Microsoft Reveals More Windows 8 Details
Barence writes "Microsoft has released the first full details of Windows 8, with an all-or-nothing approach to touchscreen technology. All versions of Windows 8 — whether used on a touchscreen device or not — will use the operating system's new Metro interface, which was first developed for Windows Phone 7 devices. The advent of Windows 8 sees Microsoft introduce a new style of application, dubbed Metro Style apps, and its own app store. The company also claims to have boosted Windows 8 performance with fast boot/shutdown times, a new Task Manager and the option to refresh a PC with a clean install of the OS with apps and settings left intact."
...as if millions of PC users suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
which should be the next good version, and if MS keeps to their historic release schedule, we should see sometime in 2014 to 2015. Not that long to wait really, since I'm sure Windows 7, which I find to be excellent, will tide me over while I wait.
There's not a fucking chance I'm using that shitty windows phone interface.
Seems like the Windows/Star Trek "every other release" rule is still in play. This user interface will be horrible on the business desktop for people who actually want to get real work done. I wonder how many businesses will avoid Windows 8 and wait for 9 to come out?
that there is a button to completely turn off metro and switch back to win2k-style menus (yes, i am doing that usually).
I think the most shocking and relevant reveal of today's release was the inclusion of ARM processing. This is big.
My Desktop PC is NOT a smartphone with a 22 inch screen
Please dont treat it like one
Quote from link: "Every screen needs to be touch. A monitor without touch feels dead."
Response: Like everything developed by every company that wants to have mass market sales, it's humorous to NOT hear "It's what we've noticed as something very popular with other types of [technology] that eats up peoples' time and develops even further interest in buying. Mystery and slow revelation with additional hidden secrets is the key to fast up-front sales. We'll jump on the bandwagon, but it's something completely different from the norm! Buy it and you'll find out how!"
Honesty is too painful to just throw out there, I guess. :)
Not troll material or flamebait at all - It's just something I see constantly and I find it humorous. I may love Windows 8, I may hate it. Don't know until I use it.
This version can actually mean the year of Linux on the desktop.
If Windows XP had not lasted so long, or 7 had not come so soon, Ubuntu would have a non insignificant marketshare as of now
Having the same interface from 4 inch to 40 inch screens --- I really dont see how they can make something that scales SO well, will wait and watch, but I have serious doubts regarding the success
Metro is the default UI, but you can switch back to Aero Glass/Aero/Classic by tapping the Windows key on your keyboard. Metro isn't mandatory or forced on you on the desktop.
Essentially, they are following what Opera, Chrome, Unity, Android, and iOS have been doing for how long? And this is big news?
I call it 'The Aristocrats'
Microsoft insists that the touch-oriented interface is suitable for any device, regardless of whether it has a touchscreen or not. "We envision an OS that scales from small form-factor, keyboardless tablets, all the way up to servers," said Windows president Steven Sinofsky, at a special press preview of the new operating system.
What's more, the company believes that every device should have a touchcreen. "The UI is the same UI, whether you use a mouse, keyboard or touch," said Jensen Harris, director of program management for the Windows Experience. "Every screen needs to be touch. A monitor without touch feels dead."
I, for one, don't want a server with this "Metro" interface and a touchscreen. I look forward to Windows 9, once Windows 8 is out of beta.
My first reaction is highly negative, but digging into it further, it doesn't look that bad. It'll bring up an icon display, you click 'explorer', and you're back at the standard mouse/keyboard windows UI. So my response is tempered to just slightly negative, in that there'll be one extra step during bootup.
I'm sure it will be able to be configured to go straight into Explorer, and that's what everybody who runs 8 on a desktop will do.
Let me get this straight.
I only looked at the first link but the first thing that jumped out at me was:
The advent of Windows 8 sees Microsoft introduce a new style of application, dubbed Metro Style apps, and its own app Store. The Metro Style apps are run in full-screen mode, with no Windows taskbar or other menu items getting in the way.
"Every single pixel of your beautiful screen is for your app," said Harris. "You're just immersed in the content."
Ok, so there's two big things here. An App Store and a way to run applications in some sort of full-screen interface.
Hmm. I wonder where I've heard these ideas before.
No more blue screen of death!
Just think about it... Microsoft has probably made the biggest improvement to their software in two decades... You can now reboot far faster than ever before! Just think about the time saved per week for your average Windows user!
Well, the real issue with this is that, in my experience, the apps and settings are the problem, not Windows itself (depending upon whether you consider the registry to be part of the OS or the user settings). I've found that often times nuking the user profile (which is the most obnoxious part to lose) is what solves the problem, not that Windows binaries are corrupted.
they've included the option to reimage your Windows install as a basic OS feature.
Except thats not what they are giving you. They're giving you the same thing you've always had, install over the top of an existing install.
option to refresh a PC with a clean install of the OS with apps and setting left intact.
Considering that 99 times out of a 100, its the settings that broke the install in the first place, recopying new files over isn't all that useful.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
If it really does work across Intel, ARM, tablet and desktop as seamlessly as the demos show, then I'm sold. I like the low memory usage on older systems and Metro will be a barrel of laughs. Downloading the public developer code when it goes live today (http://www.cmswire.com/cms/enterprise-20/microsofts-build-conference-windows-8-blowout-bldwin-012681.php)
If he's the Walrus then can I be a penguin please?
Can we refer to Windows 8 users as Metrosexuals?
#DeleteChrome
WINNING!
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
Not only will it work but there are a lot of new API's that aren't yet available in Metro but are available through .Net.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
So to make the most of the default new interface I would have to find some way of making my 32" HD monitor a touchscreen ?
Did big touch screens suddenly become cheap when I wasn't looking or is this just a way to push tech for monitor manufacturers seeing as 3d TV isn't working sales as well as they thought ?
Microsoft will sell both the new Metro apps and conventional desktop software via its own App Store. Indeed, that will be the only way you can get hold of Metro Style apps.
Given what Microsoft already requires for Xbox Live Indie Games and Windows Phone 7, it'll probably be yet another $99 per year certificate for a developer to renew each year.
Why the fuck would we want that on a desktop? Part of what makes a desktop system so useful is having multiple things open that you can switch between, position around, and so on. Right now I have my browser up on top of my primary window, but my e-mail client hiding behind it. I can see when new mail comes in. On my secondary monitor is the interface for our digital security system so I can watch over the cameras. There are a few other things loaded and running, but the windows are occluded at the moment. I don't want to be "immersed" in any of this shit. The ability to have multiple things going is why I like my desktop, it's why I have 4 cores, 8GB of memory and north of 4 million pixels of total display.
I do not get this obsession with trying to make computers work like phones. No, bad idea. When I heard of what they were doing with Lion I said "What a horrible idea." Now MS is doing the same? What the fuck? How about you give me a phone interface on a phone and a computer interface on a computer?
This has got to be the most stupid thing Microsoft has done since they launched the Kin.
The what? I've never even heard of the Kin until now. Can I reward you for providing information on this splendidly hip device by paying you in bitcoins?
The more you know, the more you have to say and the more you should listen.
They say we'll be able to make "Metro" applications with HTML, CSS and Javascript. Does that mean we won't even need Windows to make Windows Apps?
I don't need backwards gimmicky UI concepts that look like total crap (WP7) or apple style lockin hell app stores and I have zero interest of any kind in touching my monitor. It looks gross enough as it is.
If the new UI can't be turned off and I mean turned the hell **off** then no sale.
Progress to me is defined as enabling me to get crap done. Distraction and game playing (not keeping your designers on their leashes) is not progress -- it is a waste of everyones time.
... then Windows 8 fans can only be Metrosexuals.
Windows 8 is not an OS for a 22 inch smartphone
Please dont treat it like one
I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
I just read through the linked articles
Is there a text transcript anywhere? Dont have enough bandwidth for watching the entire video
Media Center never replaced the Windows Explorer and this won't either. They will just make it an option to boot to Explorer or to boot to the Windows Phone OS. They can make this the default interface for retail disc installs if they want but there is nothing stop end users, admins or OEMs from setting it up to boot from Explorer.
Is there a text transcript anywhere? Dont have enough bandwidth for watching the entire video
I only read through the linked articles
I'm surprised that you interpreted anything they said as "Silverlight apps won't work". They showed a Silverlight app running.
I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
Instead of a touchscreen interface, do it with Kinect. Even if it fails horribly, imagine... the corporate world having to suddenly get off their fat butts and dance around like apes for 8 hours a day. Obesity in America - now only a problem with Apple users.
In debates about Christianity, there are two groups: those looking for answers, and those looking to just ask questions.
From the article:
The full-screen Metro Style apps are likely to be web apps; the kind you would typically expect to find on a tablet. Things such as Twitter clients, video players and news readers, rather than full-blown desktop software such as Office or Photoshop.
Although they can be coded in conventional programming languages such as C and C++, they can also be created using standard web technologies such as HTML, CSS and JavaScript (but not, rather controversially, Microsoft’s own Silverlight). And because they are based on web technologies, they are the only applications that can be used across both the x86 and ARM-based versions of Windows 8 without any recompiling.
Guess I misinterpreted it
Microsoft sees the future of computing interfaces and is actually moving towards it. Large buttons makes mousing faster and easier anyway. Windows 8 is gonna support mouse+keyboard, touch and stylus equally fully, no holds barred. OS X is going to have some catching up to do.
It seems odd that the only screen shots show very little utility. How do you use Excel in the Metro interface? Word? Does everything just default to full screen? Based on the screen shots, apparently Microsoft thinks people spend half of their time looking at the screensaver with the current temperature overlaid on top of it.
I'm seriously wondering if any of this will matter in a few more years. The PC becomes the tablet becomes the smart phone becomes the cloud becomes the....what exactly? We demand total integration with all our gadgets so it is inevitable that the first OS to fully do that wins. I totally expect to see integration between Windows and Linux soon and I'm not talking WINE.
This feature is probably more useful for removing pre-installed vendor bloat.
Surely this will re-install vendor bloat, the way that the current recovery partition does?
Because TFS had no real details on what Metro looked like, I went hunting on youtube to find something. I came up with Windows8 Metro UI OS of the Future-Preview-Computex-2011
But when I watch the video it seems to me that the visuals are running about 30% faster than the sound. I don't know if it is my computer (never seen this before with youtube).
I am also amused that a guy is supposedly running the demo, but that the user name/profile is a womans - perhaps we all get to share the one login??? lol
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
'nuff said.
----- obSig
I would be surprised if they don't end up with a version of .net that runs on ARM Windows. That's pretty much what that tech is FOR. They have it running on the 360, and that is a non-x86 processor.
.Net is a different situation.
Silverlight just never took off, and so there's no point in porting it.
'Jensen Harris, director of program management for the Windows Experience. "Every screen needs to be touch. A monitor without touch feels dead."'
I applaud your efforts to make a more modular windows. I think it's a long time coming and I'm glad to see you move in a more compartmentalized direction.
One problem, you may argue all you want that my monitor is dead, however I would point out that I can at least read it. Unlike your touch screen, my monitor has none of the crud and filth that fingers put on keyboards and mice like your touch screen has. When you learn how to make a desktop interface, you may be installed on my hard drive. Until then you are dismissed like Gnome and Unity will be from my DESKTOP hard drive.
Good day sir!
~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
Given the cheapness of ARM hardware, I see no reason why a $50 all-in-one computer wouldn't be possible, aside from the historical greediness of the software vendors, LCD manufacturers, etc...
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
All versions of Windows 8 — whether used on a touchscreen device or not — will use the operating system's new Metro interface
I thought that Microsoft had learned its lesson with Windows Vista, and would not try to pull the "Microsoft knows best, customers know nothing" approach on its customers again.
Mac OS (yes, the 68k OS) were considered stable every other release as well; all the odd major numbered OS always requires endless number of patches (keep in mind that back then, there was no broadband to ease patch distribution.) With the exception of OS8 (which was released to get out of contracts with Mac clone makers,) even numbered versioned OSes were considered more "mature" than the odd numbered versioned OSes.
ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
What a load of garbage and all anti MS biased.
Ars Technica is in the process of writting review for those who prefer the old explorer. MS made it quite clear both GUIs will be used.
The screenshots of the new task manager and explorer are cleary not Metro.
http://saveie6.com/
...that the screen be about 63cm away (some would say over 110cm, a safe-ish bet is beyond arms-reach), otherwise your eyes suffer.
Windows will now demand I have a touch-screen (even though I have all these 'keys' and a mouse thingy and a tablet doofer and...)
This means that the screen must be within arms-reach (and and quite possible within the resting point of vergence for the eyes).
Screw. That.
I have got nothing against touch-screens in the right use case (e.g. a kiosk) where I will use them briefly but on my desktop?
I try to keys my fingers on the keys and keep the work going. Having to reach up and stab at a too-close screen sounds horrific. Expect shoulder RSI cliams to follow.
Windows 8! The Ubuntu 11.04 of ntoskrnl distros.
Because Microsoft software has not been compared enough times to the auto industry.
I'm wondering if this 'Best Windows Ever'-tm is destined to be the Metro Round-about with no usable inlets or outlets. Or just a tiny funny thing some people use like this one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xy8wxQ4aJo8
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
Depends on your hardware. A lot of composited stuff in applications has to do a software fallback if you take off Aero Glass, and so it eats different resources.
I find Windows 7 to be a better overall computing experience than XP, Vista, and Ubuntu 9.04 and 10.04, which were the 4 operating systems I had running across various systems at the time I tried out 7. I made 7 one of my dual boot options on my primary system not long after that, and recently I reformatted the HD as I wanted to reclaim the full space into a single partition as I found I was only booting into the other OS about once every few months.
I don't know where you got the Idea that there exists any OS without several pages of google results for "OS problems". I've never used one, and I started with dos 3.2, and have used almost everything since, including such outlier gems as NT 4. Windows 7 has fewer problems for me on a day to day basis than any other OS I've ever used compared to the amount I use it. maybe some other OS marketing team coined the phrase "it just works", but that really is my experience with win7. Nothing's crashing. nothing's blue screening. no programs are doing weird shit for no reason. nothing's claiming security problems or rights issues. no malware or viruses. it detects hardware and auto-configures absurdly well. I could chalk it up to being lucky, but I've got two different systems (a desktop and a laptop) that both run very well on the OS, no matter what I throw at it. Hell it usually runs older software better than older OSes!
perhaps your experience is different than mine, but everybody I talk to seems to share the same opinion. This post may sound like MS fanboyism, but I assure you that I was unhappy enough with MS's offerings to go to linux as my main OS for a good period of time. They've done a lot of backwards shit in the past, but I've got nothing but praise for Windows 7. The worst thing I can say about it is it's UNC file sharing is difficult to get working correctly.
Metro Style apps can, for example, talk to one another. Pictures stored in a photo app can be easily shared with a social networking app. Likewise, you can click the “share” button whilst in Internet Explorer 10, and post a link to straight to a Twitter or email client. “Two apps can share data between them, without the two apps knowing anything about one another,” said Jensen Harris, Microsoft’s director of program management.
That is what should make you run for cover.
Hey KID! Yeah you, get the fuck off my lawn!
What Windows 8 is, is Microsoft ticking the boxes:
When I watched the keynote I had a sense of déjà vu because basically Windows 8 is exactly what Ubuntu is supposed to be.
Microsoft's stated aim is "One OS for all devices".
Let me know when Microsoft brings out "Windows XB" for its next video game console and one can run XNA Game Studio directly on it.
Yooww: I had not seen the Metro interface before: I can just see Fisher Price firing up their lawyers with prior-art !!
You heard of the app store first probably with some Linux distribution in the 1990s.
Did Linux distributions charge the maintainer of a free software project $99 per year for inclusion and restrict even the owner of a machine from installing applications not included in the repository without ponying up $99 per year for access to gcc?
Another AC trolling...
Ironically, the concept of "desktop as an application" is nothing but new. If you go to your task manager and kill the explorer process, you can get your full desktop without the task bar in pretty much any versions of Windows. Hack, this sometimes happens automatically when I had to kill the unresponsive desktop.
First, when you use the classic desktop, it automatically disables Aero so I don't know why you are speaking about them as if they were separate.
Secondly, using Aero is almost always going to provide better performance because the entire UI is offloaded to the GPU. When you use classic desktop, your CPU has to handle everything. It's like comparing the performance of Direct3D/OpenGL vs software rendering in a game. The only time I can think that classic desktop might seem faster is if you have a really old GPU, because even a moderately modern Intel IGP will handle Aero just fine.
Dual monitors are something that are real, REAL popular in the workplace. Heck I was late in the game in getting them, all our secretaries, accountants, and so on had them before I did. Likewise tons 'o shit being open is the norm for people in the workplace. It isn't "one app only".
Now is it different at home? Could be, but lets remember that business is a mainstay of Microsoft. They make a ton of money there and it is something that helps them keep their prominent position.
This seems like something that will really piss business customers off.
I've seen more than a couple younger people who have the idea that their mobile phone is all the computer they need. They'll surf the web on it, do everything there. Why would you want anything else?
That attitude never outlasts their first job that uses computers. When you are doing more than just piddling around surfing the web and playing games, suddenly a mouse and keyboard start to make a lot more sense, you want a bigger display, ability to do more than one thing, and so on.
Phones and tablets suck at content creation. They are consumption devices. That's fine, but let's stop pretending that is all people do. We all aspire to be employed and many of those jobs use a computer for a lot of what you do.
Even some non-work things aren't well suited for phones or tablets. This post would be a good example. I shudder to think the amount of time it would take to try and get done with a touchscreen keyboard. However with my computer, I can bash it out quickly since it is set up for fast typing what with real, tactile, keys and a monitor that me fingers do not occlude.
This is not to say new technologies have no place, they do, and I love my smartphone. However this idea that "New is always bettar!" is stupid.
> [...] and the option to refresh a PC with a clean install of the OS with apps and setting left intact.
If this actually works and is practical, it might be reason to upgrade.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
One thing windows has always offered is flexibility, windows 8 just gives more flexibility. I watched the keynote today, all the Metro apps run on top of native libraries built right into the Windows 8 kernel. I for one look forward to trying this out and have visions of controlling my 55 inch flat screen with a kinect in my living room!
Microsoft has spent more than a decade offering, then deprecating, various incarnations of pseudo-desktop web applications:
- Windows DNA
- ActiveX
- VBScript applications running in Internet Explorer
- No-touch deployment
- Clickonce applications
The result is "web applications" that offer the worst of both worlds: the limitations of web applications, with the platform dependence and deployment complexities of desktop applications. Historically, they only run on one particular version of Internet Explorer (probably 2 or 3 releases old), require a particular version of Java, require administrator access, and need very specific security settings on your browser. These apps run in a browser but don't work with bookmarks, the back button, or right clicking. They are slow because every operation requires contacting a server AND running logic on the client. On top of it, these apps are tough to write: you have to know a server-side language, HTML + CSS + Javascript + Microsoft's DOM, and probably some other language to cover-over the limitations (hence the Java and/or C++/ActiveX part of things).
If Microsoft does this right this time, these apps will be purely HTML5 + Javascript. But then if that is the case... haven't they just invented the web browser? The apps should run on a Mac then too. So what's the point?
Microsoft has figured out correctly is that people like apps that look like appliances. No more having 10 toolbars so everything is one click. People are happy today to hide the powerful features if it makes things approachable and pretty. The ribbon in Microsoft Office is an attempt to compromise here. The Windows 7 UI buries and removes lots of features. This is akin to phones: even the most basic options on my Android phone require digging into menus to get there. They do it for screen real-estate. Apple's solution is simply to remove the advanced features. Microsoft is seeing the way the market is going and is trying to catch-up to it. They probably go that right, but they need to find a way to do it without alienating the power that we have today.
Okay, very well, Micro$oft, GNOME 3, and Unity all seem to be pushing their users towards a "unified" interface that's common to both PCs and tablets. They accomplish this by dumbing down the PC interface and removing functionality. Can someone please explain to me how this is desirable? And don't get me started about the ribbon interface-- most monitors sold nowadays are WXGA and vertical pixels are valuable. It all smacks of, "We know what's best for you, the consumer. Now shut up."
Windows 7 is a better Windows than Ubuntu, no doubt. However, Ubunutu is a way, way better *nix than Windows 7 can ever hope to be. If you limit yourself to the GUI tools available on an Ubuntu system, then you're only using a fraction of the power that exists there.
Please, throw some positive points at this comment!
Especially since as monitors got wider, Microsoft became obsessed with using up more vertical space.
I will not mourn that which I never had to lose. - Unknown
This is a stupid idea. It was a stupid idea on the i-whatever devices that Apple sells, and it will be a stupid idea on Windows. Say I want to develop and use an application that I write myself. For myself. On my computer and nobody else's. Now I have to get Windows' approval to "sell" it to myself? I'm heading out to buy a couple of copies of Windows 7 (which I actually kinda like) in case I get a new PC sometime in the future and it comes with Windows 8. That way, I can wipe the disks clean and do a fresh install of a slightly less crippled OS.
... will be if it can play your Angry Words With Friends
What's a desktop, grandpa?!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Any ideas on if .Net will work on/will be advanced in Windows 8?
Yes and yes. From Sinofsky's blog:
"We will show the brand new tools that allow you to code Metro style applications in HTML5/JavaScript, C/C++, and/or C#/XAML. The investments you have made as developers in all of these languages carry forward for Windows 8"
So, basically, .NET is still there, and it gets full access to all Metro APIs.
The title says it all.
restrict even the owner of a machine from installing applications not included in the repository
Who said anything about doing that?
The article states that the only way to install a Metro style application will be through Microsoft's app store. From the article:
As you would expect, Microsoft will sell both the new Metro apps and conventional desktop software via its own App Store. Indeed, that will be the only way you can get hold of Metro Style apps.
Like Apple, Microsoft will vet and digitally sign Metro apps before they appear on the Store.
In the past, some platform manufacturers have implemented a policy that "the only way you can get hold of" an app is through a specific app store, and they've implemented by not allowing end users to self-sign applications for installation.
DeathFromSomewhere wrote:
$99 per year for access to gcc?
What the fuck are you talking about?
I am aware that Visual Studio Express allows the user to develop classic applications. But will the version of Visual Studio Express made available after the release of Windows 8 allow the user to develop Metro applications? If that were the case, then users could self-compile and -install applications from sources other than the Store, and the article states that like Apple, Microsoft doesn't want that. This is why App Hub (formerly XNA Creators Club) and the iOS developer program have an annual fee.
We're getting an OS that:
1) is a superset of Win7 (everything on Win7 will run on Win8),
2) easily switches from a touch UI to a classic desktop UI,
3) will work on various CPU architectures for phones, tablets, and PCs,
4) will allow seamless connectivity, application, and data sharing between all your computing devices,
5) and will run on a crappy atom CPU,
and people here are complaining?!
Slashdot is now officially full of luddites! Go read the engadget review of the developer preview to get a sense of how this OS fits in the modern world.
Obligatory hedge: "I have karma to burn, so go ahead and flame away"
Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
Oh I can certainly drop to terminal window when I need to, and I did with ubuntu. a lot. a whole lot.
That's part of what I didn't like about ubuntu, that I had to dick around with a lot of stuff on a nitty gritty level to get it working. It reminded me sometimes of the old days manually editing config.sys to get IRQs and DMA channels playing nicely between different hardware. To be fair, Ubuntu wrapped a whole lot into gui, a far and away better experience than when I first tried slackware in 1995, but ubuntu gui config was always hit or miss. Wine's gui config worked quite well for instance, but 9.04 never truly liked my video card, and I'd have to manually update my xconfig file half the time, etc (hell, I had to install the video driver from a command prompt more often than not). The repositories rarely had the most updated version of non-big-name software, etc, so I spent a good amount of ubuntu time at a prompt. Now, I'm certainly capable of doing so, but as I said... I just don't want to anymore. I still used dos to do most of my file management even into the win98 era, but eventually GUI interaction won me out, and I prefer it to this day for most tasks. Say what you like, I'm just not that hardcore geek anymore. At least not on my home machine anyway.
I have nothing bad to say about people who like that level of intimacy with their OS. 10 years ago I might have been into it too. I just have other stuff to do now.
Most of the time, I have my laptop closed, on my desk, and I'm WAY back, using my TV as my primary monitor. MY ARMS ARE NOT 8 FEET LONG! How the hell am I meant to touch that? The Finglonger won't be reality until the year 3000!
Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
Reminds me of metro-sexual too much. I think I'll stick with rural apps.
Wait until RMS starts whining about some obscure encrypted media format which it turns out Windows 8 supports by default. This is nowhere near the sheer stupidity slashdot is capable of.
-1 overrated isn't the same thing as "I disagree".
The JavaScript apps are HTML5. You need something similar to vi to write them. You can use the HTML features like local storage etc.
But then I guess they'll run with web browser chrome around them unless they're installed through the Microsoft Marketplace. Otherwise, developers would be able to circumvent the Microsoft Marketplace by selling copies of the .hta files (or whatever they're called in Metro) to end users. Or perhaps I'm reading too much into "the only way" from the article:
Microsoft will sell both the new Metro apps and conventional desktop software via its own App Store. Indeed, that will be the only way you can get hold of Metro Style apps.
Typical MS, ripping off great ideas from OSS.
New API's and libraries to exploit!!! All new attack vectors!!! Yeah!
Huh?
I think this strategy will hurt them. Basically, it sounds like they're merging their mobile and desktop OSes. How do you focus on things like energy efficiency that mobile devices demand while also keeping backwards compatibility and Windows under the hood? It's an OS with two GUIs.
I can see how the idea would appeal to Microsoft execs - they probably see it as finally expanding Windows to whatever device, a long term goal of theirs. But just like the previous MS tablets and the previous MS mobile OSes, it tries to do too much rather than do select things very well. One would think that Apple's success over the past decade would have taught these guys some lessons. Tablet purchases don't care about Windows compatibility. Windows compatibility matters for businesses who have implemented MS technologies in a way that makes them dependent on them. Mostly in the form of MS Office formats. If you need a computer for work you get a computer. Tablets are much better suited for reading and browsing the internet, two things nobody needs MS-specific technologies for, and business people will not use them as their primary work device anytime soon. Sure, there may be some bleed over, but it's foolish to think that MS's dominance in the business world will bleed over to the mobile space in any way that's significant. It hasn't worked with cell phones, which many use primarily for business, so why would it work for tablets?
They should have copied Apple. Make a mobile OS and make a desktop OS, not this strange combination of the two. Windows 8 just looks like a big fat juicy target for the malware coders. Limiting features enhances security, efficiency, and oftentimes usability.
"From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
and why would I want to have full screen app on a desktop with a big screen or muilt screen systems?
Now full screen works a cell phone but on a much bigger screen?
I love the way Slashdot people spend years bagging on Microsoft for not "innovating", and then when they do something new, all you can do is piss and moan. If you don't like it, and you have something useful to say, then NOW IS YOUR CHANCE to affect the final outcome. This is a developer preview. It's not even a beta. They WANT to make it better, they want to engage with developers and users. So all you whiners -- here is your chance to stop being a hypocrite, and maybe either 1) admit that they're doing something *at least* interesting, and 2) maybe even consider installing it and sending in real feedback. If this was some random group of guys building a new UI / desktop for Linux, you'd be cheering them on.
Nothing's crashing. nothing's blue screening
oh really? I've had uTorrent hang so hard a couple of times that it can't be killed from taskmgr or taskkill. In fact win7 itself hung while shutting down necessitating a hard reset.
Junk it and go with HTML/JS. It's going to be automatically portable, debugging will be easier, and you'll see better performance and stability, with steady development. Silverlight is going to be maintained, for sure, but the browser wars ensure a steady rate of progress and bugfixes, whereas M$ can afford to ignore Silverlight and release on it's own timetable.
Bundle the apps for android and iOS and you leverage those markets as well. Silverlight is a toy.
Means apps like, say, Starcraft 2, which are designed around x86 code and really only use the handle assigned by the OS to put their window in, will have a place in the market. They won't have any metro elements, or any interaction with the new OS features like contracts, etc (unless they patch it in.) These are called "silo" applications.
It's amazing how much people complain about nonexistent problems. Too bad this derp didn't rtfa. (or should that be wtfv?)
Well, the real issue with this is that, in my experience, the apps and settings are the problem, not Windows itself (depending upon whether you consider the registry to be part of the OS or the user settings). I've found that often times nuking the user profile (which is the most obnoxious part to lose) is what solves the problem, not that Windows binaries are corrupted.
I would say the ratio is closer to 50:50 system:non-system corruption; with the two often working in tandem. But that was my thought, too: Why only refresh HALF the warez?
No, no it isn't. And it hasn't been for 11 years.
For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
Windows 7 is a better Windows than Ubuntu, no doubt. However, Ubunutu is a way, way better *nix than Windows 7 can ever hope to be. If you limit yourself to the GUI tools available on an Ubuntu system, then you're only using a fraction of the power that exists there.
I don't use Ubuntu but Fedora 15 on my wife's and my laptops and I easily have a much better GUI or command line experience than MS Windows anything. before you say Troll I actually use my laptop in my professional capacity as an IT consultant and can easily work with people in the corporate sector who are using MS Windows XP, Vista, 7. and Office software.
Many people I work with have issues with their corporate (Fortune 500) laptops and have to recover them on a 3 to 5 monthly basis. I have even seen Windows 7 blue screen and no I was not hallucinating. For me I only have a downtime of 2 minutes when I get a new kernel (usually every 10 to 15 days) so it is not unusual for my laptop to have one to two weeks uptime (today is 2.5 days). When I go to work I open up my screen and connect the corporate LAN to get a DHCP IP address automatically. When I get home I open my screen and the OS connects to my wireless network automatically and the next day I close the screen and repeat the process.
Total cost of software for my laptop is $0 and I don't pirate software. The company I consult for does not supply software for me to be compatible with those people who do use MS Software yet strangely (to some) I can easily work with them.
There ain't no such thing as proprietary standards only proprietary formats. Standards are by definition open.
Jensen Harris, director of program management for the Windows Experience. "Every screen needs to be touch. A monitor without touch feels dead."
And I very much agree with the parent poster:
Maybe they expect people to have alot Windex for the Windows Monitors.
does MS provide free bottles of windex with windows 8?
and I am not a fan of touchy smartphone UIs either - very much a keyboard kinda guy.
So, Microsoft is going to help the monitor manufacturers by forcing everyone to have touchscreens (yeah, right). On giant step for Microsoft, on giant step back for users.
Guess I'll be using my MacBook more and converting my desktop to Linux.
0-5% usage in AEROGlass mode, & 0-5% in Classic Mode too.
Once more, as far as CPU usage: You're overlooking the fact that 2d display has been offloaded to the graphics card's circuitry for ages!
(And, for a LOT longer than 3d graphics have been around mind you...)
In fact - I've used boards that do THAT since 1992 (Diamond Stealth 64 being my 1st one that did so, via its "Windows Accelerator" features which offload bitblt graphics primitives for 2d display in Windows to the graphics cards' processors for this).
I.E.-> I had the EXACT same CPU usage moving around taskmgr.exe's Window on the screen, resizing it, etc. in both CLASSIC Mode (using Win32 + GDI display subsystems) & AeroGlass (using DirectX display subsystem).
* NVidia GeForce GTX 470 graphics card in use here...
APK
P.S.=> Or, did you forget that graphics cards in Windows have been offloading duties from the CPU since the early SVGA days (1992 is when I first started using "Windows Acceleration" featured SVGA cards)? apk
It's not mandatory. It's an option. You turn it on or turn it off. The argument against touch related stuff pretty much crumbles in the face of reality - you don't need to use it, you don't have to use it.
Microsoft is simply expanding the capability of their product to include the reality of touch enabled devices. Get over it.
So you're saying Microsoft will start selling computers to compete with non-computers such as iPad. That hasn't worked for the two decades that tablet PCs have been around. Windows for Pen Computing 1.0 (based on Windows 3.1) has been around since 2001; why did it fail where the iPad succeeded? Some people might think it's because the iPad didn't try to be a "computer" with all the complicated "computery" things. Non-geeks want an appliance.