The direction Microsoft took with Windows 8  

855 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you like the direction Microsoft took with Windows 8?

    • Yes I love it, i'll be upgrading
    • No I hate it, i'll stick with Windows 7
    • It doesn't bother me
    • I will use Windows 8 with a start menu hack program


Recommended Posts

I will upgrading my two touch devices (a tablet and a notebook) currently running Win7 to Win8, but the rest of my "non-touch-enabled" infrastructure won't be being upgraded to Win8 any time soon! In summary: Win8 = better for touch screens, Win7 = better for non-touch screen imho!

Windows 8 reminds of OSX Tiger in the sense that the UI is all over the place. I was happy to see Apple unify most of the desktop with Leopard. I hate how you have to bounce back between two UI's in Windows 8. I wish it was complete either way, meaning all metro or all old desktop. Not the hack job that exist now. Don't get me wrong I really like the metro UI, just wish it was more consistent. Also, since I mentioned Apple I'm sure I will cause some negative reaction, so here are my main points. Really like that Microsoft is going in a different direction with metro. I find metro to be pretty easy to navigate until you have to work with settings. Don't like the need to bounce back and forth through two ui's. Can't wait until Windows 9 when things are more streamed line.

That very reason it's not *complete* is because WinRT is not complete - it's still being fleshed-out and lacks apps. (Naturally - that's where the frustration from those that hate Windows 8 is coming from.)

That said, the rest of Windows 8 (not just the hardware compatibility, but the backward-compatibility with Win32 applications/games/etc.) is as good as it gets.

A word to those that hate the very idea of multiple APIs and UIs: if WinRT were confined to tablets and slates (especially non-x86 tablets and slates) who would develop for it, and especially compared to Android or iOS? When it comes to tablets and slates, Android and iOS are Microsoft's competition (for both users and developers). Without the advantage of a greater possible user pool than either Android or iOS, no developer that wants to make money would touch WinRT with a ten foot fork.

I personally love Windows 8... but I have just gone back to Windows 7 because of the lack of compatibility for programmes I use everyday. For example, the installation for Sony Vegas didn't run, and I couldn't mount some of my games with PowerISO. Hopefully, they will fix this in the future and this won't be another major OS failure like Windows Vista...

The only reason you'd have to mount with PowerISO is if the image is in a *foreign* (non-ISO) format - such as MDS. Why not convert the image to ISO, then mount normally? (PowerISO is also an image-format converter, in addition to a mounting tool - because Windows 8 includes a mounting tool, if I found myself needing PowerISO, I'd simply use the conversion tool.)

Sony Vegas - Compatibility Settings, and Windows 7. (Also, select Run as Administrator for the installer, if not the program itself.)

Because Metro is not about a start screen, it's also about window management. Something that you can kinda get around in Windows8 but that's intended to become the standard in future Windows releases.

I could stand a fullscreen start menu if it was all about that (heck I'm enduring Gnome Shell's Overview right now, which even while offering a lot more features than Metro is still a fullscreen menu anyway), but the limitation of a few hardcoded window arrangements (fullscreen, 50/50 and 80/20 splits) is something that just won't work for me.

Then Windows8 happens to feel half backed, and not just because of the "beta" status. It neither here nor there when it comes to window management, offering a weird mix of behaviours depending on the type of app you are running.

You could stick with the classic desktop, but then where's the advantage of running Windows8 at all? There might be some improvements under the hood, but at the end of the day you have the same experience as with Windows7 plus a few annoyances, and you end wasting time adapting your workflow to work around features you aren't using.

The start menu... I didn't like Windows7 start menu so it's not like I'm attached to anything. I disliked it same as I didn't like it when other desktops like KDE adopted it. The old "classic" start menu wasn't good either, but at least it wasn't such a mess that you absolutely needed a search box to find anything.

If we really want to go that way I'd rather use something like Synapse and be able to find not just my apps but absolutely everything on my systems from a single search box, and then drop the whole menu instead of pretending that the new implementation is of any actual use other than wasting space.

Also the widgets on the start menu could be a nice idea wasn't it because I'm working on my desktop, not on the start menu. I can already get info about incoming mail, weather, chats (which I can reply to without even opening new windows or changing my window arrangement), calendar events and what not without touching any key, so I don't feel any need for a whole new screen full of gadgets.

Summing up, I don't see Windows8 adding anything I need, yet it would force me to change my workflow for no good reason. The Metro style window management feels like a huge step backwards if you are doing anything other than watching movies or browsing the web. I just can't get my work done with those crappy split options.

Yeah, but that's only if you choose to interact with Metro apps.

I am using literally 0 metro apps, and using Windows 8 like it was 7.

There is literally no difference in workflow except the lack of jump lists in the start menu.

didn't I read somewhere, where the hacks to allow the start menu are no longer available with the new release?

Hacks? No, because Microsoft is removing the old code from the codebase. BUT - the third party apps that use their own code, will still work.

Having tried the WP, CP, and now the RP i can see a massive leap forward, the RP is really good, metro is fine when you use it a while, as someone said its the windows 95 syndrome, my opinion is its a first class OS and like it or not metro is here to stay, the new features are good and the speed in use is far better than windows 7 or xp

I personally have no problems with the RP at all and will upgrade to RTM and im looking forward to it

I've been using Windows 8 on a tablet (the BUILD tablet) and a two-monitor desktop system. I really like the consistency of using the same OS on both places. My use cases for both are very different (i spend a lot more time in the desktop on the desktop computer, and i am more of a consumer of information on the tablet). But the one OS does both very well. I hardly even notice the Start Screen when I'm on my desktop - it's just a bigger version of the Start Menu to me.

This forum is dominated by Windows 8 haters, no prizes for guessing what the poll results will be.... :rolleyes:

Neowin is a Windows biased computer tech forum full of geeks; if Windows 8 is getting any love at all it will be here. In the real world its going to be a lot more hated. If you think Vista flopped just wait until Windows 8 shows up on the market.

I do think Windows 8 is going to be more successful then android tablets. I don't know any one who uses one anymore. Eventually I see windows 8 more people then the Ipad but that isn't until 2-3 years from now. I think it will get off to a slow start but then pickup when more hardware is designed specifically for windows 8

It only looks simplistic. It's a horrible interface on a desktop, even tech professionals have trouble figuring things out when they sit down at it (and no they shouldn't have to learn it, an OS UI should be intuitive). You shouldn't have to look up bizarre mouse gestures or learn which invisible hot corner to go to to get to some function that for the last few decades has been in plain view. Giant tiles or mobile phone style apps running full screen make no sense either. Sure it works ok on touch tablets because that's what it is designed for. Putting it on a desktop for use with a mouse and keyboard is just plain stupid. It's all about the app store and trying to take control over the tablet market. I'm sure Apple is shaking in it's boots.

I'll use 7 for a while after 8 is released, so that all the driver bugs that are inevitable can be worked out.

Then after a few months I'll think about switching to 8 as long as there are decent tweaks out there that shut out Metro as much as possible.

I don't see the point in Metro (on a PC) and see no point in switching my PC habits to shift to a less efficient method.

I'm sure that a week after the RTM, there will be a ton of tweaks for anything and everything.

In current form I dislike it immensely. If they do go ahead and remove aero I simply won't use it at all, if they don't remove aero I may use it if someone finds a way to completely remove the RT environment or force it to boot straight to desktop. If neither of those conditions are met i'll stick with 7

The new Explorer UI is nice, but 8 doesn't have enough killer features to make it a must have for me.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I like the show more options. The only problem with it is that it's not always in a consistent spot in the menu. If the copy/paste/cut, happens to show on top, then more option is the last in the menu. But if copy/paste/cut happens to show on the bottom, then more options is before the copy/paste/cut. But I do like the more options because it hides the stuff that I rarely use. But I would like to choose what it is or isn't hiding. That would make it better.
    • I wonder if "put it back the way it was for decades" ever crossed their minds? 🤣
    • Rescind the stupid "Show more options" in context menus and just give us the full menu instead of adding more steps to get to what we want. The "simpler by default" makes me think they'll go in the opposite direction. Every context menu should have a configure button so you can pick and choose what options should be shown, I know you can do that with some registry fu but that shouldn't be required.
    • This is why competition must exist. Finally, pressure is mounting on Microsoft to move in the right direction.
    • Microsoft is making Windows 11's context menus faster, simpler, and configurable by Taras Buria Five years ago, Windows 11 introduced redesigned context menus, offering users a simpler, more modern design. However, customers quickly discovered that the new menus leave a lot to be desired. Many are unhappy with performance (they are really slow), while others dislike the double-layed design, where many options are hidden behind the "Show more options" button. In addition, over the years, menus became cluttered and overloaded. While Microsoft has already fixed plenty of pain points across Windows 11, context menus remain mostly unchanged. Fortunately, Microsoft is finally listening. Marcus Ash, Design and Research Lead for Windows at Microsoft, responded to a tweet on X, confirming that the company is working on fixing Windows 11's context menus. Reworked context menus are supposed to be faster, simpler by default, and "configurable to what you use most." What the latter means is unknown, just like whether Microsoft plans to keep the classic menu alongside the modern one, but according to Marcus, the wait should finally be over soon, as he promised to "share our approach soon." Improved context menus will most likely appear first in Windows 11 preview builds in the Experimental Channel. While we wait for Microsoft to release them, you can try fixing context menus on your PC with a simple tool called Windows 11 Context Menu Manager. It lets you disable entries you do not need, not only cleaning up context menus, but also making them significantly faster. Microsoft has already improved Windows 11's Start menu and taskbar, so hopefully it will address user criticism of the context menu as well. Stay tuned for new Windows 11 preview builds, which usually arrive every Friday.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      I2D earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      468
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      249
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      64
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      61
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!