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Doubt the real answer is this clean.The Ribbon is more efficient and more utilized than menus, 100% proven fact.
The Ribbon is more efficient and more utilized than menus, 100% proven fact.
It seems to me like MS makes a solid OS every other version.
Win 7 - solid
Vista - skip
XP -solid
ME -skip
98 - solid (for the time)
......
It seems to me like MS makes a solid OS every other version.
Win 7 - solid
Vista - skip
XP -solid
ME -skip
98 - solid (for the time)
......
What exactly are the improvements over Win 7?
That only works if you conveniently skip any OS that doesn't happen to match the paradigm.
Windows 95 came before 98 and was what I would call a good OS. You also skipped Windows 2000. You're also ignoring the 64-bit movement. Windows XP 64-bit was terrible, but Vista was the first OS that made 64-bit truly mainstream. Vista64, especially after good 64-bit drivers had come out, was a fantastic OS that is 90% of what Windows 7 is.
That only works if you conveniently skip any OS that doesn't happen to match the paradigm.
Windows 95 came before 98 and was what I would call a good OS. You also skipped Windows 2000. You're also ignoring the 64-bit movement. Windows XP 64-bit was terrible, but Vista was the first OS that made 64-bit truly mainstream. Vista64, especially after good 64-bit drivers had come out, was a fantastic OS that is 90% of what Windows 7 is.
While I do agree with some of the points this guy makes, I don't know if I would go as far as calling Windows 8 a "design disaster."
HA!Vista is just not that bad. It's not like they removed the start button or something.
Microsoft is being very odd about how they manage relations with the public. If you look at Apple, they don't generally listen to user feedback, but they don't ask for it either: they believe they know what's best for users, and they're absolutely resolute in this belief. They project an extreme confidence in their products and what they're doing. Microsoft asks for feedback but generally doesn't listen to feedback. They believe what they're doing is right, and they will seek out validation for it, but they simply crawl into their shells when the flak starts flying. Microsoft appears to have little genuine confidence in what they're doing: they seem to feign it, but they really desperately want validation for what they're doing, and when they don't get it, they lash out.I see they listened lol...not
Kind of like Star Trek movies,the good ones are always followed by a clunker.
This gets rid of Metro (until reboot, I believe). I'm about to try it out myself
I doubt it. From what I can tell, there seems to be a groupthink mentality at Microsoft.Do you think that anyone working for Microsoft thinks that it is a Design Disaster?
Do you think that anyone working for Microsoft thinks that it is a Design Disaster?
It's all about the apps and us paying for them. Well we all know what we can do about that.![]()
While I do agree with some of the points this guy makes, I don't know if I would go as far as calling Windows 8 a "design disaster."
I find myself trying to locate apps in the jumbled mess that hasn't been pinned to Start Menu for whatever reason - I don't use it often, not really pin-worthy (SQL Server Configuration Manager for example). What used to be a simple task of scrolling down All Programs alphabetically, I find my eyes wander all over the place in All Apps even though I know it's also alphabetical, taking several times longer to locate something. Perhaps all they need to do is bolden and change the color of each "app folder" fonts (Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 for example) and make the apps within have smaller fonts.
don't feed the guy hits. pure retardation being spewed from an "independent blogger"
They're going about it in an odd way, having two disjointed UIs in Windows 8 and all.Microsoft is trying to create a ecosystem that sucks people in. To do this you must have a unified interface.
You are the first but sadly not the last in this thread that for some reason ignore the ability to just type what you are looking for.
As is mentioned other places in this thread, this is NOT a new feature. But for the love of something to hit people with, it sure as heck is ignored a lot.
I just cant shake the feeling that Windows 8 would be better off as two separate operating systems. A classic Windows 8 for regular desktop and notebook systems - which would feel more like a service pack for Windows 7 than a full release and a separate Metro version for touch-enabled hardware.
^This 100%....
I had the same exact feeling 5min after installing Win8 preview on my laptop.....![]()