This is a nice little preview of Windows 8.1, it lasts about 7 minutes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hB37nJ8XWkk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hB37nJ8XWkk
If he would have right clicked on the new Windows "Start" button, he could have added another hour and a half of commentary...
Knightsman said:Nobody likes change, mostly everyone I've talked to about it, with a touch screen, loves it. Now that they added an easier way to switch between the desktop and tiles, its the icing on the cake.
Its not so much the change thats not liked. (although to do someting a certain way for 25 years and then switch is a bit off putting). Its more a matter of Microsoft coming up with a solution to a non-existent problem. Win 7 worked perfectly. If Microsoft wanted a tablet OS they should have just made one. (see iOS vs OSX) But no, what they did was try to convert a desktop OS to a tablet OS and ended up with an abomination thats not worth a damn for either.
I would say "don't knock it 'till you try it" but you seem set in your ways
My mom uses it and loves it, and if you knew my mom you'd know that that's a significant endorsement haha.
I really dont see whats so bad about the current "start menu." I use it on my desktop at home and it is fine. In fact, I dare-say I like the new menu better than the old. No more clicking start then all programs, and scrolling to the one you want. Just open the new metro UI and there's everything you want in an organization that you set up yourself. A lot more apps on one screen in easy to see icons, seems a lot better than the scrolling list view with apps inside folders. For anything I use often, I just pin it to the task bar, just like I did did in all previous windows versions. The Win-X menu is my favorite thing ever too.
As far as using the OS is concerned, I'd rather use 8 than 7. But working on the system can be very annoying. I really don't like the way UEFI works and it can be a pain to work with, and I really, really hate that they got rid of booting to safemode via F8. Not even win-x makes up for it.
I would say "don't knock it 'till you try it" but you seem set in your ways
My mom uses it and loves it, and if you knew my mom you'd know that that's a significant endorsement haha.
I would say "don't knock it 'till you try it" but you seem set in your ways
My mom uses it and loves it, and if you knew my mom you'd know that that's a significant endorsement haha.
Well. on a 1080p screen you can have 288 small tiles when 8.1 is released, so at that point there will be zero scrolling. But an advanced user should probably be familiarized with the search function, in which case on both win7 and win8 the start menu is irrelevant.With all due respect. I can open programs much faster from the Start Menu then that start screen. I have over 200 programs installed on my daily driver machine. Do you know how much scrolling that would require on a Windows 8 start screen? How the frak is that more efficient? How is stopping work and reaching a touch screen more efficient? Windows 8.1 makes minor improvements with this but it is still too much scrolling on a desktop machine. Sorry but I will never run an OS that has this fraking UI disaster and if forced to I will install Startisback and get the functionality that I desire.
I think you're 1st paragraph is disrespectful to a good member on here. Your 2nd statement pretty much says it all, if you are a Iimited user you won't see it it for what it is. I have have one user in about 18 now that has liked it and he was a very limited user. People have had to try and use it mainly because their old XP computers are end of life. Anyone that has used any version of windows really since day 1 have been able to get a new computer and use it out of the box. Familiarity is there, Control Panel, Start etc are there on every version I can remember.
I'm not opposed to change if it provides me benefit. The Windows 7 start menu is far superior to the Windows Xp one and I welcomed the changes it brought. I used Vista when most people avoided it.
Search is great and I use it often but it doesn't help if you don't recall the name of the program. A start menu that you can organize is easier to use. I put my programs in categories so that I can find and use them. Daily use programs are pinned to my taskbar. Windows 8.1 does offer some customization but it still isn't as useful as a true start menu and the desktop. Having the start screen pop up is jarring everytime it appears. I find it distracting and it slows down my use of the machine. I'm never going to get use to it. And considering the horrible market reaction to Windows 8 I'm not the only one that feels that way.
After all it did cost the CEO of Microsoft his job.