Linked by snydeq on Mon 14th Jan 2013 18:46 UTC
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Now, Windows RT should be on that list; it provides absolutely zero advantage over Windows 8, it is completely, fully, wholly capable of everything Windows 8 is, but has been artificially crippled in order to squeeze more money out of fallible people.
It cannot run x86 programs. And for the ordinary person out there the OS is just a tool to get your programs running.





Member since:
2006-02-15
I don't know if I'd even include Windows 8 in that list. Sure, it's too dumbed-down and it totally fails to take into account and accommodate more experienced users, power-users and a whole boatload of work-related environments, but at the same time it accomplishes quite a few things.
For one, Windows 8 now lays out the path for a unified look and feel across many of their products, granting them the distinct feeling of a brand that they've been lacking. Even if the platform really matures in a future version of Windows the steps in-between are still important. Secondly, a curated app store as the default will eventually lead to fewer malware and virus outbreaks, and by extension to fewer computers available for botnet administrators to use. Thirdly, it gave Microsoft the excuse they've been looking for to start manufacturing their own computers and by extension force OEMs to either start working on a competing platform or on improving their own product-lines.
Now, Windows RT should be on that list; it provides absolutely zero advantage over Windows 8, it is completely, fully, wholly capable of everything Windows 8 is, but has been artificially crippled in order to squeeze more money out of fallible people.