Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Windows 8 Review | Immedia Audio Visual Technology Review

By?Dana Wollman

It?s unusual, to say the least, for us to spend a year with a product before publishing our review. In the case of Windows 8, we?ve written thousands of words already, starting with our first hands-on in September of 2011, followed by deep dives on the?Developer Preview,?Consumer Preview,?Release Preview?and?RTM build. Even our readers have had ample time to get acquainted with the OS ? it?s been available as a public download since February. And yet, we?ve never tested a final version of the software running on brand new, made-for-Windows-8 hardware. With the OS now on sale (alongside with dozens of new PCs), it?s finally time for us to double back and revisit everything we?ve previously written in the form a final, comprehensive review.

And what a challenging assignment this was: it?s hard enough to give an OS the full review treatment without burying the reader in minute details. It?s even tougher when the software was built for so many different kinds of hardware. Combining a traditional desktop with Windows Phone-inspired Live Tiles, Windows 8 was designed to be equally at home on traditional PCs and more finger-friendly devices, like tablets and hybrids. In addition to walking you through the operating system?s various gestures and built-in apps, then, we?ll spend some time talking about which form factors are best suited to this redesigned version of Windows. Read on to see what we found out.

It?s all about the cloud

The whole boot-up sequence takes not a minute, but just 20 seconds in some cases.

We can remember when we first started using Windows 7; the start-up sequence wasn?t that different from Vista, which in turn wasn?t unlike versions of Windows that came before that. The chain of start-up screens could be long, sometimes taking more than a minute to complete. Depending on how slow the system was, it could have taken a while longer for the desktop to fully load. Here, booting Windows feels like turning on an Android tablet, or some other mobile device. The whole process takes not a minute, but just 20 seconds in some cases ? a short sequence marked by a brief splash screen and redesigned Windows logo. If this is your first time starting up your Windows 8 machine, you?ll see a 30-second video tutorial explaining some of the controls that otherwise might not be so obvious ? the so-called Charms Bar which you pull out from the right side of the screen, for example. (We?ll circle back and explain all those new user interface elements in just a moment.)

From there, getting set up is a quick, painless affair. When you first boot up Windows 8 you?ll be prompted to sign into your Microsoft account. Yep, the same one you might already be using for Hotmail, SkyDrive and Xbox Live. That means that every time you sign into a Windows 8 PC, your settings and custom tweaks will follow you to that new device. Additionally, because your Microsoft account is linked to your SkyDrive storage, you?ll be logged into SkyDrive on any Windows 8 device where you?ve logged in using your Microsoft ID. So, because Office 2013 backs up to SkyDrive by default, it means any document you edit on your Windows 8 device will automatically upload to the cloud.

If you didn?t already have a Microsoft account, you can create one while you?re setting up your PC. You can link your account at any time, really, and you also have the option of disconnecting it (in Microsoft?s words, ?switching to a local account?). Naturally, too, you can add multiple user accounts, as you could on previous versions of Windows.

If you like, you can also cherry-pick which settings do and do not get synced across your various Windows 8 devices. Go into the settings menu, for instance, and you can use on-off switches to sync your settings for desktop personalization, accessibility, language, app and browser settings. You also have the option of syncing your lock screen, account picture and other Windows settings, like those relating to File Explorer or the mouse. Note: to have your passwords follow you from PC to PC, you?ll need to ?trust? the computer through an online verification process.

Security options

DNP Windows 8 review

Obviously, if you log into Windows 8 for the first time using an existing Microsoft account, you?ve already got a built-in password for your PC. But in addition to a standard password, you can use a four-digit numerical pin to unlock the device. What?s more, with Windows 8, Microsoft is also offering a new ?Picture password? option that allows you to pick any photo and make a series of gestures on it. You can make as many gestures as you want, but they do have to be taps, circles or swipes. In addition to the order, though, you?ll have to remember where on the picture you?re supposed to make each gesture.

We had mixed success here. On the one hand, when we set our password to be one tap in each corner of the picture, we were easily able to replicate this pattern, even if we didn?t hit the exact same pixels each time. Still, when our password was a diagonal slash across each corner, we struck out trying to draw the lines in the same spot we did initially. Fortunately, as you?re configuring your picture password you?ll be asked to repeat the pattern, so if you can?t do it then, that might be a sign you need to come up with something else.

User interface

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Redesigned Start Screen, and the end of the Start button

Everyone can, and will, figure it out.

It?s safe to say the Windows Phone-esque Live Tiles have been the single most polarizing thing about Windows 8. Which makes sense: the new, mobile-inspired Start Screen looks wholly different from anything we?ve seen on previous versions of Windows. What?s more, you can?t even interact with these apps the same way: they run at full-screen, and can?t be minimized or re-sized like the windows you?re used to. In short, these tiles are the cornerstone of the Windows 8 experience, and they?re impossible to avoid, even if you plan on doing much of your work in the traditional desktop.

As you?ve probably heard by now, the Start button is no more. Well, it?s there, but you?ll have to hover with your mouse in the lower-left corner to make it appear. So, it?s exactly where you?d expect it to be; it?s just hidden until it?s clear you need it. And what if you?re using a touchscreen PC, like a dockable tablet? Your device will almost certainly have a dedicated Start button, the same way every Windows-compatible keyboard has a Start key. You can also find a shortcut to the Start menu in the Charms Bar, which you expose by swiping in from the right side of the screen. Not being able to click on the Start button is an adjustment, to be sure, but we?re also confident you?ll fall into a rhythm pretty quickly. After all, hovering where the Start button used to be isn?t that different from clicking it, and hitting the Start key with your pinkie feels natural as well.

When Windows users say they wish Microsoft hadn?t axed the Start button, what they?re really nervous about is the fact that the Start Menu is presented so differently. When you hit the Start key, you?ll no longer see a stack of fly-out menus; instead, you?ll be whisked away from the desktop to a full-screen assortment of finger-friendly Live Tiles, which you scroll through from left to right. In other words, that minimal, unfamiliar screen?is?the new Start Menu.

Back when we first tried out the Developer Preview, we said it felt jarring to switch back and forth between the traditional desktop and this more tablet-optimized Start Screen. And it is ? if you?ve never used Windows 8 before. What we can say now that we didn?t appreciate back then is that while the learning curve is steep, you do get comfortable after a while. No one is a dummy: everyone can, and will, figure it out. It just takes a little time before using Windows 8 feels truly effortless.

Universal search

DNP Windows 8 review

We?d add, too, that once you master this new layout, there are lots of useful things about the OS that feel like clear improvements over previous versions of Windows. If you make the same pinch-to-zoom gesture you?d use to zoom in and out of web pages, you can shrink the Start Screen so that you can see all your pages of apps at once. As you can imagine, that?s useful if you have a large collection of apps and don?t want to page horizontally through eight home screens.

Additionally, once you bring up the Start screen you can start typing to search for something. As any Windows user will tell you, you can already more or less do this in Win 7, except here you don?t even need to find a search bar. The results will immediately pop up on the right side of the screen. From within the search results pane, you?ll see the results are divided into files, settings and applications. Admittedly, this method of search isn?t obvious to new users, but again, you only need to learn it once. After that, it?s quite convenient.

Charms Bar

The Charms Bar is at its best when you have some sort of touch device at your disposal.

We already mentioned the Charms Bar, which appears when you swipe in from the right side of the screen. Here, you?ll find shortcuts for the Start Screen, settings menu, a list of connected devices, search and sharing. Lingering on that last point, sharing works much the same as it does on other mobile devices, which is to say if you?ve got some piece of content ? say, a Word document or a batch of photos ? you can share them in all sorts of way. This includes email, as well as Facebook, SkyDrive, Twitter and any other applicable service you?ve linked to your Microsoft account. Again, we?re used to doing this on our smartphones and tablets, but it?s a pleasure to be able to use a Windows PC the same way.

What?s more, it?s nice that all of these sharing and settings menus are easy to reach with your thumbs, even if you?re using a large 11-inch tablet or a 13-inch convertible PC. The Charms Bar is one example of this: you can reach the settings and sharing menus while still cradling your tablet in a natural position. Moving on to the left side of the screen, you can swipe in from the left to toggle through open apps ? a feature known as Switcher. Each time you swipe, a different program slides into place, taking up the whole screen. Here, too, it?s easy to control your device, even if you?re holding a large-screen tablet and have your hands full.

You can also expose the Charms Bar using a mouse, though it?s a less smooth experience. You?ll want to hover on so-called hot corners at the upper- and lower-right portions of the screen. This can be frustrating, and definitely has a learning curve. If you?re using a PC without a touchscreen, there?s a good chance the trackpad has fresh drivers that allow you to replicate key Windows 8 gestures, like swiping in from the right to bring up the Charms Bar. We?ve also seen accessories like the?Logitech Wireless Rechargeable Trackpad T650, which bring this functionality even to people whose older PCs don?t support these gestures. Point is: this feature in Windows 8 is at its best when you have some sort of touch device at your disposal. Whether that ends up being a touchscreen or a gesture-enabled trackpad doesn?t matter as much.

One other, potentially confusing thing: the Charms Bar holds the shortcut to?system?settings. If you?re inside an app and want to see some options specific to that program, you?ll need to perform a different gesture entirely: swipe the top or bottom of the screen to bring up that menu.

Multitasking

When it comes to switching apps, you can use that Switcher gesture, but there are other built-in features designed to make multitasking a bit easier. For starters, Snap allows you to dock a window or app so that it takes up either a third or two-thirds of the screen. That leaves room for a second app, which you can snap into the remaining space. That?s actually quite similar to Aero Snap from Windows 7, except here the dimensions are in thirds, instead of half the screen. As in the Win 7 version of this feature, you can?t manually re-size these windows: once they snap into place they?re going to take up a predictable amount of space (i.e., one third of the screen).

Also, in Windows 8 you can mix up the proportions by sliding the border of a window across the screen. Say, for instance, you?re working on a Word document on two-thirds of the screen, with IE 10 sitting off to the side. You might be spending most of your time typing in Word, but if you need to do a web search, you can just put your finger on the border between the two windows, and drag it over so that now the web browser takes up more space. It?s also worth noting that you can mix and match traditional desktop programs and Modern (formerly known as ?Metro?) apps. In some cases, this can mean fewer jarring jumps between the desktop and more touch-friendly apps.

Snap is a trick you can pull off if you?re using a touchscreen device or a traditional mouse and keyboard. Whether you?re using your finger or a cursor, you need to drag down on the app from the top of the screen before it can be docked into place. If you are using a mouse, you can also hover in the upper-left corner of the screen to expose open apps. What you?ll see isn?t a list, per se, but a series of preview thumbnails ? miniaturized versions of whatever?s going on in that window (your Outlook.com inbox, your SkyDrive home screen, et cetera). From there, you can click on a thumbnail to switch to that app, or you can right-click to close one. Like so many other features in Windows 8, this feels less clumsy with practice, though even after months of testing, we find the swiping Switcher gesture feels smoother, more intuitive.

Personalization options

To some extent, you can control the look and feel of Windows 8. No, there?s no bringing back the Start button, but you can select different color themes for your Start Screen. Toward the end of the Windows 8 development process, Microsoft added so-called Personalization Tattoos ? essentially, Start Screen backgrounds with patterns and borders. So long as you?re signed into your PC using a Microsoft account, this, too, will follow you to other Windows 8 devices you might log into. Get another Win 8 PC down the line, and it will show your paisley background as soon as you sign in for the first time.

Lock screen

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In addition to the Start Menu, you can customize the look and feel of the lock screen. This includes the background photo, as well as which notifications are displayed. For instance, even without entering your password, you can see upcoming calendar appointments, as well as a peek at how many unread messages or emails you have. In the PC settings, you can also choose to display detailed information for one of two things: your upcoming calendar appointment, or the weather forecast.

Desktop

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DNP Windows 8 review

For the most part, the desktop should feel familiar to Windows 7 users.

For the most part, the desktop should feel pretty familiar to Windows 7 users, especially compared to that redesigned Start Screen. Still, there are some differences here, too. For starters, the Aero UI is no more, which means windows no longer have a transparent border. Everything here is flat and two-dimensional, not unlike those new Live Tiles.

In a move that will please power users, Windows 8 also ushers in improved multi-monitor support, with the ability to display different desktop backgrounds on multiple displays, as well as have a single picture span those various screens. You also have the choice of expanding the Taskbar across those monitors, or setting it up so that a pinned program only appears on the same screen where that app is running. All told, it?s a welcome improvement, though it would be nice if you could run Modern UI-style Windows 8 apps on more than one monitor at a time. Also, if you do have a multi-monitor setup, you?ll find it?s trickier than usual to pull up the Charms Bar using a mouse.

Other changes: Windows Explorer is now called File Explorer, and bears the same Ribbon UI already used in Microsoft apps like Office and Paint. There?s also now a File History feature, which stores versions of files similar to Time Machine in Apple?s OS X. The Task Manager has also received a makeover so that when you first launch it, all you see is a list of open apps. Nothing about processes or memory usage; just a list of programs, and an ?End task? button. Click ?More details,? though, and you?ll see a half-dozen tabs, showing you everything from performance graphs to CPU usage to running processes. In the processes tab, in particular, there are four columns showing CPU, memory, disk and network usage, with the resource hogs highlighted in a darker color.

One thing that hasn?t changed: the keyboard shortcuts. The same ones you relied on in Windows 7 will work here, which should take some of the sting out of getting used to a new user interface.

Built-in apps

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Mail
Setting up the Mail app is easy: if the Microsoft ID you use to initially sign in is tied to Gmail, or some other service not run by Microsoft, it automatically prompts you for your email password. In the case of Gmail, we had the option of syncing our Google contacts and Calendar as well (we said yes). There are also easy setup options for Hotmail, Outlook.com, Yahoo and AOL, though you can add accounts from other services too. Even if you don?t link a Hotmail or Outlook account, the Mail app will import all your folders and labels ? everything, really, but your starred items, in Gmail. Those folders take up just a narrow pane on the left side of the screen. Next to that is a wider window where you can see each individual message, along with previews and, when applicable, thumbnails of the contact who wrote to you.

The email itself takes up the most space, stretching across the entire right third of the screen. Up top, above the message, you?ll find icons for creating a new message, replying / forwarding and deleting. (We always did like the in-line delete button in Outlook.com, so we?re glad to see that design touch carries over here too.) If you swipe the top or bottom edge of the screen for the options menu, you can refresh your inbox, or move a message to another folder. Also, if you have more than one email account hooked up, you can pin a particular inbox to the Start Menu.

All told, it?s easy to use; we just wish there were easy-access buttons for archiving and marking junk mail as spam. Unfortunately, too, you don?t have direct access to certain of Hotmail and Outlook.com?s finer features, like the ability to ?Sweep? newsletters and other so-called gray mail into out-of-the-way folders. However, if you set up Sweep on Hotmail.com our Outlook.com, the Mail app in Windows 8 will still follow whatever rules you have in place.

Calendar

DNP Windows 8 review

As promised, when we chose to sync our Google contacts and Calendar, our appointments all promptly showed up in the built-in Calendar app. (If you?re not a Google user, you can also link your Hotmail, Outlook.com or Exchange / Office365 calendar.) The default view is by month, which is a bit too busy for our tastes ? you can only see two appointments per day, even if there are many more. We highly suggest selecting the daily or weekly view in the menu options hidden at the bottom of the screen. If you?re creating an appointment from scratch, you?ll have the same options as if you were doing this online: everything from date to time slot to reminder alerts.

?Read the rest of this article at Engadget

Source: http://www.immediatechreview.com/windows-8-review

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