Windows 8 is really hard to adapt?

  

Computer Store News Windows8 takes a lot of time to adapt, but it is the best operating system made by Microsoft, probably the best operating system ever made...

Windows 8 is really hard to get used to. Really, really hard.

Don't get me wrong, even when you're done with the installation, Windows 8 looks fantastic. There have never been so many elegant colors and layouts that have never been used before. From the beginning, it was beautiful.

But when you get to the "start" screen - well, this is true, it started to crash people.

I started using Windows 8 full time on March 1, 2012, less than 8 months ago. Soon after I started, I wrote a particularly harsh article, I think about it. In the weeks and months that followed, I really liked using Windows 8 from an early age - in all honesty - unfortunately so demanding.

(For clarity, I use the MacBook Pro hardware and OS X, Windows 8 virtualization. Is developing a virtual machine in my Windows, all my "open network" and non The VM is completed outside of the work of the Microsoft device).

Startup Screen The anger of the public on Windows 8 is mostly focused on the new mode start screen. But I hope that you will realize that it is actually a better Windows 7 and Windows XP "start" than the task switcher in the menu. The old Windows "start" menu is cumbersome, cumbersome, and mysterious. Have you tried to get a newbie user to find the paint in the "Start” menu? It's like one of those line loop games that are bustling with extraordinary when you go to turn off tracking and send back the beginning.

And, I will bear my soul, you are against this, and although many teasing me on Twitter, I don't know, in the Windows 7 Start menu, you can just type, it will find the right one for you. application. Yes, obviously you can press the “start” button, just type “Notepad”, it will find your notepad. I learned what is love & ldquo;start & rdquo; menu, people tend to do this, but almost no non-technical people know this feature. Guess what the same function is - this is in Windows 8. Hit the Win button and start typing, just fine.

In short, "start" & rdquo; menu will not break Windows 8, people will get used to it. Some people will make money and make replacement of the old Windows start menu. Good for them.

Dualism My problem is that there is never a real "start” menu. What I don't understand is the old way of dualism and the new way of Windows. (New Windows, by the way, refers to the Metro-style/Previously-differently-named-style app that works full screen, on Windows 8 and Windows RT). After using it a few months later, I suddenly understood why it was like this, opposed, stopped struggling, and I never looked back.

Cold, our technicians don't understand what is “who is when you have a new & Windows application on the desktop”. Non-technical staff, this is very worthwhile and will not care.

The problem with Microsoft is that if the PC in the world you are trying to transform becomes an old irrelevant, you have to be bold. And Windows 8 is suspected of exploding in the middle of this transition. This is the specific reason why not old Windows and new Windows are related. Back in the decade, the new Windows is too futuristic and unbalanced hardware. Going forward for 10 years, almost no one will use the operating system, it looks like old Windows. (Okay, maybe 20 years.), including various front ends for OS X and Linux, is essentially WIMP. They will also die, otherwise the inventor's dilemma must be resolved.

It is true that we all have to consider peace when it comes to Windows 8. Is there a better way to get old Windows and new Windows to work. Microsoft is taking the most horrible way to do this. I mean kindness.

Don't hate it! Since September 2011, there have been 4 versions of Windows 8 - Developer Preview, then a consumer preview at the end of the month, then RTM in August. One problem with this timeline is that it takes six to eight weeks to get used to Windows 8.

As a new drop in the operating system, play a comment on all the amateur and professional scholars. Since Windows 8 is so weird, most of these articles are negative. I don't know how many writers make a piece that is demanding, when they start using it in Windows 8, only look back and regret it after the week, like me.

The wave of anxiety has never calmed down, first because the time is acceptable to the user, and because Microsoft has always created a vacuum and an OS about the facts. This is just a breeding speculation.

No one will like the new version of Windows when they are released, and businesses never buy them for years. Windows 8 will be judged in 2018, not 2013.

So my advice is true. If you are new to Windows 8, don't give it hatred. Sit back, relax, and after a few weeks, I'm sure you will love the entire Windows 8 slot. And absolutely, definitely not downgraded if you bought a new machine with Windows 8 pre-installed. You will miss a fantastic operating system.

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