Recommended Posts

shaddows are something my stupid spelling checker keeps switching words to on me automatically... for some reason it's in the dictionary list of words... but seriously, you seem to be trying to find stuff say? don't like the topic don't post

Oh noes!!! You really showed me!

You seem to be looking for BS to nitpick about. Win 8 hasn't even hit retail yet and you're whining about extra software inconsistency. I've seen apps that still look 16bit. What about those?? I guess that makes even Win7 or XP look "inconsistent".

In the DP, CP, and RP, Microsoft has drop shadows enabled by default. In the RTM, drop shadows are disabled by default.

Shadows are enabled in Windows 8 RTM. They have not been removed, but are very faint. Take a look at the screenshots and zoom in and you'll see. Inactive windows don't have shadows.

Oh noes!!! You really showed me!

You seem to be looking for BS to nitpick about. Win 8 hasn't even hit retail yet and you're whining about extra software inconsistency. I've seen apps that still look 16bit. What about those?? I guess that makes even Win7 or XP look "inconsistent".

good greif :rolleyes: the point is MS is releaseing new "Windows 8 UI" programs and they don't even fit the "Windows 8 UI" it's not nit picking, its pointing out that they once again are not following their own UI design guidelines

Shadows are enabled in Windows 8 RTM. They have not been removed, but are very faint. Take a look at the screenshots and zoom in and you'll see. Inactive windows don't have shadows.

you have to enabled them in RTM, these new programs are ignoreing that setting and showing drop shadows when you have them disabled

Oh wow, I didn't notice either, maybe because the border itself is now so in your face I guess? I wonder how it'd be with a thinner border to match the thin shadow.

Metro itself may not have much of consistency issue.

It's the desktop where 99% of time would be spend has huge consistency problem.

It would take another topic to list all desktop issues

Yes, I certainly agree with that.

good greif :rolleyes: the point is MS is releaseing new "Windows 8 UI" programs and they don't even fit the "Windows 8 UI" it's not nit picking, its pointing out that they once again are not following their own UI design guidelines [. . .]

But this isn't a Windows 8-style app. Microsoft is only using that phrase to refer to WinRT apps. This is a Desktop app :) Due to all of the inconsistencies with Desktop apps, maybe they just thought it wouldn't matter?

Like what?

Like meaningful Metro inconsistencies. Like a Metro control page bringing up a desktop .cpl app. This isn't even a Metro app.

Lot of this left over, or rather, hybrid cross over will start to fade with time I'm sure. Don't get me wrong, I don't expect or think the "desktop" is going away at all but it will change to better match metro. I also don't mean change as it sorta has in 8 with just a new theme. MS could be holding back things for later, specifically Windows 9 once more users have wrapped their heads around the start screen and "metro" better.

I expect things like the systray to be dropped, or for the most part anyways, probably replaced with a slide in metro menu that acts as a replacement for the systrey/notification center. I also expect the taskbar to support pinning live tiles and not just the current standard win7 icons we get now. And before you jump up and down and moan about how adding live tile support to the taskbar would make it fatter and take up too much room I'd like to point out to WP8 and it's small size live tiles. They would fit perfectly on the taskbar while the start screen can support small, normal and large tiles. Seeing the first few steps, the ground work, being laid with Win8 makes me excited for what Win9 could bring us in a few years.

Seeing the first few steps, the ground work, being laid with Win8 makes me excited for what Win9 could bring us in a few years.

Windows 9 will bring improvements (I hope), but if Windows 8 is the foundation for the future then Microsoft should have put more effort.

Let's take the UI as an example. Maybe for the average user it is not as important, but the fact that the OS installer still uses the aero frames, for instance, is something that makes me think of Microsoft as lazy. Not only that, but other areas of the OS also feel unfinished. There are still notification popups with round corners and heavy shadows, the windows update window still has the strong blue gradients, prominent lines and round corners (not changed from 7 at all), the explorer preview pane still has the blue gradient (just like in Windows 7), the screen saver settings window still uses an XP-era monitor image, etc. There are many more inconsistencies. While Microsoft did change most visible parts of the OS, many still remain untouched. I do not know if they ran out of time or if they just didn't care, but as a perfectionist I don't believe in doing half the job to finish it later. Things must be complete and done right from the very beginning.

With all of this I am not saying that every piece of software has to be perfect. There will always be things to improve.

Just got the new version of the Microsoft mouse and keyboard drivers... its all metro now, but in widows 8 their windows and splash screens all have drop shaddows?! but nothing else does in win8?

Even though I don't like that Metro crap UI, I don't see anything wrong with the screenshots you are showing.

Windows 9 will bring improvements (I hope), but if Windows 8 is the foundation for the future then Microsoft should have put more effort.

Let's take the UI as an example. Maybe for the average user it is not as important, but the fact that the OS installer still uses the aero frames, for instance, is something that makes me think of Microsoft as lazy. Not only that, but other areas of the OS also feel unfinished. There are still notification popups with round corners and heavy shadows, the windows update window still has the strong blue gradients, prominent lines and round corners (not changed from 7 at all), the explorer preview pane still has the blue gradient (just like in Windows 7), the screen saver settings window still uses an XP-era monitor image, etc. There are many more inconsistencies. While Microsoft did change most visible parts of the OS, many still remain untouched. I do not know if they ran out of time or if they just didn't care, but as a perfectionist I don't believe in doing half the job to finish it later. Things must be complete and done right from the very beginning.

With all of this I am not saying that every piece of software has to be perfect. There will always be things to improve.

I agree that they need to change more of the older UI elements like stuff from XP and so on but we'll see how they take to updating Win8 and WinRT. If the updates they do going forward are bigger and not just simple patches for bugs like we're used to then we could see constant UI tweaks till bigger ones come with Windows 9.

There are still two glaring Win9x-era dialog boxes in Win8. The Mouse one is particular jarring because of both the low-quality icon that doesn't even attempt to be Metro and because of the "battleship gray" background.

And the worst part is both of these were brought up during Win7's development and continued to go ignored. I think Microsoft just doesn't care.

post-119000-0-86969100-1344101303.png

post-119000-0-17076800-1344101344.png

Why not just hire someone just to fix all the dialogue boxes and win 9X icons

Not as easy as it sounds. Removing old icons could break legacy support and changing one dialog box could break another.

As much as they could/should fix all the inconsistent dialog boxes, that in of itself would probably require a new Windows version. And even then, it wouldn't change inconsistent behavior: sometimes you'll get a modal window, other times you'll get a tabbed window, sometimes you'll get multiple windows.

What are "shaddows"?

To people with a functioning brain the word is "Shadows" but it seems yours isn't capable of seeing the person accidently hit d twwice <--- see what I did there?

There are still two glaring Win9x-era dialog boxes in Win8. The Mouse one is particular jarring because of both the low-quality icon that doesn't even attempt to be Metro and because of the "battleship gray" background.

And the worst part is both of these were brought up during Win7's development and continued to go ignored. I think Microsoft just doesn't care.

I know right. I mean when im staring at those two dialogues all day i get mad they look like that.

What are "shaddows"?

really bad-ass shadows

...And the worst part is both of these were brought up during Win7's development and continued to go ignored. I think Microsoft just doesn't care.

I think since MS would love to kill physical mouse and keyboards one day soon, they divert their attention to more important things than the mouse graphics and boxes.

There are still two glaring Win9x-era dialog boxes in Win8. The Mouse one is particular jarring because of both the low-quality icon that doesn't even attempt to be Metro and because of the "battleship gray" background.

And the worst part is both of these were brought up during Win7's development and continued to go ignored. I think Microsoft just doesn't care.

This is what I'm talking about. I think you are right, maybe they just don't care otherwise these would've been changed long ago.

I think those will finally be changed, Win8 has a metro control panel and we could see it gain more options going forward.

There should only be 1 control panel in the whole OS, in my opinion. The desktop control panel has gotten more complicated over the years. A simplification and unification with the "metro" control panel would be better.

Not to mention the background of the splash screen looks like it was ripped from Vista and the application is kinda clunky.

You also have to remember that windows 8 was just leaked when it actually releases they will of course send out service packs and updates to fix eveything which was missed or messed up on.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I hope this encodes in to AV1 or AV2 as currently tiktok uses h265 and h264.
    • Qualcomm reportedly in talks to build custom video chips for TikTok parent ByteDance by Karthik Mudaliar Qualcomm is reportedly in advanced discussions to provide custom chip-design services to Chinese tech giant ByteDance, the same company behind TikTok. According to a report from Reuters, Qualcomm could be involved in designing custom silicon tailored for ByteDance's massive data-center workloads. If it goes through, the deal would make ByteDance one of Qualcomm's early anchor customers for its fastly growing custom chip-design division, For years, Qualcomm was the king of making smartphone processors and modems. The company has also been moving into the PC ecosystem and other formats such as on-device AI for Android XR headsets. However, this particular deal is about Qualcomm's custom Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs). For a platform like TikTok, ByteDance needs hardware that can help it ingest, process, and serve billions of short-form videos daily. Generalised hardware is no longer the most cost-effective and efficient route, which is why ByteDance is trying to develop custom Video Processing Units (VPUs). VPUs designed specifically for ByteDance’s algorithmic needs could drastically reduce data-center power consumption and improve encoding speeds at an unprecedented scale. The underlying tech behind these processors is actually from Qualcomm's recent acquisition of AlphaWave Semi, a high-speed connectivity specialist company. By combining AlphaWave’s high-bandwidth IP with Qualcomm’s architectural expertise, the company could begin mass production by the end of 2026, if the talks go through. All this also comes at a time when U.S.-China tech relations have dwindled. Escalating trade frictions between Washington and Beijing have severely impacted the export of high-end AI chips from U.S. firms like Nvidia, AMD, and Lam Research. Yet, the Qualcomm-ByteDance discussions show that U.S. tech companies are still actively seeking growth avenues and are open to doing business with China, where regulators still permit. Reuters notes that the outcome of this deal could be uncertain, and ByteDance might also seek partners other than Qualcomm. via Reuters | Image via DepositPhotos.com
    • Look who's back!
    • I wonder how driving laws around the world will change. No way to really tell if people are using phone. Same with smart watches i guess even now and those silly built in tablets for controlling the car instead of buttons.
  • 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
      457
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      161
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      112
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      84
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!