Windows 8

Posted on
  • 2.22.2010
  • by
  • mirat
  • in
  • Label:
  • Everybody’s got a wish list for what they want Windows to be. As a technical beta-tester for Microsoft and the author of the Windows 7 Power Users Guide, I’ve had a great insight over the last few years into what Windows could have been, having tested features that were later dropped from betas, and I’ve read a great deal of private feedback from other technical testers over the years.

    In this series I hope to cover everything I believe Windows 8 will need to be, and what features it should have to truly compete against Google Chrome OS on the netbook and PC, and with iPhone OS and Android on the tablet.

    One click install

    Microsoft have gone to great lengths over the last few years to make all operations in Windows simpler and quicker to use. Cutting down the amount and volume of mouse clicks necessary to perform tasks.
    This approach has been moderately successful so far and connecting to a wi-fi network in Windows 7 is a great example of how the one-click approach can work.

    One single-click solution that Windows is lacking though has been highlighted by Apple to great effect with their app store. For one reason or another the Windows installer still takes users through too many steps to install software.

    This simple solution, that Apple and Google have used now to great effect has been around on Linux for years, and is widely regarded as one of that OSes finest features.
    Obviously with some packages there are options, Microsoft Office for example is a large package and Google Earth will optionally install the Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer. Having an installer package that will enable a quick single-click install is what Windows needs if it’s to compete in the same consumer market as Android and Apple-powered devices in the home.

    Only by making installing programs as easy in Windows as it is with other operating systems can Microsoft be seen by their millions of users to be offering an experience that’s as good and easy to use.


    Finger Friendly

    The tablet is reborn. Apple have now launched their much anticipated iPad and this can only mean that another ageing way to interact with technology will be invigorated and soon, everybody will be jumping on the bandwagon.
    The introduction of multi-touch computing with Windows 7 was a good start, but sadly Windows 7 is still not at OS you can use simply in that manner. The ageing interface of drop-down menus and the window control buttons will either have to be redeveloped, redesigned or dropped completely.

    Some people would say that this could pose problems for running legacy software on the PC, but the introduction of XP Mode in Windows 7 went some way towards rectifying this. Microsoft need to announce that all new PCs from the end of 2012 need to have hardware support for virtual machines, and this gives the hardware manufacturers plenty of time to make sure their processor and motherboard ranges support it.

    iPhone OS and Android, while nowhere near as advanced or as flexible and pioneering completely touchable interfaces. If Microsoft are serious about pushing multi-touch forwards, they need to address the main interface structure of Windows urgently.
    Cheap

    One of the biggest barriers to owning Windows is the price. Fortunately with Office 2010 Microsoft are trying out a new click-to-install format, where you can start with a free version of the Office suite with limited functionality that you can expand by making micro-payments for the extra features you need.

    Should this work, and there’s no reason why it won’t, this model could be ported to Windows and by the time Windows 8 launches in 2012 we could be looking at the first free version of Windows.








    Blog AdvertisingBlog Advertising - Advertise on blogs with SponsoredReviews.com

    More Downloads

    Loading...

    0 komentar:

    Post a Comment

     
    Copyright (c) 2010 I'm listed in Technology by Bloggermint
    Powered by : Cibaringkeng