I've been dreading Windows 8 ever since I saw this laptop deal for Black Friday:
https://www.officedepot.com/a/produc...ptop-Computer/
I'm a fan of HP and showed it to my wife and she said "Go ahead and get it."
After hearing such horror stories and worst case scenarios with UEFI and 8, I really didn't care to get it. I half-heartedly tried to talk my wife out of it, saying that her old laptop is just fine and even has a new SSD. But she still wanted it. It came in early last week. I postponed working on it for a day or so and finally grit my teeth and cracked open the box and started.
First impression was "What a mess!" as I looked upon the start screen. There was no way my wife would go for it. But thankfully, I found the desktop and from there, started to work things out. I found the Windows 8 key, now hidden inside the BIOS instead of being on a sticker underneath the laptop like it used to be using Belarc Advisor. I then printed it out. From there, I just said "Screw it!" I took out the old mechanical hard drive and put in her SSD from her old laptop and then promptly booted it up. Of course, it wouldn't boot to a Windows 7 SSD, this I knew already. I went into the BIOS, found the boot order, changed it to the DVD drive, put in my copy of Windows 8 I downloaded from Piratebay, since I couldn't get a regular copy from Microsoft, and did a fresh install, getting rid of all the bloatware that came with the new laptop.
From there everything when pretty peachy. Since the serial was in the BIOS there was no need to enter it in throughout or after the installation. It was automatically activated which I thought was pretty cool. I actually like that. After installing all the drivers I put in my favorite anti-virus security suite and then installed Classic Shell, which bypasses the awful start screen and makes the OS go direct to the desktop. It also installed the "Start" button Microsoft excluded in 8 which users like me would sorely miss.
All in all, I'd say 8 is a pretty darn good OS from a user's POV. It seems to be fast and works great so far. Of course, my wife only plays online games and such so the requirements aren't too high to begin with.
And she loves it! That right there made messing with 8 all worth it. It plays the games perfectly and she is amazed by how fast it is.
Still, I really, really, really wish she'd use Kubuntu instead. Kubuntu is so much cooler. *sigh*
https://www.officedepot.com/a/produc...ptop-Computer/
I'm a fan of HP and showed it to my wife and she said "Go ahead and get it."
After hearing such horror stories and worst case scenarios with UEFI and 8, I really didn't care to get it. I half-heartedly tried to talk my wife out of it, saying that her old laptop is just fine and even has a new SSD. But she still wanted it. It came in early last week. I postponed working on it for a day or so and finally grit my teeth and cracked open the box and started.
First impression was "What a mess!" as I looked upon the start screen. There was no way my wife would go for it. But thankfully, I found the desktop and from there, started to work things out. I found the Windows 8 key, now hidden inside the BIOS instead of being on a sticker underneath the laptop like it used to be using Belarc Advisor. I then printed it out. From there, I just said "Screw it!" I took out the old mechanical hard drive and put in her SSD from her old laptop and then promptly booted it up. Of course, it wouldn't boot to a Windows 7 SSD, this I knew already. I went into the BIOS, found the boot order, changed it to the DVD drive, put in my copy of Windows 8 I downloaded from Piratebay, since I couldn't get a regular copy from Microsoft, and did a fresh install, getting rid of all the bloatware that came with the new laptop.
From there everything when pretty peachy. Since the serial was in the BIOS there was no need to enter it in throughout or after the installation. It was automatically activated which I thought was pretty cool. I actually like that. After installing all the drivers I put in my favorite anti-virus security suite and then installed Classic Shell, which bypasses the awful start screen and makes the OS go direct to the desktop. It also installed the "Start" button Microsoft excluded in 8 which users like me would sorely miss.
All in all, I'd say 8 is a pretty darn good OS from a user's POV. It seems to be fast and works great so far. Of course, my wife only plays online games and such so the requirements aren't too high to begin with.
And she loves it! That right there made messing with 8 all worth it. It plays the games perfectly and she is amazed by how fast it is.
Still, I really, really, really wish she'd use Kubuntu instead. Kubuntu is so much cooler. *sigh*
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