How does alt-tab function in Windows 8?
Vista was actually pretty great, or were you not there for XP or 2000 on launch? Nvidia got their shit together and the problems stopped. By the time SP1 came out, as long as you'd figured out how to disable UAC, Vista was a rather nice OS, much like 2000 before it--it even used less RAM than my XP box did, and performed better. In fact, of this century's OSes, it's still the lightest one I ran, 2000 aside.
Plus, the black/blue theme just looked a lot better than XP's Playdough approach.
Don't get me wrong--Vista had its problems, but it was universally loathed for reasons that were mostly stupid. It was a case of things getting blown out of proportion; I had people who were telling me about all these things it supposedly did that were so horrible, and, having owned a Vista machine for over a year at that point, I was pretty amused/frustrated to hear about a wide variety of issues or things Vista supposedly did that I had never once encountered.
Windows 7 was really just Vista SP2. Oh, remember how XP was basically horrible before SP2? Same thing with Vista, really. Windows 7 isn't that much different--some under-the-hood stuff has changed, and they added the idiotic pin system/messed up Windows Explorer/made quicklaunch a pain in the ass to find--but other than that, it's basically Vista. It didn't have the driver issues and crashes of Windows Vista because, well, it wasn't all-new architecture.
And how are you gonna navigate to steam? Doubling clicking on tiny icons from 10 feet away? Metro is better for launching applications from far away. The Steam TV interface will only compliment it.
No, Vista was bad. Because it had driver issues, crashes.
Win 8 is incredibly solid... Even if you just use desktop. It's also got desktop improvements like better mass file movement/copying.
Vista was actually pretty great, or were you not there for XP or 2000 on launch? Nvidia got their shit together and the problems stopped. By the time SP1 came out, as long as you'd figured out how to disable UAC, Vista was a rather nice OS, much like 2000 before it--it even used less RAM than my XP box did, and performed better. In fact, of this century's OSes, it's still the lightest one I ran, 2000 aside.
Plus, the black/blue theme just looked a lot better than XP's Playdough approach.
Don't get me wrong--Vista had its problems, but it was universally loathed for reasons that were mostly stupid. It was a case of things getting blown out of proportion; I had people who were telling me about all these things it supposedly did that were so horrible, and, having owned a Vista machine for over a year at that point, I was pretty amused/frustrated to hear about a wide variety of issues or things Vista supposedly did that I had never once encountered.
Windows 7 was really just Vista SP2. Oh, remember how XP was basically horrible before SP2? Same thing with Vista, really. Windows 7 isn't that much different--some under-the-hood stuff has changed, and they added the idiotic pin system/messed up Windows Explorer/made quicklaunch a pain in the ass to find--but other than that, it's basically Vista. It didn't have the driver issues and crashes of Windows Vista because, well, it wasn't all-new architecture.