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Windows 8 Pre RTM Metro UI Leaked

An anonymous reader writes with this snippet from PC Tech Talk, which features screenshots of what is said to be something very close to what users will see in Windows 8: "One of the biggest changes Microsoft announced for Windows 8 was the change from the 'Aero Glass' interface we had in Windows Vista and Windows 7 to a new Metro UI. Until today these changes had not been fully seen as the weren't included in the recent Release Preview. A number of changes have been made to the UI since the Release Preview 2 weeks ago. Microsoft have said the new Metro UI will appear crisper following the removal of shadows and transparency. Gradients have been removed from buttons. The task bar is no longer has the glass, transparent look or blur effect. The new design brings with it some heartache for those that loved the Aero Glass effect as it has now been completely removed from Windows 8." Maybe it's more exciting in motion than are these static shots.

29 of 484 comments (clear)

  1. It looks the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It looks the same. I the blurring/transparency that important?

  2. Pirate proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I for one will not be pirating this version. The ultimate DRM!

  3. hideous, hideous, hideous by alen · · Score: 5, Funny

    its like seeing bill o'reilly naked

    i'm going to run out and buy a Mac for twice the price of a PC just so i don't have to look at this

  4. Actually, not too bad. by bodangly · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its pretty clean and I was baffled at the need for fancy glass and transparency, heck, those things were cliche by the time Win7 came out and are beyond cliche already. I like an interface made up of flat colors much better personally.

  5. window manager by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    These screenshots remind me of linux when the window manager crashes.

  6. The new Windows 8 user interface... by benjfowler · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... looks like ass.

    Or vagina.

  7. Re:Wow by SomePgmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Eh, it looks to me like win7 with less transparency. I'd say it's more on the order of "minor theme adjustment" than anything.

    I just can't make myself get worked up about it one way or another like it's a huge deal.

  8. Re:'Windows Classic' theme? by Junta · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, the Windows Classic theme is actually not there this time. After surviving XP, Vista, 7, 8 seems to kill it off.....

    --
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  9. Feels like late '90s all over again by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If these screenshots are to be believed, it feels like every fancier looking OS from the late 90s, back before most of the fancier stuff was really feasible.

    Shadows have a role (helps to establish depth and layers). Gloss has a role (draws the eye to interactive elements). Translucency has a role (establishes that something is over something else and gives it a sense of impermanence). Gradients have a role (draws the eye along the gradient towards something). Windows Vista and 7 overdid it by quite a bit, but cutting them out entirely is like throwing the baby out with the bathwater. You sacrifice usability when you do so. You can take a minimalist approach while still having those elements.

  10. They removed transparency? by cpu6502 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why?
    It's like a step backwards to an old 80s OS where everything consisted of solid bars with no shading or variation.

    --
    My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
  11. Re:Wow by localman57 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To me it looks like windows 3.1, but with more colors and higher resolution. And a task bar.

  12. 3.0 v. 3.1(1) by clinko · · Score: 5, Funny

    This design is great, but Windows for Workgroups 8.11 is going to be even better!

  13. Metro = Retro? by localman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How odd - it looks like any of a dozen Linux window managers from the late 90's. Back then I used to think how the flat/square look was just the first simple thing a developer would come up with, and how Linux would need a little more graphical refinement if they ever hoped to go mainstream. In the end it doesn't matter much for usability, but it sure looks like a toy/baby window manager to me.

  14. Clean and simple by hob42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All I have to do is set the window border color to a nice light blue, drag the task bar to the top of the screen, and I'll feel like I'm back using my Amiga from 20 years ago. Which isn't a bad thing, really.

    What I find funny is that everyone bashed XP's big rounded edges and colorful themes as being cartoonish. Then Vista came around, and everyone railed against Aero for being a pointless resource hog, adding eye candy without functionality. With 7, everyone complained it was just a service pack for Vista, because there wasn't a big huge interface change. Now, they decide to overhaul it to be a simpler, cleaner interface, without the frivolous flair, and everyone hates against that too.

    1. Re:Clean and simple by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting

      But people didn't bash Vista because of the eye candy. They bashed it because (a) the eye candy didn't work with their graphics card (which is a fair criticism - Vista came out long after OS X, which had similar compositing going on, which worked on old 4Mb ATI Rage 3D chipsets - I'm not kidding, Jaguar worked perfectly on an old Beige G3 that had that chipset); (b) because Vista was incompatible with a lot of their existing software. and (c) because Vista introduced some security changes they didn't like much.

      The overall look of Vista got a lot of praise, for those who had compatible hardware. And 7 - which was a service pack for Vista - dealt with most of the criticisms and has become extremely popular. People are happily ditching XP for 7. And part of it is the look.

      So I think you're possibly maybe overstating the criticisms.

      I like Aero. Windows 7 is really the first version of Windows in a long time I've been happy using. I think it's a shame they're taking it out of Windows 8.

      --
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  15. That's the best they can do? by Ashbory · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the goal is to simplify the interface they have failed. The first screenshot in the article: "Computer" is the most cluttered confusing thing I have seen in a long time. I counted 8 icons of computer screens.

  16. Re:GPU? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why would you want your CPU doing the Window compositing? Computers have these massive GPUs sitting around doing nothing - might as well use them for something like, I dunno, graphics processing.

  17. Don't need a Mac just to escape Windows 8 by tepples · · Score: 5, Funny

    i'm going to run out and buy a Mac for twice the price of a PC just so i don't have to look at this

    You don't need to. My clean PC runs Xubuntu.

    Clean, precise, pangolin-powered. MyCleanPC.

    1. Re:Don't need a Mac just to escape Windows 8 by dyingtolive · · Score: 4, Funny

      I saw what you did there, but only mere moments before reflexively getting ready to mod you troll.

      You, sir, play a very dangerous game.

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  18. In other news: by JBMcB · · Score: 4, Informative

    IE 10: Better HTML 5 support - not much else - who cares?
    Sign in with MS Account: Who cares? Is anyone gonna use this?
    Picture Password and PIN Login: Picture pass is kinda cool, but PIN login? Really?
    Ribbon in Windows Explorer: Holy cow no thank you.
    Hybrid Boot: Kinda cool - depends on how well it works.
    Windows To Go - Officially supported BartPE. Yawn.
    Refresh and Reset Recovery - How about making it so you don't need recovery in the first place? How is this better than a decent backup system?
    Native USB 3 - This shouldn't be a Windows 8 "feature," this should be in a service pack for Vista and Seven
    New Windows Task Manager - Yawn
    XBox Live integration - I don't think anyone will care about this - are they thinking about competing with steam? Good luck.
    Storage Spaces - LVM for the masses? Kinda cool.
    Family Safety - Wasn't this included with Windows Live? Yawn
    Antivirus in Windows Defender - In other words, they are just including MSE.
    Secure Boot Support - Holy cow no thank you

    So a handful of actually useful new features (that can, mostly, be added on to Seven with 3rd party utilities) a few that should be included with Seven and Vista, and a bunch that I don't want, including, in a big way, Metro.

    Doesn't sound like a winner.

    --
    My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
  19. Re:Wow by gl4ss · · Score: 5, Funny

    well.. you know how some people bitched that start button menu filled their entire screen after they installed 200+ programs? well, now microsoft fills your entire screen for start button and it's pressed by default.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  20. Microsoft just became the laziest of OS designers by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After having used Windows 8 and started developing apps for it using VS 2012 (11 beta) for several months now, I have to say Metro is about the laziest UI design that has come out of any OS developer in the history of operating systems.

    What they have done is removed ALL borders, all color variations and rounded corners, along with any chrome and created blobs of white/grey boxes with text on it.

    Its almost like Microsoft has given up on traditional desktop applications and want to encourage more "web-like" app designs exclusively for the Metro overlay.

    I could almost be claimed to be a Windows fanboy, but Windows 8 is the first time since Windows ME that I am greatly disappointed in the direction Microsoft is taking for UI/UX. It is horrid on almost every level of UI and UX and I have been a UI/UX developer for 15+ years.

    Windows 8 may be the biggest disaster they have ever created.

    --
    I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
  21. Re:It's shiny and pretty by inkswamp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is that all that counts today ? pretty effects and cool graphics ? I for one just want a plain old desktop with no background, just the classic theme without anything installed, no gadgets no candy just the desktop, a couple of icons there and that's about it.

    You do realize, of course, that roughly 30 years ago, computer geeks were running complaining about these new-fangled GUIs and how they just wanted a good ol' command line interface without the pretty graphics. I think we're long past those arguments at this point. IOW, you are squarely in the minority. People want computer interfaces they can relate to and that feel "human" and that means pretty effects and cool graphics.

    --
    --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
  22. Re:Wow by MachDelta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You mean the key that 90% of gamers disabled or removed because accidentally touching it just as you were about to cap/frag/score/win/pwn/save the princess is the leading cause of keyboards being snapped in half over a knee in a fit of hysterical rage? That key us gamers haven't used, ever?
    Great.

  23. No morse code for you by Pitawg · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... looks like ass.

    Or vagina.

    Stay away from Morse Code, if you have that much trouble determining dots from dashes.

  24. Re:Wow by ThePeices · · Score: 5, Funny

    What kind of crap games are you playing that don't disable that key for you? Seriously. That key is 17 years old.

    He said "save the princess".

    I think that says it all.

  25. Re:and Merto is program manager full screen by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Funny you mention that. I had told a colleague the other day that I predict this will be the same as Active Desktop. People will just want to turn it off / get it the hell out of the way so they can get some actual work done with their PCs. Unfortunately, it's going to be another set of APIs in Windows that will have to be maintained forever, and will turn the OS a bit schizophrenic in terms of it's presentation.

    I'm actually really happy with Windows 7 - I really like the way it looks and performs. So, I don't think it's a matter of me simply not liking change, I think. I just can't see any use for this Metro stuff on a desktop. Sure, it makes perfect sense on tablets, but why try to pretend it's useful in situations where it obviously won't be?

    Meh. I just don't get this at all.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  26. Re:Wow by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Funny

    But what if I don't have a tablet and only have a desktop. Now I have to get a touchscreen to launch any application on my home desktop.

    Everyone loves touchscreens, they're so cool. Haven't you watched sci-fi movies? Haven't you seen CSI?

  27. Re:Wow by swalve · · Score: 5, Informative

    Except Windows 7, which does the same thing with one less keystroke.