According to Matt Smith of digitaltrends Author , When Windows 8 launched last October it seemed it might bring Microsoft into the touchscreen age. Today, with PC sales slipping and tablets rising, it’s starting to look like a necessary step taken a few years too late. While manufacturers are clearly ready to sell touch-enabled computers, their efforts aren’t being matched by Microsoft, which has failed to provide an operating system consumers can love. Or, for many, even like.
There’s irony to be found in this turn of events, as Windows 8 was meant to avoid this exact situation. Redmond’s top management, after what appeared to be a period of denial, eventually realized that giving touch the middle finger would force some consumers to purchase Android and OS X tablets by default. But Microsoft’s delay, and its previous baggage, drove the company to craft a compromise solution. Consumers are buying OS X and Android tablets even more frequently, and often because Windows 8 isn’t up to par.
The only solution to this mess is a quick recovery, and CEO Steve Ballmer acknowledged this both at Build 2013 and with Microsoft’s recent re-organization. Windows 8.1, slotted for release less than a year after Windows 8 launched, could be proof that Microsoft truly understands its problems and seeks to reinvigorate itself. Or, it could be a Band-Aid applied to a wound the company doesn’t fully comprehend.
We’ve spent some time with the preview version of Windows 8.1, and here’s what we think so far…
The Start Button is back, the Start Menu isn’t
Apps view is half-baked
To make matters worse, apps view attempts to automatically populate the menu drags in a lot of unwanted junk. While Windows 8 apps appear properly, desktop apps are often recognized along with many unessential but related files. For example, the operating system automatically displayed not only SiSoft Sandra (the software we use to test processor performance) but also twenty other non-executable files found in its folder. What a mess!
We also can’t find a way to remove these files from the apps view without deleting them. Only Windows 8 apps can be properly removed by long-tapping them and then clicking uninstall, the same process that’s used to remove those apps from the Start screen. We hope Microsoft will resolve this before release; if it doesn’t, apps view will be all but useless.
All of these problems make the new apps view a terrible Start menu replacement. Third-party companies in the business of resurrecting Start can breathe a sigh of relief.
Two steps forward for personalization
Windows 8.1 also adds Large and Small tiles, the former taking up as much space as four regular tiles, and the latter taking up a quarter of the same. This simple change significantly enhances user customization; indeed, a user on a desktop machine might make the new “apps view” largely irrelevant through obsessive use of small tiles.
Unfortunately, these minor improvements are soured by a small step back. To move tiles, users must now long-tap to “select” the tile, then tap again and drag to move it. Previously, tiles could simply be moved with a tap-and-drag motion. While the new method enables extra editing features, it’s also less intuitive and feels strange after nine months using a different process.
Searching for a unified experience
Besides unification, Microsoft also added a “Smart Search,” which automatically builds an attractive, Metro-UI result out of data pulled from Bing. Smart Search includes result thumbnails and, when possible, will pull in location data, videos, apps, and more. For example, searching for restaurants often brings the Maps app up as a result, and when opened from search, the Maps app automatically shows relevant local results. In some cases, Search will even create a beautiful spread with portraits, maps, weather, and other data, though this only occurs with the most popular and common keywords.
All of this makes for an experience that’s simple, attractive and “just works” in a way other Windows 8.1 features should envy. However, the experience is absolutely refined for touch rather than the desktop, which may frustrate users who prefer a keyboard and mouse.
Shortly after its Windows 8.1 reveal, Microsoft announced that Web search results served via Bing will include advertisements. While this could be a distraction, we didn’t notice any ads during our use, though it may be that the “on” switch hasn’t been flipped yet.
Improved ‘split view’ still so-so for multi-tasking
This feature exists in Windows 8.1, and it’s not available on Android or the iPad. What’s arguable, however, is split view’s utility. Not all apps opened in this way are actually useful, and opening split view can be a pain, particularly for those users lacking touch. Neither concern is at all addressed by the new operating system.
And, if you’re using a laptop with a display resolution of 1366 x 768 or lower, you won’t even be able to access more than two apps at a time, which means the split view tweaks are of minimal use to consumers who own an average 15.6-inch (or smaller) laptop.
App store gets revamp but is still filled with junk
But they’re still there. In the prominently featured “Popular Now” section, for example, we found an app called “FACEBOOK!” Yep – in all caps, with an exclamation point at the end. This was flanked by “MSN Touch” in the New Releases section, an app that’s actually not made by Microsoft, though it has no trouble using its logo and iconography.
In the categories, which are now hidden in a swipe-down menu at the top of the screen, little has changed. Social is still dominated by paid third-party Facebook apps, Photo is still dominated by “Sexy Anime Cosplay Girls Daily,” and Security is still populated by anti-malware apps of dubious origin.
The new Store is undoubtedly a step in the right direction, but this is merely a move towards the proper path rather than the last step in the journey. Major improvements are still needed to make the Windows Store a success.
Internet Explorer 11
And that’s too bad, because Internet Explorer could, as always, use some help. The browser still feels incredibly slow next to its major contemporaries (Chrome and Firefox). Worse, it remains split in half like the rest of Windows. There’s the desktop version, which works better with sites like Google Docs, and the touch version, which is better for on-the-couch browsing. Each version launches from its own executable, and there’s no way to transfer tabs between them.
Other tweaks and changes
Other changes include a new “top settings” view in the Settings menu, minor tweaks to File Explorer, the ability to use Skype from the local screen, improved portrait support, and refinements to apps like Xbox Music and Mail. All of this is appreciated, but it’s difficult to notice at first and not exceptional. If you’ve used Windows 8 before, you’ll probably like what Microsoft has done with Xbox Music. But users coming from Windows 7 or another operating system won’t be impressed.
Windows 8.1 is still Windows 8
This first revision of Windows 8 takes several steps in the right direction. We’re happy to see the Start button is back, but not merely copied from Windows 7. We also like the improved personalization options, love the new search function, and appreciate the small tweaks that make Windows 8.1 a smoother, more approachable operating system. Microsoft does seem to understand many of its problems and is working to resolve them.
However, we’re worried by what appears to be continual half-hearted execution. Apps view is a great idea and looks beautiful, but it doesn’t work well. Internet Explorer remains woefully behind the alternatives. And the Store still contains far too much junk. Microsoft is still a long way from producing a version of Windows 8 that users will want to own.
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