I was really impressed by the seamless upgrade from the windows 7 HP on my desktop to windows 8 Pro. All I had to do was uninstall MSE which is already builtin. Couple of reboots and I am on Windows 8. All my programs work flawlessly and all my settings are saved.
I am wondering if I screwed the pooch on getting the 40 buck upgrade since I am already on Windows 8 RTM. Would suck if I had to reinstall Windows 7 just to get the upgrade.
The new feature, "windows on the go", which allows running windows from a usb, is only available to enterprise.
Is there an available option for windows 7 home premium to upgrade to windows 8 enterprise ?
Edit:
I mean for regular users, like home users, and not through bulk enterprise purchase.
There is stuff under the hood, but Microsoft never talks about it. Windows 8 is supposed to be slimmed down to make things run faster/longer even with mobile devices. That is probably why Aero and other fancy UI stuff is gone. Also in previous versions, Windows included tons of printer drivers. That is not being done anymore as the OS is supposed to be able to print without the need of large-sized drivers that are typical from the vendors. File history is also something new. Both Anti-virus and anti-spyware is now built into the OS. There seems to be interest in Windows To Go, but that is an enterprise-only feature.
As I suspected, liking or not liking Metro makes no difference. Reason is if you like the Metro style, it is there. If not, you can download a 3rd-party Start Menu and stay in Desktop. My guess is that will be quite a few people coming out with their own Start Menu (maybe even from big names). If others have convinced you that you do not even want to interact with Metro at all, put a utility called FxxkMetro in your startup folder.
As for speed, it seems a little on the slow side for me. Obviously, this is not good as my desktop computer is only 2 years old. Not sure if it the cause is the OS, hardware, driver, or what with me. Not many others have mentioned any performance issues (speed or latency), so I am guessing it has been fine for the few days they have been using RTM.
It's not just a UI, it's an application framework (WinRT). It is not Windows, it is a part of Windows. If you do not use WinRT apps, you should have no need to use "Metro".What a lot of people don't understand is that 'Metro' is not a just user interface. It IS windows now. For better or for worse. It's too far under the hood to simply flip a toggle switch to turn it off.
How long do you think it will be before amd has official drivers out?
Not true, it is the other wayIt's not just a UI, it's an application framework (WinRT). It is not Windows, it is a part of Windows. If you do not use WinRT apps, you should have no need to use "Metro".
You are correct.Is this really the place for the invasive Metro discussion? We've had a thread for that.
It's not just a UI, it's an application framework (WinRT). It is not Windows, it is a part of Windows. If you do not use WinRT apps, you should have no need to use "Metro".
i hope you are wrong about that, i really do. i have a crossfire setup and am Leary of installing it due to the problems some are havingLast week of October before official drivers start rolling out on the internet.
i hope you are wrong about that, i really do. i have a crossfire setup and am Leary of installing it due to the problems some are having
I'm surprised that Microsoft isn't trying to sue everyone who's downloaded the RTM version.
One of the first things I did after the Win8 installation was to go into Contol Panel's "Default Programs" and change all the files associations from default Metro apps (e.g., Photos, Video) to desktop apps (e.g., Windows Photo Viewer, Windows Media Player) Thankfully, that did not take too long.Not true, it is the other way
If you do not use desktop applications, you have no need to use the desktop at all.
try those in desktop:
- in the taskbar, click on the network icons.
- right click on any file, select 'open with', click choose default program.
- try to shutdown ??
- try to open any file like a music or a video or an xps document, the default is to open in metro, and you have to switch all files manually to regular programs.
- at the start screen, when viewing 'all apps', the metro apps are using all the screen, u have to scroll for a bit to see the normal apps.
- try to insert a dvd, autoplay menu is metro, click anywhere else accidentally and the menu is instantly gone.
MS is simply giving desktop users the finger.
looks likew there is beta driver that works 9.00-120612a-140545EIs there some need to bring crossfire into this environment so soon? Save yourself some headaches until it matures.
You're thinking of Apple. In any case, the Preview was quite snappy on the 7200 RPM SATA II drive I tried it on, and the, erm, tiled screen was easily gotten past. My understanding was that Windows Live was history as far as Win8 was concerned; does anyone know if this is true? My time with it seemed to offer either Outlook or webmail as the only email choices.