Windows Blue Is Officially Windows 8.1, Free For Existing Users 491
Several readers sent word that Microsoft has officially dubbed the upcoming revision to its flagship operating system "Windows 8.1," retiring the code-name "Windows Blue." They also said the update would be freely available to anybody with Windows 8. It will be available through the Windows Store. "Reller declined to provide an exact release date for Windows 8.1, but said that Microsoft is 'very sensitive to the timing of the holidays.' Ideally, Microsoft will be able to provide devices with Windows 8.1 pre-loaded in time for the holiday 2013 season, Reller said, but those who purchase a Windows 8 device later this year will be able to easily upgrade to 8.1."
Service pack (Score:5, Insightful)
So, then it is the unofficial return of the service packs.
Re:Service pack (Score:4, Funny)
Free.
Couldn't sell it.
Only for current users. That's not exactly restricting scope, is it? ;-)
Re:Service pack (Score:5, Informative)
Semi-free. You can only get it from the app store. And you can only use the app store, even for free apps, by registering a Microsoft Account (presumably for spying purposes). Whereas in the past you would get service packs via the normal Windows Update process. Since the app store is the only reason Microsoft is pushing windows 8, I don't see them changing this policy ever.
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It's still only free-as-in-beer.
I know, I know: "Whoosh." But the distinction is still kinda important, don't you think?
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It's all about the marketing....
Wow... (Score:4, Insightful)
I honestly wasn't expecting that. Toward the end of Vista's lifecycle, I think that they were offering 'buy this computer now, upgrade for free*(additional charges may apply) when 7 comes out' in order to avoid having a sales slump while people waited it out; but offering '8.1' as a free update, this soon after 8, is about as close to a concession speech as you could expect to see. (Especially in light of the rumored move to a 'release often cheaply or by subscription' model, which would have made a cheap, but nonzero, upgrade price a more natural option than it otherwise would have been)
Re:Wow... (Score:4)
Think of it less as a new OS like going from Vista to 7 was (even though Vista, 7 and 8 are just incremental upgrades to the same OS) and more like going from XP to XP SP2. It fixes a lot of major issues and (hopefully) responds to user feedback.
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W7 was more an incremental upgrade from Vista. More like a parallel-developed version of Vista that never got released initially. It's just too different.
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
Windows NT 4.0 self-identified as NT4.0
Windows 2000 self-identified as NT5.0
Windows XP self-identified as NT5.1
Windows Vista self-identified as NT6.0
Windows 7 self-identified as NT6.1
Windows 8 self-identified as NT6.2
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Informative)
There is a good technical reason for numbering the versions that way. A lot of badly written software was checking the major version number. Installers were especially prone to this. As such Microsoft only increments the major number when they deliberately want to break compatibility with such software and force sysadmins who really need to get it running to turn on compatibility mode.
2000 had some new UI stuff and various APIs ported over from Windows 98/ME. Vista had the biggest changes in Window's entire history. On the other hand any OS with the same major version number tends to be fairly similar from an API point of view.
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Poorly written version detection is why Windows 7 self-identifies as 6.1
Turns out that 6.0 (and 7.0) fail the old
if (majorVer >= 5 && minorVer >= 1)
idiocy that places were using to check if you were running XP instead of Win2K.
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Funny)
I'd still wait for Windows 8.11 for workgroups. Maybe they'll add a proper command line and support x forwarding natively.
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I'd still wait for Windows 8.11 for workgroups. Maybe they'll add a proper command line and support x forwarding natively.
Microsoft will add native x forwarding to windows shortly after the devil^W^W Balmer ice skates to work
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Windows for Warehouses.
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I just see it as a Service Pack Upgrade to the system. It isn't like We are going from Windows 8 to Windows 9. Just Windows 8 to 8.1.
Besides the speed of the update is well within your normal hardware upgrade cycle (every 4-6 years) It isn't like you will be expecting to get a new laptop from to run 8.1, as well the changes are not enough for most people to Pay for the upgrade.
Overall I don't see it as Microsoft saying anything bad about windows 8, instead of we listen to your advice and made the new ver
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)
Showing something is better...
When I showed someone how to do it with win 8 they looked at me and said "how do I know I should do that?!"
They seemed to have forgot one of their early lessons with the 'start' button.
http://www.irintech.com/x1/co/3586/1347415399000
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Interesting)
I clicked it, thinking: "Surely this will let me set the image as the wallpaper", but I was given just two options: set as lockscreen (IT'S A LAPTOP!), and set as 'app tile'
I immediately closed the window since the option I wanted wasn't there--no wait, actually I didn't close it. There was no UI option to close this fullscreen picture. I alt-tabbed back to the desktop. I found the picture again, right clicked it, and went to the "open with" option. There were like 5 image viewers that came with Windows to choose from. I chose the old "Windows Photo Viewer" and set it as the default so this madness won't happen again.
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There is no apparent way to get to the control panel in windows 7. Someone had to teach you or you had to poke around.
This is 'It's not what I'm used to, whaaa' and nothing more.
Re:Wow... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wow... (Score:4, Insightful)
No visual clues AND no documentation. You are either supposed to just figure it out yourself (not something that happens with the typical "I need something simple since I'm scared to touch buttons" user), or spent time researching online.
There is oddly enough, a sort of tutorial added later, but you must first obtain an account and subscribe to the store (their entire goal with W8 is to get faces to the store). Not sure why they were unable to have this built in from the start, except that it's clear they had to whip W8 too soon before it was complete.
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's one way to look at it. The other way to look at it is: if your UI is so discoverable that all you have to do is hit one key and then type whatever you're looking for and *boom* there it is, you know you have a great UI.
DOS was even better. You didn't even have to 'hit one key' before you could type the command you were looking for.
Back in the real world, if your GRAPHICAL User Interface requires you to type the name of a program to start it, it's a lousy UI.
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Dunno 'bout you, but on my ios6 iphone 4, I go to home screen, press home again, and there's this magical Search page that will rifle through my phone. if I search for "doctor" it'll return all the calendar, email, address book entries for that "doctor." If I have media in the phone with the word "doctor" in it, it'll also come up.
How is it worse than a
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's your problem... You are assuming power users. Do you know how many people I know who still go to the edit menu to select COPY and PASTE rather than using keyboard shortcuts or even right clicking?
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I just find it much faster to type "Control Panel" than to move the mouse and click three or for times. This applies to both W7 and W8. To each their own I guess.
you have to know to type that though.
you might have faster time setting the setting from command line as well! if you only knew the command by heart in advance!
beauty in windows 95 was that you didn't have to know shit about it, you didn't even need to know that control panel was where the settings were, you would find it soon enough behind start button.
gestures, magic swipes etc. are appalling. it's not intuitive at all, but designers have come to realize that as long as it's different than before then the
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Have you timed this? Typing often feels faster than mousing, even when it isn't.
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Two words: mouse elbow. Microsoft doesn't document for shit these days and after using a computer for thirty years I don't want to fucking have to learn all over again!
I learned to drive 45 years ago and only had to learn once, even though automotive technology has changed completely. If Ballmer took over Ford, he'd swap the brakes and throttle.
At least, I don't want to relearn it without an overriding benefit, like when we went from DOS to Windows.
Or Windows to Linux, great improvement. Windows can't hold
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wow... (Score:4, Interesting)
In Windows 7/Vista, the start menu shows you an input box--the closest element to the button, in fact--with "Search Programs and Files"
In Windows 8, the start menu shows you an entire screen's worth of distracting colors and movement, all contained within identical boxes.
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't know how I'm comfortable with it either, but after using Windows 8 for half a year I am (not saying it necessarily takes six months to get comfortable, I just don't remember whether I was comfortable with it from the start (no pun intended) or not).
Both the start menu and start screen grab my attention, which is expected since I pressed winkey to bring them up in order to use them. Win+I and enter gives direct access to control panel. Harshly coloured jumbled mess is a bit of an exaggeration IMHO, a
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In Win8, right click the corner where the start menu should be. It brings up a short list of really useful settings and admin type stuff, including the control panel.
Go back further... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Go back further... (Score:4, Funny)
Windows 7 start menu is essentially the optimized version of the windows 3 program manager, with easier means to open and access along with ability to use files and programs not contained within program manager. Whereas Windows 8 start screen is optimized for the use of pounding your forehead against a touch screen .
Re:Wow... (Score:5, Funny)
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They literally say it is a free update in the very first sentence of the article, which is cited in the second sentence of the summary (which says the same thing).
The upcoming Windows Blue update, now officially known as Windows 8.1, will be delivered as a free update through the operating system's app store, Microsoft confirmed today.
Fuck the Walled Garden (Score:5, Funny)
As long as it's a closed development ecosystem where you have to pay to play, and MS gets to profit from your work, all I have to say is FUCK MICROSOFT. I'm sticking with my MBP.
Re:Fuck the Walled Garden (Score:5, Insightful)
Am I really the only one who sees the irony here?
Yes. Most of us saw the humor.
Maybe I can Start loving Windows again (Score:5, Interesting)
Stop saddling me with your damn phone interface and we'll see.
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The newest version os Stardock Start 8 completely bypasses the Modern interface (in the old version, you could still see it flash on the screen during boot), disables hot corners, charms and everything that we hate about Win8.
It basically turns Win8 into Win7 with the new Win8 tweaks under the hood.
Best of all, it's only $5 bucks. If this Blue update doesn't bring me what I want, I'll definitely buy a legit version of Start8.
Re:Maybe I can Start loving Windows again (Score:4)
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He already answered you:
"... the new Win8 tweaks under the hood."
Re:Maybe I can Start loving Windows again (Score:5, Insightful)
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Maybe I can Start loving Windows again
Stop saddling me with your damn phone interface and we'll see.
Yeah, the phone-thing can be a problem... If you do start loving windows again, make sure you get proper protection, or at lest prop it up with a hypervisor box so don't ruin your 'hardware' when it comes crashing down, if you know what I mean...
Protip: The windows that you can crack open using a special tool is the best -- You can adjust for tightness.
Re:Maybe I can Start loving Windows again (Score:4, Insightful)
Hear, hear. I put up with those sorts of interfaces on my phone because of what it is. The interface inherently must be limited, or else it would not be usable on a tiny screen when operated by big, clumsy fingers.
When I'm on a computer, I have a nice, big screen, a mouse, and a keyboard. There's plenty of screen real estate to use for things like multiple windows with scroll bars and title bars, tabs, navigation controls galore, etc. There is no good reason to be stingy in terms of your user interface. If I wanted a limited UI, I would have bought a tablet in the first place.
I'm afraid I just blue myself. (Score:2)
Good move (Score:2)
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Too little, too late? (Score:2)
I wonder if this has any chance of actually saving Windows 8.
I find it amusing they were so out of touch with actual users they decided to go ahead with this in the first place.
I've never even seen Win 8, but I certainly have seen the stories and people saying how much they dislike it ... not even sure if what they're restoring even puts a dent in the dislike for the product.
This is the kind of about-face which usually indicates the company made a stupid choice and are now trying desperately to pretend like
Re: Too little, too late? (Score:2)
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Most of those stories you've heard are also from people that have never seen it. I upgraded from 7 to 8 for about 4 months. Metro is annoying, but very easy to suppress with any of a dozen third party Start menu replacements (most are free). I had some stability issues, but they got a lot of patches out pretty quickly. I did run into a few oddball problems, such as you can't run apps that use Silverlight if you have Client Hyper-V installed (Silverlight still works fine in browsers for Netflix) but they've
Re:Too little, too late? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Too little, too late? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm counting among the people who gave Windows 8 a chance rather than going in hating it already. I ended up going back to Windows 7 (as I said), but I don't think 8 is the disaster that so many people claim it to be.
People treat it like a house with a cracked foundation and rotting trusses when it really just needs new siding and maybe a few non-structural walls moved.
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Windows 8 had to be released when it was so they could push their tablets and phones. It wasn't ready for the desktop, but could be made to work. Now, it appears it is ready for the desktop. Time will tell.
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I've never even seen Win 8, but I certainly have seen the stories and people saying how much they dislike it ...
It's funny, because other than these kinds of statements and initial reviews from online rags, I've only heard average to good things about Windows 8 (in comparison to XP or 7). That is, everyone I've talked to who's actually used it - y'know, the people whose opinion I value because they've actually got experience with what they're talking about - had two complaints:
1) "I didn't like the start screen at all." Well, then I got used to it. I also pinned the stuff I normally use on the desktop to the taskb
Re:Too little, too late? (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps you don't actually have to work with any customers that know 0 about computers. I do. I have customers that could not tell you what version of windows they use. Hell when I try to use the start button to narrow it down, is it a blue circle or a green oval, they get confused. I do NOT need another interface to hold hands though. I do NOT want to waste the time teaching all of my users how to do something that they have been doing for 15 years.
I hate windows 8 not because I have to get used to it, but because I have to help every single one of my customers get used to it. That is the major issue. This issue would not have existed if they had left the option to boot to desktop, and left the windows orb in the corner. Now get off of your high horse please. Ohh and the reason you posted anon is obvious. You know you are wrong and are trying to avoid any negative moderation.
Re:Too little, too late? (Score:5, Informative)
They can't just dump Metro - there's a complete ecosystem of apps dependent on it. It's very small, but it's not like they can abandon it. That would be like Apple just discontinuing the entire iOS line and saying "Sorry, your iDevices are useless."
It is far more likely than you think, they have already killed zune, they killed all of those windows phone 7's saying to their customers "yeah our bad you won't be able to update the phone you just bought sucks to be you." Oh and then there was the playforsure debacle. They pushed silverlight and have now nearly abandoned development of it. So Microsoft could throw framework/interface formally known as metro to the wolves on a whim at anytime they want and it would just be par for the course.
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They just need to push Metro to the background like Apple OSX App store is done. If i dont invoke it, i NEVER see Launchpad on OSX. Make metro so i can ignore it on my machine if i so choose.
The problem is that Metro is the new start menu.
It would be like Apple dumping the Dock and saying "Launchpad or GTFO", which they clearly didn't do because they realised people who have been using OS X for years would find that annoying and baffling. (I too, do not use launchpad, but I know some people who love it - see what choice does for you?!)
Windows Store? why not windows update? (Score:2)
Windows Store? why not windows update? and will there BE ISO for clean / fress install and or upgrades from 7
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Because they want to catch all those people who weren't tricked into getting Microsoft accounts by the original Windows 8 installer and saw that they could in fact just choose a "local account" and not have something quite so easy for Microsoft to datamine.
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Because they want to catch all those people who weren't tricked into getting Microsoft accounts by the original Windows 8 installer and saw that they could in fact just choose a "local account" and not have something quite so easy for Microsoft to datamine.
that sounds like a big enterprise trun off to need a MS account to get all your updates.
Windows Update or Windows Store the same ... (Score:3)
Windows Store? why not windows update?
It probably will be in Windows Update. However a Windows Update will probably not change your configuration settings. Whether you get the 8.0 or the 8.1 user interface will probably just be configuration. Your default configuration varying depending on what you originally installed.
Now if you go to the Windows Store and install Windows 8.1 that will probably change your configuration settings.
Going Update or Store will probably leave you with the same binaries on the hard drive.
So are they really fixing it this time? (Score:5, Interesting)
Running Windows 8 at home has been an exercise in asking "How did that get though testing?" questions.
I have observed a number of bugs in the current Windows 8 that cause me to seriously doubt Microsoft's Quality control processes. My running favorite issue is how the Parental controls are exceptionally easy to bypass (just a mouse click at the right time and my son has unlimited time despite how the system is configured.. ) Come on Microsoft... Windows 8 was mostly a GUI adjustment to that metro aka touch screen interface... No real kernel changes from Windows 7.. You need to test a bit better kids.
Windows 8 was not properly tested prior to release, I'm guessing because they rushed it to market. Hopefully 8.1 won't be as rushed and they will actually TEST some of this stuff a bit better this time.
Or, as it will be known at release... (Score:2, Troll)
The official launch name will be Windows Apology.
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My guess is that MS will compound their error (Score:3)
Unable to admit mistakes, there will be no start button that brings up an easily navigable menu. There will be a bitmap that brings up the desktop or something equally stupid/lame.
In other news, Microsoft will give developers no clue as to their long term language strategy. Developers, with no interest in investing limited time, money and resources into Microsoft language technology shambles, will go elsewhere. Top managment at Microsoft will continue to be baffled as to why nobody is writing Windows 8 Apps, or Windows anything apps, anymore.
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Do you have some stock that you like, by any chance? I have some credit available on my margin account, and was looking to short something.
store only? (Score:3, Interesting)
Will there still be a stand alone MSI for those of us who have multiple PCs to update? Enterprise or not, updates of this nature need to be available to install on non connected PCs, and I would also like to be able to have it on my USB utility drive so I can upgrade customers/family who have Win 8 PCs.
Needs to have updated ISO's as well (Score:2)
So people who are still on 7 can just do 1 install or if you are starting with a clean pc you do have to sit and download what they used to call SP's.
Will they address feedback (Score:3, Insightful)
The single biggest question is whether or not they will address feedback from the masses on two things that they have been repeatedly told were very bad ideas?
Restore the start menu (not just bounce you back to TIFNAM)
Boot directly to the desktop
If they don't address these two issues with an option to allow both the enterprise is going to continue their mass boycott of Windows 8 for years to come. Microsoft has been particularly stubborn on these points, even though they are dragging the PC industry down with them by being pig headed about things. Microsoft, can your arrogance be overcome?
Some things never change. (Score:5, Insightful)
__
What really happened (Score:3, Interesting)
Windows 8 was a classic marketing trick. Company has a brand new product. Company has an existing, highly successful, product. Company uses latest version of existing product to 'trojan horse' the new product into customers' lives. After promotion period is over, company once again restores familiar version of original product.
Only problem is that Microsoft has messed up this age old tactic in every way possible. The 'freebie', Metro, RT or whatever the marketing goons at MS fail to call it, was neither wanted nor valued by existing users of Windows. Unlike the free issue of a new magazine that arrives with the current issue of your current magazine subscription, Metro offered nothing useful to anyone. Metro was designed for touch tablets, but Windows 8 mostly sold for non-touch desktop and notebook systems.
You must know this. Originally, full blown Windows 8 was set to be released for ARM computer devices, but then Microsoft accepted an extraordinary pay-off from Intel to delay this inevitable move for another year+. The high managers of Microsoft cancelled the plans for Windows on ARM, instructed the teams to cripple the ARM version of Windows to Metro only, and switched to the 'trojan horse' promotion of Metro on proper Windows 8 installs. The end result was the biggest marketing disaster in Microsoft history, and Intel's pay-off does nothing to change this.
The irony is that ARM devices DO have full blown Windows 8 on them, which is activated by very minor hacks, but the perception of the ARM devices as Metro only, combined with obscenely high prices, meant the Metro ARM tablets didn't sell at all. No hardware base means no-one cares to develop Windows 8 code apps for ARM (which, by the way, is trivial using Microsoft's ARM tools).
Now, ordinary Windows 8 (known as 8.1 for a short periof, before reverting back to 8) will be returned to Windows 7 desktop functionality. Metro will be (to all intents and purposes) repositioned exclusively as a 'mobile' platform. Curiously, this will happen at the same time as Microsoft prepares to release a proper version of Windows 8 for ARM- but then ARM is about to become commonplace in notebook and desktop systems as the old x86 market dies.
Microsoft is correct in thinking that the traditional, multiple window interface of desktop computers is a poor match for mobile devices in their touch screen mode. However, touch screen devices are rapidly becoming 'hybrids', becoming notebooks when docked to a keyboard, and tablets when used without. It is natural that these two modes of use can switch between two interfaces, AT THE USERS DISCRETION.
Microsoft's biggest problem is that they still expect to make each user pay loads of money for Windows. This is rather like the old 2D SVGA graphics companies like Hercules expecting PC users to still pay loads of money for the 2D graphics hardware. Established computer tech, hardware or software, tends to lose all value across time. Your 2D hardware once cost you hundreds of dollars, but now costs just a few cents. The OS should, likewise, be effectively free. Microsoft should be making its money from 'services' by now.
MS knows that moving to tablets means finally accepting that an OS has minimal value. It also knows that with the growing performance of tablets, it cannot pretend the tablet OS is clearly inferior to the desktop OS. Windows has a choice. Become 'free' or become history. Google can deliver the coup de grace at any time now by authorising an official multi-window shell for Android, and give it the desktop functionality of Windows. Of course, there are already any number of unofficial shells for Android that allow people to use it in desktop mode, but app developers need a standard platform to really make a difference.
The age of the x86 is over. The unavoidable Intel tax ensures this fact. The fate of Microsoft is less certain. Intel CANNOT afford to give away its only good product, its x86 CPU. Microsoft CAN afford to give away Windows (in theory) and even do the same for offline OFFICE. The move to ARM does not have to destroy MS. Microsoft just needs to employ some high level managers that have a clue and a backbone for once. Obviously this cannot happen while the useless clown Ballmer is in charge.
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Not for long, if you're representative of the quality astroturfer that they can afford these days...
I thought no one used the Start button! (Score:2)
Free for existing users (Score:2)
But users who don't exist will have to pay!
Just think of all the revenue they will get from The Toothfairy, Santa Claus, Martians, Klingons, Kzinti , Elves, Unicorns, and Honest Politicians
Really? Blue? (Score:2)
Like, as in Windows Blue Screen Of Death? Is this a not-so-inside joke?
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But now Windows has a nice big :( on their BSoD to make it pretty. Lord knows I saw enough of them when I tried Win 8 after the retail launch. I might go back once 8.1 comes out, it had a lot of nice features but I had some stability issues (although many of those were fixed within the first couple months of patches). The metro UI can be suppressed in less time than most people take to write a gripe about it on an Internet forum.
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Windows Blue?
More like Windows Blew.
Re:Boy, they just ask for it, don't they. (Score:5, Funny)
Made me think of the Mitch Hedburg one-liner. "I used to do drugs. I *still* do, but I used to, too."
Windows Blue. It *still* blows, but it blue, too.
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Here's part of it: http://www.classicshell.net/ [classicshell.net]
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Start button for Windows 7 and Windows 8...
What am I missing here? My windows 7 machine has a start button. Is it the wrong one?
Re:So what comes next? (Score:4, Funny)
Windows XP forever and windows 7.5 (Score:2)
Windows XP forever and then windows 7.5
7.5 is windows 7 UI + all there other stuff stuff from 8 enterprise only
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I have been holding out replacing my desktop and laptop for this as well. Did they put the Windows 7 Style Start Orb back? Can it boot directly to the old-school screen and bypass the tiles?
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NO. What gave you that Idea? The orb is an icon that simply links you back to metro. The rest is still windows 8. Oh there is an arcane way to get to the desktop without first entering metro but you will still have to deal with it alot
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If you want the look & feel of Windows 7, 95, (shudder) Vista, or even 3.1 or something custom you make up, download Classic Shell - http://www.classicshell.net/ [classicshell.net] - and you will have more control over Windows than you've ever had.
Re:Wohoo! Windows blew (Score:4, Insightful)
If all you want is a start menu just install kubuntu or Mandriva and you'll have all the functionality of all the versions of Windows, with no lacking features whatever, plus features Windows never had. And your system will be faster and more responsive.
Windows? Ballmer blue it!
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For tech support and "old hands" it's like you used to have a reserved parking spot outside the building, so you knew where you were going to park every morning, and didn't have to "remember" where you car is parked in the afternoon.
And now, you have to park in the multistory next door, where there's a valet that parks your car and returns the keys in the morning, but no valet in the afternoon. So you can get almost the same parking spot every day by getting in super early, or you get a random spot and have
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Yes, your contention that you can put them where you want is the "arrive at 6am so you get the same place every day" equivalent in my analogy. That doesn't help the tech that has to find them, they're not you. They're not "random" in the sense that they're shuffled every time you open the start menu, but they are random in the same way that you can't always immediately find the cups in an unfamiliar kitched, or be sure that's all the cups and not just the "good china", etc.
As to what they're doing. They're
Meh. (Score:2)
We'll see. Windows 8 has already lost the WinTel empire at least one customer that I know of (my missus tried+hated Windows 8, and she opted for an iPad instead.)
Me, I'll wait to see what happens. I can't see Ballmer's ego marching things back to a full-on Windows 7 (and TBH, before)-style interface (in spite of enterprise pretty much demanding it), so I suspect that whatever comes of it will (at risk of trolling, but just IMHO) reek of a duct-tape job, with a start button lashed in somewhere but with Metro
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Nothing wrong with duct tape. Nothing at all. Keeps much of the known universe functioning.
A big step up, actually.
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I can agree that "Windows Blew."
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Before you say it, being able to split my screen and run two apps at a time is sooooo 1992. I currently have six windows open on this screen and eleven open on my second screen. We outgrew "two apps at once", like, 20 years ago. How did they think this would be acceptable? Did Ballmer have a stroke or something?
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hell I stopped by my dad's house the other day and he had a 4 separate programs running at once, my freaking dad, who gets boggled by power cycling his router had a browser going with google maps, his GPS software, excel for calcing time and mileage, and skype talking to his brother