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Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Windows 8 Consumer Preview Gets Reviewed

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As we reported this morning, the Windows 8 consumer preview is here. Now is your chance to try out the new Metro user interface and other features that Microsoft is working on with the new operating system.
While the verdict is still out for some people in regards to their opinion on the changes made to the consumer preview of Windows 8, the response from tech publications has been largely positive.
Gizmodo’s Mat Honan listed his five favorite new features in the Windows 8 consumer preview. The big selling points for him was how fast and fluid the operating system is. It also appears that Internet Explore 10 may be the first good browser that Microsoft has ever developed.
CNet’s Seth Rosenblat called Windows 8 “the most integrated and capable operating system Microsoft has ever put out.” He does, however, feel that Windows 8 “attempt to unify the desktop and the tablet” could end badly for the company. He’s staying optimistic, but says “there’s not much room for missteps.
Tom Warren of The Verge was also optimistic of the new operating system, but like Rosenblat had his reservations. Microsoft is praised for its move to unify its three platforms (Windows, Xbox and Windows Phone) under Metro, but it remains to be seen if customers will care. He says that the true test for Windows 8 now is what developers do with it.
Mashable’s Peter Pachal was more critical of Microsoft’s approach to unify all of its products under Metro. He rightly says that people “don’t do all the same things on a tablet that you do on a PC, and when you do, the experience is different.” He also says that the Metro user interface was obviously designed with touch in mind while mouse control was somewhat iffy with keyboard controls faring better.
David Pogue from the New York Times may be the most excited for Windows 8. He says that its successful because it works and it’s a design that’s entirely Microsoft. In what may be the most ridiculous praise yet, Pogue says that Microsoft gets the “religion of simplicity and beauty.”
Some people have been less than kind to the new design. Ars Technica’s Creative Director Aurich Lawson had this to say on Twitter:
Windows 8 is such a mess. Big flat tiles with crude white icons, glassy window frames, and then random gradients on the stupid “flat” fish. 4 hours ago via Twitter for Mac ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto
Freelance tech journalist Elias Makos apparently doesn’t like how Office apps look on Windows 8:
I get all excited when I see Windows 8′s sleek tablet experience and then throw up when I see desktop Office apps running on it. 17 minutes ago via Echofon ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by@socialditto
Rafael Magu, who is followed by President Obama so he must be important, tries to download the Windows 8 consumer preview on his Mac and is hilariously greeted with an executable:
Went on to download Windows 8 CP. Microsoft site gives me an EXECUTABLE. On a Mac. #facepalm 14 minutes ago via Echofon ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by@socialditto
The important thing to remember is that this is the Windows 8 consumer preview and as such, it will still have bugs and problems that Windows wants a large number of users to help them find and catalog.
With such early positive reviews, we may be looking at something amazing from Microsoft. Of course, as tech journalists we are wowed by a lot of things that the general public doesn’t care about.
With Apple’s current stranglehold on a lot of the computing industry, it’s all up to Microsoft and its league of developers now to convince people that what they do is better than what anybody else does.
One of the best ways to really test a new operating system is to have somebody who uses a different OS test it out. Here’s a great video review from a Linux user making their way through Windows 8. It’s absolutely fascinating:
Have you installed the Windows 8 consumer preview yet? What do you think? What do you like or hate? Let us know in the comments.

Windows 8 Brings A Host Of New Features

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As we reported this morning, Microsoft has made the consumer preview of Windows 8 available as a free download today. The new OS aims to revolutionize Windows, unifying user experience across multiple platforms – laptop/desktop computers, phones and tablets, and the Xbox gaming console.
The big new feature of Windows 8 is the Metro user interface. Windows Phone users have had the Metro interface since 2010, and Xbox Live users have had it since the most recent update late last year. The paned interface replaces the Start menu on desktops and laptops. It arranges your Windows apps in a tiled format. Clicking a tile opens the associated app. Apps can also display information in their pane. A weather app can display local weather information in its pane, and then bring up more information when you click the pane to open the app. Metro displays apps in page format, as well. Users can rearrange their Metro apps and pages into whatever order they want, just like on a smartphone or tablet.
In a move that will be jarring to some long-time Windows users, Windows 8 does away with the Start button completely. Sort of. The button itself is gone, that’s true, and the Metro interface replaces the Start menu. Don’t panic just yet, though: the way to access Start screen is pretty familiar: you get there by clicking in the lower left corner of the screen.
The interface isn’t all about Metro, though. Windows 8 keeps the traditional desktop interface and the good old start bar, but gives it a major makeover. Moving your mouse around the screen gives you access to a bunch of slick new ways to interact with your computer. As previously mentioned, the lower left corner takes you to the start screen. Move the mouse to the upper left corner and see your most recently-used app. Move down from there, and you get a list of more recent apps. Moving down from the top right or up from the bottom right shows the “charms.” These are a few basic system functions including search, share options, access to the Start screen, a device list, and your settings.
Another key feature of Windows 8 is the Windows Store. That’s right, Windows is finally getting an app store. Apps are purchased from the store with a Microsoft account. Installing an app from the store puts it on your Start Screen. Purchasing an app gives you a license to put that app on up to 5 machines total.
SkyDrive is Windows 8’s new cloud storage and connection system. Users sign into SkyDrive on all of their Windows machines, and SkyDrive syncs their apps, personalized settings, and files across all devices they’re signed into. SkyDrive also connects with various web services includeing Facebook and Flickr to keep users’ photos and files synced.
The Windows 8 consumer preview is available now for free and can be downloadedhere. For more on Windows 8’s features, check out here. To see all our Windows 8 coverage, including Twitter reactions and reviews, go here.
It bears repeating that the Windows 8 Consumer Preview is just that: a preview. It’s not the final version of the OS, and as such is bound to have some bugs that still need squashing. Microsoft has not yet announced a release date for Windows 8, but a late third or early fourth quarter release seems fairly likely.

Windows 8 Preview Released, Twitter Reacts

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Today Microsoft released a Consumer Preview of its new Windows 8 operating system at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, to much interest – the preview has already been downloaded over 3 million times, according to USA Today.
Steven Sinofsky, president of the Windows and Windows Live Division at Microsoft states, “with Windows 8, we reimagined the different ways people interact with their PC and how to make everything feel like a natural extension of the device, whether using a Windows 8 tablet, laptop or all-in-one,” adding that Windows 8 is “a generational change for Windows.” The new tile-based user interface of the operating system is based on Microsoft’s Metro design language, and is thoroughly different in form, as compared to Windows version of the past – there’s no start button.
Here are some Twitter posts regarding the preview:
Okay, Windows 8 freaking rocks. I approve 110% 1 hour ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by@socialditto
Installing windows 8. It better be good. 1 minute ago via Twitter for Android ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto
Danke Windows 8, dass du in meiner VB nicht funktionierst. 3 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by@socialditto
Really not keen on @Windows 8 so far Metro and standard desktop clash to much, Just not right in desktop env. Mouse support is just rubbish. 1 minute ago via Twitterrific for Mac ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto
FREAKING OUT over how good this windows 8 is. I WANT TO LIVE IN MY COMPUTER #WaitIAlreadyDo 1 minute ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by@socialditto
Windows 8 failt hard!!! 3 minutes ago via Twitter for Android ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto
I gotta say, Windows 8 looks pretty sweet. 5 hours ago via Twitterrific for Mac ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto
 
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