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Hands on: Windows 8 review

In Depth: Up close with the developer preview of Microsoft's new OS

September 13th | Tell us what you think [ 21 comments ]

hands-on-windows-8-review

Windows 8 offers options on lock screens and more, but loses the familiar Start menu

As expected, Microsoft is using its Build developer conference to distribute a pre-beta, developer preview version of Windows 8 (for x86 PCs only; the hardware to run the ARM version on isn't finished yet).

Windows 8 is Microsoft's combined desktop, laptop and tablet operating system, designed to go from 10-inch touch-only tablets to big screens in your living room, from ultra-portable notebooks to massive gaming systems and business desktops.

You can check out our Windows 8 preview video below:

It's got the Windows Phone 7 Metro-style touch interface of live tiles, the Metro programming model for building web apps and native apps that run full screen and share information.

Windows 8 also features gestures to put two apps on screen side by side, and the traditional Windows desktop for when you need richer apps like the ones we've been using in Windows for years.

Windows 8

That's a combination no other single operating system can offer - but how well does it work?

The inspiration of Windows Phone 7's Metro interface is clear in the interface for the Windows 8 Lock screen and Start screen (which completely replaces the Start menu).

But this isn't a slavish copy of the phone operating system look.

It still has the live tiles and the personalisation, enabling you to pin people, RSS feeds and web pages alongside apps. But it's more colourful, more flexible and better designed, to enable you to arrange and explore large numbers of apps.

Windows 8 interface

You can customise both the image you see on the Windows 8 Lock screen and the details of unread emails and missed instant messages that it shows. And you can pin desktop apps such as Office or Task Manager, and even a link to the desktop, to the Lock screen.

Windows 8

You can group tiles together - giving groups a name or leaving them blank - and make any tile single or double width. Just swipe the tile up a little to get the option to change the size, unpin the app or uninstall it completely.

You'll be able to do that for pre-installed Metro software too (which is what Microsoft is encouraging OEMs to bundle on new Windows 8 PCs).

As well as moving a tile to a new location by dragging it, you can also drag it up to the top of the screen with one finger and hold it there while you swipe across the screen to get to where you want to drop it - a much easier way of dealing with a long list of tiles.

Future builds of Windows 8 will also enable you to pinch to zoom out so you can see all the tiles on screen at once, and rearrange groups at the same time.

Windows 8

Once you launch apps, you can use gestures to arrange them. Swiping from the left switches to the next app, but you can also swipe and drag to put two apps on a screen side by side - and one of those can be the Windows desktop.

There are only three window sizes for apps arranged like this (counting full screen), so that developers don't have to worry about making an infinite number of layouts look good. One app is a thin QVGA 'snap' view on either side of the screen, and the other is a larger VGA full view - which is why this only works on 1366-resolution widescreen PCs.

But if the Windows 8 desktop is in full view you can still use Aero Snap to arrange two windows, and if it's in snap view you get thumbnails for all the running desktop apps that you can tap to open.

This is a good combination of enabling you to use two apps at once on a tablet. This is something only the occasional dual-screen Android tablets enable you to do, and then only for a limited number of apps. It also makes it easy to switch from Metro apps to desktop apps and back.

Windows 8

Swipe in from the right of the screen and you get what Microsoft is calling the Windows 8 "charms": search and share, which work across different apps; devices and settings; plus a button for switching between the Start menu and the desktop.

The Settings charm gives you the settings for the current Metro application plus options for volume, brightness, notifications, networking, switching language and choosing to sleep, shut down or restart.

It's great to have one place to do that in every application. It's also a logical place for commands such as Restart that used to be on the Start menu, because there was nowhere else to put them. We kept looking in there for a link to the Control Panel, which is currently just a tile on the Start screen.

It would be more logical to put a link here for more settings, in the same way that the friendly Control Panel interface organises the most common options clearly, with a link to the desktop control panel for other settings (and you can still search for specific control panels just like searching for an app or file).

Windows 8

Open an app that needs the Windows desktop and you get the familiar desktop view with Recycle Bin, task bar and Start button.

But the Start button opens the Start screen again - the Start menu is gone in Windows 8.

The look of the desktop and desktop apps will change before the Windows 8 release date. We're expecting the new-look Task Manager to be a clue to the final interface style, but the ribbon makes an appearance in Explorer. This is always controversial, but we think it works well for organising options and tools together.

Windows 8

If you use multiple monitors, you finally get better desktop management. You can have the Start screen on one monitor and the desktop on the other, which keeps the two interfaces separate.

But if you're using multiple screens it's more likely you're using desktop apps, so you'll like the option to duplicate the task bar on both screens or pick which icons you see on the task bar for each screen. You can also finally put a different desktop background on each screen.

Windows 8

 

Your comments (21) Click to add a new comment

ru4r33lr8n0w


Tuesday at 21:04 BST

21. Windows 8 is garbage! Unless you consider mind-numbing frustration at having to redundantly click on a myriad of counter-intuitive tiles and panels and windows for the sake of what had been done previously with one click; somehow tolerable...it's ****!

Here's a new WinDev mantra I've made up for Win8...

M-indlessly

E-mploy

T-iles

R-egardless

O-f

U-ser

I-ntuition

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masterctrl1


September 24th

20. Anyone stuck in "desktop mode" should try this test anytime you have the opportunity. Run your favorite desktop app on a touchscreen system configured for large icons or larger font or a screen resolution to make buttons and menus work best. Spend 2-3 days using it this way with mouse, keyboard, and touchscreen, Then switch back to good ol' desktop mode without a touchscreen. I guarantee you'll want the touchscreen back -- immediately! Now imagine if all your favorite desktop apps were touchscreen optimized. That is the future, plain and simple, and Windows 8 is going to take us there with a common UI across multiple devices. I for one, can't wait and I started out on an IBM PC running DOS with floppy drives. Imagine the next generation growing up with touch-driven tools starting in kindergarden and grade school. The desktop as we know it is DEAD.

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lonestar33


September 23rd

19. I'm giving it a chance in Boot Camp on my MacBook Air for now. It is clearly tablet influenced, but it's pretty ugly to look at. The double tiles are just pointless, reduce them down. How do I change the weather to read Celcius please? Who chose that unpleasant shade of green? Can it be changed. By the way although Boot Camp is strictly speaking set up for Win7 it can be made to work.

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xarzy


September 16th

18. i do hope that Windows 8 would live-up to the high expectations of Windows loyal users. And may engineers of this incoming platform provides an easy to integrate code policy and a robust fun to use interface.

see related post: http://www.infotechpeek.com/2011/09/13/windows-8/

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james


September 16th

17. To those asking, we're busy playing around with Windows 8 and will add more of our thoughts about its potential as a desktop OS very soon

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paul


September 15th

16. @paul43524 Our reviews policy regarding hands ons is here: http://bit.ly/qncEYw

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somethingelse


September 15th

15. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DArxXyimC0Y

I made this short video after a 12 hr test of Windows 8

it shows Windows 8 with no true desktop style start menu, a BIG mistake by ms

OK MS said in the dev video "the windows 7 start menu is gone", they need to have a option to put back.

How to get 7 start back in bindoh's hate (for now) ...

Open Run type regedit.exe hit Enter key to launch Registry Editor.

In the Registry Editor, navigate to

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Mic­rosoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\­Explorer

In the right pane, double-click on the entry named RPEnabled and change its value from 1 to 0 to enable the Windows 7 Start menu in Windows 8

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paul43524


September 15th

14. I wish TechRadar would stop calling Previews "Reviews". This applies not only to this article, but across the site.

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bradavon


September 15th

13. This hands on has some more info about Windows 8 Desktop mode:

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9219996/First_look_The_two_faces_of_Windows_8_Developer_Preview_

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bradavon


September 14th

12. @ Dj99: I remain unconvinced. Desktop Apps still won't be written for touch. How well will they run? Not very well IMO, even with fuzzy logic.

All iOS and Android apps are written from scratch with touch in mind.

Besides Windows 8 tablets are a good year away. There's plenty of time to buy iPad 2/iPad 3 or Android and then Windows 8.

We don't even know how far along iPad or Android will be when Windows 8 ships.

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bradavon


September 14th

11. I imagine it will run fine with a mouse/keyboard. A big button will work just as well with a mouse, as a finger.

The question that everyone is wondering and as all articles are tablet focused no one has answered, is how well Windows 8 will run as a Desktop OS?

I mean 100% of people using Windows today aren't use Metro Apps, they're using Desktop Apps. That 100% will work in the Desktop mode of Windows 8.

* How do these work in Windows 8?

* Is the constant jarring nature of Metro to Desktop to Metro annoying?

* How easy it is to stay in Desktop mode?

There's no Start Menu for instance. So as soon as you press it, you're dumped back into Metro. It looks like to avoid this, you "have" to put every app on the Desktop or pin it to the Task Bar. If it's on the Start screen, you're dumped out of Desktop mode.

* What new features does Desktop mode get?

I've seen articles mentioning an improved System Restore that allows you to restore revisions of documents/photos etc... Actually it was a different app. I forget the name.

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liassic


September 14th

10. It would have been useful if you'd said at the beginning of the review that you were going to review it from a tablet point of view.

I'm more interested in how it works as a desktop OS - with a mouse and keyboard.

Is this the end of Windows as a desktop OS?

That's what I need to know. Thanks.

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munichlondon


September 14th

9. Looks very promising indeed. To me W8 is one of the prime examples why competition between compentent companies is the best thing that can happen to customers.

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dj99


September 14th

8. Looks really good.

At the moment if you are thinking about buying a new computer you will need to own a tablet AND a laptop/desktop (if you want an iPad for example).

With Windows 8 you can just buy a tablet and have a keyboard dock around if you need it. Also... it will run Crysis!

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techpike


September 14th

7. A desktop os based on a tablet OS...Still a day late and a dollar short.

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bradavon


September 13th

6. @ Geordie2004: Agreed. We need to see how well it works on Desktops and Laptops. Pretty much all the noise on Win8 so far has been about how well it works on tablets when the vast majority of users won't be using it on these form factors.

I also want to know how the Desktop Mode is handled too.

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anteaus


September 13th

5. This kind of interface was designed for small touchscreens where menus wouldn't work, at least not without a stylus. But, and a very big but, I simply cannot see why I would want to use this kind of interface on a computer with a physical keyboard and an accurate pointing device. It would be like being forced to use a stillson when I have a ringspanner.

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stu531


September 13th

4. I genuinely hope Microsoft continue to innovate with Windows. We all know they took their eye off the ball with Vista (or maybe XP was still good enough) - but anyway, keeping up with (and continuing to challenge) Google and Apple is ultimately good for customers.

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geordie2004


September 13th

3. Personally I would love to see another review of this OS, but on a regular desktop PC rather than a touchscreen/tablet 'rig'. This was a good review for what it was, but the vast majority of it dealt with things from a tablet perspective.

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