Except you have to go through the start screen just to get to the destktop. I'm well aware the taskbar still exists. But it, like the desktop, is buried underneath the start screen.You can pin things to the task bar in Windows 8, too. For the frequently-used programs that you don't want to pin, just place in them in the first tile positions of the Start Screen. Push the Windows key, and then click what's right there in front of your face. That's no different from Windows 7, really.
That's part of the reason why win8 is so bad though. You shouldn't have to do any of these things, especially paying $80 or however much for an "upgrade." If its just a "new version" of an OS, you shouldn't have to relearn it if you already knew the previous version. You also shouldn't have to look to 3rd party software to fix what shouldn't have been broken in the first place.Definitely think they shouldn't have made an OS that requires you to go out and make / find things to better your experience but w.e I didn't pay for my version and I love finding neat things to solve my problem.
Last edited by Alhanelem; 01-09-2013 at 02:37 PM.



And it's one incredibly cumbersome click away, right after start up.
Really, why is people making such a big fuss about some UI changes? Relearn what, exactly? Most stuff still works the same, the biggest difference being a bigger start menu in which stuff is easier to organize and find. Or was it any easier to find stuff in the old start menu in which you'd have to go through a ton of folders and sub-folders to find stuff (or just type in the program's name, which is faster on 8)? And what 3rd party software? And to fix what, exactly? I just don't get it.That's part of the reason why win8 is so bad though. You shouldn't have to do any of these things, especially paying $80 or however much for an "upgrade." If its just a "new version" of an OS, you shouldn't have to relearn it if you already knew the previous version. You also shouldn't have to look to 3rd party software to fix what shouldn't have been broken in the first place.
I first grabbed 8 when the DP came out. It took me 10 minutes if much to get used to the new start screen. It makes it easier to find the stuff you care about since you can just arrange it in any order you want instead of the completely arbitrary way in which it used to work before.
Also, 8 boots up in about 11 seconds with an OLD SATA HDD.
Last edited by Klefth; 01-09-2013 at 03:42 PM.



Question: Why does Windows 8 have its own Xbox Live? Does it mean you can play games on Windows 8 with other Xbox 360 users?
jc
Technically it's Games for Windows live, which has been around for a long time. You can use the same Gamertag, but there is no cross platform because the xbox is a closed system.
Historifcally every other home version of Windows has been bad 3.11 god, 95 bad , 98 good, Me bad, XP good, vista bad, 7 good, 8 bad."
They go through this development cycle where they get people to buy in to a piece of crap where they tried something new, then the next version they fix all the crap they broke the first time around.
Wait for Windows 9, folks. Or switch to linux...



Why does every person who uses this every other OS excuse ALWAYS forgets to list Windows 2000?Historifcally every other home version of Windows has been bad 3.11 god, 95 bad , 98 good, Me bad, XP good, vista bad, 7 good, 8 bad."
They go through this development cycle where they get people to buy in to a piece of crap where they tried something new, then the next version they fix all the crap they broke the first time around.
Wait for Windows 9, folks. Or switch to linux...
I also like how people who bash 8 probably didn't try out the 2012 server edition and see how much better it is to the older 2009.
Last edited by Dhalmel; 01-09-2013 at 05:47 PM.





Windows 2000 was part of the Me/NT line wasn't it?



NO.
ME is based on the 9x kernel and is a development from Windows 95 and 98.
2000 is based on the NT kernel and is a development from Windows NT3.1,
NT3.51 and NT4.0. Windows 2000 is actually NT 5.0
Windows 2000 and onward is based off of the NT kernel
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