Windows 8 hater finally upgrading (me)


Recommended Posts

After the live tiles, application tiles (for non-Metro apps) are just hideous. This isn't an opinion. Microsoft straight up dropped the ball. There are hundreds or thousands of beautiful 256x256 PNG icons out there. OS X uses them. So, why can't Windows 8 grab one from somewhere and slap it on a tile with great contrast? Invert the icon's primary color, there's your tile color. Darken it a little, and throw a drop shadow on it. Maybe that's not your cup of tea, but hey, it's an improvement.

I think it has always been on the heads of third-party developers to maintain their own icons, and many of the Desktop-land icons are already ugly as sin before being slapped onto a tile. Things can get complicated if Microsoft steps in and replaces third-party icons, since that could be construed as messing around with a particular product's branding. That said, I think Microsoft should start treating these Desktop tiles in the same manner as shortcuts on the desktop, and let users change the icon easily, and with good support for many file formats.

Ultimately, Windows 8 suffers from design clash, as others have already said. Metro really needs to take a flying leap. The design language is atrocious, in my opinion. It just doesn't feel conductive to a desktop computer. Also, I really don't like this dynamic of Gmail address as Microsoft account name. On one hand, it's not that bad (and my wife's is a Yahoo account). I want to convert my Microsoft account to something like Outlook or Live, but the closest I can get is something like [email protected]@Outlook.com. WTF? And some cybersquatter has [email protected]

 

I think it has always been on the heads of third-party developers to maintain their own icons, and many of the Desktop-land icons are already ugly as sin before being slapped onto a tile. Things can get complicated if Microsoft steps in and replaces third-party icons, since that could be construed as messing around with a particular product's branding. That said, I think Microsoft should start treating these Desktop tiles in the same manner as shortcuts on the desktop, and let users change the icon easily, and with good support for many file formats.

Sure, but I think most major applications have these icons. I used to play around with the various 'dock' apps, like RocketDock and the like. And if you added, say, Firefox, the icon would scale all the way up. Very few used 32x32 exclusively (at least, that I used) and for those it was easy to fix... Mainly, I'm just concerned with the look of the tile. Maybe it should be on the developer to design and package their own live tile, but does Windows 8 allow that? Are there third-party (non-Microsoft) apps that have tiles that look great? Or is it just the standard icon on that grey tile? That's my problem with it. And I think Microsoft could at least pick the primary color from the icon and color the tile accordingly.

 

Based on the details that you posted in your support topic, I'd say that this issue is due to a driver glitch, and is most likely to be resolved with an updated driver set from AMD. Not being a participant in the TP, I have no idea how frequently these updates are forthcoming, or whether AMD is currently handling driver support at all, but I think your best bet for seeing a fix (pre-RTM) is when the Consumer Preview is released.

True. I really need to see if I can track down an updated driver, though it's strange that the problem is restricted to explorer.exe (the file manager, Start menu, taskbar, and system tray) and this particular build.

I don't complain about lack of glass and really never cared about it but if most users want it back they should at least be given the option natively, there was no legitimate reason to remove it.

Going by that logic the Luna theme should have been kept in Windows Vista.

Sure, but I think most major applications have these icons. I used to play around with the various 'dock' apps, like RocketDock and the like. And if you added, say, Firefox, the icon would scale all the way up. Very few used 32x32 exclusively (at least, that I used) and for those it was easy to fix... Mainly, I'm just concerned with the look of the tile. Maybe it should be on the developer to design and package their own live tile, but does Windows 8 allow that? Are there third-party (non-Microsoft) apps that have tiles that look great? Or is it just the standard icon on that grey tile? That's my problem with it. And I think Microsoft could at least pick the primary color from the icon and color the tile accordingly.

No, they don't pick particularly good tile colors in many cases. One particularly egregious one that I see right now is the Office 2013 version of Powerpoint. The orange of the icon is almost buried in the background of the tile. Now that you mention bundling tiles...well, Oblytile does allow custom tiles to be created. I figure if a developer were interested, they'd have their installer package drop a custom tile onto the Start screen using the same trick.

I think Microsoft tile is inspired by Star Trek computer OS but they attempt to go around the patten.  Microsoft's attempt seems to prove futile.  Star Trek style is more efficient and relevant.  If it is indeed an inspiration effort based on Star Trek OS computer, I think Microsoft failed very bad.

I think Microsoft tile is inspired by Star Trek computer OS but they attempt to go around the patten.  Microsoft's attempt seems to prove futile.  Star Trek style is more efficient and relevant.  If it is indeed an inspiration effort based on Star Trek OS computer, I think Microsoft failed very bad.

Metro or Modern is inspired by the numerous street signs and other iconography/typography you come across daily.

Wasting time because they want glass enabled? Nonsense.

 

I suppose users complaining that Office 2013 is too bright, white and they don't like using it and tend to use it less makes them more productive too? I mean that certainly doesn't waste time at all, right? It's also why Office 2015 is getting changed up with a dark theme too, right?

I guess you should tell them about the Dark gray theme in Office 2013.

post-62693-0-86997400-1419835466.jpg

 

My login screen locked out for 30 days was deciding factor. I tried so at least I am not a geezer afraid of change. I like fine touches. I feel this was an experimental release really.

If you forget your password, Windows 7 won't let you log in as well. This is a weird reason to switch an OS.

I guess you should tell them about the Dark gray theme in Office 2013.

attachicon.gifCapture.JPG

 

If you forget your password, Windows 7 won't let you log in as well. This is a weird reason to switch an OS.

Windows 8(8.1/10)you can reset you're password via outlook/hotmail etc.. pretty cool better than 7.

  • 4 months later...

I guess you should tell them about the Dark gray theme in Office 2013.

attachicon.gifCapture.JPG

 

If you forget your password, Windows 7 won't let you log in as well. This is a weird reason to switch an OS.

 

Well I DID IT!

 

I actually switched to Windows 8.1 5x time is the lucky charm.

 

After a hellish 2 weekends I found out the cause of my issues and it is strange. It was a bad SATA cable. I bought $380 worth of new SamSung Pro 850's thinking I had a bad disk after time #4 had major corruption issues. I re-installed WIndows 7 when I noticed it could not restart. Partition table gone??

 

THen I thought I had a bad disk as I re-installed Windows  7 again and this time it stalled at a different spot each time when uncompressing files??!

 

I need Hyper-V to pass my MS certifications. So it was time to jump. MY BSOD problems might be glass8 related but they finally went away with 1.3.1 and latest NVidia drivers. My only irritation besides me being used to the old look and feel was my beloved VMWare Workstation 11 I can use nested hyper-V installs of Server 2012. Hyper V is not accelerated, and can't do nested VM's so I need to host all images on 8.1 which I find weird. I can always go back to workstation but have to disable hyper-V at the host. ... strange I can not have both on the same host.

 

Windows 8.;1 has the best EFI support and I can finally turn off the buggy CSM compatibility mode and 3rd party USB 3 drivers that I required in Windows 7.

 

I miss the rounded corners and aero still. But I put the Windows 7 image as the background for now to adjust my transition. I need to learn new things as an IT professional.

 

However as an average Joe sorry neowinners but Windows Media Center and familiarity will win hands down.

Well I DID IT!

 

I actually switched to Windows 8.1 5x time is the lucky charm.

 

After a hellish 2 weekends I found out the cause of my issues and it is strange. It was a bad SATA cable. I bought $380 worth of new SamSung Pro 850's thinking I had a bad disk after time #4 had major corruption issues. I re-installed WIndows 7 when I noticed it could not restart. Partition table gone??

 

THen I thought I had a bad disk as I re-installed Windows  7 again and this time it stalled at a different spot each time when uncompressing files??!

 

I need Hyper-V to pass my MS certifications. So it was time to jump. MY BSOD problems might be glass8 related but they finally went away with 1.3.1 and latest NVidia drivers. My only irritation besides me being used to the old look and feel was my beloved VMWare Workstation 11 I can use nested hyper-V installs of Server 2012. Hyper V is not accelerated, and can't do nested VM's so I need to host all images on 8.1 which I find weird. I can always go back to workstation but have to disable hyper-V at the host. ... strange I can not have both on the same host.

 

Windows 8.;1 has the best EFI support and I can finally turn off the buggy CSM compatibility mode and 3rd party USB 3 drivers that I required in Windows 7.

 

I miss the rounded corners and aero still. But I put the Windows 7 image as the background for now to adjust my transition. I need to learn new things as an IT professional.

 

However as an average Joe sorry neowinners but Windows Media Center and familiarity will win hands down.

It's a shame you 'upgraded' to Windows 8. I don't mean that as a insult or anything, but I have to say, Windows 8 is a downgrade to the whole Windows ecosystem. Vista is better than Windows 8. 

I would of actually suggested you download the Windows 10 10074 iso, and install that. It keeps the Windows 7 desktop, has aero glass with the task bar and start menu, and performs SOOOOOOO much better than Windows 8 could ever hope to perform. 

I am glad you figured out the SATA problem however. I would suggest that you try out Windows 10 10074, even if its in VM enviroment, im sure it would be more to your liking than Windows 8.

 

I need to learn new things as an IT professional.

 

However as an average Joe sorry neowinners but Windows Media Center and familiarity will win hands down.

 

Indeed very true, that's one of the reasons I finally switched to Windows 8 once 8.1 was released.

 

Windows 8 does have a much more useful task manager, explorer and better support for newer technologies.

 

You get used to working around things, for example I always right click the start button and sign out at work, or on my home machine right click and sleep. Plus you have a lot of the power user options on that menu too.

 

The charms bar and recent apps switcher can be disabled in 8.1, you can auto boot to the desktop and disable the lock screen, all without any 3rd party apps.

 

The start screen still looks like some horrible multicoloured rainbow once you start pinning desktop apps to it, however to be honest i've always used ObjectDock since the Vista days to have my most used apps and shortcuts on, so i've basically just not used the start screen at all.

 

Having used 8.1 since the public preview i'm certainly used to it, is it the best Windows OS to date? No. However I think Windows 10 is where it will all come together and old & new will work together a lot better.

 

Also still rocking Windows Media Center on the living room HTPC here with a Quad DVB-T2 tuner, as I use XBMC / Kodi on everything else and that now has PVR functionality i'll eventually move over to that given it can now replicate the TV features of Windows Media Center and the extender functions. It's just not as smooth a WMC at this point, however by 2019 or 2023 when 7 / 8 are now longer supported I expect Kodi will be much better than WMC for TV / PVR functionality.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Calibre 9.10 by Razvan Serea  Calibre is an open source e-book library management application that enables you to manage your e-book collection, convert e-books between different formats, synchronize with popular e-book reader devices, and read your e-books with the included viewer. It acts as an e-library and also allows for format conversion, news feeds to e-book conversion, as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer. Calibre's features include: library management; format conversion (all major ebook formats); syncing to e-book reader devices; fetching news from the Web and converting it into ebook form; viewing many different e-book formats, giving you access to your book collection over the internet using just a browser. Calibre 9.10 changelog: New features Content server: A new "modern" interface with a sidebar to ease navigation Content server: When used with HTTPS allow installation as a PWA (Progressive Web App) Edit book: Saved searches: When filtering the list of saved searches match by keywords CSS parsing: Add support for CSS Level 4 selectors Cover grid: When using an image larger than the viewport as a texture scale it to fit the viewport Annotations browser: Allow restricting displayed annotations by custom annotation styles as well Edit book: Compress images: Add option to convert PNG images to JPEG or WEBP Bug fixes E-book viewer: Fix IME on Windows not working when typing in notes for highlights Conversion: Heuristics: Improve performance in some pathological cases SNB Input: Fix error on some input files Windows: fix rare crash when too many notifications are displayed at once Fix duplicating of books not duplicating value from enumerated columns when the column has a default value defined Fix a regression in 9.8 that caused errors from AI plugin providers to be silently swallowed and not displayed to user Fix CSV export invalid when exporting comments field Disallow Python templates when reading book metadata (CVE-2026-53511) Improved news sources The Week Economist Espresso Horizons Download: Calibre 9.10 | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Calibre for MacOS | 327.0 MB Download: Calibre for Linux View: Calibre Home Page | Calibre Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Malwarebytes Anti-Malware 5.6.1.257 by Razvan Serea Malwarebytes is a high performance anti-malware application that thoroughly removes even the most advanced malware and spyware. Malwarebytes version 5.**** brings comprehensive protection against today’s threat landscape so that you can finally replace your traditional antivirus. You can finally replace your traditional antivirus, thanks to a innovative and layered approach to prevent malware infections using a healthy combination of proactive and signature-less technologies. While signatures are still effective against threats like potentially unwanted programs, the majority of malware detection events already come from signature-less technologies like Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit and Malwarebytes Anti-Ransomware; that trend will only continue to grow. For many of you, this is something you already know, since over 50% of the users already run Malwarebytes as their sole security software, without any third-party antivirus. What's new in Malwarebytes 5.****: Unified user experience - For the first time, Malwarebytes now provides a consistent experience across all of our desktop and mobile products courtesy of an all new and reimagined user experience powered by a faster and more responsive UI all managed through an intuitive dashboard. Modern security and privacy integrations - Antivirus and ultra-fast VPN come together seamlessly in one easy-to-use solution. Whether you’re looking for a next-gen VPN to secure your online activity, or harnessing the power of Browser Guard to block ad trackers and scam sites, taking charge of your privacy is simple. Trusted Advisor - Empowers you with real-time insights, easy-to-read protection score and expert guidance that puts you in control over your security and privacy. Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 changelog: Features and improvements Updated the sign-in section of the My Subscription page to clarify that users can activate their subscription by signing in with their Malwarebytes account. Updated the uninstall flow to collect more meaningful insights and address customer concerns. Refreshed the app's tutorial layout for a better look and feel. Issues fixed Fixed an outdated link when clicking Take action after running a Digital Footprint Scan. Miscellaneous bug fixes. Download: Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 | 472.0 MB (Free, paid upgrade available) Links: Malwarebytes Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Yep, not sure where the surprise is here. They release a new model for every phone, every year
    • AI would probably be better utilised replacing Executives than Engineers.
    • RapidRAW 1.5.8 by Razvan Serea RapidRAW is a beautiful, non-destructive, GPU‑accelerated RAW image editor designed for speed and simplicity. It uses a lightweight (~30 MB), efficient code base built with Rust, React and Tauri. Ideal for Lightroom workflows, it offers rich editing tools—exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, whites/blacks, tone curves, HSL mixer, dehaze, vignetting, film grain, sharpening, clarity and noise reduction—processed in real-time on the GPU. Features include intuitive masking (brush, linear, radial, AI-powered subject and foreground detection), generative edit layers (via ComfyUI), 32‑bit precision, and full RAW format support through rawler. RapidRAW also provides library management (folder navigation, ratings, metadata, EXIF viewer), batch operations, export presets (JPEG/PNG/TIFF), sidecar editing (.rrdata), undo/redo history, customizable UI themes, smooth animations, resizable panels, and preset copy/paste. A modern high-performance Lightroom alternative with polished UX and creative tools, RapidRAW brings powerful photo editing to photographers seeking speed, responsive GPU feedback, and streamlined workflows. RapidRAW v1.5.8 release notes: This release introduces several new editing tools and workflow refinements designed to improve both photo editing and library management. It expands creative flexibility with the addition of a preset intensity slider and a global hue adjustment, while also introducing convenient navigation features such as quick bottom bar filters and folder sorting. Behind the scenes, the update addresses background indexing issues and ensures folder image counts are updated correctly. It also broadens accessibility by adding support for Korean and Traditional Chinese. [full changelog] Download: RapidRAW 1.5.8 | ARM64 | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) View: RapidRAW Home Page | Screenshot | Other operating systems Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Enthusiast
      Xonos went up a rank
      Enthusiast
    • Conversation Starter
      Admir earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      405
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      168
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      129
    4. 4
      neufuse
      69
    5. 5
      Xenon
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!