Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta  (Read 13710 times)

Description:

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline commodorejohn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2010
  • Posts: 3165
    • Show only replies by commodorejohn
    • http://www.commodorejohn.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #44 from previous page: March 04, 2012, 08:09:15 PM »
Hey, we can all have a good laugh at the days of front-panel switches, but at least with the Altair there wasn't a third party controlling every software installation...
Computers: Amiga 1200, DEC VAXStation 4000/60, DEC MicroPDP-11/73
Synthesizers: Roland JX-10/MT-32/D-10, Oberheim Matrix-6, Yamaha DX7/FB-01, Korg MS-20 Mini, Ensoniq Mirage/SQ-80, Sequential Circuits Prophet-600, Hohner String Performer

"\'Legacy code\' often differs from its suggested alternative by actually working and scaling." - Bjarne Stroustrup
 

Offline kolla

Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #45 on: March 04, 2012, 09:23:06 PM »
Quote from: persia;682440
Linux Unity
There's no such thing.
B5D6A1D019D5D45BCC56F4782AC220D8B3E2A6CC
---
A3000/060CSPPC+CVPPC/128MB + 256MB BigRAM/Deneb USB
A4000/CS060/Mediator4000Di/Voodoo5/128MB
A1200/Blz1260/IndyAGA/192MB
A1200/Blz1260/64MB
A1200/Blz1230III/32MB
A1200/ACA1221
A600/V600v2/Subway USB
A600/Apollo630/32MB
A600/A6095
CD32/SX32/32MB/Plipbox
CD32/TF328
A500/V500v2
A500/MTec520
CDTV
MiSTer, MiST, FleaFPGAs and original Minimig
Peg1, SAM440 and Mac minis with MorphOS
 

Offline DaBest

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Join Date: Jan 2003
  • Posts: 226
    • Show only replies by DaBest
    • http://www.fennecadventures.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #46 on: March 05, 2012, 01:38:20 AM »
Well....I installed it. Then removed it. Don't need it. They must be really bored.
Quote
\\"Keep it simple STUPID\\"
                    \\" Keep ur AMIGA\\"
:whack:

A4000/040  Desk Top is Back up and running :rtfm:
Picasso4, X-Surf2, 1.2 GIG HD, 24x10x40 CDR, OS3.9,18 MGS of RAM
 

Offline psxphill

Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #47 on: March 05, 2012, 12:28:09 PM »
Quote from: LoadWB;682449
My problem is that while the user interfaces are being dumbed-down to match a massive untapped user base, technically-savvy users are being shat on and told they have to dumb-down.

Windows 8 isn't dumbed down, at least on x86/x64 platforms. It's just different.
 
There are many improvements unrelated to metro, which is why they allow you to install on a machine that doesn't meet the resolution requirements of metro. Task manager & the file copy progress are much better for instance.
 

Offline SysAdmin

  • News posting Auto Agent
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2009
  • Posts: 1393
    • Show only replies by SysAdmin
    • http://www.a-eon.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #48 on: March 05, 2012, 01:24:02 PM »
« Last Edit: March 05, 2012, 08:44:48 PM by SysAdmin »
Posts on this account before August 4th, 2012 don\'t belong to me.
 

Offline commodorejohn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2010
  • Posts: 3165
    • Show only replies by commodorejohn
    • http://www.commodorejohn.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #49 on: March 05, 2012, 04:54:47 PM »
Quote from: psxphill;682540
Windows 8 isn't dumbed down, at least on x86/x64 platforms. It's just different.
 
There are many improvements unrelated to metro, which is why they allow you to install on a machine that doesn't meet the resolution requirements of metro. Task manager & the file copy progress are much better for instance.
It may indeed have tons of architectural improvements under the hood - by all accounts it's quite snappy, which is always nice (and a rare pleasure for any version of Windows at launch.) However, the Metro UI absolutely is dumbed down - there's the inherent dumbness in trying to push a tablet/phone UI on a desktop/laptop environment, however nice of a tablet/phone UI it might be, but by many accounts there are things that are just plain stupid (they tried to kill Alt+Tab. They didn't succeed, because of all the screaming, but the mere fact that they tried should point to how wrong-headed they're being about serving the needs of Windows users. And the "Start screen" is quite frankly a massive, pointless waste of space in a desktop environment, but they're not giving you the option to get rid of it.)

I have no problem whatsoever with performance improvements - in fact, I am all for anything that makes Windows lighter and faster. I am less pleased at the attempt to move away from native code and the Win32 API and onto Microsoft's proprietary VM (primarily because any VM is a waste, but also because backwards compatibility is half the reason I use Windows in the first place,) but for the moment they haven't ditched it, so I'll leave that argument until its proper time. What I cannot tolerate is a bunch of upstart "designers" telling me that I need to just get used to them changing things on me because they need a prominent place to display their little art project, so that people will appreciate it as is their due. Yeah, here's your appreciation, Metro Team: I'm not buying it. Not unless someone in management reins you in and makes your tablet OS entirely 100% optional on my non-tablet. Period.
Computers: Amiga 1200, DEC VAXStation 4000/60, DEC MicroPDP-11/73
Synthesizers: Roland JX-10/MT-32/D-10, Oberheim Matrix-6, Yamaha DX7/FB-01, Korg MS-20 Mini, Ensoniq Mirage/SQ-80, Sequential Circuits Prophet-600, Hohner String Performer

"\'Legacy code\' often differs from its suggested alternative by actually working and scaling." - Bjarne Stroustrup
 

Offline Duce

  • Off to greener pastures
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Jul 2009
  • Posts: 1699
    • Show only replies by Duce
    • http://amigabbs.blogspot.com/
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #50 on: March 06, 2012, 11:00:44 AM »
Metro (tile) UI is optional, and the desktop interface is not much different than Win 7 once you get past the changes to start button.  Your run command, cmd line and similar are still there...

However, there is a lot to be said for the "who wants/needs this?" critics - and I am one of those critics, and also a person that works in supporting MS products as a MCSE/MSCA for a living.  Win 8 is snappy, runs well, but Metro brings nothing to me over Windows 7, really.  I won't shell out good money for a "new" OS, just to have to revert it to a familiar GUI desktop via settings or group policy.  I see no real way I could use the Metro UI in a productive manner in the ways I currently use computers, and many others - a vast majority of serious computer users in fact, likely feel the same.  All the good intentions of MS and others to "appify" the desktop on traditional computers is a real, real hard sell.  I fail to see value in such an interface on a serious level on the desktop if said interface is merely a way to launch programs into traditional desktop modes for productivity purposes.  It comes off as a hacky skinned interface to me, for how I use a computer anyways.

I have zero intentions of ever owning a W8 tablet, but for some there *might* be some appeal in the "Apple" sense of using a more tablet-like interface on a desktop.  The Metro UI might be very nice to use with an input device similar to the Apple magic trackpad and gestures, but for me W8/Metro is a complete nightmare to try and use via traditional input methods with that Metro UI.

But you also have to bear in mind that people 1 year from now will simply have this OS on the machines they buy off the store shelves, so it's forced adoption in a wide sense.  A strategy that may prove to be entirely worthless if it turns out that 95% of the users of Windows 8 are simply running it with Metro entirely turned off.  I suspect that will be the case for many users.
 

Offline persiaTopic starter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Sep 2006
  • Posts: 3753
    • Show only replies by persia
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #51 on: March 06, 2012, 02:26:22 PM »
The problem in IT has always been forecasting the future.  It's an industry younger than a lot of the people in it.  Personal computers started out in people's garages and a plaything of geeks and have become a household appliance.

What percentage of people prefer a touch or touch like interface?  The tablet marketplace is exploding while laptop and desktop sales stagnate.  If I were a manufacturer I could easily read that as the market demanding more touch devices.  The click the windows ball and have all your programs listed is an outdated paradigm, most people just pin their favourite apps to the non-dock dock bar at the bottom and never touch the "start" ball.  The question is what makes the most sense to replace it with.  Would metro make more sense if your computer had a kinect connected to it?
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

What we\'re witnessing is the sad, lonely crowing of that last, doomed cock.
 

Offline runequester

  • It\'s Amiga time!
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Oct 2009
  • Posts: 3695
    • Show only replies by runequester
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #52 on: March 06, 2012, 05:00:31 PM »
Well eh. It's been how many months since windows 7 came out? Time for people to pay the piper again (and again for the undoubtedly accompanying version of office)
 

Offline commodorejohn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2010
  • Posts: 3165
    • Show only replies by commodorejohn
    • http://www.commodorejohn.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #53 on: March 06, 2012, 05:11:24 PM »
Quote from: persia;682685
The problem in IT has always been forecasting the future.  It's an industry younger than a lot of the people in it.  Personal computers started out in people's garages and a plaything of geeks and have become a household appliance.
IT has been a full-fledged industry since the '50s. And forecasting the future is always tricky, but one consistent lesson from those 60-odd years has been that change for change's sake is going to be derided, disliked, and usually ultimately ignored. Technologies that don't offer concrete improvements don't tend to stick around.

(Even technologies that do offer improvements have to justify the cost of the transition in time and effort - which is why the US still uses the imperial measurement system and not metric. Moving to an entirely different UI paradigm on a device not even designed for it is likely to be a hell of a transition cost.)

Quote
What percentage of people prefer a touch or touch like interface?  The tablet marketplace is exploding while laptop and desktop sales stagnate.  If I were a manufacturer I could easily read that as the market demanding more touch devices.
And thus we see the folly of making all decisions based on sales-driven market research. If Microsoft had bothered to look further into the question, they might've realized that people aren't not using laptops and desktops just because they aren't buying new ones as often. And if they paid more attention to use instead of sales, those countless fleets of XP workstations out in the field might tell them something...

"You can't invent a customer to fit your research." It's a lesson that somehow we keep failing to learn.

Quote
The click the windows ball and have all your programs listed is an outdated paradigm, most people just pin their favourite apps to the non-dock dock bar at the bottom and never touch the "start" ball.  The question is what makes the most sense to replace it with.
The question is whether it needs replacing at all, and the answer is "no." "Outdated" as a slur in UI design is a warning sign that you're entering change-for-change's-sake territory, and UI is the absolute worst place for that kind of thinking. The Start menu has survived from 1995-present by being a useful feature, even if not everybody uses it all the time. It doesn't need to be changed just because it's old. I'm older than the Start menu, and I might guess that you are - should we be thrown out and be replaced with vapid stand-ins simply for being "outdated?"

Quote
Would metro make more sense if your computer had a kinect connected to it?
No.
Computers: Amiga 1200, DEC VAXStation 4000/60, DEC MicroPDP-11/73
Synthesizers: Roland JX-10/MT-32/D-10, Oberheim Matrix-6, Yamaha DX7/FB-01, Korg MS-20 Mini, Ensoniq Mirage/SQ-80, Sequential Circuits Prophet-600, Hohner String Performer

"\'Legacy code\' often differs from its suggested alternative by actually working and scaling." - Bjarne Stroustrup
 

Offline persiaTopic starter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Sep 2006
  • Posts: 3753
    • Show only replies by persia
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #54 on: March 06, 2012, 07:05:07 PM »
Have you ever heard one Mac user say "Gee, what we need is a round ball that you click that lists the contents of your applications folder?"?  But of course we do need to be sure that what we replace it with is better from a UI perspective.  I agree with you that we aren't to the touch pad, kinect, touch screen phase in the PC world yet and it's not clear that will end up the direction.  The Metro developers clearly believe that it is the direction, but for the operating system to lead rather than follow is dangerous.

Apple is moving iOS and OS X back together, but they are doing it in steps, making sure that the hardware & software work together in a logical way.  Microsoft seems bound and determined to skip all those steps in between and plunk a fully developed unified desktop/tablet OS down this year.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

What we\'re witnessing is the sad, lonely crowing of that last, doomed cock.
 

Offline commodorejohn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2010
  • Posts: 3165
    • Show only replies by commodorejohn
    • http://www.commodorejohn.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #55 on: March 06, 2012, 07:26:31 PM »
Quote from: persia;682717
Have you ever heard one Mac user say "Gee, what we need is a round ball that you click that lists the contents of your applications folder?"?
No, I have not, but here's the thing:

A. Mac is not Windows, and their users do not expect either to be the other. It would be generally unreasonable of them to. (Any given user probably has a few behaviors they'd like to see carried over, but if they were really unhappy with one they'd probably switch.) Windows users do expect Windows to be Windows, though, and rightfully so.

And B. Mac OS has actually had equivalent functionality for a long time (since its inception? At least since System 6.) In classic Mac OS, you can add program shortcuts (or even programs, period) to the Apple menu simply by placing them in the Apple menu folder, exactly like the Start menu - in later versions, it even supports sub-folders. OS X moves this functionality to the Dock, but the end result is roughly the same. (Minus the sub-folders, annoyingly, but that's details.)

Having an application-shortcuts menu is a tremendously useful thing - note how many implementations of this functionality are available on Aminet, for instance. Even Microsoft isn't trying to ditch it entirely, because that would be stupid even by Metro standards - they're just trying to make it waste enormous amounts of screen space and cover up everything you're doing every time you want to launch a program.
Computers: Amiga 1200, DEC VAXStation 4000/60, DEC MicroPDP-11/73
Synthesizers: Roland JX-10/MT-32/D-10, Oberheim Matrix-6, Yamaha DX7/FB-01, Korg MS-20 Mini, Ensoniq Mirage/SQ-80, Sequential Circuits Prophet-600, Hohner String Performer

"\'Legacy code\' often differs from its suggested alternative by actually working and scaling." - Bjarne Stroustrup
 

Offline psxphill

Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #56 on: March 06, 2012, 10:25:54 PM »
Quote from: commodorejohn;682566
(they tried to kill Alt+Tab. They didn't succeed, because of all the screaming, but the mere fact that they tried should point to how wrong-headed they're being about serving the needs of Windows users.

Both the consumer & developer preview have alt+tab, I don't think there was ever a chance it would disappear.
 
Windows 8 is ambitious but it is not finished yet. Screaming is unlikely to have any positive effect. Everyone at Microsoft should be running the preview by now & they are Windows users too.
 

Offline commodorejohn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2010
  • Posts: 3165
    • Show only replies by commodorejohn
    • http://www.commodorejohn.com
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #57 on: March 06, 2012, 10:48:13 PM »
"Ambitious" is only a positive if the aims are good. Windows 8 with Metro is a retrogression to the attempts at operating systems for the computer-illiterate of the 1990s, like Microsoft Bob and Packard Bell Navigator. It's ambitious in the sense that Smith & Wesson switching all their product lines to Nerf guns is ambitious - ballsy, yes, but a completely terrible idea in every other respect.

(Also, I don't know how "unfinished" it can possibly be, when they're talking about rolling it out this fall...)

(According to the previously-mentioned Register article, the developer preview attempted to ditch Alt+Tab, but as I haven't used that I'll defer to those who have.)
« Last Edit: March 06, 2012, 10:59:58 PM by commodorejohn »
Computers: Amiga 1200, DEC VAXStation 4000/60, DEC MicroPDP-11/73
Synthesizers: Roland JX-10/MT-32/D-10, Oberheim Matrix-6, Yamaha DX7/FB-01, Korg MS-20 Mini, Ensoniq Mirage/SQ-80, Sequential Circuits Prophet-600, Hohner String Performer

"\'Legacy code\' often differs from its suggested alternative by actually working and scaling." - Bjarne Stroustrup
 

Offline Duce

  • Off to greener pastures
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Jul 2009
  • Posts: 1699
    • Show only replies by Duce
    • http://amigabbs.blogspot.com/
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #58 on: March 06, 2012, 11:38:52 PM »
Quote from: runequester;682702
Well eh. It's been how many months since windows 7 came out? Time for people to pay the piper again (and again for the undoubtedly accompanying version of office)


Uhh, Win 7 has been out for well over 2 years.  RTM was in July, 2009 - retail in October, 2009.
 

Offline runequester

  • It\'s Amiga time!
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Oct 2009
  • Posts: 3695
    • Show only replies by runequester
Re: MS Windows 8 Consumer Beta
« Reply #59 on: March 07, 2012, 01:50:09 AM »
Quote from: Duce;682742
Uhh, Win 7 has been out for well over 2 years.  RTM was in July, 2009 - retail in October, 2009.


well, then you are well overdue to cough up another 100 bucks.