MS Releases Windows 8 Consumer Preview

I tried the 64bit iso in vm but it gave me blue screens...least I think its blue screens...I hope that isn't the new blue screen. It was a frowny face that said something like DPC WATCH DOG with no additional information.
 
download it, last night. Installed it on Virtual Box, and played with it for a bit. I like the Metro UI as a mobile platform but don't know about it being on on desktops and such.
 
Disappointing to say the least! This is all I get after the install:

win8.jpg
 
gave up on VM and installed it on a laptop

hate metro

for anyone else that wants the start menu back, it can easily be added with this free app

http://www.lee-soft.com/vistart/

..

Installed fine on my VM, admittedly though I've patched my exe so it lets me pick Windows 8 so that may help. Installing tools a bit of a pain but got there in end

New GUI is awful, for a user maybe good, for a tech to get at settings its a nightmare
 
Downloaded the .ISO last night directly from M$ and can't wait to try it.

I hear they're removed the start button. Me = unhappy as the hack for the preview to get the start menu was rubbish.
 
I installed it on a spare pc & I'm not overly impressed so far. Why does it take 100 steps to turn off this thing?
 
I've got the 64-bit version running on one of my test boxes. My initial reaction was "egad, this sucks!"

ZDNet's Ed Bott has a pretty good blog post about it, and using his blog, I've been able to make some headway using it.
http://www.zdnet.com/blog/bott/gett...zdnet/Bott+(ZDNet+Ed+Bott's+Microsoft+Report)

Also, a blog post by CNET's Seth Rosenbloom:
http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13970_...th-microsofts-tablet-friendly-os/?tag=nl.e404

One interesting thing is that antivirus/antispyware is built-in (Windows Defender)

Like it or not, we're all going to have to learn this ... and my guess is it's going to be a big learning curve.
 
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I'm shrinking the hdd on my main laptop so I can play around with it. I have a feeling that this will be the first non-release version of Windows that I don't use as a main OS.

I think that metro should be optional when no touch input is available. The OS should default to the Aero UI.

Also they should be using this as an opportunity to kill 16 bit legacy support which I'm guessing they still include within x86 and x64 versions.
 
I just installed win 8 on a Toshiba L300D-ab2 AMD with a 2gb of RAM
Things are really different but the same once you start fooling around. Links to social media is huge, I do like some of the home screen (apps etc)
The installer worked seamlessly. It is actually works like installing win 7 over vista. Automatic save of winold folder. I installed onto a fresh install of Vista. Come with a great pinball game again YEA! I will post more as I play more.
Dean
 
I installed it on a spare pc & I'm not overly impressed so far. Why does it take 100 steps to turn off this thing?

I was incredibly flustered trying to use it... and you nailed it on the head with trying to turn it off! I couldn't get Win8 off my laptop fast enough.

The apps were horrendous. I think it has potential on tablets, but definitely not my laptop.
 
I can't figure out what MS is thinking with the direction their taking with windows 8, if I wanted a "smart phone" experience on a big screen monitor I would run an android emulator

mabye Windows versions are coming to be like start trek movies, every other movie bombs at the box office
 
In a parallell reality somewhere, where respect for consumer choice is a consideration:

Windows Installer Options:

"Windows 8 has a new UI called Metro. Would you prefer to use this or the traditional Start Menu?"

1.Metro
2.Start Menu


---

But no.

I can see various Start Menu tweaks being standard fare with the initial release of the OS if they continue to insist on Metro as the default.

Stupid.

.,
 
Looks good, but has a ways to go. Also....

I have fielded a few support calls already about this, but it seems a lot of folks aren't reading the fine print about the OS being overwritten by Win 8, and that to return to the previous version the OEM disc would be needed....

I have already posted to my page the warning to have their install / recovery disc on hand before attempting the Win 8 install, as it is not a dual boot release! :D

Otherwise, Win 8 has a ways to go, which is what Microsoft said, but if they go the same route with customer input they did with Win 7, it'll be a winner.

I am more interested in what it will do in the mobile PC (tablet) environment, to see how well it will integrate into healthcare HIS /RIS operations.
 
pulled an old laptop drive off the shelf and installed it on my laptop to mess with this weekend.

Dislikes:
User integration with Windows live on setup. you can just setup a local user but it's not readily apparent at the start.
start menu and the tabletly feeling. there should be a choice as was said by 16k_zx81. Desktop and tablet mode mayber?
The mail app doesn't have support for IMAP. not a deal killer but certainly annoying for a mail client.
Google integration only loads the default calendar in the calendar app. not good if you have several calendars.
I realize the apps probably aren't the finished product, but there are some glaring omissions.
I spent an hour working with it in a domain and hopefully there's some GPO's to control the start menu look and feel.

Likes: Doesn't look like they botched up anything that worked in win 7.
can still install my VPN client. remote to my clients, etc.

So far my verdict is a big fat "why bother unless you are forced to".
 
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