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Devs Flay Microsoft For Withholding Windows 8.1 RTM

CWmike writes "Windows app developers are taking Microsoft to task for the company's decision to withhold Windows 8.1 until mid-October. Traditionally, Microsoft offers an RTM to developers several weeks before the code reaches the general public. On Tuesday, however, Microsoft confirmed that although Windows 8.1 has reached RTM, subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does on Oct. 17, saying it was not finished. Antoine Leblond, a Microsoft spokesman, said in a blog post, 'In the past, the release to manufacturing milestone traditionally meant that the software was ready for broader customer use. However, it's clear that times have changed.' Developers raged against the decision in comments on another Microsoft blog post, one that told programmers to write and test their apps against Windows 8.1 Preview, the public sneak peak that debuted two months ago. One commenter, 'brianjsw,' said, 'In the real world, developers must have access to the RTM bits before [general availability]. The fact that Microsoft no longer seems to understand this truly frightens me.'"

292 of 413 comments (clear)

  1. so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by iggymanz · · Score: 5, Funny

    so Microsoft wants only the agile and extreme to survive, while the slackers get left behind. makes sense to me.

    1. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      so Microsoft wants only the agile and extreme to survive, while the slackers get left behind. makes sense to me.

      Sounds more to me like Microsoft is making consumers be beta testers for all of the 3rd party software out there, and putting a much higher support burden on the independent software developers since they can't test their software on the released OS until the public does.

    2. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by iggymanz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      that's fine too, they'll keep buying Microsoft since that's what's pre-loaded on almost everything sold. suckers. Remember Ballmer and MS only "in trouble" because their ever growing profits and income are growing quite as fast as they'd like. they aren't hurting at all

    3. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Russ1642 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What it means is that the developers should calm down because MS didn't actually make any significant changes. They're just dropping in a new default wallpaper and turning off a few features everyone hates to make it more 'user friendly'.

    4. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Sounds more to me like Microsoft is making consumers be beta testers for all of the 3rd party software out there, and putting a much higher support burden on the independent software developers since they can't test their software on the released OS until the public does.

      You're exaggerating the burden. What are the odds that any single independent developer has managed to sell their app to all three people who own Windows 8?

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    5. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by denmarkw00t · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Turning off a few "features" that devs haven't hopefully designed around in their apps. It's important to keep the people who are the backbone of your OS's ecosystem in the loop - no devs = no users.

    6. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Funny

      What you've written is a little long, but if we etch it really small, it ought to fit on a tombstone in the Graveyard of Famous Last Words.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by BitZtream · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Microsoft believes that 8.1 is so much like 8.0 that it won't need testing. They've stated this multiple times before.

      Considering that they do actually do extensive testing and dogfooding, its probably reasonably safe.

      It also means they are telling you that they didn't make any real changes and are charging you for the service pack they refuse to create for 8.0.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    8. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by aldousd666 · · Score: 1

      Saving money. Baller (not ballmer)

      --
      Speak for yourself.
    9. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Microsoft wants their cashflow to survive. Nothing else matters (tm), as Metallica would attest.

      Look at what happened with the Kin. A billion or so dollars thrown out the window in less than a year of the product's release. Nearly a billion of Surface tablets and PC's sitting in warehouses because nobody wants them. TPM and secure boot. Windows Vista.

      I'm actually _shocked_ that Ballmer wasn't ousted years ago, because Gates (as much as he's probably hated here) was an _incredibly_ intelligent, shrewd businessman. Ballmer, on the other hand, is a good _salesman_. He convinced plenty enough manufacturers to build Surface hardware and Windows 8 machines, so that should be proof enough, particularly after how colossally bad Vista turned out to be. But it seems that enough people remembered Vista that when the Surface hardware...er...surfaced...people were a bit more cautious.

      The worst part is that Windows 7 felt like a huge turn in the right direction to me. I was perfectly happy to run Windows 7 for entertainment and games, Linux for everything else, and it worked fine. Then I bought a Windows 8 PC and because of a borked UEFI implementation it would only boot either Windows 7 (32 bit), Windows 8 or Fedora...oddly enough. If Microsoft wants to dictate how I use my PC they should at least be offering an alternative better than the ones that already exist, including their own products.

    10. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or maybe, just maybe, the dirty little secret MSFT doesn't want you to know is really the fact that Windows 8.1 is just Windows 8 with a switch flipped that will let you go to the desktop and some more "apps apps apps, have we mentioned we have an appstore with apps?" in your face metro bullshit. Like making a "Start Goatse" as I call it where you click the start button trying to escape and it hauls your ass right back to metro...have they mentioned they have touch and apps?

      Or maybe the engineers at MSFT are doing this on purpose, its been widely known that ballmer is fricking HATED by many at the company and doing what they can to make sure "Ballmer's Folly" flops as bad as Win 8? Really wouldn't be out of the question. At the end it won't matter though as i can tell you little shops like mine have stopped carrying Win 8x anything as I have watched people gladly pay for a more expensive refurb with Win 7 than be forced to take Windows 8, its a giant DO NOT WANT as far as consumers are concerned and after I was stuck fixing that mess a few times i can say honestly? Don't blame 'em.

      It takes a HELL of a lot more than simply slapping Start8 to kill the abomination that is "Oh hai I'm a cellphone LULZ" Metro, specifically it took a half a dozen deep level registry hacks AND hunting down a generic synaptics touchpad driver to kill those $%#^%# swipe gestures bullshit, and even then it looks like a poor man's Win 7 copy. I'm predicting it'll bomb and suck and be the punchline of jokes, just like Win 8. They can polish their asses off but all they are gonna have is a shiny turd NOT a diamond!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    11. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Sounds more to me like Microsoft is making consumers be beta testers for all of the 3rd party software out there, and putting a much higher support burden on the independent software developers since they can't test their software on the released OS until the public does.

      Which is pretty much how it's done with Android and that seems to work well enough. On the other hand their old strategy was to do it more similar to iOS and OSX which seem to throw out a new beta every 2 weeks, which works well for them too.

    12. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by jd2112 · · Score: 1

      so Microsoft wants only the agile and extreme to survive, while the slackers get left behind. makes sense to me.

      On the other hand Microsoft had developer preview versions of Vista for ages and yet countless applications and hardware drivers weren't ready for it's much delayed release.

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    13. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Insightful, really mods? Got news for ya pal and its that NOBODY IS BUYING WIN 8! In fact I can get a refurb Win 7 machine sold in a few hours, i had a Win 8 machine sit SEVEN MONTHS before it sold, how did I sell it? Put Win 7 on it!

      MSFT is screwed on two fronts, 1.- After the MHz Wars switched to the Core War PCs quickly became waaaaaay overpowered compared to the jobs that folks had to do, so that 5 year old C2D laptop, or Phenom I X3 desktop? it has more cycles to spare than Joe Average knows what to do with. 2.- When it does come time to get something new a lot of people are either having the machine they have fixed or are buying a Win 7 system because Win 8 is a DO NOT WANT, its Vista all over again with people using downgrade rights (I've had to deal with downgrades so often that I now charge extra if I have to call for a key) or buying OEM or getting a refurb unit, whatever it takes the vast majority will do because they hate Windows 8!

      Dude its not even just the little guys like me, its gotten so bad for the OEMs that Lenovo and Acer are selling their PCs "pre hacked" with a third party shell already bolted on so the machine looks and acts like....Windows 7! That is fricking bad when the #1 OEM on the planet has to hack the shell just to get anybody to buy a PC with Windows 8 on it, I mean how piss poor do you have to be for sales to have the OEMs go out and buy a third party shell and bolt that shit on there just to move some units?

      So try looking at those figures again before you say MSFT has the customers locked in, because between Android, ChromeOS, OSX, iOS, and Win 7 frankly there is a lot of choices for those that think Win 8 is a turd and judging by the adoption rates a hell of a lot more are ignoring or actively avoiding Win 8 than are buying.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    14. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      That is fricking bad when the #1 OEM on the planet has to hack the shell just to get anybody to buy a PC with Windows 8 on it, I mean how piss poor do you have to be for sales to have the OEMs go out and buy a third party shell and bolt that shit on there just to move some units?

      OEM's have always been installing third party software in an attempt to improve upon Windows and differentiate themselves from each other.

    15. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by DavidD_CA · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It also means they are telling you that they didn't make any real changes and are charging you for the service pack they refuse to create for 8.0.

      8.1, or SP1 if you prefer, is a free download.

      --
      -David
    16. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      It's weird that it's taken Microsoft so long to release this update--remember, the consumer preview came out two months ago (after being announced in April!), and it won't be out for another month-and-a-half. There are more changes than just slapping on a start button and a "boot to desktop" switch, but the changes aren't that substantial...

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    17. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      App I work on already broke with Windows 8.1 preview.

      We're working on a workaround but no RTM to test against is going to make things "fun" (for some definitions of the word). I guess we get to ship the update with "Works on Windows 8.1 Preview, use that for now, will let you know about 8.1 RTM sometime after it launches".

    18. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      I do give MS kudos for releasing a new OS every year. They do not want another XP where the longer corps, developers, and users use something the more resistant to change they become and harder it is to leave.

      Windows 8.1 is a smaller release for sure but you can't criticize them for waiting on their ass. DirectX and WDDM have minor updates and some api changes do mean QA is required from ISV and OEMs to test their shit.

      But sadly it looks to be Windows 9 to see if MS truly makes it usable. I think tablets are "a" future rather than "Thee" future and perhaps MS went a little overboard?

    19. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by readingaccount · · Score: 2

      Shouldn't have posted that. Better to let them wallow in their own ignorance rather than correct them with information which is very, very easy to find on the net. They've already made up their mind because if they really wanted to know the truth, they would have found out by now.

    20. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If you try to use Win8 you notice the awful mess it is.
      The start "button" is replaced by a magic corner, which both on a high resolution screen and in a VM is a huge pain to hit, plus there is nothing to indicate it even exists so you can only find it by chance! That one they fixed with 8.1.
      Then Windows updates: The only way to find the program in order to update it seems to use the search function on the start screen. Of course the only way to even notice that there is a start screen is by randomly starting to type, since there is no search box anywhere - despite the top 10% of the start screen being completely unused, so there would have been enough space.
      If you then click through the options, when you click at the "wrong" place you suddenly and without forewarning are thrown into the desktop!
      If If you didn't actually want to go there, there isn't even an easy way to get back (at least none obvious?), no you have to start the whole procedure with searching for the "update" app from the start!
      Holy shit, you couldn't have designed a worse UI if you had wanted it! Even for the elevation prompts they at least had the sanity to put a symbol next to the buttons so you know a prompt will pop up if you click, whereas this new UI likes to throw you between desktop and tile UI like a leaf in the wind, without warning and often for no real good reason.

    21. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by readingaccount · · Score: 1

      I've found bugs in various Linux distro's installers of all places. I consider them worse bugs than what one can find in Windows, mainly because it shows a lack of care and concern about edge-cases.

      Fuck I hate Linux (on the desktop) these days. No concern about quality at all.

    22. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      That would piss me off as a user. I find 'Classic Shell' on windows 8 to be better than any of the default start menus of any windows version. I don't want it to be rendered inoperable by a single point OS update.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    23. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by gbjbaanb · · Score: 2

      IIRC Lenovo are selling machine pre-downgraded to Windows 7. Lenovo are also the only PC manufacturer who saw an increase in sales recently.

      I don't think the 2 are non-coincidental.

    24. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by unixisc · · Score: 1

      What I'm not getting is - why would devs care about Windows 8.1, since aside from the start button, there are hardly any differences b/w 8 and 8.1?

    25. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Spudley · · Score: 1

      It also means they are telling you that they didn't make any real changes and are charging you for the service pack they refuse to create for 8.0.

      Well, it would mean that, except that it's a free upgrade.

      So, uh, it basically is a service pack. They could just as easily have released the same product as Win 8.0 SP1.

      The reason they're calling it 8.1 rather than SP1 is marketing -- they want it to *sound* like a bigger upgrade than it is, so that it distances itself a little (but not too much) from the tarnished reputation of 8.0.

      In fact, the biggest change in 8.0 -> 8.1 is IE11, which is coming out for Win7 as well anyway.

      --
      (Spudley Strikes Again!)
    26. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by fwarren · · Score: 2

      The you sir, are entitled to a refund. Every penny you paid for it.

      To bad Miscrosoft does not have the same offer.

      Back in the XP days, if I mentioned Linux, peolpe looked at me like a deer in the headlights.
      Back in the VISTA days, a few people asked me what I heard about VISTA.
      Back in the 7 days, the most said was to me was "It's not XP, but I like it"
      Now with 8, people activley come up to me and tell me how much is sucks.

      It appears that XP was the pinacle of Microsoft Computing. Sure 7 was better, but not by much, and all things in the public eye are compared to XP.

      Where I work for a living, I give free PC "advice" to the employees for their personal PCs. If they want Windows work done on their home computers, I charge $75 an hours. I install and maintain Linux for free (my contribution to open source). We are now at the point people are asking me to install Linux on their computers. Only 3 or 4 in the last year. But faced with option of running windows 8, more and more people are opting for Linux.

      --
      vi + /etc over regedit any day of the week.
    27. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Antonovich · · Score: 2

      Ok. Hours for Win7 and months for Win8. How long for Ubuntu? FreeBSD? While I'm sure you could probably get it out the door in seconds if you put an Apple sticker on it somewhere (with a skinned *nix of some sorts, hey, why not!), "people" still buy Microsoft which is why you didn't mention the other alternatives (and probably don't provide them). Microsoft doesn't care about the fact that you still install Win7. As long as you are not promoting options they are happy, and getting richer. What people don't seem to realise is that only geeks seem to care about tech empires. Shareholders only care about profits. Why is it necessary for Microsoft to live forever again? As an investor, do I prefer $x/share/year for the next 10 years before management does a couple of rounds of firings to get the share price back up before I see, or the fact that the nerds like the company? Microsoft are doing just fine.

    28. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Joce640k · · Score: 5, Insightful

      People are so institutionalized that they can't even operate a PC without a start menu! T

      Of course they can....but the start menu was put into Windows for a reason. That reason hasn't gone away so why should the start menu be removed?

      --
      No sig today...
    29. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Stoutlimb · · Score: 1

      I think you pointed out Microsoft's folly. A longer release cycle creates resistance to change. A shorter release cycle creates resistance to Microsoft. I don't think they'll grasp that concept until the fail tsunami finishes rolling in and out.

    30. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Vanderhoth · · Score: 2

      Until you mentioned it I hadn't even considered the possibility that by putting the "start button" back in MS might be completely breaking code 3rd parties are using for their implementations of alternative menus. It'll be interesting to see if that's what happens. If they do break 3rd party menus there's going to be a hell of a lot of screaming on the interwebs from people who were only able to use Win8 because of the third party menus.

      I didn't think it was possible, but I'm all the sudden even happier I don't use windows 8

    31. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by readingaccount · · Score: 2

      I fucking HATE this argument that if something like Linux is not working out for me, I have no reason to criticize because it's free. That's great, so I'll just use Windows then because it gives me less pain, now what? People will spend money if it saves them some pain.

      Being free is NOT a reason to abstain being critical of its quality. Nothing gets better if they keep their standards low. I'm not saying Windows 8 is amazing or anything - I do think it was something of a misstep for Microsoft. But after years of trying Linux, always giving up because it was too flakey, or didn't run the software I wanted, or had too many problems with hardware, it's fucking ended as far as I'm concerned. I'd rather live with Windows 8 than try another Linux distro for as long as I live, and don't really give a damn what the zealots think.

    32. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by cyber-vandal · · Score: 2

      I completely agree with you here. I have dared to criticise the Linux desktop here in the past and have been met with loads of abuse. I started using Linux in 1998 and around that time it looked like it might bury the joke that was Windows 9x/NT but instead of rallying round a set of common standards and working to ensure Windows users could transition painlessly to Linux all there was was pointless bickering that people called "competition" which would "lead to higher standards". Well 15 years later it most definitely hasn't. If Ubuntu is supposed to be the OS for grandma then grandma will be using Windows (or more likely an iPad) for the foreseeable future.

    33. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      3rd Party shells used to be all the rage with OEMs until Microsoft changed the licensing terms (with Windows 98) to ban the practice. Thats why things like Packard Bell Navigator and such vanished from new machines. Lenovo likely gets away with bundling the start menu program because its not a replacement shell, but an enhancement.

    34. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by NJRoadfan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It was miles better than Program Manager and File Manager. The start menu and the rest of the Windows 95 interface was the last time Microsoft spent big bucks doing user interface and human-computer interaction studies and research. The Chicago/Win95 betas were by far the most interesting to look at since major changes to the UI would occur each release as MS would try out new things... and remove stuff that didn't work out so well.

    35. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by NJRoadfan · · Score: 2

      Will it be available to folks who don't have/use a Microsoft Account like every past service pack? Chances are its being deployed in the "Windows Store" and not Windows Update like it should be.

    36. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      At this very moment some HR idiot somewhere is looking for Windows8 senior developers with at least 10 years experience.

    37. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Deathlizard · · Score: 1

      Dell and HP also sells systems with Win7 preinstalled and is not doing as well, but they have to be ordered as such. With Lenovo they always ship you Win8 media and the system has Win7 which is nice unless the customer really wanted Win8, then its a pain.

      However, Lenovo quality has gone way south as of late, and this is coming from someone who has sworn by Lenovo since back in the IBM Days. Out of the 6 Lenovo systems we bought over the last 6 months, Two have already had motherboard replacements and the other four have had other issues ranging from WiFi Card Replacements to wierd random crashes for no reason to even one Windows update (KB2647753) causing all windows updates on most Lenovo systems to revert unless you install all of the other updates first.(something that doesn't happen on any other OEM I've had in here or with Straight Windows 7).

    38. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      OEM's have always been installing third party software in an attempt to improve upon Windows and differentiate themselves from each other.

      I'm more of the opinion they do it to get paid some distribution money from the third party crap. Much like I don't think Oracle is trying to improve Java or Windows when they try to install that Ask.com shit toolbar.

      Nobody is doing it to improve anything but their bottom line, and they're willing to install shitware to do it.

      I won't even buy an OEM install because it's got so much crap on it -- my mother in law and my wife's laptops took so much time to disable all of the shit it wasn't funny. What should be on paper a decent machine with nice specs is full of shit that slows it down and makes it unusable, because there's no memory left.

      More on topic, if Microsoft isn't going to get this to developers before they get it to the public, they're going to have the same problem they've been having ... in addition to nobody actually wanting Windows 8, there won't be any apps for it.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    39. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by leonbev · · Score: 2

      It sounds like Microsoft wants a three to six month jump on their competition for Windows 8.1 "Modern UI" apps.

      Seems stupid to me, considering that most users aren't really buying into "Modern UI" anyway. I would want people filling their app store with as many launch day titles as possible to build legitimacy to the platform.

    40. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by synapse7 · · Score: 1

      Seems to me they are doing everything they possibly can to kill it off, good for them.

    41. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I won't even buy an OEM install because it's got so much crap on it -- my mother in law and my wife's laptops took so much time to disable all of the shit it wasn't funny.

      Next time uninstall Norton first and WildTangent second. Then you'll have enough resources to run the rest of the uninstalls :D

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    42. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      They can polish their asses off but all they are gonna have is a shiny turd NOT a diamond!

      You can't polish a new turd, anyway. It has to be old enough to be petrified, or at least cold enough to be frozen solid. Windows 8 is neither.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    43. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      Next time uninstall Norton first and WildTangent second. Then you'll have enough resources to run the rest of the uninstalls :D

      In these cases it was the Toshiba and HP crap with all of those stupid (and useless) 'assistants' that do more to make the machine useless than useful. I had to disable or uninstall so many things it wasn't funny. It's like they wrote a clippy for every feature in Windows that you can access already.

      This is why when I buy a machine I splash for the full retail license. Because an OEM install is pretty much garbage and full of crap -- mostly just full of shitty trial ware, ad ware, and things which just need to get removed.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    44. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Karzz1 · · Score: 1

      Buying an additional license is a waste of money. You can legally download official MS isos and use the OEM key with it ( unless you are trying to use a different version of course).

      --
      Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
    45. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      Really? Thanks for that.

      It's been several years since I bought a new machine and went through this process, which means I'm starting to think about replacing it.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    46. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by denmarkw00t · · Score: 2

      You have no idea how hard I was laughing when I wrote that - I'm on administrative leave, and our office doesn't have that, so I got fired.

    47. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

      OEM's have always been installing third party software in an attempt to improve upon Windows and differentiate themselves from each other.

      Well, yes, but most of that was just crapware, not a real attempt to add value. The Lenovo and Acer modifications seem to be addressing actual user needs – replacing lost functionality which really should still be part of the core OS.

      I don't remember any OEMs creating hacks that made Windows 95 look and work like Windows 3.1. That's because people actually liked '95 better.

    48. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      Or... and I know this sounds weird... they could NOT release an untested version the day 8.1 is released but wait a few days.

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    49. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I've had a couple of problems with Classic Shell's start button since installing the 8.1 preview, but mostly it's working fine, and I'm sure the boffins at Classic Shell will sort out the problems in time. After all, their goal is usability and functionality.

      Meanwhile, for the many years I can't find _any_ justification for anything's Microsoft done with Windows except "help support our monopoly".

      Really, the Windows 8 changes (i.e., "Metro" or whatever it's called now (my vote is "Angry Fruit Salad")) were thoroughly and broadly criticized long before it ever shipped, but they forced it on us anyway. And most users just accept it because to the average non-technical computer user, computers are arbitrary and capricious and the only thing you can do is just "deal with it". In other words, Microsoft's biggest accomplishment is to condition people that software is its nature horrible. Of course, they have hardly done this alone, but they are a primary cause.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    50. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I installed the 8.1 preview and I haven't noticed any difference (aside from it taking some 20 minutes to install it after downloading... is there some law that says every subsequent version of Windows must take 2-3 times longer to install updates?) .

      Of course, I don't use any of the Angry Fruit Salad apps because they are all too slow and too limited and too ugly and completely inappropriate for the desktop. I never would have thought it, but with Metro, Microsoft has invented autistic software.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    51. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      The CentOS install I have doesn't let you unlock the screen. You have to switch users to get back in. Apparently testing isn't part of the Linux mantra so I'm right there with you on the Linux hating.

    52. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I've found plenty of bugs, some persisting for years, in the various versions of Linux I've run over the years. However, I have always found that the solutions are available. Yes, sometimes they take a lot of work, but with Windows, a lot of times you just have to live with it.

      The main reason I use Windows on my main laptop is because I like to run a lot of Window software that can't be run on Linux, or can't be run without hassles I don't want to deal with. Mostly games. Yes, I'm aware of alternatives, but I also have an environment and tools (including TCC and Multi-edit which have both been around for 25+ years) that I like and am very productive with. I like the Windows environment circa 2005 and as long as I can keep working that way, I will.

      However, I've used Linux distros a lot... RedHat and SuSE back in the day, later Ubuntu and now Linux Mint. I like them a lot, too and would be happy to use them full-time if I chose to. Yes, there are hassles, and there are some really stupid things about them, but overall they are good.

      Here's my take: It's not a matter of lacking quality control, or "not caring" but the fact that the PC ecology is so incredibly and vastly diverse that no one company can possibly cover all the corner cases.

      Microsoft is bigger and (especially) richer than a lot of countries, and they do a pretty good job of it, but they can't cover it all either. Apple does a much better job, but they have a closed and extremely limited hardware ecosystem. Microsoft (along with Linux distro makers) try to make their software run on any piece of no-name discount hardware you can eke out from the back pages of Computer Shopper (is that still a thing?) and in the vast majority of cases, almost all of it works perfectly.

      I'm down on MS for a lot of reasons, and I think they are overall, a very evil company, but I'll give them credit for their efforts and successes for maintaining hardware compatibility. I think they generally do it pretty well.

      I also have to give a lot of credit to the Linux world. The kernel runs on an order of magnitude more diverse hardware than Windows, and desktop environments have taken up the nigh-impossible challenge of supporting as many kinds of hardware platforms (sometimes more because older hardware is often supported longer!) than Microsoft. Name a Linux organization that can put even a tenth of Microsoft's resources into their desktop and you might look at the Linux desktop experience a little differently.

      In other words, I have a little more patience with the Linux desktop because it has gotten where it is by nothing more than a lot of hard work. There was no monopoly feeding it. There was no strong-arming OEMs to get it on every desktop. There were no dirty tricks used to put the competition out of business. There's no chromosomally-damaged chair-tossing troll telling me that it's the best thing possible and the only thing I should ever want. There's no vendor lock-in, no walled gardens, no sabotaging of third-party products, no deliberate breaking of backwards compatibility to force upgrades... the list goes on.

      In that regard, I think Linux is the most honest and virtuous product out there. If the desktop has a few more problems here and there, I can forgive it.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    53. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I don't have a Microsoft account and I was able to install the preview. I can't speak for the final product, but one day Windows asked me if I wanted to install the 8.1 preview and I clicked "Yes". It took a ridiculously long time, and I had to reboot 3 times with more updates each time, but that was all there was to it.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    54. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by GoatCheez · · Score: 1

      I agree with everything you said except for your last statement. Microsoft has stated multiple times the 8.1 upgrade is free for everyone with windows 8.

      There really is not a lot that is different. As far as UI changes go, on the desktop, there is a button to bring you to the metro interface (that they call a "start button").
      Also, the metro interface has a way to browse all applications now. Those are the only noticeable UI changes I've seen.

      Under the hood, they've added a 3D printing driver interface.

      So, really, there is not much to worry about and the available preview version should be adequate for testing. I still wish we could test on the final version however.

    55. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by jbolden · · Score: 1

      You have to be piss poor in not demanding that Windows 8 systems have Windows 8 hardware. Yes it is Vista all over again same mistake in allowing OEMs to sell the newest operating system without the right hardware.

    56. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by a_mari_usque_ad_mare · · Score: 1

      I think Windows 8 is actually worse than Vista, in the sense that it won't be fixed because Microsoft does not want to fix it.

      Vista was fine in concept, just incredibly buggy and half-baked when it was released. The SP1 update was a major change to the kernel and was the first version that was mostly usable.

      Windows 8 just has a terrible concept for the UI and they're running with it. I've followed the 8.1 changes and they are mainly focused on improving the Metro part of it. Granted, the Metro stuff needs work as it is absolutely terrible, hands down the worst touch OS out there, but basically no one cares as no one is buying Windows 8 tablets. If you use the desktop, 8.1 brings boot-to-the-desktop and basically nothing else.

      The best case is that the major pushback makes them reconsider, and make Metro optional. I think they actually truly believed the whole world would follow them to the Windows App store and Metro apps, and the desktop would just be a legacy mode needed for Win8, probably to be gone in Win9.

      --
      The map is not the territory.
    57. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Yes they are. They just don't get a lot of coverage here. For example there are substantial improvements to Bing and Bing integration. The search APIs are being massively overhauled, Microsoft is allowing search and data integration features delivered from the web to be integrated directly into applications. I have no idea if this is going to work,but this could be a major differentiator. The "start menu" to Metro thing everyone is complaining about is actually a system of dashboards allowing Metro to run and be called by Desktop. That's a huge step towards integration. There is better integration with Skydrive and most likely at the enterprise level with Azure services....

    58. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Nope, not seeing ANY XP users, I haven't seen one in about 6 months, no what everyone wants is Windows 7 because Windows 8 is a broken mess that is simply unusable. Watch this video to see how a fricking tech writer fares with Win 8, now imagine that for Joe Average its much MUCH worse. in fact when people talk about Win 8 I usually say "Oh you mean "Hey stop doing that!"" and they all agree because Win 8 seems to be completely random and arbitrary, it just does shit whenever and whatever it feels with zero prompts or explanation given.

      And if by other OSes you mean Android and iOS? I'll agree with ya there, if the next CEO don't toss the trainwreck that is metro the end of Win 7 will be the end of MSFT. Hell Acer is already up to double digit sales of ChromeOS, an alternative to Windows on X86 getting double digit sales is unheard of since the days of the 386! The simple fact is that Metro is designed for an interface that just doesn't exist, the touchscreen PC. Sure there is a handful in the wild but when you look at the numbers they are MAYBE 3% of the entire PC landscape, that means 97% of the users get a broken interface because ballmer had a raging hard on for tablets, just fucking retarded.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    59. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by unixisc · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't count iOS or Android as PC choices... b'cos they aren't!

    60. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      Microsoft believes that 8.1 is so much like 8.0 that it won't need testing. They've stated this multiple times before.

      Considering that they do actually do extensive testing and dogfooding, its probably reasonably safe.

      It depends on what kind of app you're writing, I suppose. In the app I work on, 8.1 broke a number important things compared to 8.0. Further, each preview release of 8.1 broke things that worked in the previous preview release of 8.1. Without testing, there can be no assurance at all that things will work without testing on the exact bits the end users will be running. In fact, if history is any guide, it's pretty much guaranteed that our apps won't work correctly on the RTM.

      Windows 8.x has been a much larger pain to develop for than prior Windows versions because it's been much less stable from preview to preview. I've never experience as much pain with developing for Windows as I have with 8.

    61. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by maccodemonkey · · Score: 1

      Microsoft believes that 8.1 is so much like 8.0 that it won't need testing. They've stated this multiple times before.

      Considering that they do actually do extensive testing and dogfooding, its probably reasonably safe.

      It also means they are telling you that they didn't make any real changes and are charging you for the service pack they refuse to create for 8.0.

      Oh c'mon...

      Even Apple betas their minor patches to developers before release.

      What Microsoft believes and what the reality is could be two different things. Even if they aren't, what's the harm in releasing a beta to give developers some assurance that nothing actually has changed?

    62. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Mod up.

      And I think all three of them post here.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    63. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Dogfooding is only effective for independent developers if the internals actually use the independent applications in question. I suspect this is unlikely. Rather, dogfooding almost always means internal testing of system features and official company applications. Independent application testing is often an accidental byproduct. (Having managed an IT department in such a company.)

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    64. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      > Or maybe, just maybe, the dirty little secret MSFT doesn't want you to know is really the fact that Windows 8.1 is just Windows 8 with a switch flipped that will let you go to the desktop

      In fact, weren't there reports that such a switch actually existed in the Win8 preview, but vanished in GA?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    65. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      You mean they replaced that schizophrenic Seattle monstrosity with what looks like urine-colored stained glass with flyspecks? Yeah, I'm impressed they found something even more unappealing than that "Down and Out in Seattle" bad acid trip.

      Apparently ugly is the new pretty at Microsoft.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    66. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      And I think all three of them post here.

      [raises hand sheepishly] Yo.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    67. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      They're Microsoft. Remember the "We're the Phone Company" skits on Saturday Night Live from the late 70s? It's the same thing. They are still a de facto monopoly and consumers have no choice to accept it.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    68. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I'm not surprised. I mean these days a single app in Windows can easily be as big as the entire OS was 15 years ago. The complexity of that operating system is mind-boggling, and I'm speaking as someone who works on a project with almost two million lines of code.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    69. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by chuckugly · · Score: 1

      Overblown, IMO. First, I have a mix of Windows 7, Windows 8, and Linux boxes. The Win 8 boxes are very easy to use, the Welcome Screen is just a big start menu, and I seldom, even in Win7, ever used the start menu. I really don't remember when the last time was, maybe a few months ago. When I set up a machine, I always, even in Win7, start pinning the apps I use to the task bar. Also, WIN+D ...

    70. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by oreiasecaman · · Score: 1

      And where's your bug report? Have you looked for workarounds? It's easy to "hate Linux" and do nothing to try to improve it.

      --
      This is a UDP joke, I don't care if you get it or not...
    71. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by chuckugly · · Score: 1

      Windows 8.1 will be a free Microsoft Store update to Windows 8.0

    72. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      I can't be bothered to forgive it, I've wasted way too much time with stuff that should just work. I don't care who's to blame, I'm just sad that something with such potential to revolutionise the client experience is largely relegated to being a server OS, although perhaps Android will succeed where KDE and GNOME failed.

    73. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Nope they were all returned because Linux shits all over its own drivers every time you update the damned thing. You take the "Hairyfeet challenge" which i'm sure you can find with a little Googling and you'll see that QA and testing is non existent in Linux, its just a fucking mess of an OS. As much as I hate Vista and 8 I'd take either one over Linux, yes its THAT bad.

      And please don't waste my time talking about your router (never gets updated so no shit it don't break) your cellphone (controlled by google with a billion a year spent on upkeep, also doesn't use vanilla linux for shit) or servers (all the major server companies pay entire dev teams to do nothing but fix their drivers when Torvalds and company take a steaming dump on them) because we are talking about laptops and desktops and in that arena Linux is deep fried shit.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    74. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Really? My Android smartphone plays games, surfs the web, plays music, chats, what else does a unit have to do to be considered a personal computer by you?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    75. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Yeah it was in the DP build IIRC, I know I was going straight to desktop after 5 minutes of dealing with "Oh hai, I'm a cellphone giggle" Metro but when that no longer worked in CP I tossed the thing and never looked back. It might work good on a tablet but since i have ZERO desire for a MSFT tablet (happy with my android smartphone, thanks anyway) Win 8 is just a giant PITA.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    76. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Windowser · · Score: 1

      I won't even buy an OEM install because it's got so much crap on it -- my mother in law and my wife's laptops took so much time to disable all of the shit it wasn't funny. What should be on paper a decent machine with nice specs is full of shit that slows it down and makes it unusable, because there's no memory left.

      I was tired of removing crap and just ordered a nice machine from these folks without any crap on it

      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
    77. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Windowser · · Score: 1

      The CentOS install I have doesn't let you unlock the screen. You have to switch users to get back in.

      What the f**k did you screw with to have a machine that won't let you unlock the screen ?
      I have a laptop with ubuntu, one with Mint, a desktop with Debian stable and a server with CentOS : all of which are letting me unlock the screen.
      Hell, my laptop automatically locks when I walk away from it and unlocks when I get back to it thanks to BlueProximity.
      You must have worked really hard to come up with it or you are just full of shit.

      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
    78. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Windowser · · Score: 1

      It took a ridiculously long time, and I had to reboot 3 times with more updates each time, but that was all there was to it.

      Only 3 reboots ? WTF ??
      I can upgrade a Debian stable machine from 6.0 to 7.0 with only ONE reboot.
      I'm glad I don't use windows anymore.

      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
    79. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Being able to do things I can do w/ a PC or a Mac. Like connect it to a printer and print something important that I need to get signed (not everyone accepts those electronically signed documents), or, perhaps more important, scan some of my important documents so that I have references in case I lose anything, like my DL. Or posting things online - I can't post my response to you on my cellphone (I could, but it'd be too painful to be worth bothering about). I'm not a developer or programmer, but if I were, I couldn't do that on my phone (not w/o attaching an external keyboard and monitor, if possible.

      I have a Lumia 520 - one of those Windows Phone 8 toys. Typing on it is a breeze - it does a terrific job not only at suggesting words you are about to type, but also guessing what the next word will be. But even then, I wouldn't type big posts like here on that, but it is good for quick things. Like making shopping lists, navigating, SMS (I hated SMS on every other phone before this one), camera/camcorder functions.... These are some of the things I can't do on a PC, but are great on the phone. Add to that some nifty utilities that I have, like unit & currency converters, a calculator, news sites including weather, stock tickers and sports, as well as some games and videos. Point is that when I'm sitting near my PC, I rarely need to convert units, calculate stuff, have my shopping list or any of that, but it does become handy when I'm travelling. I even have a /. app on my PC, but don't try to read the comments there, as that takes me to IE. Again, I use IE here on my PC to post, but not there.

      But back to your question - I still can't do everything I need w/ a phone - I would need a PC for that. Especially since there are a lot of things that can be done smoothly on a PC, but would cripple you if you tried to do it on a phone. But as I mentioned above, I wouldn't try substituting my phone for even a netbook - it's just not the same. Both have their uses, and in some ways, both are mutually exclusive. Also, just like Windows 8 is a good phone & tablet interface but sucks on a PC, so would Android or iOS if they were brought there. And both Google & Apple recognize it - Google aims ChromeOS for such uses, while Apple aims OS X for such uses.

    80. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by unixisc · · Score: 1

      But that's a pretty small issue compared to Windows 8, which seeing that video you linked to elsewhere in this page, is difficult to get to do anything even close to what you want. With Linux, once it's installed, if the user is someone who doesn't do periodic updates, his stuff is not gonna break. Yeah, initially, it would be some work making sure that the whole system works, but once he's there, it'd be a breeze. He'd probably be using KDE or GNOME or one of several other DEs, none of which are anywhere near as difficult to use as Metro.

      Vista was fine - I never had issues w/ it. Your issue was certain features not working well, or the resource consumption being too high. Windows 8, from everything I've read, is different - it's the basic usability that's broke. Something that you don't have in Linux, unless you are forced into the CLI

    81. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      Linux hating is easy when it really is broken.

      You attitude is one of the biggest reason I hate Linux. Apparently you feel that I have no right to complain about bugs unless I am also going to do the work of fixing them. I work full time. I have a family. If in order to use your OS I need to also code it, I'm going to bloody well use Windows cause my time is worth something. If you want me to use you OS, then don't write shit code. Test your releases, and don't say 'how are you improving it?' when I tell you it's broken.

      A screen unlock bug should never have shipped. It is trivial to reproduce and trivial to test. It's not a "dance up and down and do the hokey pokey and you blue screen sometimes" bug. It's a "every time you try to authenticate after walking away from the machine bug".

    82. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Windowser · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is not Linux. And yes, Ubuntu sucks on lot's of things (don't get me started on Unity).
      You should try the same Linux NASA is using in space : Debian
      Ubuntu is based on it, except they take the unstable development branch and put custom patches on it to make it more unstable.

      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
    83. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by Antonovich · · Score: 1

      Ah... nice tangent you just went off on there... I was just saying that MS don't care that you don't like Win8 because you will install Win7, not something else. They are laughing all the way to the bank as long as it stays like that. You just agreed with me in a violent and aggressive fashion. This must be /.

      There are many reasons why Linux has such terrible consumer driver support after all these years but I don't think many would argue that support is good. I (experienced admin and dev) spend less time maintaining my home computers if they are running Linux but the vast majority of people would be completely lost. If I am going to be without a power socket for several hours I still boot to Windows on my laptop because power management for my machine is a joke with Ubuntu.

      You obviously haven't managed servers though, or you wanted to do very strange things with them indeed (like installing custom kernels on custom built hardware). Most server setups today are much, much, much less hassle running a decent Linux distro - and that includes driver issues. I have spent several years managing both Linux and Windows on servers and I have wasted FAR more time on Windows driver issues than Linux ones.

    84. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by cavebison · · Score: 1

      ... in addition to nobody actually wanting Windows 8, there won't be any apps for it.

      Huh? Don't all existing Windows apps run on Win8?

    85. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      That's another flaw with many people who support Linux (and I'm a huge supporter of Linux, so I'm not a hater)... "It works fine for me, therefore you must have screwed it up."

      There's probably something specific to his configuration that you don't use. You can't automatically blame the user. In fact, if you want to get any traction for any product, you can't blame the user even when it's the user's fault.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    86. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      Ah yes... the ever wonderful "well yeah that linux sucks, but MY linux is awesome!"

      Actually that particular bug is in gnome and thus manifests on multiple linux flavors. We are running centos (red hat derivative) and it has the same gnome screensaver bug and no, I don't have a choice of my linux. We run whatever our security folk could be bothered to get customer approval to run.

    87. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      The same can be said of Windows except you'd be opening it up to malware and guess what? The same applies to Linux. How fricking sad is it that you will sit here with a straight face and tell me i should leave my users vulnerable with a badly out of date OS? And you HAVE to do the forced upgrade deathmarch because Linux don't support previous versions for shit because "Hey its free!" well so is that dogshit in the park but I don't want to be handling it either.

      At the end of the day there is a reason why more people risk hefty fines and in some regions even jail time to steal the competitor's product than take yours for free by several orders of magnitude and that is because Torvalds is a shitty developer who refuses to let go of a broken driver model he ripped off of UNIX in 1993. I mean can you imagine how much you'd be laughing if Windows kept the creaking and buggy as fuck .VXD driver model in 2013? that shit would be hilarious, right? Well that is EXACTLY WHAT TORVALDS HAS DONE by keeping the ancient fucked up POS dependency hell breaks constantly "let the devs do it" driver model which in the end leaves you with shit like this, with drivers that are half assed, piss poor, and break often.

      Again feel free to take the Hairyfeet Challenge and try for yourself and see if 1 or more drivers aren't completely trashed by the end. For extra points try it on a laptop and see how quickly Linux shits all over the wireless. the Hairyfeet Challenge actually rigs things in Linux' favor by asking for only HALF the support Windows gets and on top of that I didn't even use anything exotic, we are talking boring bog standard hardware that is in a good 90% of the desktops and laptops and it STILL shit all over itself. If the Linux community wanted to pay me for the bandwidth and time I'd be happy to film it live but frankly the challenge is so easy to replicate at home that anybody can do it, all you need is a bog standard desktop or laptop and a copy of whatever distro you want to test from 5 years ago which you will then upgrade/date to current through the GUI as Joe and Jane Normal would be expected to do.

      At the end of the day the Linux driver model is deep fried tampons and as long as Torvalds is in the big chair it will stay that way because he is old and cares more about "purity of essence" than having a functional OS. Hell even basic common sense will illustrate that the math don't work when it comes to drivers, when Torvalds adopted that driver model you could fit every Linux driver on a single floppy, now you have over 100,000 drivers, hundreds of new drivers released each month and MAYBE 300 devs (I'm pretty sure it isn't even half that, just giving Torvalds the benefit of the doubt) that are qualified to do low level driver debug and testing. If you mainlined pure coke into their veins and kept them working 24/7 then you would MAYBE have each driver looked at once every 6 years MAYBE.

      There is a reason why every B&M shop that has tried Linux has dropped it, from little shops like mine to giants like Walmart, why simply shopping for devices to use with Linux quickly becomes a game of hardware roulette and why drivers get shit on constantly when you update/grade and that is because the driver model just doesn't work. But when you get any of the devs on here the only explanation you get is either Torvalds "It wouldn't let me just tweak whatever I want at any time" (yeah jackass, that is kinda the damned point, to keep you from breaking shit) or worse that kernel dev who said, I swear to God, that "I hope every non free driver breaks often!". Yeah because users don't want functional hardware, all they care about is the racial purity of the GPL. BTW in a case of irony moist and delicious what does every forum tell you to buy for video? Nvidia because their proprietary drivers actually fucking work!

      After nearly 5 ye

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    88. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by oreiasecaman · · Score: 1

      I never said you have no right to complain if you re-read my post carefully. No need to be so defensive, man... chill out

      --
      This is a UDP joke, I don't care if you get it or not...
    89. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by unixisc · · Score: 1

      But not everybody updates even Windows. Even Windows 7 - all the people who get bootlegged copies of Windows 7 - there's no way they can update that, since it will toss up the MS message that they 'may be a victim of software counterfeiting', and only offer them ways of buying the real stuff. So most people in that predicament simply won't update shit, they'll just let their anti-virus take care of things. Same goes for Linux - the people here who swear by Linux normally don't update them, and are happy to just use what they have.

    90. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by smash · · Score: 1

      They're not charging you for a service pack, because Windows 8.1 is a free upgrade for Windows 8.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    91. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by smash · · Score: 1

      You can't polish a turd, however you can roll it in glitter.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    92. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Wow....you haven't been keeping up on current events huh? Why do you think MSFT is pushing the living shit out of Windows 8? Look up "Win 7 all versions pre-activated" and slap it in a VM and try it for yourself, not only does it appear NO DIFFERENT than a stock Win 7, even has the OEM wallpapers and the "Genuine Windows" look when you click properties but on top of that it gets updates just fine and even greys out any updates to WGA!

      That is of course just pointing out the easiest route, the one used by the guy selling PCs at yard sales and off the back of a truck, I have also seen them set up to use WSUS Offline with a little script that was set to run once a month, seen one that was set to update off some server in BFE, and that is also ignoring the elephant in the room which is if you don't update Windows you can still run the latest software which is completely IMPOSSIBLE in Linux unless your ass has some backporting skills and a LOT of time!

      I'm sorry but THERE IS A REASON why Linux has been free for 22 damned years and ain't done jack shit on the desktop, and that is because it sucks ass as a desktop OS. Frankly it wasn't made to be a desktop OS, corps sink millions to use it in the server role and nobody sinks shit into the desktop side, and millions are also poured into the embedded side and that works good too, but on the desktop? I'm sorry but its crap. To use a /. car analogy its like that old 83 Dodge you see rusting in a field IF you spend your weekends futzing with it and IF you learn its quirks and IF you are willing to work around the problems? Sure you can get it to take you down the road....but most folks aren't driving down backroads looking for their next car in a field somewhere and that is because they have better things to do than spend all their time tinkering. That is Linux on the desktop/laptop in a nutshell, a hobby OS for tinkering.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    93. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by DavidD_CA · · Score: 1

      I don't know, but all of the other updates to Windows were deployed through Windows Update. I don't know why this would be any different.

      --
      -David
    94. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      Windows 7 OEM (preinstallation on Lenovo, Dell, HP, Acer, etc) requires BIOS with SLP bits, OEM:SLP key (like above link), but it also needs a certificate installed in Windows to recognize the BIOS.

      "Daz Loader" Will install the certificate, and the OEM:SLP key to match your machine if the BIOS already has the right bits. It can also be used illicitly if your BIOS doesn't have the right bits, which I don't condone. But it's the easiest way to nuke and install Windows 7 on an OEM machine.

      When installing from the ISO's above, you can hit next or "enter key later" or something during install, then run Daz afterwards.

      http://forums.mydigitallife.info/threads/24901-Windows-Loader-Current-release-information

      Windows 8 is a whole 'nother matter, and other methods are required to do a nuke and reinstall. Make sure first thing first you always burn off restore DVDs (which was frustratingly hard to find on a Win 8 Toshiba I set up lately.)

    95. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 1

      I was setting up a Toshiba Windows 8 machine for my father a few weeks back. Very frustrating uninstalling the shitware. Symantec was the worst. It kept begging to not be uninstalled, I spent time filling out the survey explaining why I hated their shovelware. It was also frustrating that the option to burn off the restore DVDs was hidden, as usually that comes back to bite people later when they bork their machine or have a hard drive failure. I would have done a nuke and reinstall, but it isn't as easy in Windows 8 as it was in Windows 7, so I had to put up with uninstalling the shovelware. Installing ClassicShell to get start menu / boot to desktop was the least of my worries.

      Given how unnecessarily complex setting up the average Windows PC is, I'm amazed Joe Sixpack manages at all. The shovelware experience does an amazing amount of damage to the Windows image, as that junk bloats Windows more than Microsoft does. Microsoft sells "Microsoft Signature PC's" which are shovelware free, but in pretty low numbers (who buys a PC from a Microsoft store?) I'm also amazed walking into Best buy how many PC's say "DANGER: Your Symantec trial expired 45 days ago" or "DANGER your McAfee trial expired 32 days ago". Really? You think you're going to sell PCs like that? Talk about curb appeal! Meanwhile go over and look at the crowd around the Apple display.

    96. Re:so pony up, Microsoft want agile extreme only by vilanye · · Score: 1

      My custom built PC(from 2007) has upgraded every version of opensuse on the day it was available: zero problems.

      And that is with an in-place upgrade, not reinstall. Just point my repos to the new version and run zypper dup and I can continue doing my work while everything upgrades in the background. Up-to-date system, zero downtime(well a 10 second reboot is required sometime after zypper is complete-no nags about it either), try that in Windows. There have also been some significant changes in OpenSuse since then KDE 3.x->4.x, PulseAudio, systemd and a bunch of other non-backwards compatible features.

      Again, zero issues.

      Your challenge has been met and defeated with next to no effort.

      Perhaps it is time for you to admit that you are a numbskull A+ certified(lawl) monkey(triple redundancy-sorry about that) and find a line of work better suited to your skills, like stocking shelves at walmart over night.

  2. Software Quality On The Decline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Now we don't even test anymore - the customers can test.

    Go team retard!

    1. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by http · · Score: 1

      Why shouldn't 3rd party devs do this? MS has been doing it for forever.

      --
      If opportunity came disguised as temptation, one knock would be enough.
      3^2 * 67^1 * 977^1
    2. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by symbolset · · Score: 2

      Long ago with Linux customers fixed their own utiliy issues. Today they build on the shoulders of giants as God and the Founders intended..

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by Livius · · Score: 1

      Microsoft does things like this because they can.

      Or at least they think they can.

      But because they're insecure, they need to *actually* do the self-destructive behaviour in order to prove to the world that they can.

    4. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by dlingman · · Score: 1

      Now we don't even test anymore - the customers can test.

      Who needs fault tolerant software, when you've got fault tolerant customers?

    5. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by Kasamir · · Score: 1

      Never go full retard.

    6. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Now we don't even test anymore - the customers can test.

      Go team retard!

      "Now"???

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    7. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Maybe someone at MS thought "RTM" means "Retard Turbo Mode".

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    8. Re:Software Quality On The Decline by symbolset · · Score: 1

      I would love to see the moderation count on this comment, and the IP address log. It has been to +5 and -2 several times.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  3. Developers gone with Ballmer by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 4, Funny

    No more Ballmer, no more Developers, Developers, Developers?

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
    1. Re:Developers gone with Ballmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      More like his final chair thrown at the developers.

    2. Re:Developers gone with Ballmer by Dracos · · Score: 2

      Everyone only heard every other word of that rant. Before every "developers!" there should be a "Fuck".

    3. Re:Developers gone with Ballmer by MrEricSir · · Score: 1

      No, Ballmer changed his mind a few years later.

      --
      There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
  4. New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by dgharmon · · Score: 2

    Withold access to the new APIs until their own stuff is out-the-door. Then third party developers will have to spend months playing catch-up ...

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by slack_justyb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I call BS. In some pink fluffy world where unicorns do prance, doth Microsoft hold steady between preview release and RTM. Preview is just that, a preview of some ideas that they may or may not keep come RTM. So developing on preview is always a gamble because the technology that was there but not mature in preview, may have just been pulled in order to make RTM timeframe.

      Microsoft holding the golden bits back is just another peg in their hostilities towards developers and pretty much renders a good bit of MSDN memberships useless, not all grant you, but I know a lot of people who hold MSDN membership just so they can be ahead of the curve. Holding back is just plain silly but strangely makes sense for some company that continues to gear away from the old "Desktop Think".

      I'm not judging you, it's a common thing to think preview = RTM, but historically that's just not been the case. Microsoft is prone to fiddle between the two time slots, and your program is hosed if it tickles the fancy for someone, to add some extra BOOL parameter to a method to make it work for some vendor in testing.

      Preview is not equal to RTM and trying to develop software you intend to sell to someone(s) for large sums based on preview, is just begging for support tickets to flow in like the breaking of the Teton Dam. When you hear a bunch of MCSDs gather round talking about that guy, that's the guy their talking about. Don't be that guy.

    2. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      I've read your post and decided you are full of shit.

    3. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      I read yours too. Duly noted, but since you failed to provide any rationale, I'll be hard pressed to believe anything more than you are a troll.

    4. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      If it's so minor, then why aren't they done with it yet, and releasing it to developers?

      You can repeat the refrain of "Oh, it's a minor update. Nothing to worry about here!" all you want, but nobody is buying it because of past experience.

      2 months is a shitload of time in software development.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    5. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Windows Service Packs have broken masses of popular software in the past. A minor change can have massive consequences.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:New Microsoft same as OLD Microsoft .. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      If its in code freeze, then why won't they release it to developers?

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  5. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by masterofthumbs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So when it gets released and pushed out over Windows Update, the average user's install won't break because some little driver has an issue with how Windows 8.1 does things. Having the RTM out early also allows OEMs to make sure they are picking hardware that will work best with Windows 8.1 and have 8.1 machines ready for to be sold when 8.1 drops. By not having an RTM, Microsoft is telling everyone to go screw themselves and that they'll have to figure out if stuff works on Release Day.

  6. It's just more ComputerWorld flamebait from CWMike by mystikkman · · Score: 1

    The devs can use Windows 8.1 preview and Visual Studio 2013 preview to make their apps.

  7. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can you please explain why developers need the early access? Is Windows 8.1 not backwards compatible? If it's not available to devs prior to GA will the users end up spending several months being able to do nothing but play solitaire? What is the significance of a third-party piece of software being GA on the exact day as the OS it targets?

    Backwards compatible is not always backwards compatible, I haven't written MS software in ages but plenty of things behave differently with new releases and SP's - sometimes bugs that your software has been written to work around have been "fixed", which then makes your workaround fail... Maybe your software doesn't use any of those bits, or maybe it makes your software crash upon startup. The only way to know is to run it against the same release that consumers are getting.

  8. Oh hell no by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On Tuesday, however, Microsoft confirmed that although Windows 8.1 has reached RTM, subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does on Oct. 17, saying it was not finished.

    What the fuck. No. Words mean things, and "release to manufacturing" means that the software is ready for Releasing To Manufacturing. It doesn't mean "beta 15", or "we think this might be ready", or "release candidate". It means that it's ready to ship and that this is what will be going out the door on launch day.

    Google's infinite betas are a bit of mild industry humor, but "beta" doesn't have an inherent definition. You can stretch it to justify almost anything. But "RTM", "release candidate", and others have very specific, unambiguous meanings. If it's not finished, it's not RTM no matter who the hell says it is.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Oh hell no by VortexCortex · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yep. Came here to say this too... but also:

      subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does

      Well, guess we don't need MSDN subscriptions anymore then now that they're fucking useless.

    2. Re:Oh hell no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      the timing of RTM for OEMs is simply to meet holiday production schedules. microsoft can push updates to OEMs, literally, on the production floor. if microsoft, the king of releasing software early and unfinished, says it ain't ready yet, then IT AIN'T FUCKING READY YET.

      and big fucking deal.. so an app developer can't play with the final bits until public availability.. there's no rule that says their apps have to be in the 8.1 store on day 1. take a week, or two, or through the first official patch tuesday, before putting apps in the store.. it's not like 8.1 is gonna fly off shelves and jumpstart pc sales... cuz it's not...

      and microsoft, what the fuck are you doing? wrap 8.1 up as a windows update or call it sp1.. sure it's "free" for win8 users, but they have to "buy" it for zero retail cost from your online store.. which means, you get to know all the little deets of every one of the upgraders.. a totally unnecessary data grab and invasion of user's privacy.... shame shame shame on you... i cant wait for the media shitstorm on release day once that lil 'catch' is "discovered" by reporters.

    3. Re:Oh hell no by MrDoh! · · Score: 1

      Appears so, or Technet subs, oh, wait...

      --
      Waiting for an amusing sig.
    4. Re:Oh hell no by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      On Tuesday, however, Microsoft confirmed that although Windows 8.1 has reached RTM, subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does on Oct. 17, saying it was not finished.

      What the fuck. No. Words mean things, and "release to manufacturing" means that the software is ready for Releasing To Manufacturing. It doesn't mean "beta 15", or "we think this might be ready", or "release candidate". It means that it's ready to ship and that this is what will be going out the door on launch day.

      Google's infinite betas are a bit of mild industry humor, but "beta" doesn't have an inherent definition. You can stretch it to justify almost anything. But "RTM", "release candidate", and others have very specific, unambiguous meanings. If it's not finished, it's not RTM no matter who the hell says it is.

      ... and yet, at the same time, if you pick up a brand new PS3 or XBox game on the release date and shove it in your console, the first thing it does is download an update. People have come to not only understand day-1 patches, but almost expect them. And yes, that sucks for developers, because while you and your customers may be fine with a day-1 patch of your software as the price of install, you still need to write that patch on a stable code base.

    5. Re:Oh hell no by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      and microsoft, what the fuck are you doing? wrap 8.1 up as a windows update or call it sp1.. sure it's "free" for win8 users, but they have to "buy" it for zero retail cost from your online store.. which means, you get to know all the little deets of every one of the upgraders.. a totally unnecessary data grab and invasion of user's privacy.... shame shame shame on you... i cant wait for the media shitstorm on release day once that lil 'catch' is "discovered" by reporters.

      This is what I have been saying. While you can use Windows 8 with a local account, more and more stuff is tied to your Microsoft Account, such as accessing the Windows Store to get the 8.1 update. They know when I log on to my computer, they know when I install a certain app from the Store, and they can datamine various things here and there when I am just normally using my PC.

    6. Re:Oh hell no by readingaccount · · Score: 1

      Well, guess we don't need MSDN subscriptions anymore then now that they're fucking useless.

      Apart from the fact you hate Microsoft and are probably not willing to listen to reason, MSDN subs are great because they provide access to almost all of Microsoft's software repository. Just because Win 8.1 isn't going to be released early on MSDN does not invalidate the preexisting benefits of having the sub.

    7. Re:Oh hell no by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Apart from the fact you hate Microsoft and are probably not willing to listen to reason, MSDN subs are great because they provide access to almost all of Microsoft's software repository

      Yes, for a fuck-ton of money. But many people have more limited MSDN subs which provide just operating systems (all current shipping/supported systems.) These are now basically useless.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  9. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by Mabhatter · · Score: 4, Informative

    If I'm a Dev, I would be trying to use the FIXED features as much as possible, especially for desktops. So if I was working on a win 8.1 app, I just got nicked at the last minute. So when my customer upgrades at 12:01am I got no chance to get a patch in place. Behavior like that is Microsoft throwing their devs under the bus (of pissed off customers) for no good reason at all.

    I think Apple still gives Devs a few days between releasing "Gold" to them and the package for general release. That way they have lead time to load up the App Store for release day.

  10. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by Kjella · · Score: 1

    In the real world, developers must have access to the RTM bits before [general availability].

    I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but is this really true?

    Well I guess in the "real world" there's no open source software, since developers and users get access to the same code at the same time. Honestly, is there really going to be a day one rush to upgrade your OS? Maybe in the slashdot crowd but the "market" will take their sweet time.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  11. Issue is overblown by readingaccount · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The APIs were in the CTP. If nothing changed it shouldn't be as scary as the story indicates. Though it does make for good MS bashing, which is why it's here.

    1. Re:Issue is overblown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ummmm.....CTP RTM. Code needs to be tested.

    2. Re:Issue is overblown by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      Rarely are APIs stable between preview and RTM. Unless Microsoft has also done a 180 turn for stablilty between the two points, which from the article doesn't sound like the case, I wouldn't bet on APIs being stable between the two.

    3. Re:Issue is overblown by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      Well I guess that's one of those, we'll see, kind of things now isn't? Historically that's not been the case, but who knows?! However, IMHO I wouldn't be betting the farm on it, especially when Microsoft says they're going to fiddle with it before wide release. If you're right, you're right. If you're wrong, you're wrong. Either way, Microsoft holding the bits back after many years of giving MSDN people access to RTM without a bit of notice, is a bit douche bag-ish. Again, that's my opinion on the situation. However, I'll admit I'm still a bit jaded from WTL being shown the door, so maybe that's playing a role in my opinion.

  12. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by hawguy · · Score: 1

    In the real world, developers must have access to the RTM bits before [general availability].

    I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but is this really true? As long as Microsoft has tested and is certain of backwards compatibility, then it doesn't matter.
     

    He said "real world". There's no such thing as 100% backwards compatibility in the real world -- every bug fix and api update introduces a potential incompatibility for a developer that inadvertently (or even intentionally) relied on the previous behavior.

    In any case, who are these devs and why are they so irate? There's nothing at work worth getting emotional about. It's just work.

    It's not just "work", it's lost revenue from customers that can't get your software to work, extra staffing costs to answer emails and phone calls from customers reporting problems, and hours of extra overtime work trying to fix a problem in a few days when you normally would have had 2 weeks to fix it.

  13. Re: I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

    There is "certain" and then there is "what's in the box".

    How often in MICROSOFT releases do those match? In a bet-your-job kind of way?

  14. we're all developers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    One commenter, 'brianjsw,' said, 'In the real world, developers must have access to the RTM bits before [general availability]. The fact that Microsoft no longer seems to understand this truly frightens me.'"

    in the real world, everyone is a developer.

    1. Re:we're all developers. by mcl630 · · Score: 1

      Is everyone paying thousands of dollars for a MSDN subscription now? News to me...

  15. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Expensive popular games will run or be patched very quickly. MS productivity products will be updated or just keep working.
    DirectX 11.2 is on the way too and developers can enjoy thinking about that support.
    If you bought into the MS way, 'write and test their apps against Windows 8.1 Preview" seems to be the method.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  16. Differences between preview and RTM by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The devs can use Windows 8.1 preview

    I think the point of the article is that developers feel likely to end up burned by any substantial differences between Windows 8.1 preview and Windows 8.1 RTM. When a difference between preview and RTM causes an application not to work, it may end up with unjustified 1-star ratings (or whatever the equivalent on Windows Store is).

    1. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by recoiledsnake · · Score: 5, Informative

      RTM means release to manufacturing, i.e to the OEMs to test on beta hardware and with beta drivers.

      Take Google, which just drops the new version of the Android SDK over the wall along with the hardware running the new version of the Android OS. I didn't notice any outrage there, perhaps because they don't allow comments on their blog posts(or they don't have blog posts). Or perhaps because if Google does it, it's okay.

      This is just a low-effort manufactured story quoting blog comments, by the cookie cutter Computerworld "journalists" who can't even spell "sneak peak[sic]" and submitted by them to Slashdot to troll for pageviews. Another Slashdot low.

      The author of this "article"? A certain Gregg Keizer, who is most well known for inteviewing a fake CEO(who was actually a computerworld writer himself) who faked Windows 7 benchmarks to spread FUD against Windows 7, which Slashdot predictably lapped up at the time. (now, Windows 7 is the best OS ever according to Slashdot though)

      http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9158258/Most_Windows_7_PCs_max_out_memory

      http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/why-we-dont-trust-devil-mountain-software-and-neither-should-you/31024

      ComputerWorld reporter Gregg Keizer last week quoted a company source as boasting, “Outside of Microsoft, I don't think anyone knows more about Windows performance than us.”. ..
        ComputerWorld reporter Gregg Keizer has frequently been first on the scene with details when DMS has released a new study. We found at least a dozen stories under his by-line at ComputerWorld based on reports from XPNet, many including quotes from DMS Chief Technology Officer Barth. As we note later in this report, our reporting strongly suggests that “Craig Barth” does not exist and is in fact a pseudonym for InfoWorld contributing editor Kennedy since the late 1990s

      Yet Slashdot continues to fall victim to this junk on multiple stories every week, the jokes on us. However, it's apparent that readership is dropping, as people with half a brain continue to quit, the moderation becomes even more brutal towards any comment that is not hating on Microsoft(see GP comment modded down, perhaps by Computerworld sockpuppets for calling out CWMike), and people lose interest in submitted stories to a dead place, resulting in Computerworld and HotHardware's MojoKid blogspam taking over the front page as they have a vested interest to submit stories and write flamebait headlines and summaries as they know Slashdot laps it up, and this causes more people to leave.. The problem seems to be taking care of itself.

      --
      This space for rent.
    2. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by mystikkman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Take Google, which just drops the new version of the Android SDK over the wall along with the hardware running the new version of the Android OS. I didn't notice any outrage there, perhaps because they don't allow comments on their blog posts(or they don't have blog posts). Or perhaps because if Google does it, it's okay.

      The funny thing is that Google doesn't even release a beta or RC version for Android like MS did with the 8.1 preview. Where's the Slashdot story and outrage?

      The Slashdot story "Linux Vendors Push For Open-Source In Hybrid Datacenter Clouds" has just 19 comments after 4 hours. Now most of Slashdot comments consist of lame karmawhores like tuppe666, tepples, MightyMartian and bmo competing with each other to post the most puerile anti-MS drivel and modding each other up in the echochamber and shouting down anyone who points out their over the top hate and idiocy. Sad, really, atleast earlier insightful comments used to get modded up, now they have no chance.

    3. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by gmhowell · · Score: 3, Funny

      However, it's apparent that readership is dropping, as people with half a brain continue to quit,

      Bullshit, I'm still here.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    4. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      The Slashdot story "Linux Vendors Push For Open-Source In Hybrid Datacenter Clouds" has just 19 comments after 4 hours. Now most of Slashdot comments consist of lame karmawhores like tuppe666, tepples, MightyMartian and bmo competing with each other to post the most puerile anti-MS drivel ...

      ... posts an obvious MS fanboy. Just look at your own posting history.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    5. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by asylumx · · Score: 1

      Agreed, the quality of both articles and comments here has been in great decline the last few years. People seem to be more interested in having others who share the same opinion instead of having reasonable dissenting opinions that they might actually learn from.

    6. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You're proud to still be here because you are one of the readers with only half a brain???

      Congratulations, you got the joke. Pretty good for an AC. If you got it well enough to not get whooshed, then maybe you'd have been smart enough to register for a free account and use it to log in.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by steelfood · · Score: 1

      It's popular to take a dump on Windows 8.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    8. Re:Differences between preview and RTM by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      He's probably a tralfamadorian, unfamiliar with human customs and just wanted to verify his studies of our species.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  17. Support costs money by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If a behavior difference between preview and release causes an application that worked under preview to fail under release, the owners have to deal with increased support issues resulting from this failure. Support costs money.

    1. Re:Support costs money by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. There are a million things the user is may do to their machine that will be more likely to break software than this update to 8.1.

    2. Re:Support costs money by aiht · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. There are a million things the user is may do to their machine that will be more likely to break software than this update to 8.1.

      That's beside the point. The whole customer base won't be doing any of those things all at the same time.

    3. Re:Support costs money by BetaDays · · Score: 1

      So I guess you have tested 8.1 to prove that claim?

      --
      Paul: Father... father, the sleeper has awakened! - Dune
  18. Windows 8.1 is just a service pack by linebackn · · Score: 4, Informative

    Keep in mind that Windows "8.1" is really just a service pack for Windows 8. Only the marketing department ran amok and decided to bump the version number to make it look like this "rapid release" shit.

    It is hilarious watching all the betaz folks getting all crazy excited over a damn service pack.

    1. Re:Windows 8.1 is just a service pack by Wingman+5 · · Score: 1

      I would not call anything that bumps the kernel a minor revision number "just a service pack".

    2. Re:Windows 8.1 is just a service pack by asylumx · · Score: 1

      It all goes down to who owns the version number: Devs, or marketing? We have this same kind of debate with our software, the folks marketing it want to call it 2.0 but the devs are saying "we barely changed anything, should be 1.1 at the most!" -- in the end it will come down to who owns versioning (or will be split and both will call it what they want, sort of like NT 6.1 / Windows 7)

    3. Re:Windows 8.1 is just a service pack by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

      It doesn't matter how it's named. Some devs that are complaining are not "betaz folks" as you dismiss them. Some of them merely want to make sure that RTM doesn't break anything. You know why? Because they are they ones who have to deal with it. Maybe RTM doesn't really change much. However, all they have is MS saying so. Anyone who's installed a Service Pack from any vendor should know better than take their word. Given how normal MS service packs break things, it's being prudent. But to me what MS says makes little sense. "It's ready. There's little change but we can't release it to you because there's little change." That's a lot of doublespeak IMO.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  19. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

    And exactly how is this shafting you?

    "I got to feeling like a machine, and that's no way to feel." - Shaft

  20. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    It's not just "work", it's lost revenue from customers that can't get your software to work, extra staffing costs to answer emails and phone calls from customers reporting problems, and hours of extra overtime work trying to fix a problem in a few days when you normally would have had 2 weeks to fix it.

    Yeah, seriously, that's not worth getting emotional about.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  21. Dont Care by stanlyb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Simply put, you, the developer, are out of picture. MS, simply, don't, care, about, you, anymore. Period.

    1. Re: Dont Care by Teresita · · Score: 4, Funny

      Microsoft got burned by all those developers bad mouthing Win8 for months before it came out, which killed sales, and they won't let that happen again. It's a Google conspiracy, you see. Because Win8 is actually a great OS. Who doesn't want to sit in the office all day swiping tiles until their arm breaks off? It's good for your triceps.

    2. Re: Dont Care by AHuxley · · Score: 2

      Exactly, Windows 8 starts up fast on a SSD, the productivity and games run well with new the fast new gpu and cpus, the computer shuts down fast too.
      8.1 will bring back the look and feel older people where missing and everybody will be happy.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    3. Re:Dont Care by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      Missing Ballmer already?

    4. Re: Dont Care by mcl630 · · Score: 1

      Because startup and shut down speed are the most important aspects of an OS? FYI, Windows 7 starts up quite fast with an SSD too, and faster GPUs and CPUs will help no matter what OS you run.

    5. Re: Dont Care by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Recall http://blogs.msdn.com/b/olivnie/archive/2012/12/14/windows-8-fast-boot.aspx
      Startup and shut down speed was something MS was talking about wrt Windows 8 vs older MS products.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    6. Re:Dont Care by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Its a very interesting and telling difference in styles:
      That productive, capitalist person at a conference table involved in product development for a growing small business is just what the USA needs more of.
      Apple may push the aspiration that using their products will allow any user to enjoy a projected lifestyle option.
      The dancer could face a costly diploma mill like existence with new and past students willing to do 'anything' to get ahead.
      Academics would be international, bringing fame to the institution blocking any chance of internal institutional advancement.
      The worker relaxing might face a bleak reality of wage vs rent vs healthcare vs transportation costs vs food vs savings calculations every few weeks.
      A sinking feeling their job will be outsourced, made redundant or suffer a loss of any discretionary spending power due to cuts or new contracts?
      MS goes for the monotony of workaday life been made a bit more easy and colourful with every version sold.
      Apple may project the fantasy of trust fund fun or winning a scholarship lottery in form and function.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    7. Re: Dont Care by readingaccount · · Score: 1

      Couldn't you just stay in the desktop mode and not worry about the tiles then? Hyperbole just ruins any argument you make.

    8. Re:Dont Care by Psychotria · · Score: 2

      Simply put, you, the developer, are out of picture. MS, simply, don't, care, about, you, anymore. Period.

      Are you sure you added the required amount of commas?

      I shall fix it for you:

      Simply, put, you, the, developer, are, out, of, picture. MS, simply, don't, care, about, you, anymore. Period.

    9. Re: Dont Care by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      The only way to do this is to either put an icon for every application you ever want to run on the desktop, or install a 3rd party hack that adds back functionality that should have been there to begin with, and has been there for 18 years.

      Unfamiliarity with the subject matter also ruins arguments.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    10. Re: Dont Care by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      >> put an icon for every application you ever want to run on the desktop

      Been doing that for years. It actually makes for a nice interface.

    11. Re: Dont Care by Lithdren · · Score: 2

      Oh please, my old Windows NT box would shut down so fast it would do so before you even fully booted the system.

  22. Beta users are not the majority by tepples · · Score: 1

    Well I guess in the "real world" there's no open source software, since developers and users get access to the same code at the same time.

    Sure, Firefox has the Beta, Aurora, and Nightly channels, Chrome has something analogous, and Ubuntu has the beta of the next semiannual Alliterative Animal version. But the vast majority of end users don't expect them to be supported in the same way that the release is supported. Beta users expect breakage. However, developers can rely on builds marked "release candidate" to be nearly identical in behavior to the RTM, especially once the final release candidate is declared RTM a short time in advance of pushing it out to the vast majority of end users. Even if this window between the release of an RC and its deployment is only a few days, it's still long enough for developers to fix those application defects that have the highest impact.

  23. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by c0lo · · Score: 1

    Behavior like that is Microsoft throwing their devs under the bus (of pissed off customers) for no good reason at all.

    Maybe they do want to make a minivan from their customers bus.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  24. No Worries by Ed+The+Meek · · Score: 1

    Microsoft still has that brilliant cash cow and business stronghold - Office - to power them through these tough times. /sarcasm

  25. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by c0lo · · Score: 1

    You can probably guess which group of idiots is complaining.

    The security programs manufacturers (AntiMalware/firewalls/etc)? You know, the ones most sensible to changes in kernels and drivers? Even more, for which a "false positive" against a system service/dll may cause the security suite to bomb the OS?

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  26. that's how you know it's quality code by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

    Microsoft confirmed that although Windows 8.1 has reached RTM, subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does on Oct. 17, saying it was not finished

    if the code isnt finished, it's beta software at best.

    MICROSOFT, YOU ARE SELLING BETA SOFTWARE.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    1. Re:that's how you know it's quality code by jader3rd · · Score: 1

      if the code isnt finished, it's beta software at best.

      MICROSOFT, YOU ARE SELLING BETA SOFTWARE.

      No where in there does it say that Microsoft thinks that the code isn't finished.

    2. Re:that's how you know it's quality code by Urkki · · Score: 1

      if the code isnt finished, it's beta software at best.

      MICROSOFT, YOU ARE SELLING BETA SOFTWARE.

      Well, that's certainly improvement over what they were selling when they launched ME or Vista...

      Also, RTM does not mean final. If RTM is (pre-)beta quality, it just means they are planning on installing a set of updates on devices between manufacturing and packaging, Or maybe they're just relying on users updating their device, which users need to do anyway with any tablet or smartphone today, regardless of OS or brand.

  27. Seriously by stormesj · · Score: 1

    Wait there are really people developing for Windows 8?

    1. Re:Seriously by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      There are always people that lacks the ability to broaden their views.

      Microsoft right now seems to go the way of a woman with a life crisis - facelifts, perfume and cosmetics in large volume to try to hide its age.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  28. Touble trouble trouble by tuppe666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Remember Ballmer and MS only "in trouble" because their ever growing profits and income are growing quite as fast as they'd like. they aren't hurting at all

    Nobody is suggesting that M$ is in any financial Difficulty. The "in trouble" is 5 quarters of PC sales down. The "in trouble" is missing the boat on massive computing shifts like mobile and cloud. The "in trouble" is its partners are walking away form Windows and announcing greater Android and Chrome products. The "in trouble" is its trying to be a services and devices company...and failing at both. The "in trouble" is those competitors it could crush with spare change or be having or being a monopoly, now have Billions of their own they are struggling to spend. The "in trouble" is suddenly both its cash cows of Windows and OS have competitive replacements at little or no cost.. The "in trouble" is its brand smells of failure. The "in trouble" is everything it had depends on its "windows" monopoly, and suddenly that is looking to be a legacy windows monopoly/Microsoft Office Insurance monopoly, and suddenly those are not not as relevant, and becoming less relevant.

    Ballmer is not "in trouble" he is out the door, stabbed in the front by Bill no less, and its not because Microsoft is "in trouble" financially its just all that future computing cash looks to be flowing to other companies who aren't "in trouble"

    1. Re:Touble trouble trouble by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      We would, but seeing as you haven't left the Holy Sepulchre at the Church of Microsoft, we'd have to yell really loud.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Mashiki · · Score: 2

      Nobody is suggesting that M$ is in any financial Difficulty. The "in trouble" is 5 quarters of PC sales down.

      Well, look at the state of the industry? If you game on a PC, do you need to upgrade it? Most of the time people are going 2-3 years now. That heavily attributed to consoles stagnating the market. If you do basic things on it, like email and word processing, do you really need more than a dual core for that? There isn't any drive in the market, in turn it's hit it's peak.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    3. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      You know, some people complain about consoles "stagnating the market", but I'm glad I don't need to buy a $500 graphics card every year (or two cards!). I spent $1500 on my current rig two years ago, and I'm happy that it can still run just about every game on maximum settings. I know I can't be the only one.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    4. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

      To make a long story short: Microsoft is sooo '98...

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    5. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Urkki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We would, but seeing as you haven't left the Holy Sepulchre at the Church of Microsoft, we'd have to yell really loud.

      Whoa he doesnt like Google and we all know the only people that dont like Google are people who love Microsoft! How could any rational person *not* like Google?!

      Does someone still like Google? Use their stuff, sure, lesser of evils etc, but like them... Seriously?

    6. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Urkki · · Score: 2

      ...I suppose the Flamebait mod means someone does like Google ;)

    7. Re:Touble trouble trouble by asylumx · · Score: 1

      I like both Google and MS, but hate Apple, Where do I fit in?

    8. Re:Touble trouble trouble by fizzer06 · · Score: 1
      Nobody is suggesting that M$ is in any financial Difficulty

      That statement is obviously false.

    9. Re:Touble trouble trouble by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I must admit I have extreme dislike for Microsoft. I merely distrust Google. I'm kind of indifferent to Apple because I don't use, nor am I directly affected by their existence. If you want to join that cult, that's your business.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    10. Re:Touble trouble trouble by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2

      "ill mannered Uncle Fester internally furious at being fired and taking revenge on the others by trying to cost them as much as possible on the way out the door"

      It could be argued by the very cynical he's been doing that for 10+ years.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    11. Re:Touble trouble trouble by InsGadget · · Score: 1

      Thank you for bringing some facts, even if you are downgraded for it. The PC market is pretty well saturated, so it's quite understandable for it to slow. Doesn't mean people will suddenly stop using Windows though.

    12. Re:Touble trouble trouble by phorm · · Score: 1

      Odd as it might seem, I can like somebody (or some corp) without fully trusting them.

      Like a fun buddy who you wouldn't want to introduce to your sister...

    13. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      I disagree with MS missing out on the mobile/cloud. They had the cloud for a while now. Before Apple at the least. MS didn't capitalise on the mobile gold rush but they aren't out yet. They are taking a sliver of the market every month. Sales are increasing and eventually word of success of failure will pass on and that will be the deciding factor.

    14. Re:Touble trouble trouble by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Odd as it might seem, I can like somebody (or some corp) without fully trusting them.

      Like a fun buddy who you wouldn't want to introduce to your sister...

      Well yeah, except if Google is the fun buddy and your data is the sister, then they're already living in the same house, owned by him, and you only have the fun buddy's word that nothing funny is going on, even though your sister does not pay any rent as far as you know...

    15. Re:Touble trouble trouble by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Well played.

      But say, you have a step sister you don't care about much (data you don't care much about if it goes missing or falls into wrong hands). You let her live with your fun buddy and not worry about it.

      And, you have technology to make your sister enjoy the company of the fun buddy yet save her from bad effects (encryption and backup). You protect your sister using that technology and let her live with the fun buddy and not worry about it. The fun buddy doesn't make it easy to use the technology, but can't do much about it if you do.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  29. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by DeathElk · · Score: 1

    Look at the bright side. At least now you've got time to post on Slashdot.

  30. Start screen != Start menu by tepples · · Score: 3, Insightful

    8.1 will bring back the look and feel older people where missing

    How so? I've read that 8.1 just brings back a visible button in the lower left to open the Start screen. It still has the same problem that the Start screen entirely covers up the applications you were using on the desktop, breaking subconscious continuity, unlike the Windows 7 Start menu or the Classic Shell Start menu that sits in the lower-left corner and leaves what you were working on visible.

  31. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Backward compatible is almost never backward compatible. I go through enough "backward compatible" upgrades that fail almost monthly to know better than to believe that bullshit.

  32. But it is finished by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    On Tuesday, however, Microsoft confirmed that although Windows 8.1 has reached RTM, subscribers to MSDN will not get the final code until the public does on Oct. 17, saying it was not finished.

    I don't understand. RTM is the golden master which is finished.

    1. Re:But it is finished by smash · · Score: 1

      Maybe the code is finished and they're re-doing artwork, or adding additional drivers or something. Who knows.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  33. Re:It's not devs, it's FUD mongers by mlts · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are some exceptions: We poor IT people who see Windows Server 2012 R2 and its bump of Hyper-V heading right for our data centers, and want to be able to start testing on it as soon as possible.

    A preview release won't do, as there almost definitely will be changes between it and RTM versions.

    Yes, on Windows 8, it is a lot of cosmetic changes, but Windows Server 2012 R2 has a number of new features that need to be evaluated and scoped out, testbeds created, tickets to vendors made (so they can fix incompatibilities), build documents updated, AD policies checked, tests to see if the OS will work on existing hardware, and so on.

    All this OS testing has to be done and well documented before anything hits the production floor. Yes, one can sit on Windows Server 2003 and not bother trying to throw anything newer, but things change, and even though ESXi might be the mainstay of virtualization now, the deduplication and VM handoff (similar to vMotion) capabilities of the 2012 R2 Hyper-V will make it extremely attractive as a competitor. This all has to be well tested and documented.

    Not doing so will eventually result in a day when the auditors come by, find obsolete versions on products, demand they be upgraded... which forces the business to go head-long to the latest OS or else. Might as well ease the pain and take time to get things tested, bugs found, and workarounds documented as early as possible.

    Of course, this varies from business to business. Some companies can remain on NT 4.0 and be well off. Others have lots of software and regulatory issues, which means that not keeping updated means failing security audits.

  34. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    So when it gets released and pushed out over Windows Update, the average user's install won't break because some little driver has an issue with how Windows 8.1 does things. Having the RTM out early also allows OEMs to make sure they are picking hardware that will work best with Windows 8.1 and have 8.1 machines ready for to be sold when 8.1 drops.

    Which is why they have an RTM which has been...Released To Manufacturers.

    By not having an RTM, Microsoft is telling everyone to go screw themselves and that they'll have to figure out if stuff works on Release Day.

    Well yeah that might be correct, but they do have an RTM so what you're saying isn't particularly relevant.

  35. Could Apple buy Microsoft? by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 1

    Do they have the cash?

    I'm just thinking that it would be a fitting end to a decades long rivalry.

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
    1. Re:Could Apple buy Microsoft? by smash · · Score: 1

      If you have 140bn in CASH, a bank will most certainly give you a loan against that to purchase an asset worth 280bn.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    2. Re:Could Apple buy Microsoft? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but why would they buy a company in decline? Apple buys companies that make emerging technologies.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    3. Re:Could Apple buy Microsoft? by smash · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that apple would. however microsoft as a company are not in decline. Their desktop platform is, but this is true for the desktop market in general. Obviously, you'd do a projected ROI before purchasing Microsoft to work out a realistic price. But the question was whether apple COULD buy MS. Given the numbers above (enough cash to put a 50% deposit on the loan required), they probably COULD.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  36. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by exomondo · · Score: 1

    Well I guess in the "real world" there's no open source software, since developers and users get access to the same code at the same time.

    That really depends on the development model rather than whether it is open source or not, sometimes the source isn't released until the final product is released.

  37. Google and Microsoft situation very different by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Take Google, which just drops the new version of the Android SDK over the wall along with the hardware running the new version of the Android OS. I didn't notice any outrage there

    Google can do this because on release a very small number of normal users, plus some contingent of the most technically hard core are the only ones who are going to be running that version of the OS for a while.

    The day 8.1 goes out many millions of fairly non-technical people will be running it. If your software is glitchy at that time, you are screwed.

    I would be just as peeved if Apple did not release regular builds leading up to releases like iOS7. Apple also releases beta versions of minor updates too.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      First, we are talking about Metro apps. Second, Windows 8 apps are fully supported without any changes in 8.1

      We're talking about new versions of Metro apps that can optionally use the new APIs in 8.1

      Metro apps written for 8.0 won't be "glitchy".

      Given the number and usage of Metro apps, this isn't that big of a number. Second, the 8.1 preview has the necessary APIs required to develop and test, so this isn't like the Android situation.

      Once 8.1 is released, developers can test and release their new version of apps using the new APIs. Their old apps will continue to work unchanged.

      As usual this is a storm in a teacup.

      --
      This space for rent.
    2. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by smash · · Score: 1

      The day 8.1 goes out many millions of fairly non-technical people will be running it.

      Not likely, if the take up (if you can call it that) of Windows 8 is anything to go by.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    3. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      Since when was this discussion limited to Metro apps? I'm pretty sure most antivirus vendors as one obvious example would want to get their hands on the RTM build too to ensure compatibility.

    4. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Metro apps written for 8.0 won't be "glitchy".

      That you know of. No-one can tell since no-one can test.

      Once 8.1 is released, developers can test and release their new version of apps using the new APIs.

      First of all, that means mostly no apps that make use of 8.1 specific features on launch.

      Secondly, it's not about the new API's, it's about ensuring that older stuff is bug free. I've never met an OS patch yet that didn't impact some subset of applications.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    5. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      You're right. No MS update has ever broken anything in the past has it.

    6. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      Who cares about Metro apps?

    7. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I would readily admit to having a pro-MS bias for reasons that are obvious to anyone who has checked my profile, but you are defending the indefensible here. If there were truly no differences between Preview and RTM, then there would have been no RTM. And, historically, RTM was always released on MSDN/TechNet, for developers to test against (and for adventurous souls to experiment with), followed by GA (General Availability) 2-3 months later which is when it hits the shelves and casual users have it installed. There are zero excuses for changing this, and if you read the actual blog posts, the tone is basically "well it's RTM, but it's kinda not done yet". In other words, it's not actually RTM, but apparently no-one has the balls to admit that, so here we have these games with rewriting the dictionary.

      The negative reaction from developers (which, again, is not started by the media - see comments on the original blog posts) is 100% warranted, IMO. When their apps break come RTM for whatever reason, the users will bug them, not MS.

    8. Re:Google and Microsoft situation very different by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      First of all, that means mostly no apps that make use of 8.1 specific features on launch.

      Unless of course... you use the 8.1 preview.

  38. Consider yourself lucky by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Is it your OS? No. It is Microsoft's OS. They have never offered a fair field for ISVs. Be glad they still let their users run your app at all.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  39. MS just can't stop stepping on their dicks. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Hell, at this point, they're so far along they're wearing golf cleats and standing in a puddle of salty vinegar.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  40. Re:How are we all developers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you hadn't noticed, MSFT requires you to create an XBOX account to play certain games and music in 8.1.

  41. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by thunderclap · · Score: 2

    Trusting MSFT that they didn't break anything between the developer preview and RTM is like trusting that man who just walked into the Baghdad cafe with the overstuffed jacket is here for lunch even though he is shouting 'Allu akbar' right now.

  42. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    DirectX 11.2 is on the way too and developers can enjoy thinking about that support.

    No-one other than Microsoft will be releasing a DirectX game that only runs on Windows 8 and above until Windows 11 is out.

  43. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

    What features, you ask? Well, the new DPI scaling mechanism and arbitrary Metro split screen resizing will have significant implications for UI layout, for example.

  44. Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by bryanbrunton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This post is a public plea for someone within Microsoft to come forward with documentation on the rationale behind the recent apparent loss of all reason and common sense by the company.

    Please, please come forward now!

    The actions of this company make no sense to us. We are bewildered by the illogically behavior of Microsoft's direction.

    Everyone knows that to ruin the useability of Windows by the utter donkey skit that is the Metro Interface makes no sense. There must be some greater reason behind these mysterious decisions that Microsoft has recently under taken.

    So give us an internal memo or two! There must have been voices of intelligence within Microsoft who argued against the self-destructive path that it has recently undertaken.

    Let us know why Microsoft is committing public suicide.

    1. Re:Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by Buchenskjoll · · Score: 1

      I am bewildered by your use of illogically as an adjective.

      --
      -- Make America hate again!
    2. Re:Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by asylumx · · Score: 2

      It kind of speaks to an apparent loss of reason and common sense, doesn't it?

    3. Re:Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by phorm · · Score: 1

      Actually, I wonder if there's a Snowden (well, NSA) link here.

      From what I've read, MS is now known (though previously suspected) to pass on access and backdoors to the NSA. Hereto, it stands that the NSA - and by extension the US gov't - has some stake in ensuring that MS continues to live on. With the push for "secure computing", it seems that backdoors and lock-in may be integrated down to the hardware level. Maybe MS doesn't give a f*** because they don't expect they'll have to, as sometime in the not-so-far future people will be even more locked into their OS than now.

    4. Re:Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You assume that there is some kind of grand master plan for doing evil and causing people to suffer.

      Don't ascribe to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity and incompetence.

    5. Re:Where is Microsoft's Edward Snowden? by bryanbrunton · · Score: 1

      It could have something to do with the fact that I care so little about random posts on tech news sites that I type as fast as I can and don't bother to proofread.

      But no, such a logical deduction is beyond you.

  45. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by nateman1352 · · Score: 5, Informative

    As someone who has written and maintained complex commercial Windows software recently I can say that since Windows Vista the backwards compatibility story with Windows is not nearly as good as it used to be. Pretty much every new version of Windows since then has brought some serious changes in behavior.

    With Vista the big breaking change was of course UAC which I'm sure everyone here knows about.

    Windows 7 on the surface did not introduce a large amount of breaking changes when compared to Windows Vista. Probably the biggest breaking change was the need to use a new GUID in your application manifest if you didn't want your customers to be annoyed by the "Program Compatibility Assistant."

    However, Win7 was the first version where 64 bit OS installations really took off. Depending on the application, making an existing 32 bit Windows application work on a 64 bit OS can be a lot of work. I'm not talking about recompiling to 64 bit here either. There are a fair number of breaking changes with regard to COM objects, esp. if you are mixing .NET and native code anywhere.

    Win8 brings us Metro/Modern apps which most Windows developers have been ignoring because of lack of backwards compatibility with Win7 and a strict sandbox that makes it almost impossible to write anything other than silly casual games (Cut the Rope/Angry Birds) or an "app" that does nothing more than access a website which you could access with your web browser anyway ("Facebook app"/"Netflix app".)

    For the people who write applications (not "apps") Windows 8 has a couple things that make life difficult as well. One of the big ones is how difficult it is to perform an automated installation of .NET 3.5. For those doing driver development, the addition of connected standby to Win8 has really complicated life as well.

    All this adds up ever since Vista we have always had to make changes to our software to support a new OS release, wierdly enough binary compatibility between OS releases on Windows is actually becoming comparable to a typical Linux distribution. With the release cadence of Windows becoming quicker ongoing support and maintenance for commercial Windows software is quickly becoming as expensive as commercial Linux software support.

  46. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by dbIII · · Score: 4, Interesting

    However, Win7 was the first version where 64 bit OS installations really took off.

    It's also when we found out how much legacy 16 bit shit was a point of failure in expensive applications and wouldn't run on 64 bit Win7 - I'm looking at you AutoDesk, Halliburton, and just about every "security" copy protection dongle supplier on the planet. It's no use if your expensive per seat application won't run because some IDIOT has coded something as recent as a usb driver for a evil dongle thing in 16 bit.

  47. There are several substantial changes for "Metro" by benjymouse · · Score: 1

    Windows 8.1 does away with the fixed split when you run two modern apps in split view. It used to be that you had two "modes" - one for when your app was the main app and one for when your app had the narrow strip at the left or right.

    That last mode is now gone. Your app may now have both more and less space. As an app developer you'll have do content with this more fluent split. It has actually broken several apps. Not that they will not run - they just look like s*** when they don't take advantage of the assigned space.

    Yes - as an app developer I can test this on the preview version of 8.1 - but it would be nice if I could actually test on the real RTM version.

    What irks me is that I have seen no really good explanation from MS as to *why* we will not get the RTM bits. Which makes you start guessing. Is it perhaps that it is not quite ready, and they want be able to push last-minute updates to a known and controllable crowd (OEMs). Maybe they are afraid that if a broader community (without NDAs?) got to see the unfinished bits they would risk a bad rep even before launch?

    If that is the case, those in charge are really, really stupid. The OEM bits *will* leak to the Internet at some point.

    --
    Reading slashdot one-liner: (irm http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot).rdf.item | fl title,desc*
  48. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    What features, you ask? Well, the new DPI scaling mechanism and arbitrary Metro split screen resizing will have significant implications for UI layout, for example.

    Those sound like things that would be in the Preview don't you think? I would imagine if the APIs for those features somehow changed there would have been a release for it.

  49. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

    Yes, they are in the Preview, but as a developer I'd still want to test on RTM before customers get their hands on it.

  50. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    Yes, they are in the Preview, but as a developer I'd still want to test on RTM before customers get their hands on it.

    In that case wait til you've got your hands on it and then release after that, how do you think we do it in the Android world? It's not like any of those features are in the current release anyway so releasing it any earlier doesn't get you anything and if you're not confident that there are no changes between the Preview and RTM (even though they have said target the Preview) then you can always wait for release.

  51. Greed by Kuruk · · Score: 1

    Greedy little angry birds want there 8.1

    Well we are still on windows 7 and you can just eat zune bots.

  52. writing a book and need screen shots? by maxwells_deamon · · Score: 1

    If the screens and features do not change, why call it a new release? Screen shots in a book that may be incorrect or that say "preview" on them don't impress publishers.

    People who do support work for a living and can not play with the real thing before it goes out to the real world look really dumb.

  53. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 2

    Those features I mentioned will affect existing apps, not just apps to be newly released. Developers would like to test to make sure the new features don't interact poorly with existing apps.

    It doesn't really matter how it's done in the Android world, the point is that developers currently pay for MSDN subscriptions precisely to get access to Microsoft software for development purposes and now those perks are largely useless. It's a regression on a paid subscription, we have every right to be unhappy about it.

  54. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    Those features I mentioned will affect existing apps, not just apps to be newly released. Developers would like to test to make sure the new features don't interact poorly with existing apps.

    Are the existing apps using the new APIs? Do they operate poorly in the Preview?

    It doesn't really matter how it's done in the Android world, the point is that developers currently pay for MSDN subscriptions precisely to get access to Microsoft software for development purposes and now those perks are largely useless. It's a regression on a paid subscription, we have every right to be unhappy about it.

    So it's less a matter of process - since in the Android world we do this all the time - and more a matter of regression of value in the paid subscription...well maybe it's time to cancel that subscription then.

  55. Meh, why should MS care by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Funny

    Windows Dev: Gives us the RTM MS or else!

    MS: Or else?

    Windows Dev: Or.... or... I will continue to buy into your mono-culture by not learning any portable languages or tool chains and only develop for your product to the greater glory of your holiness.

    MS: I might have stepped in something, lick clean my shoe and try to hide your excitement.

    Windows Dev: Yes glorious master.

    MS knows EXACTLY how to treat its 3rd party developers. Like shit and the 3rd party developers will lap it up hoping that one day they will be bought out. Or *shiver* partnered. Which is code for getting it so hard up the ass your tonsils hurt.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Meh, why should MS care by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      MS knows EXACTLY how to treat its 3rd party developers. Like shit and the 3rd party developers will lap it up hoping that one day they will be bought out.

      You know, in an era where more people are buying tablets running a non-MS operating system than they are anything Windows ... Microsoft might need to rethink that.

      Or, maybe (as usual) Ballmer was full of shit when he was yelling "developers developers developers".

      Sooner or later one would assume the developers would say "fuck it, we can do Android", and Microsoft will find themselves wondering what happened. In fact, I would say based on market share alone anybody solely developing for Windows platforms these days is hurting themselves.

      If Microsoft can't have apps to make their platform compelling, people aren't going to buy it for Notepad, Solitaire and Office.

      Or *shiver* partnered. Which is code for getting it so hard up the ass your tonsils hurt.

      Sadly, in my observation, that's true -- I have taken to interpreting 'partner' as "we'll do business with you until we buy/build our own competing product and try to put you out of business".

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:Meh, why should MS care by phorm · · Score: 1

      Portable languages, I agree that MSVC++ is definitely a bit of lock-in... but toolkits are starting to be fairly cross-platform, with LeadWerks, Unity, and many others supporting not only Mac but also Linux and mobile devices.

      Depending on your tools, it may be a matter of using different IDE's/compilers for different OS's, but it's still doable.

    3. Re:Meh, why should MS care by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      MSVC++ is only as much lock-in as you let it be (which is to say, not anymore so than e.g. Clang on OS X). If you stick to standard C++ and cross-platform libraries, you're fine. If you need platform-specific code, keep it in a separate module with proper isolation from the rest of your code, and try to abstract it away in a cross-platform fashion. OTOH, if you sprinkle C++/CX and other language extensions all over your code, call directly into Win32, design your app as a bunch of COM components, and do similarly stupid decisions, then sure, you'll be locked in - and well deserved at that.

    4. Re:Meh, why should MS care by phorm · · Score: 1

      That would be the middle of the three E's (Embrace, Extend, Extinguish). Stupid as it sounds for people to use OS-specific extensions in many circumstances, it's not exactly uncommon.

    5. Re:Meh, why should MS care by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So what exactly is gcc trying to embrace & extend with its own language extensions?

    6. Re:Meh, why should MS care by phorm · · Score: 1

      Which extensions? The only special extensions I've used are ones that are in the C++ draft but not current-version. You generally have to add special flags to use them.

    7. Re:Meh, why should MS care by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/C-Extensions.html
      http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/C_002b_002b-Extensions.html

      Some of them are "draft standard", most aren't. E.g. computed goto, statements as expressions, conversion from member function pointers to regular ones, nested functions, various __attribute__ stuff etc.

    8. Re:Meh, why should MS care by phorm · · Score: 1

      Then I guess that - similar to VC++ - anybody using those extensions will have to deal with the issues of non-portability. I've not really seen most of those before so I can only guess at how much they're used.
      Best to avoid them if you can, unless you're working on something that's OS-specific anyhow (Linux kernel module, whatever).

    9. Re:Meh, why should MS care by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yes, of course. My point was that pretty much all C++ compilers out there have some language extensions of their own, so the problem has been with us for the long time - and people have generally learned how to deal with it.

      Of late, the official Microsoft guidance on using C++ to write apps for its platforms (specifically, in the context of Win8 Metro apps) is to use standard C++ as much as possible, and only use language extensions when necessary to interface with the OS (e.g. C++/CX to call into WinRT), with a clear isolation boundary between portable code and platform-specific code.

  56. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 2

    Those features I mentioned will affect existing apps, not just apps to be newly released. Developers would like to test to make sure the new features don't interact poorly with existing apps.

    Are the existing apps using the new APIs? Do they operate poorly in the Preview?

    I don't think the apps call any APIs to trigger the new functionality, I believe the OS just does its thing assuming the apps will behave correctly. Considering part of the reason the original Metro split screen stuff was so limited was because Microsoft "guaranteed" that apps will only run 1/3, 2/3 or 3/3 of the screen, it's quite likely some apps won't behave correctly when resized to an arbitrary size. Running in the preview *should* be sufficient to test for this, but there's no guarantee the preview behaves exactly like RTM.

    It doesn't really matter how it's done in the Android world, the point is that developers currently pay for MSDN subscriptions precisely to get access to Microsoft software for development purposes and now those perks are largely useless. It's a regression on a paid subscription, we have every right to be unhappy about it.

    So it's less a matter of process - since in the Android world we do this all the time - and more a matter of regression of value in the paid subscription...well maybe it's time to cancel that subscription then.

    With Microsoft cancelling TechNet and devaluing MSDN, I wouldn't be surprised if that starts happening soon.

  57. Re:the upgrade myth by smash · · Score: 1

    It's not an urban legend, it used to be fact, back in the days of the Voodoo, Voodoo2, Riva 128, TNT, TNT2 and Geforce.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  58. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by smash · · Score: 1

    Apple give developers regular betas to code against as well, with notes on changes (and recommendations of features to test against) listed in the seed notes.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  59. Microsoft are lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Seriously, what is WRONG with Microsoft these days? They are making so many short sighted decisions in every area of their business. Technet subs withdrawal, Surface product forecasting, Windows 8 UI, Xbone, the list goes on. Lets hope the upcoming reshuffle and new leadership introduce a new way of doing things. They also desperately need a new PR agency. Their marketing of Surface, among others, has just been awful.

    1. Re:Microsoft are lost by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      This is perhaps why Ballmer is leaving sooner than he had originally planned. He always said in the past he would leave when his youngest child went to college which is a few years away. His upcoming retirement may not have been entirely his choice.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  60. Re:Release date, a strange coincidence... by smash · · Score: 1

    You know what isn't supported by most of the applications people running Windows are using? Point being - changing OS is easy. Changing all your applications is not free, even if the purchase cost is 0.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  61. Re:the upgrade myth by Alioth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well that's the problem!

    In the past, a PC gamer would replace their main rig every year to 18 months, and this would drive quite a bit of sales. In fact, ordinary PC users would change their computer every 2 to 3 years because the new ones were much better, and new software was more capable (and a lot more bloated) and wouldn't run well on a 2 year old machine. This started changing in the early 2000s for non-gaming PCs (my non-gaming development box I built in 2002 lasted 7 years - basically until components started to fail). For gamers this started changing towards 2010 - now there's little advantage in changing your gaming rig more than once every 3 or 4 years.

    The result - while PC usage is probably still growing a little, PC *buying* is declining rapidly because a machine from 2010 is still good enough even for gamers, and a machine from 2005 is good enough for typical email/browse the web stuff. My main gaming rig now is a decent spec *laptop* with nvidia graphics and an i7, and not a hideously overweight one either like gaming laptops of 5 or 6 years ago. Since hardly anyone buys Windows retail, falling PC sales means falling Windows sales. A Windows license for a normal PC is lasting 6 years or more now as people only replace when components actually fail beyond economic repair, and most every day users are no more likely to buy a Windows upgrade any more than they will switch to Linux. A Windows license on a gaming PC is lasting at least 3 years now, possibly more - when in the past, Microsoft could rely on gamers buying a new Windows license every year to 18 months and non-gamers every 2 to 3 years.

  62. But IE10 needs one core per toolbar by cheekyboy · · Score: 3, Funny

    and 1 core per virus scanner
    and 1 core per IE tab
    and 1 core per zynga game

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:But IE10 needs one core per toolbar by danomac · · Score: 1

      Quite a while ago (in 2007?) when the quads came out I joked you needed one for Microsoft, one for Adobe, one for Symantec, which maybe leaves you with one that you could use yourself. :-)

  63. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    applications (not "apps")

    Can we go back to programs?

  64. Or... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    so Microsoft wants only the agile and extreme to survive, while the slackers get left behind. makes sense to me.

    Sounds more to me like Microsoft is making consumers be beta testers for all of the 3rd party software out there, and putting a much higher support burden on the independent software developers since they can't test their software on the released OS until the public does.

    Or, since Microsoft developers have access to the code, their apps can be tested and ready to go when 8.1 releases, giving them an advantage over their competition. Of course, they would have to hope that the Justice Department forgets that they sanctioned Microsoft in the past for that very behavior.

  65. Re:Release date, a strange coincidence... by laffer1 · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the heads up. Windows 8.1 and Ubuntu 13.10 on the same day? It's going to be a drinking day for sure.

  66. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

    Usually its the installer package they utilized (IntellShield, etc) that for some reason was still using a 16bit stub loader.

  67. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

    I've always wondered if .NET was an improvement over Win32 or not. It seems to suffer from the same problems as Java (need specific versions for different apps since newer ones break it). The biggest break in compatibility in Windows 8 is that Desktop Window Manager is permanently enabled and can not be turned off on a per app basis anymore. This breaks many older apps (mostly video, content creation, and the occasional game) in odd ways. The saddest thing is the one nice thing about having DWM enabled, Aero Glass, was removed from Windows 8!

  68. Sigh by conquistadorst · · Score: 1

    Oh Microsoft... please continue screwing your unhappy army developers at your own expense

  69. Re:the upgrade myth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    There was never any time when PC gamers needed to spend hundreds on upgrades every year.

    Well, bollocks. Back in those days PCs were moving fast enough that if you wanted to play the latest games any way but by postcard, you needed a whole new fucking PC every year, with a new video card. Sure, you didn't need to upgrade; you could play the shittier games that came out that year, and watch everyone else play Mechwarrior, or whatever.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  70. Microsoft simply doesn't care about developers by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    That's been clear for a long time. Their language "strategy" is a ridiculous shamble. They dead-end platforms (e.g. Winforms, VB6, silverlight and soon, WPF), change code interfaces willy-nilly (e.g. Powershell instead of a VBScript.net or Jscript.net).

    Frankly, I doubt that the top manaegment of Microsoft wants to fuck with software at all anymore. I think there's not enough money in programming language or programmers. I think they want to be a services and devices company. Period.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  71. Vista by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    This is what killed Vista. It wasn't so much that Vista was a bad OS (I have been running a Vista machine for 6 years now). It is the fact that when it FIRST released it was terrible, because NONE of the hardware drivers were available/worked. This was because Microsoft rushed it out, and didn't give companies enough time to come up with proper software (particularly for hardware). So initially it had tonnes of problems. Even after most of those had been figured out just to do a clean install would take forever as you needed to download about a metric fsck tonne of updated, patches, drivers, etc... to get it in working form. Once there it is fine.

    People already hate Windows 8. Not just over elitist slashdotters like ourselves. I got a ultrabook for my folks this summer, and they hate it, and that is their core consumers. Alienate your core consumers and they will look for alternatives, Apple for example as it is easier (Metro is confusing as hell, and no start menu as well), or might as well try Linux (Chrome etc...) as it is no more daunting to use than Win8.

    1. Re:Vista by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      Nice try. It was a file COPY process that took several months to complete...and UAC.

      --
      I come here for the love
    2. Re:Vista by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Meh, Windows 7 has UAC as well, and it really isn't that inconvenient really, particularly if you have admin control (and I would wager most businesses didn't go for Vista anyway over XP at the time).

      As to the slow copy I haven't seen the issue, and I have a 2TB media drive full of stuff I regularly update and move around without much problem (30-60MB/s speeds if I recall correctly). Then again maybe I am just used to those speeds now, however I use Windows 7 at work at it doesn't seem any faster really (for copy operations).

      Don't get me wrong, Windows 7 is a superior beast, but I don't think Vista is as bad as everyone seems to make it out to be. Likely because all the reviews that were done on first launch (when it was terrible) and simply stuck. I had a computer come pre-installed with Windows ME years ago, now if you want to talk about a truly horrible OS, THAT was the worst. I don't think I made it more than a week or two before I ditched it.

    3. Re:Vista by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      Ah, I was replying to someone saying what the problems were in Vista. Therefore we would be comparing Vista to XP not 7.

      --
      I come here for the love
    4. Re:Vista by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      When Vista came out, file copies could be excruciatingly slow, and nobody had had to deal with UAC before. This is in addition to driver issues and the Vista sticker on machines incapable of running Aero. FWIW, I also had Vista just go unresponsive for a second or two now and then, on a high-end machine, and that was very disruptive to my concentration. We also lost some Windows Explorer abilities, and that made TortoiseSVN harder to use.

      Microsoft fixed the file copy issue along with many others, application vendors learned to avoid UAC, drivers got updated, people found work-arounds for breaking changes, and computers became more generally powerful. Not too long before 7 came out, Vista was a decent OS, although I never liked it as much as XP.

      File copying, time-outs, and driver issues were execution problems. The Vista-ready debacle was not a technical or OS design issue. UAC or something like that was really necessary, however annoying at first. Most of the things that annoyed people about Vista were not major design decisions with no clear benefit. This is not the case with Windows 8. My son reports that the only things he doesn't like about it seem to be deliberate design features.

      In other words, initial reviews sucked, like Vista, and for good reason. Unlike Vista, the 8 reviews suck primarily because of "features", not bugs.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    5. Re:Vista by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I agree, it was on execution not design that Vista sucked, and as time went on things improved.

      Windows 8 was a misguided attempt by Microsoft at convergence between mobile devices like tablets and PC's. I think their thinking being that most people buy laptops now rather than desktops. However not only does that not make any logical sense, but also touch screen LCD monitors are largely unavailable for desktops, and only a handful of higher end laptops usually support it right now. So not only did they take a bad design, but executed it badly as well. Then MS corporate gets involved trying to push Windows 8 and makes the situation worse by basically making it impossible to get any computer without Windows 8 regardless of type unless you built it yourself (which I do, but not the primary market). Getting a desktop or a laptop without a touch screen essentially makes the Metro interface useless, which comprises pretty much half the OS (insofar as the consumer is concerned). Even with a touch screen what sort of user even wants or would use that on a desktop? Perhaps in some cases laptop users might, particularly if they have the reversible screen into tablet kind, but that is a pretty small market of users when you are forcing it on the population as a whole. I can only speculate that the MS PR folks got a hold of the reins and thought, "Gee, none of those users are going to get Windows 8, and are going to go with Windows 7, making our new OS look like a dud, thus they try to force sales. When really it would look like a dud, because it is actually a very niche market. So design fail, execution fail, then corporate direction fail, ultimately leading to: Epic fail.

  72. Ballmer by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Sounds like someone needs a chair real quick!

  73. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by denmarkw00t · · Score: 1

    I'm almost 100% positive that Microsoft isn't testing every 3rd party application to make sure they all still work as expected.

  74. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by denmarkw00t · · Score: 1

    What if you're a small shop of, say, 4-5 people, and your livelihood depends on what customers are buying your app and word-of-mouth from those people to get their friends to buy too? Sure, Angry Birds will be fine if there are a couple hiccups, but not necessarily the case for the Little Guy.

  75. Quick! Inform the presses by guruevi · · Score: 1

    So both Windows developers can bitch about stuff. Seriously, who still develops against native Windows these days? Enterprise apps are all going web, small one-off apps are built in Python, slightly larger apps should be using GTK or QT toolkits, if you're making a game you should be developing against OpenGL and your engine should run in C and good C compiles on any platform. Nobody runs actual Windows 8 for anything serious, the Windows 8 tablets are locked down and have maybe 10 apps for them.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:Quick! Inform the presses by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      small one-off apps are built in Python

      FWIW, I wouldn't exactly call Dropbox a "small one-off app"...

    2. Re:Quick! Inform the presses by guruevi · · Score: 1

      The client is (and should be). All it does is read the local hard drive and sync it with an online hard drive. Nothing too difficult about it.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  76. They cold just as easy develope for apple. by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

    I find their tools much more fun to use anyway. https://developer.apple.com/devcenter/mac/index.action If you have never given xcode a try give it a spin.

  77. Re:the upgrade myth by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    I got a Voodoo2 when they were new and very expensive (after much pleading and agreeing for it to be counted as a combined Christmas and birthday present). It lasted 3-4 years, until I replaced it with a low-end GeForce 2MX (which was much cheaper). At the time, I was playing a lot of FPS games and so on. Many of my friends had cheaper cards than the Voodoo2. You could always get better graphics by spending more, but most games were quite playable with cheaper cards. Games like Quake 1 and 2 and Half Life even had software renderers that worked fine, albeit at a lower resolution.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  78. So when is RTM not RTM? by Wokan · · Score: 1

    When it's Windows 8.1 and Microsoft is struggling and rushing to patch over a huge mistake.

  79. Re:I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy by JohnFen · · Score: 1

    In the real world, developers must have access to the RTM bits before [general availability].

    I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but is this really true? As long as Microsoft has tested and is certain of backwards compatibility, then it doesn't matter.

    Yes, this is true. Microsoft's backward compatibility testing, while nice, is far from complete. Developers need to ensure for themselves that their code will work (or be content with publishing crap). Delaying the release to developers means that it is impossible, in good conscience, to ship an app with the promise that it works under 8.1 until well after 8.1 itself has shipped.

  80. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    I don't think the apps call any APIs to trigger the new functionality, I believe the OS just does its thing assuming the apps will behave correctly.

    Well do they or don't they? I was assuming you were concerned based on actual experience. Those apps were limited to those screen sizes so having arbitrary resizing naturally wouldn't work correctly without all the apps being changed or having a different API, so which of those it is is important.

    Running in the preview *should* be sufficient to test for this, but there's no guarantee the preview behaves exactly like RTM.

    No, there is no guarantee, but they did say code to the preview which would indicate the behavior isn't changing between that and RTM.

  81. Re: Oh really, briansjw? by exomondo · · Score: 1

    Developers and enthusiasts get "early" access to Android by running a Nexus device or custom ROMs.

    No, that's no different to any other user. We can't get Nexus devices or code to even start building custom ROMs until that is all released to the public.

  82. Re:There are several substantial changes for "Metr by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Doesn't it still restrict the splitter positions when one or both apps being run are Win8 apps?

    Keep in mind that the app has to declare whether it's targeting Win8 or Win8.1 in its manifest. And if it's targeting Win8, then there's a whole lot of compatibility shims, legacy API behavior etc that are enabled for that app. I always assumed that splitting is one of those things.

  83. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    It's not just about drivers. It's about antiviruses and malware scanners and backup managers and other apps that depend a lot on low-level stuff. And it's not like a regular desktop app can't be broken, either, it's just that the probability of that is lower - but not zero.

    Anyway, you're asking the wrong question. The question should rather be: why shouldn't developers get early access to RTM? RTM = done. The only polish from there on should be on making it run on specific hardware etc, that's where the "manufacturer" part comes in. But there's no reason why it can't be used in a testing environment.

  84. Stopping the alleged Microsoft hate by tepples · · Score: 1

    Now most of Slashdot comments consist of lame karmawhores like tuppe666, tepples, MightyMartian and bmo competing with each other to post the most puerile anti-MS drivel and modding each other up in the echochamber and shouting down anyone who points out their over the top hate and idiocy.

    I want to make my comments less hateful toward Microsoft or anyone else for that matter. Please clarify what I should change in a comment to this journal.

  85. Re:Oh really, briansjw? by smash · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up.UAC is not inherently bad, and was necessary to maintain any compatibility with old broken applications.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  86. Re:It's not devs, it's FUD mongers by smash · · Score: 1

    1 month wait too long for you? if you're rolling 2012 R2 into your datacenter on week 1 of release, you're doing it wrong. If it was released today, I'd suggest that at least 6 months of regression testing and documentation updates, etc, in a test environment would be prudent first.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  87. Re:the upgrade myth by smash · · Score: 1

    Yeah, if you got a voodoo2 when they were expensive it would have lasted a while. However, if you bought a card when they were at the mid-range price point (Voodoo Rush for example), you did need to upgrade fairly often during that period because 3d was moving ahead in leaps and bounds. Between 1998 and 2002, I'm pretty sure my transition was Voodoo Rush, TNT2, Geforce 2 MX, Geforce 4200...

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  88. Re:the upgrade myth by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
    When I had a Voodoo 2, many of my friends had no 3d accelerator at all. A lot of them bought TNTs when they came out and then kept them until the GeForce 2MX was released (it was really cheap, but still gave performance on a par with the original GeForce, so was quite popular). Sure, it was possible to spend hundreds of pounds on graphics cards every year, but as someone who was a child at the start of this and a student at the end, I still managed to play the latest games (although not at the highest settings) without spending much on graphics cards.

    The Voodoo Rush was released in 1997. The TNT2 in 1999, the GeForce 2MX in 2000 and GeForce 4200 in 2002. All of them are low-end parts except for the TNT2, and so that's one low-end GPU every 2 years. That's about the upgrade cycle that I remember for people who were active gamers. Certainly not spending hundreds of dollars every year on high-end GPUs, as the original poster claimed.

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