detractor complaint against Windows 8 with the mouse. ;)

man...you are reaching.

>>I think you missed the point... what if that eye or voice recognition would know it was you, or even not and you could enter your pin code and bank numbers via eye or hand control.... no one knows what you enter but you and the computer, and as technology accelerates, it would be faster than a 10key, keyboard, etc.

I don't think these things are niche at all<<

I don't disagree with the examples you've given. But they are niche, they are not general computing input. Retinal scanning is already here, but there's the issue of privacy there. In America, it won't be forced on anyone en masse. Probably could go anywhere fingerprints can be forced, such as on some bank transactions.

>>I for one would welcome a huge spreadsheet once technology allows me to sit there and look at the screen, or wage my finger around and have the computer build it faster than I can type.<<

When you can look at the screen a build a huge spreadsheet, or even have AI build it for you, I'll be on board that right behind you. :)

this simply isn't true. They are already working on more vocal, hand/body gesture, and even eye based control devices. they are the future, and the keyboard and mouse are simply hold-over and 'safe' technologies that some technical and non-technical folks just can't seem to let go of that readily (a la start menu).. but they will have to one day.

Of course it's true, new technology such as touch does not = the end for keyboard and mouse

They are still the most efficient and comfortable way to control a PC, and will remain so for a long time to come, which is why they have barely changed since they were introduced all those years ago.

This thread is about the fact that Windows 8 has more positive reviews than negative on Amazon and how that compares to other versions of Windows.

Wrong, this thread was deliberately created to stir trouble, nothing more.

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I flattened my machine and used 8 as my only OS for weeks and weeks, maybe longer, and tried very very hard to understand and enjoy it, but in the end it was such a PITA to do the simplest of tasks that I got rid and reinstalled 7

When I did, my machine completely made sense again, things were in sensible places and my brain didn't hurt trying to remember to click here and move the mouse to this corner and wait for this to appear, etc etc

Change is not the issue, pointless retarded changes that make things take longer / make things awkward, is the issue

Excellent perspective and my thoughts totally. I did more then a test drive myself and used it off and on for several months but when I needed to get things done quickly without all the playing around and sightseeing I decided to use W7.

17,829 People hate it

1,909,299 People dislike it

12,678,231 People are neutral

819,267 People like it

9,032 People love it

32,302,377 People don't know they are using it

3,107 People think it's glass

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    • Does anyone here know if these updates are integrated into the UUP dump isos?
    • Motrix Next 3.9.4 by Razvan Serea Motrix Next is a modern, open-source cross-platform download manager built as the official next-generation successor to the original Motrix project. It has been completely rewritten using Tauri 2, Vue 3, TypeScript, and Rust, while still relying on the powerful Aria2 download engine for high-speed multi-protocol transfers. The app supports HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent, ED2K and magnet links, offering advanced features like multi-connection acceleration, task scheduling, bandwidth control, and batch download management. With a significantly reduced install size (around 20MB), it focuses on being lightweight, fast, and resource-efficient compared to traditional Electron-based download tools. Designed for Windows, macOS, and Linux, Motrix Next delivers a clean, modern UI inspired by Material Design 3 principles, with smooth animations and a minimal workflow. It improves usability through better download organization, system tray integration, and enhanced torrent handling including selective file downloads and tracker management. Motrix Next features: Multi-protocol downloads — HTTP, FTP, BitTorrent, Magnet, .torrent, ED2K, and Metalink tasks BitTorrent — Selective file download, DHT, peer exchange, encryption controls, metadata caching, GeoIP peer flags, and tracker probing Browser extension integration — Embedded Extension API with independent authentication, download confirmation, smart auto-submit, filename hints, referer/cookie forwarding, and real-time controls (Chrome Web Store · Edge Add-ons) Safe filename handling — Content-Disposition, RFC 2047, non-UTF-8, percent-encoded, and extensionless URL resolution with path traversal sanitization Download organization — Favorite and recent folders, optional file-type categorization, stale-record cleanup, and completed history backed by SQLite Concurrent downloads — Independent controls for active tasks, HTTP connections per server, segments per file, and BT peer limits Speed control — Global and per-task upload/download limits with day-of-week and time-of-day scheduling System integration — Tray operation, optional tray speed display, macOS Dock badge/progress, protocol handlers for magnet://, thunder://, and motrixnext:// Lightweight mode — Destroys the WebView on minimize-to-tray while Rust keeps the engine, task monitor, notifications, history, and extension routing alive Notifications and power options — Native task start/complete/failure notifications, keep-awake during downloads, and optional shutdown after completion Network controls — Scoped proxy support for downloads, app updates, and tracker updates, plus system proxy detection Auto-update channels — Stable, Beta, and Latest Across Channels policies with separate download and install phases Diagnostics — Structured logs, exportable diagnostic ZIPs, database integrity checks, automatic DB rebuild, and Linux GPU rendering fallback Personalization — Light/dark/system theme, 10 color schemes, 26 languages, and first-launch system language detection Motrix Next 3.9.4 changelog: Motrix Next 3.9.4 promotes the 3.9.4 beta cycle to stable. This release refreshes bundled engine binaries, improves task detail readability and copy actions, expands link handling for magnet and ED2K workflows, polishes responsive navigation and text wrapping, updates browser extension documentation, and refines network preference controls. New Features Task Detail copy actions — Added copyable values for task metadata and reusable render functions for long text fields. Magnet and ED2K lifecycle support — Added task lifecycle handling for magnet and ED2K links. History cleanup for deleted tasks — Deleted tasks can now remove matching history records. User-Agent management — Added user-agent management and improved related network preference controls. Browser extension documentation — Added the Firefox Add-ons link for the Motrix Next extension. Improvements Engine binaries — Updated bundled binaries for supported architectures. Task Detail readability — Long task names, URLs, tracker values, and copyable metadata now render more clearly. Deletion messaging — Refined localized task deletion text for clarity and consistency. Text wrapping — Improved URI input wrapping and task name multiline display. Navigation layout — Improved sub-navigation responsiveness. Disk allocation default — Changed the default file allocation method to trunc. Proxy controls — Improved proxy button styling in network preferences. Download: Motrix Next 64-bit | ARM64 | macOS ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Website | macOS / Linux | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
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