Windows 8.1 Rolls Out Today 398
The newest iteration of Windows has begun rolling out, and is winning positive reviews. (Here's an in-depth review from Ars, and a more concise one from Wired — both give 8.1 a thumbs-up).
Kelerei wrote with the above-linked TechDirt article on the release, noting that it is a staged rollout rather than global. Starting this morning, though, 8.1 is available to some customers. Kelerei writes: "The upgrade is optional (and free) for existing Windows 8 users, though if one looks at the changes, it's hard to imagine why those already on it wouldn't upgrade."
Also at Slash BI.
Re:Win8 as a UI vs. an OS (Score:5, Informative)
Well, in true Slashdot fashion, I didn't read the article or full summary thereby missing:
"The upgrade is optional (and free) for existing Windows 8 users, though if one looks at the changes, it's hard to imagine why those already on it wouldn't upgrade."
Re:Meh (Score:5, Informative)
The start button doesn't actually do anything. It just brings up the modern UI.
Re:Meh (Score:5, Informative)
Except the start button does the same thing as the Windows button in Windows 8.0 - show up the Metro UI. In effect, it's only taking up additional space on the task bar for those who ignore the Metro stuff.
Re:Just when you thought it was safe.... (Score:5, Informative)
I have also been running 8.1 RTM for a couple of weeks and my experience is similar. Little glitches here and there. Microsoft has released quite stable stuff lately so I didn't expect this level of bugginess.
Some examples: .NET Framework 3.5 gets stuck and the manual DISM utility has to be used instead
- On various laptops, the screen brightness indicator displays wrong dynamic range after coming out from suspend or hibernation
- When a device is connected to the computer, a "Device Setup" dialog appears and it can hang there forever
- The automatic installer for
- Windows Explorer displays Korean characters correctly, but Japanese characters are displayed as squares
- When I have two monitors connected (8.1 can show a taskbar on both screens) and set the taskbar setting to "Never combine" (a Vista-style look), the taskbar button labels are shown only on the primary display
- When I turn Bluetooth off, the settings application freezes for a long time
- The verification code to authorize my Windows Live account is often not successfully sent via e-mail
Re:Meh (Score:4, Informative)
Here [iobit.com] is the free (as in beer) software you are looking for.
Shame it doesn't completely eradicate Metro, but at least it means you can avoid it most of the time.
Re:Meh (Score:5, Informative)
So why doesn't someone make an XP replacement machine? Conform to the XP interface specs at the bottom end, with much faster hardware loafing along doing half-work, just to keep old XP applications alive? It should be trivial; other than the part about Microsoft's lawyers carpet-bombing you into the late Neolithic.
Trivial? LOL! Those 'specs' are humungously huge.
PS: There's a bunch of guys trying to do it ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReactOS [wikipedia.org] ). They've been trying since 2004, and they already had a codebase when they started.
Re:Meh (Score:4, Informative)
This is a METRO button, there is no start menu.
Re:You'll pry Windows 95 from my cold dead hands! (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Meh (Score:3, Informative)