I use Windows 8 like a power user! Do you?


Recommended Posts

there is way too much "flashing" caused by full screen changes, that's the one thing that makes me feel dizzy using windows 8, when you opened the start menu, the whole screen didn't change.. for some people this causes eye strain and makes you feel tired or dizzy if you switch around a bunch... that's one of the reasons my MS keyboard I have the 5 buttons at the top assigned to my main 5 apps that I can just press the button and get it without having to switch around so much.....

good gawd system tray overload

Pretty much, but it's not that bad usually, I had to dumb the resolution down to 1280 by 720 when it's usually 1920 by 1200. So they normally don't take up that much space. I've actually gone through and tried to eliminate some of them, but i use all of them. It also drives me nuts when I can't see them and they are hidden.

there is way too much "flashing" caused by full screen changes, that's the one thing that makes me feel dizzy using windows 8, when you opened the start menu, the whole screen didn't change.. for some people this causes eye strain and makes you feel tired or dizzy if you switch around a bunch... that's one of the reasons my MS keyboard I have the 5 buttons at the top assigned to my main 5 apps that I can just press the button and get it without having to switch around so much.....

Pinning apps to the desktop/taskbar can reduce the amount of times you need to click into Home. Being a "Power User" means to take advantage of what the OS is giving you, yet I see so few actually doing that.

  • Like 2

Pinning apps to the desktop/taskbar can reduce the amount of times you need to click into Home. Being a "Power User" means to take advantage of what the OS is giving you, yet I see so few actually doing that.

I think being a "Power User" means finding and using the tools that allow me to be most productive and fit with my working style. The computer should do what I want it to, rather than me having to conform to it. For plenty of folks, Win8 is not a suitable tool.

Where's the advantage? What exactly does Metro give us that wasn't already achievable with the old style start menu apart from an annoying and ugly full screen launcher?

I think being a "Power User" means finding and using the tools that allow me to be most productive and fit with my working style. The computer should do what I want it to, rather than me having to conform to it. For plenty of folks, Win8 is not a suitable tool.

Bingo IMHO. In recent years I have begun to feel more and more like I am having to ask my computer kindly to perform a task if it feels it has to the time to do it. Whenever I have a fresh install of Windows it can take me quite a few days before I've whipped it into doing as it is told and even then I'm still hit with silly pop-ups asking me things that I ticked "no, and don't ask again" on for the 90th time a week earlier like it thinks it knows better than me what I want to do.

  • Like 2

Where's the advantage? What exactly does Metro give us that wasn't already achievable with the old style start menu apart from an annoying and ugly full screen launcher?

Live Information from Apps without opening them! ;) Oh and much more room to work with than the small start menu! Also, before the argument is made for gadgets versus metro apps, that argument is pointless. There is much more room for information in that case as well. It is much easier to see information in metro apps!

Bingo IMHO. In recent years I have begun to feel more and more like I am having to ask my computer kindly to perform a task if it feels it has to the time to do it. Whenever I have a fresh install of Windows it can take me quite a few days before I've whipped it into doing as it is told and even then I'm still hit with silly pop-ups asking me things that I ticked "no, and don't ask again" on for the 90th time a week earlier like it thinks it knows better than me what I want to do.

Not to be stereotypical, but this is really why I moved to Linux (although I still have to use Windows at work and have one Win box at home). Clean, simple, and you have endless customisation options with no extra frills. Just the things you want, nothing you don't.

In summation - if you dislike metro because you don't want to some tacky full screen start thing and have no interest in the ever trendy app store you hate Windows 8. Despite the fact that excluding metro, there is actually a lot of nice changes in Windows 8 that most people on neowin that are "haters" actually want.

I don't see why it's to much to ask that MS give us an option to have a start menu like it is now. You can use metro, I can use my start menu. Everyone is happy.

Microsoft implemented changes correctly in Windows 7 with the super bar. If you didn't like it you could make the start bar like Vista, or 95, or 2000, etc. How they are forcing (if you want windows 8) the metro start screen onto everyone is a night and day difference compared to how they made changes in Windows 7. It amazes me that people are so against having options.

I'm 100% certain that if they did that the majority of the criticism against Windows 8 would disappear nearly instantly.

I agree completely. The computing experience is a bit subjective, what works well for one person will not for another. Personally I find the full screen switching distracting and counter intuitive to multitasking, Guess my previous post was canned for saying too much :/

Live Information from Apps without opening them! ;) Oh and much more room to work with than the small start menu! Also, before the argument is made for gadgets versus metro apps, that argument is pointless. There is much more room for information in that case as well. It is much easier to see information in metro apps!

I never used gadgets, so I'm not bothered by "live information". If I want that information I prefer to just visit a website and get it.

Ok, so I have a question...

Personally I have no paricular like/dislike's for Windows 8 vs Windows 7. I get that things change. I understand both sides of the coin. My questions is this...

I don't just have a "few" applications I use. I don't have 10 or 20. I have HUNDREDS of applications. 20-30 difference racing simulation titles, other games, virtualization applications, networking tools, programming tools, Microsoft Office, etc etc etc etc etc.

So, having said that, in Windows 7 and prior to, with the Start Menu/button, I was able to sort through all of those quickly and Pin what I used most often, but could still quickly get to what I wanted because it was alphabetized in a sorted list. In Windows 8, as I install one application after another, I have hundreds, if not thousands of tiles now, page after page after page of useless garbage that is getting in the way of my productivity. I get that once I find an application I can Pin it, but I'm struggling with the efficiency of the Metro interface for someone that uses their PC the way I do.

So for those in the know, how do I...

1) Automatically sort the applications on the Metro UI.

2) or Automatically move newly installed/created box/icons to the first MetroUI page so i can find them easily.

3) Sort per application, like a folder. I have to be doing this wrong, but it would be nice if I could combine applications specific Metro boxes into a single box that I could highlight/hover and it would pop-out to that application box with those apps/links isolated.

4) Per 3, I have many applications that don't just install a single application link, but have many other, sometimes nested, applications links for other applications tools. (think Microsoft Office 2010).

I think you can see my dilema here. I want to be able to properly manage these in Windows 8. I get I may have to do it different then I did before, but what's really killing it for me right now is how poorly it manages older software that is expected a Start Menu folder to put something into. Even the Administrator Tools when enabled on the MetroUI spam the UI with 10-15 boxes. Would be nice to have 1 box, that when I hover or click on would pop out another mini UI that has JUST those apps/boxes in it.

Help!!!

Thanks!

1. At the moment there is no automatic sort on the Start Screen. Any new app/program installed places its tile at the far right. This is easily dealt with by selecting them via right click (you can multi-select) and hitting enter to unpin them from Start.

However, it does sort the alphabetically in the All Apps list, accessed by right-clicking on the Start Screen, pressing Win+ Z, or swiping up from the bottom while on the Start Screen if using touch.

2. Not sure what you mean by first Metro UI page. If you mean the Start Screen, that's where icons for all newly installed apps/programs go as I said above. If that's not what you mean, disregard and clarify, please.

3. While there are no "folder" tiles, on the All Apps screen apps are categorized alphabetically with subdirectories or files alphabetically underneath those.

But, I agree with you on how it's currently managed and hope they change this behavior come RTM and place subfolders into the All Apps screen and only the main folder onto the Start Screen.

1. At the moment there is no automatic sort on the Start Screen. Any new app/program installed places its tile at the far right. This is easily dealt with by selecting them via right click (you can multi-select) and hitting enter to unpin them from Start.

However, it does sort the alphabetically in the All Apps list, accessed by right-clicking on the Start Screen, pressing Win+ Z, or swiping up from the bottom while on the Start Screen if using touch.

2. Not sure what you mean by first Metro UI page. If you mean the Start Screen, that's where icons for all newly installed apps/programs go as I said above. If that's not what you mean, disregard and clarify, please.

3. While there are no "folder" tiles, on the All Apps screen apps are categorized alphabetically with subdirectories or files alphabetically underneath those.

But, I agree with you on how it's currently managed and hope they change this behavior come RTM and place subfolders into the All Apps screen and only the main folder onto the Start Screen.

1. After I unpin them, how do I find them again? Sometimes they aren't discernable by name, and I don't use them often enough to remember what it was called to search by them. If I remove/unpin them from Metro, now what??

2. By first page, I mean I have multiple pages of tiles after installing a bunch of applications. Every app link, url link, etc associated with the standard install gets a tile. In order to get to those tiles, I have to swipe/scroll, page after page after page after page after page to get to the new icons. If they were first created on 'Page 1', then I could move them from there as I needed.

I never used gadgets, so I'm not bothered by "live information". If I want that information I prefer to just visit a website and get it.

Now, this is an example of an "old school" mentality. I'm firmly in the old school camp when it comes to certain things. However, my tech isn't one of them. If I need to see a quick weather update, score of a game(s), latest news headlines, quick check new emails received, stock prices or any other number of a myriad of things, is it not quicker to just hit the Start Screen, glance and go back to what I was doing as opposed to opening multiple websites to do the same thing?

Now THAT seems inefficient to me. Unless, you're leaving ALL of those sites open via tabs. You'd then have to click from tab to tab as opposed to seeing it all at once which is the main "power user" argument against the Start Screen.

FYI, I got new emails from ZDnet and the NBA store, it's 84 degrees F and cloudy, Federer won, Yanks beat the Sox 7-3, 6 U.S. soldiers were killed in Afghanistan, my stocks are down (that sucks), a critic doesn't like Oliver Stone's new film, and so on.

P.S. Just got a breaking news toast from BBC on my Windows Phone. A one year tax cut renewal for Americans making under $250k, eh?

  • Like 1

Now, this is an example of an "old school" mentality. I'm firmly in the old school camp when it comes to certain things. However, my tech isn't one of them. If I need to see a quick weather update, score of a game(s), latest news headlines, quick check new emails received, stock prices or any other number of a myriad of things, is it not quicker to just hit the Start Screen, glance and go back to what I was doing as opposed to opening multiple websites to do the same thing?

Now THAT seems inefficient to me. Unless, you're leaving ALL of those sites open via tabs. You'd then have to click from tab to tab as opposed to seeing it all at once which is the main "power user" argument against the Start Screen.

FYI, I got new emails from ZDnet and the NBA store, it's 84 degrees F and cloudy, Federer won, Yanks beat the Sox 7-3, 6 U.S. soldiers were killed in Afghanistan, my stocks are down (that sucks), a critic doesn't like Oliver Stone's new film, and so on.

P.S. Just got a breaking news toast from BBC on my Windows Phone. A one year tax cut renewal for Americans making under $250k, eh?

Actually that isn't true, I love technology I just don't advocate the idea that being new always makes something better. And I have all of the websites that I view frequently on my bookmarks bar. I click the button and go to the website, it's just as simple as using the start screen with the additional bonus that it doesn't take my screen over

  • Like 2
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Qmmp 2.3.3 by Razvan Serea Qmmp (Qt-based MultiMedia Player) is a free, open-source audio player that delivers a classic music listening experience with a modern foundation. Inspired by the legendary Winamp, Qmmp features a familiar, customizable interface that supports both Winamp and XMMS skins, making it instantly recognizable to long-time users. It handles a wide variety of audio formats including MP3, OGG Vorbis, FLAC, WAV, AAC, and many others, ensuring smooth playback across diverse music libraries. In addition to basic playback, Qmmp offers advanced features such as a 10-band equalizer, crossfading, gapless playback, and audio visualization plugins. Users can manage playlists efficiently, create and save multiple lists, and even enable streaming from online sources. Plugin support extends the player’s capabilities, allowing integration of features like lyrics display, ReplayGain, and more. Built with the Qt framework, Qmmp runs smoothly and efficiently, making it ideal even for older systems. 10 great QMMP features you might not know: Global Hotkeys Support – Control playback using customizable system-wide keyboard shortcuts. CUE Sheet Support – Automatically detects and plays tracks from CUE files for full album playback. Last.fm Scrobbling – Integrated support for sending playback data to Last.fm. Audio CD Playback – Play music directly from audio CDs. Command Line Interface – Control Qmmp via command-line options for scripting or automation. System Tray Integration – Minimize to and control playback from the system tray. MPRIS Support – Integration with desktop media player controls via the MPRIS (Media Player Remote Interfacing Specification) interface. Spectrum Analyzer and Oscilloscope – Built-in visualizations for real-time audio feedback. Configurable Notifications – Custom pop-ups for track changes and playback status. Multiple Output Backends – Support for ALSA, PulseAudio, JACK, and more, offering flexible audio routing. Qmmp 2.3.3 changelog: fixed build with PipeWire versions less than 0.3.50; fixed settings dialog layout; fixed default CUE encoding; fixed possible null pointer dereference; fixed tracks order when added using drag and drop (2.3.3 only); fixed uninitialized structure usage; improved sid plugin: added libsidplayfp 3.0 support; added feature to build without residfp engine; fixed memory leak; fixed displaying audio information; updated Japanese translation (2.3.3 only). Download: Qmmp 64-bit | 24.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Qmmp 32-bit | 24.1 MB View: Qmmp Homepage | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • BATorrent 3.0.3 is out.
    • The current Statcoungter desktop numbers has Google Chrome increasing it's market share this past year and currently commanding 75% share. Everybody else is just making up the numbers with even MS Edge losing 3% this past year and has dipped just below 10% share which is staggering considering it's default on every Windows deviced purchased. If these numbers are correct that terrible Edge number is both devastating and embarrassing for MS especially when you add in the terribly low Bing market share. This leads me to ask a couple of questions as the default browser holding just less than 10% market share seems really weird. It used to be that all Chromium browsers were being counted as Google Chrome in some cases.  Is this still happening? Do these high Google Chrome numbers contains some Edge user numbers?
    • Yeah, all web browsers seem to have some junk in them these days. The regular Brave browser has a lot of unnecessary stuff in it, similar to Microsoft Edge, so I don't see any benefits of using Brave over Microsoft Edge if you already have Microsoft Edge fully set up with adblockers and that. The cleanest or best free browser outside of 'Microsoft Edge' I’ve tried so far is 'Opera Air'. It still has some bloat, but nowhere near as much as Brave browser, for example. I also really like the web browser called 'Floorp' that is based on Firefox. I have a system wide Adblocking program for Windows 11 that doesn't just blocks ads in the the web browser, but over the whole thing. I don't really need a web browser with an inbuilt adblocker because of that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      491
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      270
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!