Windows 8.1 Rolls Out Today
The newest iteration of Windows has begun rolling out, and is winning positive reviews. (Here's an in-depth review from Ars, and a more concise one from Wired — both give 8.1 a thumbs-up).
Kelerei wrote with the above-linked TechDirt article on the release, noting that it is a staged rollout rather than global. Starting this morning, though, 8.1 is available to some customers. Kelerei writes: "The upgrade is optional (and free) for existing Windows 8 users, though if one looks at the changes, it's hard to imagine why those already on it wouldn't upgrade."
Also at Slash BI.
I'll never upgrade, never!
Windows 8 was a huge disaster, and windows 8.1 only applies a different color of frosting to the same stale cupcake. As both a personal user and IT decision maker, there's no way I'd put Windows 8.x on anything around here.
...Timmy gets it wrong.
TechCrunch, not TechDirt.
Windows 8.x is back, and this time, it's personal.
Or it feels that way. I've been working with the Windows 8.1 RTM. Many more things seem to break on the Windows 8.1 RTM that did on Windows 8. Mayhem ensued. Kiss your SQLE 2005 goodbye if you haven't already. Change your Setup.exe's to Vista compatibility if you don't want them to take an hour to install. Other than that, no worries.
Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
Before everyone starts bashing on Win8 (even though it does, to some extent, deserve it), I feel obligated to state:
The OS:
1. Performs better than Win7 (for me)
2. Has been perhaps the most stable iteration of windows (for me).
The UI:
Is horrible in terms of the default layout. Adding back in a 'normal' start menu (via Classic Shell, etc) and turning off the charm bars are key to making it a usable GUI, IMO.
With the above 'tweaks' the biggest thing I miss comparing 7 to 8 is the loss of being able to search files directly from the search bar. Perhaps that' some option/tweak I missed somewhere along the lines.
Will I try 8.1? If I can do it for free, yes. Will I give them money for it? NO!
What is the use case for me typing something in the windows search charm thing and me wanting to get results from my PC and web pages, music, and photos from the Internet? Searching for files or file content on my PC already got harder with vista. Now this? If I want to search the web I can use google or bing or whatever I want. When I search my PC it is because I need to find a file on my PC. Also I do not want my data on sky drive.
[crickets chirping]
The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
Just loaded Linux on my Father's PC yesterday :)
I don't trust MS at all. Why, I reckon that MS Windows 8.1 will come with new and exciting backdoors for the NSA (and any other security agency or criminal gang (but I repeat myself)). OK, I might be exaggerating slightly, it won't come with deliberate backdoors as such, simply holes that haven't been fixed yet, guaranteed to be around for at least a few months.
I'll stick with my Ubuntu thanks (until I try Debian again later this or next month, and see if it works). Now, you might say that Ubuntu has its flaws, and well, it does. But, if you don't use Unity or the Software Centre, you can get a perfectly good system with minimal issues, and no obvious privacy concerns. (I use 12.04 with Gnome 3.something. I have issues with this version of Gnome, but I still prefer it to KDE (which kept crashing on me) and Xfce (which doesn't have enough fancyness, I do have a fancy powerful laptop, I like a bit of eye candy).)
Remember: if you are worried about security or privacy, don't use a closed source OS connected to the Internet.
HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
Ubuntu 13.10 is being release today, a date planned long ago. Noise about the service pack for Vista 8 is only intended to distract from coverage of Ubuntu and keeping it out of the news.
This is sort of what Windows 8 should have been to begin with. What this doesn't do is fix the issue with the missing Start MENU. The result is that every time you need to load an application through the menu you are forced back into the abomination that is the Metro interface. This is a deal breaker for the enterprise and shows Microsoft's continued contempt for their customers and what their customers need.
A tablet interface has no business on a desktop and Microsoft should have made it completely optional. Fixing boot to desktop was a half hearted start to be able to say they were listening to feedback - sort of. However the stunt with the Start Button instead of the Start Menu was a slap in the face to the enterprise and large OEM's that have been begging Microsoft to restore the Start Menu.
Sales will continue their worst downturn in history since the advent of the personal computer. OEM's will continue to lose money hand over fist. Enterprise customers held with contempt are evaluating third party vendors they never would have considered before. If you force people to use a new interface regardless, than it's an opportunity for your customers to pick what that interface is going to be. Sales of Mac's to the Enterprise have hit record highs, Linux is breaking through where it never did before. People are even toying with Chromebooks.
slashdotspeak for astroturfing....
How much did those reviews cost? Who is making those reviews? I'm guessing it's people who earn their living maintaining MS systems.
Yeah, I know, "hater's gonna hate"
1. No improvement in user interface. Touch sucks on the desktop and Microsoft knows it. A Start button without a Start Menu is useless.
2. Metro style apps are very painful to deploy in the Enterprise; even for those with Subscription (Dis)Advantage.
3. Still not immune from viruses and worms - needs continuous stream of patches; customer remains at the mercy of Microsoft; like the forced ditching of XP which works perfectly fine.
4. Many existing licensed software such as SQLE are not supported in 8 series; so all that money is wasted expenditure.
5. Still no native support in the OS for cameras; SIM cards, etc. even Android is better in that respect despite being minuscule in size compared to 8.1.
The list of drawbacks continue; nothing to write home about; despite these paid shill reviews.
If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
...another tree fell without a sound
....because it forced me to make the jump to Linux!
"and is winning positive reviews"
This is the biggest lie I have ever heard. Now you search your computer for vacation photos and get bombarded by bullshit Bing links. The start menu still doesn't exist. I'm pretty sure it still takes a computer engineer to find the shut down button. It's absolute garbage.
...holds it's breath!
Windows is cyclic, Win 98 Ok, Win ME terrible, Win XP Ok, Win Vista terrible, Win 7 Ok, Win 8 terrible.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
For some reason when I see this, I keep thinking back to Windows 98 Second Edition or Win98b and how it came out only a year later also following the main Win98.
I noticed that one of the office supply chains in my area was advertising windows 8.1 on the front page of their weekly ad this Sunday. Even windows 3.1 (or 3.11) didn't get this much hype as an incremental upgrade. Glad to see that slashdot is giving microsoft some free advertising on it, too.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
http://www.startisback.com/ You won't regret it..
Fucking a fat girl is like riding a scooter... it's fun 'til someone sees you.
Link to the first page.
You must go to the Microsoft Store.
Fuck Microsoft.
The only Ubuntu announcement that I would be interested in is if they decide to use MATE, Cinnamon, XFCE, or KDE for their desktop
You're in luck. Ubuntu uses Xfce.
what if I wanted to navigate based on a graphic that was previously on the screen or based on instructions that I wanted to keep up
I agree with you. But when I mention this to other people, a lot have tended to tell me that instead of switching between the menu and the instructions with your eyeballs, it's just as easy to switch between the two with Windows keyboard shortcuts. They tell me that if I get a case of amnesia from rapidly switching among full-screen environments in such an "all maximized all the time" environment, I must have a mental disability that the profitable majority of people don't have.
I'll be somewhat more interested when the Linux Mint derivative of Ubuntu 13.10 comes out.
After Unity, I went back to Debian, and was just as happy as I was with it before ever trying Ubuntu.
With all those Ubuntu distractions, I almost forgot how good Debian is (and always has been).
Thank you Ubuntu, for screwing up the UI enough to drive me back.
Any purchase of cupcake pans comes with this stale cupcake as a "no cost option" because the cost of the pans already include it.
You can pay extra to have the stale cupcake removed, but they'll call you mad and look at you funny, and you will then have to pay extra for a slightly less stale one from the same manufacturer.
And the manufacturer will STILL claim that cupcake you even PAID TWICE to remove was "a sale" and hence part of those millions of cupcakes 8.1 they've sold to happy consumers.
Did anyone else misread the first few words of the summary?
I will wait for 8.11.
There, fixed that for you.
Does anybody besides the shills really think anybody not paid or threatened with leg breaking would give this a positive review?
Here is the MAD Magazine fold-out version
Windows 8 |-------| .1 ---(fold until the two bars meet)
Result
Windows 3.1
WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
I just finished applying the update, and the first thing I noticed is that now the icons on my start screen have different background colors. In Win8 they were all blue. Now in 8.1 some are blue, some are green, many are gray, and a couple are even bright orange.
If this is how it looked for others in Win8 then I fully understand what they meant about "garbled mess of icons". I wonder if there's a way to get it back to the calm blue. I have no problem with the "menu" being full screen, but this is a bit too much.
Oh btw, these are desktop application icons, I'm still looking for a useful Metro app...
Microsoft is willingly taking a hit for a few years in the hope that Surface will take over the tablet space.
If that ever happens people may very well like a desktop that apes their tablet. (Huge win if they would also like a phone like that.) But the only major selling point for Surface is that it supports Microsoft Office. So now everything depends on how much people want a tablet with Office.
My guess, which is admittedly uninformed, is that Surface will gain some traction in the business world. Any prognosticators out their with better info for us?
So would it be an option to run Linux as your base operating system, then continue to have XP running under Wine for those specific programs that are either ancient or have no upgrade path under linux?
Is this a reasonable path to allow XP usage well past its expiration date ? ?
"the wife"
"the kid"
My, you must really love them.
Wish I could have posted this early enough that someone would see it. PowerDesk Pro supports Win8, and makes it really nice. Has a file search utility that's worth the price alone. Has a launch toolbar so you don't have to use the Metro screen. Is a regular tree-based file manager like Nautilus or the old Norton Desktop. I have used this software since it came out in the late 90s, and can't use Windows without it. Keeps changing hands, but it's worth tracking down.
The reason people hate the Windows 8 start screen is because it displays politics. Seriously, take a look:
http://www.bleepstatic.com/tutorials/windows-8/introduction-start-screen/windows-8-start-screen.jpg
Peace envoy to visit Syria to broker ceasefire...
People do not want to see politics appear in their start menu. This is the stupidest idea in computing. This distracts people, it intrinsically makes them angry.
Why treat "the UI" as seperate?
Because it's traditional in at least the UNIX world to treat them as separate components. You can take GNU/Linux and plaster Xfce or KDE or Cinnamon on top of it. Or you can take an X11 based desktop environment on GNU/Linux and switch the underlying OS to FreeBSD.
I still have my free copy of Windows 8 Pro that I've yet to install. Some of us were talking in the Elevator about it's over all UI changes and their argument made sense: develop a single consistent UI across all their platforms from Desktop to Notebook, to tablet, to phone to Xbox, oh and we expect that all future PC's will have touch screens.
It was that last part that was the gotcha. If Touch screens on laptops and desktops were really all that great, Apple would have been doing it years ago. The fact that they don't should tell you something. And having previously written point of sale software I can tell you that many of our clients tried touch screen terminals and often times went back to keyboard & Mouse.
The other huge problem on the desktop side are that business people have been trained on windows with their start menu for 15 years. Changing that presents a huge and massive disruption in workflow costing lots of money in retraining time.
Now if the metro UI was available at the touch of a button, much like Launchpad on the mac, but still had the windows 7ish start button underneath, that could of worked.
"The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
Their name is Ars Technica, not Arse Backwards. Why link to page 4 of their review?
That or Windows Mojave, a name Microsoft used to trick people into dropping RTM-tinged preconceptions when evaluating Windows Vista Service Pack 1.
I am still unsettled by the disinfo campaign regarding start menu vs start button MS is trying to be intentionally confusing users with the change and use of language to describe it while knowing full well it is NOT what the average person will expect/assume when they hear of the change.
The wired article is complicit in propagating the same nonsense while they use the word sort of. No if your going to do a review you call vendor BS like that out loudly. You don't get to concurrently propagate the same MS BS and maintain legitimacy with your readers.
For some reason this all reminds me of those whacky coca cola commercials where they tell everyone to buy coca cola while concurrently spewing on about how concerned they are about fat people being fat. It defies belief.
I've been using Windows 8.1 since June with the desktop wallpaper as my start screen background and haven't experienced anything similar since. It seems like the wallpaper provides enough context to make the desktop and startscreen seem like the same "room"
In other words, your brain processes the desktop and the Start Screen like multiple workspaces on an X11 window manager. I agree with you that that's an improvement. But in my opinion, it'd be even better if the tiles on the Start Screen would "float" over the existing windows on the desktop the way the Dash does in Unity.
(If I'm citing the same source in comments to several Slashdot stories about a topic, that can mean different things to different readers. Occasional readers of Slashdot comments may not have seen the previous citations. And among regulars, I guess the feeling that "tepples is about to link to SciAm again" might encourage people to word their arguments to take into account the citation so that I don't have to repost it.)
For the most part, Xubuntu is Ubuntu with xubuntu-desktop preinstalled instead of ubuntu-desktop. I tell people I run Xubuntu 12.04 LTS on my laptop, even though what I actually installed was the Ubuntu 9.10 CD with a sudo apt-get install xubuntu-desktop a month after release of 11.10. But the packages that are running are closest to what one gets from a Xubuntu image, and if I had to reinstall, it would be from a Xubuntu image. Sometimes I have to come up with fresh ways to say "If you want Xubuntu, you know where to find it", sacrificing a small amount of rigor for rhetoric.
Yeah. Like a fat, greasy turd...
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
Seriously, those are SO broken and easily bypassed that my kid figured it out the first week with 8.0...
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
Stuff that matters my ass..
They should have called it "Scarface", and had an ad campaign based around "say hello to my little friend!"
We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
I'll wait for 8.12 THX
No start menu? No thank you. I'll use Windows 7 for my gaming until it's EOL, by then Ubuntu should be a worthy sucessor for my gaming system.
The Amarri pray for god, the Caldari pray for profit. the Gallente pray for peace, but the Minmatar pray their ships hol
Someone bash into Microsofts skull that a UI has different demands depending how the main input is. I don't need my start menu spreading over my whole screen with ginournous buttons to pick an application.
Hell you could even diffentiate large table touch vs. portable touch devices, one approach just can't work great for all types.
upgrading to 8.1 is something one does in self-defense. It's not really optional, if you want to keep some shred of your sanity. (Which means, Microsoft should really have charged for it.)
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Does Win+F still do a fullscreen search? If so I refuse to install 8.1. This retarded feature alone kills the whole OS for me. Im a grad student and I need to read many articles and textbooks all at the same time and I used to use Win+F to sort through the gigabytes of articles I have and bring up new references as I need them. My workflow has been completely broken by the absolutely unjustifiably horribly insane idea that it makes sense to use the entire real estate of a 27 inch monitor for a simple filesearch, making cross-refencing impossible and search awfully context breaking.
Theres just no justification for this decision whatsoever, whoever made it should be lined up against a wall, raped by an army and then chainsawed in half.
I now use a mac for study, but to be honest thats only marginally better. At least it only uses a small part of the screen, but Spotlight is not anywhere near as good as the filesearch was in Windows 7. It doesnt give me enough results and gives me too many bad results. And theres no way to tell it to only give me files as results and not garbage like web results.
I dont know why this is something the OS makers find so hard to get right. Its not a problem with the algorithms, catfish on linux gives good results fast, but everyone botches up the UI of filesearch now, including the linux distros Ive tried. I just want it to work like Windows 7, which perfected this one absolutely essential part of the UI. I got used to hoarding everything in a few folders and then navigating it all using search and now that this concept is no longer trendy, MS have just killed it without offering any useable replacement.
.1 reasons to upgrade.
Seriously though, what a huge yawn. Within a year or two I won't even need a windows machine to play games, the primary purpose of windows in the world right now.
The only people who will need to still use windows on a daily basis will be legacy corporations like Microsoft.
I already have my Linux servers, desktops and web/android apps. BONUS: I have all the source code for the security infrastructure that powers them.
Now, all we need is a Linux game machine for our Linux desktops. It is going to happen within a year or two now that the graphics plumbing is worked out and ATI GPU's are now fully documented, including the latest generation GPUs. (i.e. 3.12 kernel/X 1.15 and possibly Wayland far far far into the future.)
-Hack
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
That idea is clearly not new.
Rethinking email
You can, if you wish, have a simple uncluttered interface and be able to do everything from the command line, only launching GUI programs when there's a benefit to a GUI (web and email).
That's the way I work. It's ten times faster than click-click-click-click-click through five levels of menus for everything, and whether I'm working on on the local machine or remote makes no difference. Any time I need to do the same thing several times, I can loop: "foreach thing; do something $thing; done".
At home, that clean, uncluttered interface runs on top of Linux. At work, it's Mac underneath. My interface is the same either way - a simple terminal in a POSIX environment.
After it finishes updating you *have* to create a Live account. This was not required before so I set my birthdate to 1905 and name/surname to fückoffwanker. Choke on it Microsoft! I hope I can contribute in some small way by poisoning your data gathering algorithms.
Looking at the interface, I feel like I gained nothing from this except for multi-coloured metro tiles and a useless start button. Amusingly the system pre-installed a health app on the metro interface. Makes sense for a 108 year old.
I'm only putting up with this shit because of games, help me Gabe Newell, you're my only hope!
windows xp was the last windows i ever used
Presuming it doesn't get extended several times like XP did.
I can tell you with certainty than enterprise business faced with looming XP support fail all upgraded to or are in the process of upgrading to Windows 7.
No large corporate entity or government is going to use Windows 8 or even 8.1.
With such a huge install base of Windows 7, support will be for a very long time, and there will be pressure on MS to extend even that.
I built a new computer last month, and intentionally put Windows 7 on it. A decision I am very comfortable with.
Unfortunately individual consumers have little choice however. Bought a laptop for Dad this summer. Choice was basically Windows 8 or buy an Apple. If I were a betting man I would say the only winner will be Apple. If they loosened up a bit on their elitist branding strategy they could really grab some market share. Right now if you are an individual consumer buying a sub-1000$ laptop from either a box store, or a manufacture, there is no competition, you are getting Windows 8 if you want it or not.
Hold it right there, you said it perfectly:
That's the best advice I've seen so far! I'm happy to W8 and not install Windows 8.
Windows 8: Just W8.
Cheers,
"What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
"A four-foot prune."
Today is October 17th.
Just upgraded two PCs. a Sony Vaio VPCZ2290X legacy PC (with TPM) and a HP Envy2. *BOTH* were configured to use BitLocker Drive Encryption. Both were configured to ask for a PIN at boot. Guess what? Windows 8.1 upgrade not only booted the machine lots of times but it didnt ask for the PIN, not only once.
I dont know if I should worry. Guess that I should, only if I have something private stored on those (and I mean... something I dont want Microsoft or any government to get their hands on).
Once the upgrade completed, it started asking for the PIN again. Please correct me if I am wrong (I want to be!!) but, in my head, that means only two possible things:
1. Windows stores my PIN or
2. Windows has a key to secretly access bitlocker drives directly
I dont know what is worse.
To be honest, if I had any doubt about the complete lack of security, privacy etc on the platform, this simple thing just washed it clean.
Does anyone know when TrueCrypt will be available for Windows 8, with PBA?
Windows 8.1 mouse lag reportedly renders some PC games "close-to unplayable"
http://www.pcgamesn.com/windows-81-mouse-lag-reportedly-renders-some-pc-games-close-unplayable
Now is the time of Wine-for-Windows on the Desktop
--
On Fidonet, nobody knew I was a dog
Haven't had any issues from day one. Games great, no driver issues, faster boot than Win7, very responsive. What's the big deal? Time to move along...
Businesses aren't clamouring to upgrade all their machinery just because MS has a newer OS.
You summed up MS's problem right there: a huge roll out of new OS and nobody -especially enterprise- is clamoring for it. That is what failure looks like.
Rolling, and down the hill to the pond.
Win8.1 still has problems. I'm testing the pro N Uk English version which doesn't have WMP or the WMV codecs.
You can get alternatives but there are problems:
- Vreveal 3 doesn't work without WMP.
- Ashampoo Burning Studio 12 doesn't work without WMP.
- Cyberlink WaveEditor (part of PowerDirector) doesn't work without WMP.
I tried to following instructions to install the Media Pack.
Tried installing win8 media pack - not compatible with win8.1
Tried following instructions to 'add features to windows 8.1' - searching for this only gets me a microsoft page with instructions on how to do this.
I might try an upgrade to win8.1 pro (no N) next.
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