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Windows 9 Launch

toughtrasher

Senior member
Does anyone have any information on when Windows 9 will come?

I know it's a little early and we're right in the middle of the Win 8 craze but I was just wondering so I can plan my next computer purcahse.
 
Awsome? Why? by the gods, Why?

I'm going to get a lot of hate for this, but I actually kind of liked Windows 8 and it's metro-style look. *shhh.

I'm awaiting Win 9 because I may get a new computer in the following year and I want to experience what Microsoft has in store for us. Plus, I'm also getting an Xbox One so I'm interested in how they will correlate with one another.
 
Windows 9..ha.....windows 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.4, 8.5, 8.6, 8.7, 8.8, 8.9, 8.91, 8.92, 8.93. 8.94, 8.95.....

/[morons], just give your OEMs win7 SP2 to make building the images the customer wants easier

No profanity in the tech forums please
-ViRGE
 
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Windows 9..ha.....windows 8.1, 8.2, 8.3, 8.4, 8.5, 8.6, 8.7, 8.8, 8.9, 8.91, 8.92, 8.93. 8.94, 8.95.....

/[morons], just give your OEMs win7 SP2 to make building the images the customer wants easier

ditto bro!
 
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Does anyone have any information on when Windows 9 will come?

I know it's a little early and we're right in the middle of the Win 8 craze but I was just wondering so I can plan my next computer purcahse.

1st of all we don't know what the successor to Windows 8.1 will be called and 2nd-Stick with Windows 7 for as long as possible.
 
I'm going to get a lot of hate for this, but I actually kind of liked Windows 8 and it's metro-style look. *shhh.

I'm awaiting Win 9 because I may get a new computer in the following year and I want to experience what Microsoft has in store for us. Plus, I'm also getting an Xbox One so I'm interested in how they will correlate with one another.

Oh, Windows 8 looks fine, I agree. Its just that the moronic UI design choices spoils the party.
 
Its really a shame, play with 8 on my media pc and there are so many nice things they've done to improve upon 7, but the tablet touchscreen crap they tossed on top of it for the main UI prevents me from converting any of my main pcs to it.
 
I dunno guys....I had windows 8 on my desktop during the consumer preview. Went back to 7 because I couldn't get my TV recordings to play (win7 media center downstairs). Now I just installed 8.1 on a 'spare' laptop I had lying around.

I have to say, its pretty elegant. I love the simple yet colorful graphical interface. 8.1 adds the start button back in but I haven't played around with it in too much detail. Taking the start button out didn't bother me that much. I never really used the metro apps, just the desktop.

I just setup a laptop for my father using windows 8. He doesn't like change but is coming from a very bogged down 2GB vista machine. We will see if he likes 8 with the nice bump in speed that accompanies it.
 
metro 2.0 :whiste:


I have a feeling Microsoft will stick with a hybrid OS but with improvements to Metro etc...personally its not that bad once you get use to it even as a desktop user.

I don't know if they will go with a whole new UI,I don't think so since most of the world is not ready for that just now.

Anyway whatever happens Win9 should be interesting.
 
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I have a feeling Microsoft will stick with a hybrid OS but with improvements to Metro etc...personally its not that bad once you get use to it even as a desktop user.

I don't know if they will go with a whole new UI, I don't think so since most of the world is not ready for that just now.

Anyway whatever happens Win9 should be interesting.

I agree, Microsoft will almost definitely stick with a hybrid operating system. They have a lot of smart and talented people, and while the 'unified' operating system for desktop+tablet does feel like it diminishes some of the ease of use of the desktop right now, that could just be a maturity thing or a testament to how quickly they tried to put something together and get it out there. What happened, I think, is that the market forced their hand. Mobile phones and tablets are continuing to increase dramatically in sales, and laptops/desktops are going down, and that trend is not likely to reverse. They're going to design for wherever the most market share is, and while a unified OS might be more appealing long-term, they could be trying to leverage their desktop install base to kick-start tablet/mobile development for now as well.

Two things I'd like to see in Windows 9:

1. I actually like the right pop-up bar with settings and power options. This seems like it would be perfect for a new start menu. I just really don't want a full-screen start menu... it really does get in the way when you have to go back and forth from metro to the desktop to launch programs and stuff. All they really need is app pinning, search, and some system shortcuts.

2. No full screen Modern UI apps unless the user wants that! Let the user run those apps in a window. This seems so obvious... if you have a 1920x1200-capable monitor, for example... a 1024x768 Modern UI window (even if it's not resizable, or lets you select from some predefined sizes that are optimized for mobile) can easily work in a windowed environment. This will make those apps and that development even more appealing. This would also make the new settings interface much more appealing, and more functionality can be seamlessly merged with Modern UI so that both the desktop and tablets can benefit. If that is the UI paradigm they want to use, then stick with it... just make it usable for us desktop power users, too, please. 🙂

If things are even more full-screen and "Modern UI"-ified, with closer ties to Windows Live and the "Cloud" for those features and *gasp* a Windows subscription instead of a one-time purchase,... then those would be warning signs to me that Microsoft might have lost sight of what they are and what Windows is. Maybe they can name that version Microsoft Window (without the s).
 
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You say that like the Agile model is unquestionably a bad thing.

There is a very big difference between a bug that renders web page not exactly to W3C standards and a bug that trashes your hard drive or operating system making you waste couple of days to rebuild the system and restore the data. Agile mindset has no place in system critical applications such as OS.
 
There is a very big difference between a bug that renders web page not exactly to W3C standards and a bug that trashes your hard drive or operating system making you waste couple of days to rebuild the system and restore the data. Agile mindset has no place in system critical applications such as OS.

Fast updates are fine. I get O/S updates every single day, and last night, I updated my kernel. The hard part is monetizing the model. It would have to be done via subscription, and many people would balk at that.
 
Fast updates are fine. I get O/S updates every single day, and last night, I updated my kernel. The hard part is monetizing the model. It would have to be done via subscription, and many people would balk at that.

The day microsoft does that (and offers no option to purchase a license for just the current version of the OS until it's no longer supported via security updates) is the day I finally get more than passingly familiar with linux and give up games.
 
What's the point of daily updates? Both Windows and OSX have System Updates that don't require any subscription nonsense. I wouldn't want to waste time every day updating my OS- just if something actually requires it every now and then.
 
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