Same for me.
I ran it for 2 days and tried doing all my regular stuff. It sucked balls.
I never log into facebook unless I have to contact someone on there. This is maybe once a month. However W8 decided that anyone should be available to message me at any time. I never shut my computer down, so this got very frustrating. Sure maybe there is a setting but it still sucked.
Obvious driver and software conflicts. Most things could be manually installed using W7 drivers but still a pain.
And then there was the terrible UI. I run dual monitors but one is used for a TV display. Windows could not understand this and it made for a very terrible experience. To make it usable I had to basically turn it into W7 minus a start button. What's the point in a new OS if you have to treat it like a stripped down version of the previous OS?
Hopefully by launch day its great. I'd really, really, really like to be able to play mobile games on my desktop. Maybe their tablet style OS will allow that? It would make it usable if they did.
I'd be interested to know what level of user feels they simply 'have to have' a start menu.
What about it is a necessity?
The equivalent of nearly everything in the current (win 7) start menu is in the menu you get right clicking the lower left corner of the screen (where the start button used to be). The only things i think aren't on that list are the equivalent of my computer (which can be found by click the Windows Explorer icon on the task bar, and the all programs list which is the start screen or clicking the windows key for an auto search of everything that's registered.
What's left that's missing?
I have to admit, it's much easier to find things off the start menu and search than it was on the old start menu.
There's nothing wrong with missing it and wanting to do the previous way, but i'm getting tired of the complaint of it being gone without the qualification of what it's departure is costing you.
There's only one reason anyone can say the start button is better than what they've got now and that's because they've been using it for 17 years. That's it. There's no missing functionality, just a rearranging of what was there to be honest.
There's also been some degree of re-arranging between pretty much all versions, but admittedly, not to this degree.
I agree with the previous comments.. having to buy addon software to make a OS usable seems silly. Microsoft should of given users an option, but hey this is meant to be tablet friendly so I guess you can't have it all.
I'd be interested to know what level of user feels they simply 'have to have' a start menu.
What about it is a necessity?
The equivalent of nearly everything in the current (win 7) start menu is in the menu you get right clicking the lower left corner of the screen (where the start button used to be). The only things i think aren't on that list are the equivalent of my computer (which can be found by click the Windows Explorer icon on the task bar, and the all programs list which is the start screen or clicking the windows key for an auto search of everything that's registered.
What's left that's missing?
I have to admit, it's much easier to find things off the start menu and search than it was on the old start menu.
There's nothing wrong with missing it and wanting to do the previous way, but i'm getting tired of the complaint of it being gone without the qualification of what it's departure is costing you.
There's only one reason anyone can say the start button is better than what they've got now and that's because they've been using it for 17 years. That's it. There's no missing functionality, just a rearranging of what was there to be honest.
There's also been some degree of re-arranging between pretty much all versions, but admittedly, not to this degree.
Aside from the 'all programs list' all start menu functionality still exists in the same basic place
1. right click is for properties and menus, not starting programs.
2. hidden locations require telling someone to look for them.
3. the "all programs list" is the most important part of the Start menu.
4. its hard to search for a program you don't know exists. like bundled programs that come with a printer.
5, there's no reason for not having it.
I haven't used W8 so here are some questions.
1. Where's the recent documents list ?
2. how do I get to Control Panel ?
3. how do I get to docs,pics,music ?
Yeah, aside from one of the most useful features, everything is there![]()
LOL nowadays, it's cool to hate on Windows 8 ...
Been using it for the last couple months...love it!
1.) You don't, it doesn't exist anymore unless you want to pin the Username\Recent folder, which is sorta a clunky alternative. A desktop toolbar might be a suitable workaround.1. right click is for properties and menus, not starting programs.
2. hidden locations require telling someone to look for them.
3. the "all programs list" is the most important part of the Start menu.
4. its hard to search for a program you don't know exists. like bundled programs that come with a printer.
5, there's no reason for not having it.
I haven't used W8 so here are some questions.
1. Where's the recent documents list ?
2. how do I get to Control Panel ?
3. how do I get to docs,pics,music ?
...
Here's my poor analogy. W8 is like Honda deciding a new way to steer their car was to touch the windshield in the direction you wanted to go. If you wanted to use a steering wheel you could, but it was hidden under the spare tire and instead of rotating it to steer you slide it side to side. and to steer sharper you push in on the side of the wheel in the direction you want to go.
Oh, and while its easy to start the car, to turn it off you have to hit a switch that's hidden in the door jam of the right rear passenger door.
1.) You don't, it doesn't exist anymore unless you want to pin the Username\Recent folder, which is sorta a clunky alternative. A desktop toolbar might be a suitable workaround.
2a.) Pin it to the Start Screen
2.b) All Apps, the 'Windows System' folder will usually be near the end of the list
2.c) From the Desktop, it's in the Settings Charm
2.d) Win+X
2.e) Search
3.a) Pin them to the Start Screen (any folder can be pinned, even compressed, oddly)
3.b) File Explorer opens to Libraries by default, one step away
2.f) Another place it always was - the windows/file explorer, down in the left hand column
I'll go so far as to admit that removing the recent option (btw, i really like how they did it in win7) is something i'd like to hear their explanation for. It's possible that their perogative is that it's supposed to be handled in the program since it's part of the basic API I believe. But i'd still like to hear their take on that. The only other option is that their usage tracking showed next to no one used it.
It's also odd to hear someone ask about the Documents option because it's something I just don't use - the libraries that is. My Documents is where it always was. There's no shortcut on the desktop, but it doesn't keep you from making one. As noted above, it's still right at the top of the Explorer window where it always was.
Something else, someone asked about all the programs that get added into the old all programs list and how you're supposed to find them. Same way you always did. They're all added to a panel on the start screen. You can just see all entries at once without having to click to open a bunch of folders. Search all programs won't get you web links or help files that you could find in the old start menu or in the new start screen, but you can easily organize the start screen to make those things easier for you to find.
My Start button "all programs" has well over 300 items in it. Does that mean I'm going to have 30 pages of big square icons to page through ?
As to the My Documents folder vs libraries..I'm parlty with you, I don't like libraries at all. I like easy access to actual folders on a hard drive with files in them.
But I do like easy acces to recent documents, the Start menu does this in a very useful way. For example, I pin Notepad to the Start menu, then the Notepad icon has a menu list of recent documents that I can pick and Notepad opens with that txt already open.
I hope W8 has something like this ?
I'll go so far as well as to say that they should have but an intro video on there that you could opt out of. The video should show you new tips and tricks. Things like Win key to search, right clicking the lower left corner, etc.
I installed Win8 Pro yesterday and am enjoying it immensly. If you actually learn how to use the Windows UI properly (with hotkeys) it's MUCH faster than the start menu ever could be.