Yes, that's exactly what happens.
Ok, then that's one qualm I have with W8 dispelled. One.
Yes, that's exactly what happens.
All his issues seem to be with the easily ignorable Metro start screen. I skimmed the article and didn't see anything about performance issues so whatever.
You can't ignore it when it replaces a core OS function - it's the crux of the issue.
Why would you use Windows 8 apps?
What core function does it replace?
What core function does it replace?
I would use apps... because I like software or something? Even when I do not like Metro, there are probably apps that are enjoyable or useful for me.
Actually, it is.
I learned every version of windows without ever consulting a manual
Actually, I never read manuals for the express purpose of gauging its usability and intuitiveness
Even dos was more intuitive. If you ran into a problem, you could just type "help" which is how I learned how to use DOS as a 4 year old.
In windows 8, you make one wrong move and you can become absolutely lost and some peoples only avenue will be to reboot their PC because it will be the only way they will know it will get them to the start screen.
If you design an interface that has to be explained, detailed, taught and you have to convince people it's good... Then it's likely terrible (see: windows 8)
This is basic Ux principles here. You fail on UI, you fail on Ux. windows 8 shouldn't have the assumption that people use the windows key... Or people know shortcuts... Or if something is hidden, someone can find it.
The idea with UI and UX is that it makes things easy on the person. If I know what I have to do, it should be somewhat obvious as how to perform that task, where I need to go to perform that task. Nothing should be buried left for someone to find- EVER. Microsoft has obsufacted windows in their attempt to simplify its use. Is it intuitive? No.
In every version up to including windows 7, stuff wasn't hidden. It was just segmented. Everything accessible depending on how deep you wanted to go- it was your choice. All program critical commands were available on the window, multiple times. Now in metro? It's a confusing mash of a thoughtless approach to achieve a lofty (and unattainable) goal.
I bought a playbook, and kept forgetting about the application pane because it was hidden. The keyboard and status bar swipes? Average user won't remember this stuff. They need stimulus in order to acknowledge actions that are available to them. People see - react - see - react. One tutorial is going to do... What? It doesn't solve anything. I can tell you after 20 years of experience in helping people understand their computers that if there wasn't something there that they could reference as a next step... They will eventually forget about the next step unless they use their computers every single day of their life and utilize that specific task frequently. Most people don't learn after the first lesson. It's a fact of life.
You want people to type out programs in metro to run them? A lot of people write down their passwords because they can't remember them. You assume people will remember how to close a metro app? How to back out of it? How to switch apps? There is two entire layers to the operating system that conform to two entirely different philosophies that have different actions and different results. People who struggle on PC now are going to struggle far more now.
Windows 8 should have been a streamline of core functions, fixed things to operate easier and assisted people to not make common mistakes... Refined approachability... Condensed redundancies and define lines inbetween configurable and operating environments.
Right now it performs "ok" as a tablet OS for accessibility and approachability. not great because of hidden interfaces which is something that plagues playbook too (and to a very minor extent iPad - hidden app bar which isn't exactly priority operation due to app exclusivity)
As a desktop OS, Windows 8 is such a disaster on so many levels.
ugh. that's pretty disappointing.The ability to global search anything without leaving the screen I was working on, and even the ability to drag and drop from there? Example: I'm writing a mail, and I want to attach a file I don't remember where it was located. In Win7 you can just hit the Win Key, search for it and directly drag-drop it to the mail window to insta-attach it. In Win8? You have that "Share" button in the charm bar but surprise! It doesn't interact with Desktop apps... and it doesn't show you a file path either so you can easily browse for it from the attach file dialog itself.
And especially if it's a touch interface, why put the button to send the email so close to the button to (I'm guessing) delete the email?
I also don't understand the reasoning behind the Metro screenshot on the previous page. Why are the icons so small, when a lot of people probably recognize things by their icons on the desktop? Why is there so much empty space in the square? Why is it a square, so even a short label like "JDownloader" or whatever that was supposed to be is cut off?
But pinned taskbar programs do that too, and faster. And I can pin things within the r-click menu. I literally never go into the start menu unless I'm trying to find something obscure.In Win7 the start menu keeps track of every program that you commonly use and within those programs common tasks and documents that you work on.
If you design an interface that has to be explained, detailed, taught and you have to convince people it's good... Then it's likely terrible (see: windows 8)
This is basic Ux principles here. You fail on UI, you fail on Ux. windows 8 shouldn't have the assumption that people use the windows key... Or people know shortcuts... Or if something is hidden, someone can find it.
the only thing the start screen does not do that i have found is the recently used application list. Other than that, it does everything else.Why would you use Windows 8 apps?
What core function does it replace?
the only thing the start screen does not do that i have found is the recently used application list. Other than that, it does everything else.
But pinned taskbar programs do that too, and faster. And I can pin things within the r-click menu. I literally never go into the start menu unless I'm trying to find something obscure.
If you were to try to fill the whole tile with the small icon, obviously it would become pixelated.
I'd upgrade to win8 if I had guarantees this thing would work forever
Im waiting for service pack 1 which will reintroduce the start menu.
Actually, it is.
Even dos was more intuitive.
why wait when you can have it day 0/1 with classic shell.
move your mouse to the lower right click settings, click power. or ctr alt delete, click power. and learn to search for stuff. To find the control panel, type in "co" and hit enter. Come on dude.
It really, really isn't. Usability != obviousness.
Having to learn a new operating system for 15 minutes doesn't automatically make it unusable.
How about no? You know how there are these Windows 8 videos where people who don't know a thing about Windows 8 are put in front of a PC and fumble around for half an hour? Would you really expect better results putting them in front of a command line interface? Seriously?
why wait when you can have it day 0/1 with classic shell.
Wrong, Windows icons haven't been fixed-res bitmaps for quite a while, try it yourself, go to a Windows 7 desktop and use Ctrl-Mouse ScrollWheel to scale up the icons and see for yourself.
If you launch an app and have no clue in how to close it, then it fails. right from the get go. WinRT can get away with it because there's only one button. But on the desktop? LOL
I just launched an app for my dad... he eventually hit the bottom portion of the screen and out popped the app bar with a home button. He pressed it... it just went to the app main menu. He could not figure out how to close the app. This is an example of UI and UX fail. I hand my ipad to my dad, he figures out how to close the app within 5 seconds. I hand him a keyboard and mouse and launch the desktop app... open up my computer and asked him to close it. He figured it out within 5 seconds.
Well, quite simply, I don't like having anything I use on my PC take up the whole screen. You have your peeves and I have mine. I also do multitask regularly and use the Start Menu whenever I do need to pull a program up for the most part.
One button sitting by itself is a lot more obvious than another button among 100+ other buttons of similar size and shape. Non-power users rarely use the windows key, if ever.What's the difference between pressing a button on the devices themselves versus pressing the Windows key on the keyboard? It's not like one is necessarily more obvious than the other.
On a purely practical level, I realised that 90% of my problems are with the concept of "Windows 8 apps". If the metro screen just replaces the start menu, I suppose it's not all that different except for one extra click to get to the desktop.Why would you use Windows 8 apps?
and yeah, that, too.Besides Metro, I think people are missing what a lot of the negative comments have been surrounding Windows 8. Developers and hardware manufacturers are not in love with it because it's beginning to try and close down windows.
Sure, you don't have to make Metro style apps... but at the end of the day you kind of do. Since Metro is the first thing people see, there's a good chance a large percentage of them will adopt it in some way or another. These developers don't have much of a choice because they could miss a large part of the market if they ignore these users. Microsoft is forcing restrictions on these apps, which we only assume will get worse if the Xbox is any indication of where we could head.
Manufacturers don't love it because Microsoft is venturing into PC hardware manufacture, competing directly with their partners at a considerable advantage as it's their OS.
You should skip Windows 8 because it is the beginning of a possible closed platform. Metro crap aside, this is worse. Don't use it.
Apple is guilty of this too, minus the forced tablet interface. People are trying to close down your computer bit by bit, and if you have the power to avoid it, you should.
I learned every version of windows without ever consulting a manual
Actually, I never read manuals for the express purpose of gauging its usability and intuitiveness
Even dos was more intuitive. If you ran into a problem, you could just type "help" which is how I learned how to use DOS as a 4 year old.
In windows 8, you make one wrong move and you can become absolutely lost and some peoples only avenue will be to reboot their PC because it will be the only way they will know it will get them to the start screen.
If you design an interface that has to be explained, detailed, taught and you have to convince people it's good... Then it's likely terrible (see: windows 8)
This is basic Ux principles here. You fail on UI, you fail on Ux. windows 8 shouldn't have the assumption that people use the windows key... Or people know shortcuts... Or if something is hidden, someone can find it.
The idea with UI and UX is that it makes things easy on the person. If I know what I have to do, it should be somewhat obvious as how to perform that task, where I need to go to perform that task. Nothing should be buried left for someone to find- EVER. Microsoft has obsufacted windows in their attempt to simplify its use. Is it intuitive? No.
In every version up to including windows 7, stuff wasn't hidden. It was just segmented. Everything accessible depending on how deep you wanted to go- it was your choice. All program critical commands were available on the window, multiple times. Now in metro? It's a confusing mash of a thoughtless approach to achieve a lofty (and unattainable) goal.
I bought a playbook, and kept forgetting about the application pane because it was hidden. The keyboard and status bar swipes? Average user won't remember this stuff. They need stimulus in order to acknowledge actions that are available to them. People see - react - see - react. One tutorial is going to do... What? It doesn't solve anything. I can tell you after 20 years of experience in helping people understand their computers that if there wasn't something there that they could reference as a next step... They will eventually forget about the next step unless they use their computers every single day of their life and utilize that specific task frequently. Most people don't learn after the first lesson. It's a fact of life.
You want people to type out programs in metro to run them? A lot of people write down their passwords because they can't remember them. You assume people will remember how to close a metro app? How to back out of it? How to switch apps? There is two entire layers to the operating system that conform to two entirely different philosophies that have different actions and different results. People who struggle on PC now are going to struggle far more now.
Windows 8 should have been a streamline of core functions, fixed things to operate easier and assisted people to not make common mistakes... Refined approachability... Condensed redundancies and define lines inbetween configurable and operating environments.
Right now it performs "ok" as a tablet OS for accessibility and approachability. not great because of hidden interfaces which is something that plagues playbook too (and to a very minor extent iPad - hidden app bar which isn't exactly priority operation due to app exclusivity)
As a desktop OS, Windows 8 is such a disaster on so many levels.
I realised that 90% of my problems are with the concept of "Windows 8 apps". If the metro screen just replaces the start menu, I suppose it's not all that different except for one extra click to get to the desktop.
I mean, still, obviously that's not a good reason to upgrade "if you ignore what's new it's almost just as good as the old one", but yeah.
I'd never pay money for the first version of any Windows OS, but that's a different discussion altogether.I'll pay $40 for better load times and supposedly better general performance.
Um... it is. One, on RT or iPad or iPhone - is one button. That's it. That's all you see on the front of the device except for the screen itself. One button. Now look at your keyboard - there's a lot more than one button. To someone unfamiliar with what to press, it's not obvious at all.My mistake. But then again trying to scale up desktop icons isn't something I do on a regular basis
I know your opinion on Windows 8 and nothing I say will change that, but why not just press the Windows key on the keyboard? You say WinRT can get away with it because of the Windows key on the front, similarly the iPad can do it with the home button. What's the difference between pressing a button on the devices themselves versus pressing the Windows key on the keyboard? It's not like one is necessarily more obvious than the other.
The ability to global search anything without leaving the screen I was working on, and even the ability to drag and drop from there? Example: I'm writing a mail, and I want to attach a file I don't remember where it was located. In Win7 you can just hit the Win Key, search for it and directly drag-drop it to the mail window to insta-attach it. In Win8? You have that "Share" button in the charm bar but surprise! It doesn't interact with Desktop apps... and it doesn't show you a file path either so you can easily browse for it from the attach file dialog itself.
All this hate because you dont want to learn how to use the Windows interface efficiently? Do you guys understand how easy it is to never EVER have to see the Metro UI? Sorry guys but the start button is for grandmas and babies and has been since XP. Grandmas and babies will probably like this interface more anyways.
I think this is all blown ridculously out of proportion and is really a non-factor. Its still Windows 7 at its core, which should be what matters.
Everyone listen to this guy.All this hate because you dont want to learn how to use the Windows interface efficiently? Do you guys understand how easy it is to never EVER have to see the Metro UI? Sorry guys but the start button is for grandmas and babies and has been since XP. Grandmas and babies will probably like this interface more anyways.
I think this is all blown ridculously out of proportion and is really a non-factor. Its still Windows 7 at its core, which should be what matters.
This looks awesome. Couple of questions for anyone that's used it (I haven't installed Win8 yet so I can't test it out myself just yet):why wait when you can have it day 0/1 with classic shell.
I don't think there are windows in Metro, but you can have two apps side by side in some sort of 2/3rds one app, 1/3rd the other mode. Win8 includes a desktop mode, which is just like Windows 7 except for having no start button (unless you use classic shell) - so in that mode you still have multiple windows the same as with previous versions of Windows.How does Windows 8 look when you're actually working with it? I mean I always see this screens of this Metro start screen like interface. But how does it look when I have programs open? Are there no windows anymore in Windows?
Computers are complex systems. They have to be learned. The fact that you choose to learn something by poking at it instead of RTFMing is terrible. As a programmer, this mentality is absolutely infuriating. I design a consistent, well-document application and instead of spending 2 minutes to learn by reading, people spend 2 weeks sending me the same dumbass questions over and over until they're done with what they need to do. I'll get the same fucking questions exactly 1 year later. I don't have a manual people need to read. Everything they need to know is right there on the screen, right next to the shit they're wantonly clicking away at.
Nothing about a computer is intuitive to a human. Everything has to be learned. When people say "intuitive" they really mean "like that other thing I used before and already know".
Amen.... this is a key point. You put a user in front of a mouse for the first time in windows and they would have done the same thing (in fact they did... articles having similar "reactions" to windows back then)..... what happened over the next 20 years we learned how to use it and the same thing will happen with metro.
Um... it is. One, on RT or iPad or iPhone - is one button. That's it. That's all you see on the front of the device except for the screen itself. One button. Now look at your keyboard - there's a lot more than one button. To someone unfamiliar with what to press, it's not obvious at all.
wtf... is this for real? share button instead of drag and drop??
Sorry but I just don't get this whole "it's so hard to find" thing. Once you know what button to press (i.e. the one that has a Windows logo on it, that will always be near the bottom left hand corner) that's it. No matter how old/young/computer illiterate a person is surely they can remember one thing?
It is just as efficient as using the start menu to shutdown, same number of clicks. There are of course shortcut keys for the settings menu. Win i or something.Ok, sorry I couldn't respond earlier. Is this supposed to be efficient?
Windows Key > Shutdown
Windows Key > Control Panel
That's efficient!
Computers are complex systems. They have to be learned. The fact that you choose to learn something by poking at it instead of RTFMing is terrible. As a programmer, this mentality is absolutely infuriating. I design a consistent, well-document application and instead of spending 2 minutes to learn by reading, people spend 2 weeks sending me the same dumbass questions over and over until they're done with what they need to do. I'll get the same fucking questions exactly 1 year later. I don't have a manual people need to read. Everything they need to know is right there on the screen, right next to the shit they're wantonly clicking away at.
Nothing about a computer is intuitive to a human. Everything has to be learned. When people say "intuitive" they really mean "like that other thing I used before and already know".
Not only do I not believe that you were mastering DOS via help or /? at 4 years of age (well before most kids know their ABCs), I don't believe a kid who could do that could become absolutely lost in Windows 8.
ALL interfaces and designs have to be explained, detailed, and taught. To say that Windows 8 takes more than 2 minute of explanation to anyone who is familiar with Windows 7 or a modern phone is absolute horse shit. If you have an interface that needs zero explanation than you either have an incredibly simple set of actions a user can perform or you have simply designed it to look like things people are already familiar with - things that have been detailed and explained to them in the past.
Windows 8's UI isn't a failure any more than any modern tablet or phone UI is. Grandma doesn't need the Windows key or shortcuts to do anything. Those are for experienced users. If you need to find something, you just search for it, in the simplest manner possible. Start. Typing. Nothing a normal user would need to do is "buried". Start. Typing.
And Windows has always hidden away plenty of things. Windows has always had undocumented shit to tinker with. The fucking registry is pretty much the definition of "Hide shit away so normal users don't fuck shit up because they don't know what the fuck they're doing because they're too damned lazy to RTFM". Windows has always hidden stuff away, and it's for the benefit of users. Advanced users who want extra control and system administrators do all sorts of shit on a daily basis that normal users consider to be "magic".
You're intentionally confusing "I refuse to take 2 minutes to learn where the things regular users need are" and "hidden".
You're right. An average user only learns what they frequently use. And they only use what they need. An average user will learn how to do what they need to do over time. I don't give a shit that my dad doesn't remember how to create a picture-in-picture effect when he's making DVDs of family videos. And neither does he. Because he doesn't use it and doesn't need it. If he wants to do it he can ask me and I can show him and he'll write down notes on how to do it if he thinks he'll use it in the future. You're acting as if people are incapable of learning when the problem is people are lazy and will learn as little as possible to do what they need to do.
Yes, people should know how to type. My dad doesn't know what the fuck Nero Vision, Nero Recode, Nero SoundTrax, etc. all do. He opens up the Start menu and types in "DVD" and sees "Create a DVD using Nero..." or whatever the fuck it says. You don't need to remember actual executable filenames, or even program names.
Yes, there are two layers. And the vast majority of users will be perfectly fine spending the vast majority of their time in the dumbed down UI browsing the internet and looking at their Facebook updates. And that UI is far simpler, easier, and more intuitive than the traditional desktop.
Windows 8 is streamlined for "core" functions. The vast majority of users will be fine sitting in Metro all day long. People will have to learn the nuances of interface by using it just as they had to for their phone. People will be just fine, and everyone crying about it is just yelling at the wind. For you, the desktop is still there. I know I plan to be on the desktop 100% of the time, as I absolutely fucking hate the new interface. But that doesn't make it a bad interface by any means. It's going to be great for the masses once people like you stop scaring them into thinking it's a unnavigable minefield.
I never see my desktop. What I do see is my browser window open with perhaps downloads occurring, a chat window on the side, maybe a temperature sensor or task monitor and whatever other stuff I may need to have visible. Letting me run additional programs or open files without interrupting or hiding the other "background" jobs has been and still is a good idea since the start button in Windows 95. Taking that away is dumb.