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I just finished helping somebody with a new laptop with Win8 on it get it up and running. It was definitely a frustrating experience. The funny part was to just play solitaire, you had to download it, it wasn't pre-installed (but that might be the manufacturer's fault, not Microsoft's). Then, every time they wanted to play it, it asked for her x-box id. This 70 year old woman does not have an x-box or said id!
There are parts of Win 8 that are actually nice, but the overall implementation is very poor. I don't like Ubuntu's Unity, but I would take it any day over Win8.
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mmm.... It makes one wonder just how much of Win8's shortcomings will be explained away as the OEM's fault?"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
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There's that thousand sun hate heat again, lol, phew, somebody open a WINDOW, lol, and turn on a fan!
Edit: lol @ "Windows app store is more empty than Soviet grocery store shelves". This doesn't surprise me since MS was peeving a lot of developers off, secrecy, confusion and misinformation.Last edited by tek_heretik; Dec 10, 2012, 10:46 PM.
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Originally posted by tek_heretik View PostThere's that thousand sun hate heat again, lol, phew, somebody open a WINDOW, lol, and turn on a fan!
Edit: lol @ "Windows app store is more empty than Soviet grocery store shelves". This doesn't surprise me since MS was peeving a lot of developers off, secrecy, confusion and misinformation.
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Originally posted by whatthefunk View PostI think this is going to be the nail in the coffin. These mobile devices really come down to the apps available. Apple and Android have a huge number of apps while Microsoft has very few. Because of this, the Microsoft market share is not going to increase much and because the market share wont grow, theres no point in developers spending their time to port their apps to Windows.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View Postmmm.... It makes one wonder just how much of Win8's shortcomings will be explained away as the OEM's fault?
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All of the above comments I agree with. Now, I will admit that Windows did do decent job with Win7. But, how long can they last with the momentum of Win7 success? Mobile and facebook have become so popular that most people are just checking all their updates on mobile. Win7 is still obviously a standard now in the business world, but to home users, they are moving to mobile and Win8 tried to get in on the market. Well Microsoft, you just can't have everything.
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Originally posted by buckeyered80 View PostAll of the above comments I agree with. Now, I will admit that Windows did do decent job with Win7. But, how long can they last with the momentum of Win7 success? Mobile and facebook have become so popular that most people are just checking all their updates on mobile. Win7 is still obviously a standard now in the business world, but to home users, they are moving to mobile and Win8 tried to get in on the market. Well Microsoft, you just can't have everything.
The way it is now, it is extremely difficult to use efficiently in a business environment (maybe in a few years that will change, once new software has caught up). Yes, you can get to something that resembles the traditional desktop metaphor, but only in appearance, it doesn't function that way at all. And in a home environment, it is only slightly more useable, unless your total requirements revolve only around twitter, facebook and web browsing. Gnome-shell and Unity tried to force a tablet interface onto a desktop and it hasn't been well received. Microsoft should have learned from their example. Instead they took the worst parts of what they did and built on that.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, KDE has the best implimentation -- the same core underlying technology that allows a UI to be built to fit the form factor at hand.
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Remember when VISTA turned out to be such a stinker? Microsoft was trying to force everyone to upgrade to it, but people refused and opted for PCs with XP installed. So many, in fact, that to fight the tide of migration to Linux and Apple, Microsoft extended the life of XP, which was the best version of Windows up to that time.
Well, I suspect that the failure of Win8 on PCs will force Microsoft to extend the life of Win7, which is now the best version of Windows ever released. I suspect that Win7 could be called WinLast, because I predict that Microsoft will do vanity and cosmetic upgrades to it to minimize the ongoing migration to Linux.
They'll just cycle the version number and churn the treadmill for more cash, without making any fundamental changes to Win7, while trying to claw their way out of the smartphone/tablet marketshare basement. So far, innovation and technical brilliance isn't doing it for them, so they are moving to their more tried and trusted methods of "competing"."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostRemember when VISTA turned out to be such a stinker? Microsoft was trying to force everyone to upgrade to it, but people refused and opted for PCs with XP installed. So many, in fact, that to fight the tide of migration to Linux and Apple, Microsoft extended the life of XP, which was the best version of Windows up to that time.
Well, I suspect that the failure of Win8 on PCs will force Microsoft to extend the life of Win7, which is now the best version of Windows ever released. I suspect that Win7 could be called WinLast, because I predict that Microsoft will do vanity and cosmetic upgrades to it to minimize the ongoing migration to Linux.
They'll just cycle the version number and churn the treadmill for more cash, without making any fundamental changes to Win7, while trying to claw their way out of the smartphone/tablet marketshare basement. So far, innovation and technical brilliance isn't doing it for them, so they are moving to their more tried and trusted methods of "competing".
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