Recommended Posts

I've come to the conclusion I would happily use Windows 8 on a tablet based device, however, yes everyone at home may now be running Laptops with only 2 significant screen filling Application running at a time perhaps a browser and a word processor at worst. In the business world where I expect the trend to shift towards laptops over desktop, but then with secondary monitors due to A. It being easier to complete work on a big screen over a small one and B. It increasing productivity in lots of professional based jobs. Metro just seems to counter this logical step by making dual screen working cumbersome.

I've come to the conclusion I would happily use Windows 8 on a tablet based device, however, yes everyone at home may now be running Laptops with only 2 significant screen filling Application running at a time perhaps a browser and a word processor at worst. In the business world where I expect the trend to shift towards laptops over desktop, but then with secondary monitors due to A. It being easier to complete work on a big screen over a small one and B. It increasing productivity in lots of professional based jobs. Metro just seems to counter this logical step by making dual screen working cumbersome.

You're not making any sense. With the trend towards laptops over desktops, which I agree with, you're losing benefit from having multiple programs open side by side, and you need to make the best use possible of what you have.

None of the "IT pros" posting here are in a decision making position for a major company, you can almost guarantee it. Any reasonably well run IT division will EVALUATE a new OS, be it ios on the ipad, android tablets or phones or Windows 8. And in its current state Windows 8 is still unfinished and no competent IT professional will be basing final decisions on a beta product, they will do that with at least the RC when all features are complete and the OS is considered finished or close enough to make no difference and proper testing can be done in a corporate environment. Anyone claiming that they wont be deploying Windows 8 is just blowing BS because no corporation is going to base rollout decisions on a beta OS, and corporations are now just starting to move to Windows 7 in numbers and will examine Windows 8 when its final and after testing will make a decision. Those claiming otherwise are just spreading FUD.

Sadly, there were "IT Pros" passing judgment as far back as the DP as if it were final code. Also, sadly, these are more likely to be the people that go around saying "XP is teh pwnz0rz"

Ultimately, they're not going to be able to cause much damage. The average user will see that Windows 8 boots way faster, and that it has a system refresh function for when things get problematic, while still preserving user files. It'll see some pretty quick adoption, driver issues aside. Maybe not as quick as 7, but it won't be as slow as Vista either.

My mistake, I thought you were making a legitimate contribution to this thread.

I was, and I was stating why I need/use the start button/menu. I wasn't wanting to be told "use the run box" to have a similar experience. Which really isn't the case anyways.

You're not making any sense. With the trend towards laptops over desktops, which I agree with, you're losing benefit from having multiple programs open side by side, and you need to make the best use possible of what you have.

If you read I say laptops with a secondary monitor(so effectively a Desktop) which will definitely be on the increase in the workplace due to the productivity benefits, Windows 8 is completely contradictory to that concept and will become quite annoying with having to use corners on a certain screen to access things. What they should have been focusing on is implementing functions to solve this problem built in like duplicated startbars as an option for duplicated screens.

On another aside, can you 50/50 split or am I stuck with this weird 80/20 where you can't read anything in the 20 in for example a web browser making it not really 2 useful things on the screen? If you use the desktop as the right of these 2 splits, is it just me or should the replacement right click menu(containing run, search etc) work on the left bottom corner of the desktop(ie where the start button would have been) as well as left bottom corner of the screen at this point? It seems pretty odd having stuff appearing in a window off to the right(like opening control panel etc) when your mucking about the a corner in your metro area of the screen.

On another aside, can you 50/50 split or am I stuck with this weird 80/20 where you can't read anything in the 20 in for example a web browser making it not really 2 useful things on the screen?

Aero Snap... Microsoft made a bunch of commercials about this when Windows 7 came out... awesome easy 50-50 splits...

If you read I say laptops with a secondary monitor(so effectively a Desktop) which will definitely be on the increase in the workplace due to the productivity benefits, Windows 8 is completely contradictory to that concept and will become quite annoying with having to use corners on a certain screen to access things. What they should have been focusing on is implementing functions to solve this problem built in like duplicated startbars as an option for duplicated screens.

I would imagine it wouldn't be hard for them to enable Metro for the laptop and Legacy for the extended screen.

On another aside, can you 50/50 split or am I stuck with this weird 80/20 where you can't read anything in the 20 in for example a web browser making it not really 2 useful things on the screen? If you use the desktop as the right of these 2 splits, is it just me or should the replacement right click menu(containing run, search etc) work on the left bottom corner of the desktop(ie where the start button would have been) as well as left bottom corner of the screen at this point? It seems pretty odd having stuff appearing in a window off to the right(like opening control panel etc) when your mucking about the a corner in your metro area of the screen.

I think at the moment it's just 80/20, but yeah, being able to set any split, as well as having top/bottom options.

There's a difference between the current implementation of Metro and what could be done with the UI.

Why doesn't MS just give people the option to go Desktop specific or Metro specific? Outline it in a tutorial during a tutorial, so all normal consumers press Metro specific. Desktop Specific, all Metro apps will become invisible. If you manage to click on one (say through Explorer, etc), then a simple prompt will tell you to that you need to be in Metro mode for this functionality. Essentially, Windows 7 with a new login screen and boot logo.

It'll cut all this complaining from advanced users, while still maintaining the Metro ecosystem.

On a side note, the worst thing about Metro is the limited settings. Want to see more settings? The desktop control panel launches. This is a hacker solution. Silly MS.

Better to start from scratch with a clean base and add features in slowly than do some weird hybrid hack that has some legacy junk. At the moment having Metro with legacy as backup is a better long term solution.

Apple did the same thing with offering Classic mode for OSX.

Yeah, while there are certain functions that are slowed down a bit in Windows 8 compared to 7, there's nothing you can do in Windows 7 that you can't do in Windows 8, and in a lot of ways it's faster. Of course, you could also do a lot of the things Windows 8 has still using the start button and menu, but that's a minor thing.

In Metro UI you just start typing. No need for the start button on keyboard. Just start typing.

but to get to the metro UI you need to press the start button from desktop once...

My problem with the start button not being there is simple... The old start button was tailor made for mouse input and works great on Windows 7. To me, metro on desktop seems to be a regression when compared to aero. We don't design a car like a boat to make it work on both places. They should have kept the option to disable metro. This is just my opinion. Someone might have an opposite opinion from me and I am fine with it. At the end it won't matter, the final version will more or less look like the CP and possibly the start button is never coming back. I'll perhaps stick to win 7 as long as I can.

is there any real logical reason NOT to have it?

Money... If they don't change the UI then people will think its the same as windows 7 and not upgrade. Its only changed for the sake of change.

The reason why the start menu is needed is because it work with no fuss, its easy to use and everyone is used to it. The "progress" argument is just silly... if it works with no problems why change it?? Who had problems using the start menu??

Keep touch UI to touch devices.

  • Like 2

Money... If they don't change the UI then people will think its the same as windows 7 and not upgrade. Its only changed for the sake of change.

The reason why the start menu is needed is because it work with no fuss, its easy to use and everyone is used to it. The "progress" argument is just silly... if it works with no problems why change it?? Who had problems using the start menu??

Keep touch UI to touch devices.

Lots of people had problems with the start menu. As simple as people like to say it is, navigating it isn't always easy.

After using Windows 8 as my primary OS since it's release, I have no need for a start button. I just see no need.

Windows 8 was released?!?! where can I buy a copy?

lol I had to :p

I have 4 screen's what about me? What about People who have a 30 inch monitor?

I have a 30" monitor + 23" in portrait next to it. Windows 8 works just fine on it. I don't spend more than 2 seconds in the start screen when I need to launch a program. I also do not need to look at some other window while my start screen is open, and neither does anyone else. I press start, type a few letters in, and press enter. Same as Windows 7 but I get all the new features of 8.

The start screen is actually pretty awesome. I have weather pinned on it. All I need to do is hit the start button and it updates the weather on there. Hit the start button again and I'm back to where I was. More and more things will integrate into there and I will be able to just hit the start button to see any notifications, then hit it again to go back to where I was. I find this very efficient.

The start screen is actually pretty awesome. I have weather pinned on it. All I need to do is hit the start button and it updates the weather on there. Hit the start button again and I'm back to where I was. More and more things will integrate into there and I will be able to just hit the start button to see any notifications, then hit it again to go back to where I was. I find this very efficient.

It seems MS will finally get what they were going for when they made Active Desktop with IE4.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Fresh CachyOS install with Niri - I guess it's a little orange, but I'm working on it
    • FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 by Razvan Serea FastStone Image Viewer is a fast, stable, user-friendly image browser, converter and editor. It has a nice array of features that include image viewing, management, comparison, red-eye removal, emailing, resizing, cropping, retouching and color adjustments. Its innovative but intuitive full-screen mode provides quick access to EXIF information, thumbnail browser and major functionalities via hidden toolbars that pop up when your mouse touches the four edges of the screen. Other features include a high quality magnifier and a musical slideshow with 150+ transitional effects, as well as lossless JPEG transitions, drop shadow effects, image annotation, scanner support, histogram and much more. It supports all major graphic formats (BMP, JPEG, JPEG 2000, animated GIF, PNG, PCX, PSD, EPS, TIFF, WMF, ICO and TGA) and popular digital camera RAW formats (CRW, CR2, NEF, PEF, RAF, MRW, ORF, SRF, ARW, SR2, RW2 and DNG). FastStone Image Viewer features: Image browser and viewer with a familiar Windows Explorer-like user interface Support for many popular image formats and PDF viewing True Full Screen viewer with convenient image zoom support and unique fly-out menu panels Crystal-clear and customizable one-click image magnifier Powerful image editing tools: Resize/resample, rotate/flip, crop, sharpen/blur, adjust lighting/colors/curves/levels etc. Eleven re-sampling algorithms to choose from when resizing images Image color effects: gray scale, sepia, negative, Red/Green/Blue adjustment Image special effects: drop shadow, framing, bump map, sketch, oil painting, lens Draw texts, lines, highlights, rectangles, ovals and callout objects on images Clone Stamp and Healing Brush Superior red-eye effect removal/reduction with completely natural looking end result Multi-level Undo/Redo capability Single click to switch between best fit and actual size mode Image management, including file tagging, rating and drag-and-drop to copy/move/re-arrange files Histogram display with color counter feature Compare images side-by-side (up to 4 at a time) to easily cull those forgettable shots Image EXIF metadata support (plus comment editing for JPEGs) Configurable batch processing to convert/rename large or small collections of images Slideshow with 150+ transition effects and music support (MP3, WMA, WAV...) Create efficient image attachments for emailing to family and friends Print images with full page-layout control Create fully configurable contact sheets Create memorable artistic image montages from your family photos for personalized desktop wallpapers (Wallpaper Anywhere) Acquire images from scanners. Support batch scanning to PDF, TIFF, JPEG and PNG Versatile screen capture capability Powerful Save As interface to compare image quality and control generated file size Run favorite external editors with one keystroke from within Image Viewer Offer portable version of the program which can be run from a removable storage device Configurable mouse wheel support Support themes (bright, gray and dark) Support dual-monitor configurations Support touch interface (tap, swipe, pinch) Support dual instances Play video and audio files (Third party codecs may be required for old versions of Windows) And much more... FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 changelog: Added support for SVG format Added Start importing automatically and Handle duplicate file names automatically options to the Import Photos and Videos tool WebP files can now be rotated and saved with a single click Enhanced dark theme support in the PDF viewer Fixed a bug where some links in PDF files were not clickable Other improvements and bug fixes Download: FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 | Portable | ~15.0 MB (Freeware) View: FastStone Image Viewer Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Yup, broke my comp… again. its times like this when I regret AMD. This just never happens on NV.
    • Huh? You're delusional calling the Steam Deck dead. It is so successful that it has sold out multiple times. Even after the price hike this year it sold out again with 24 hours of being back in stock. The demand is real and has not died down even after four years.
    • Same place "Unreal III" is, in everyone's thoughts!
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      460
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      160
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      85
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!