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I think you have hit the nail right on the head.
I do have fears about Windows 8. The previews have left me pretty cold. I don't really "get" Metro (which maybe explains so much of my previous comments/posts.) I guess I have the mindset of "how am I going to get my work done?" and it seems so much of the new design gets in the way of that mentality.
I think the new UI paradyme in Redmond must be as follows.
To boldy go where no other UI has gone before and get in the way of anyone doing anything useful whilst keeping the user reminded whom they are beholden to for even allowing them the priviledge of using a computer.
I just wish that there were some registry or group policy thing I could set that told the OS that get out of my face. Don't ask for admin privs for doing a directory copy and all that other crap you think you must put in place to 'protect me', I just want to get stuff done.
And there is a squadron of pigs flying over Battersea Power Station as I speak.
{In other words, fat chance of that happening}




Member since:
2009-05-19
Too true, IMHO - It was a pretty big step-up from just about anything that was available on an affordable home computer at the time.
I was still an Amiga user, and I remember not thinking to kindly of Windows 3.x and DOS, but 95' was a revelation, and a 486 dx2 with a vesa local bus graphics card - it really ran very well too. This was of course the key, to find hardware (drivers) that ran right with it.
Now days, I use Windows 7 for the desktop, but I find the revised start menu is just too busy. It certainly isn't always intuitive to use. The simplicity of the old menu was lost, but overall the operating system is still nice to use.
I do have fears about Windows 8. The previews have left me pretty cold. I don't really "get" Metro (which maybe explains so much of my previous comments/posts.) I guess I have the mindset of "how am I going to get my work done?" and it seems so much of the new design gets in the way of that mentality.
The old interface just plain works - I think Microsoft is not always aware of the assets it actually possesses, especially while it's "chasing" it's competitors.