Windows 8 is attracting a lot of vitriol, but personally I'm quite impressed just by how...well..."classy" it feels in comparison to XP or even 7. It seems like Microsoft is taking a page from Apple's book of good design.
What Windows 8 needs now is a killer Metro app (sorry for the buzzword). So far the available apps have been pretty neat, if a little unintuitive. A must-have app that also showed off all the advantages of Metro and served a useful purpose would probably erase a lot of the Windows 8 hatred, and spurn more Metro app creation to boot.
Also, if anything, Metro is farther away from OS X than Windows 7--the whole design is less like anything physical (Apple loves this, but Aero glass is also like this). The whole design aesthetic is what they call "authentically digital" and I like it quite a bit more than Apple's skeuomorphic (what random words I've learned on HN...) tendencies.
Overall, I'm actually really happy with Metro styling. I'm also happy with the related design of WP 7 and the Zune software before it. Plenty of color, no rounded corners, fewer gradients and generally simpler, more minimalist design is what I like the most about it. In some ways, it's not dissimilar to the design of HN, which I also like.
I think your point about a "killer app" has some merit. I've certainly found no reason to stay in Metro so far. However, I just can't see where the value is going to come from.
Metro is neat looking, but I just can't think of anything that could be done in Metro, while maintaining the "look and feel" (and the tablet-accessibility) of the interface, that wouldn't be better as a web app. Sure, you might have a Metro skin that dumps you into the desktop to do complex tasks, but then there's no real value in the Metro component.
Literally everything about it looks like a (reasonably sexy) web app. Plus, it's an ERP, so there shouldn't be anything running locally, or very little. This is basically just a platform-dependent web application. In some ways, it even smacks of Active Desktop all over again. Aside from extremely loyal, MS-only shops (of which, I admit there are probably quite a few), I just can't see anyone using something like this for anything important enough to reach "killer app" status...
so as i understand it, all the windows users are going to switch to linux because they hate change, and all the linux users are going to switch to windows because they hate change. okay then.
if people want to keep using XP because that's what they're used to, they should just keep using XP. if people want to keep using gnome 2.x, they should keep using gnome 2.x. software changes. all these new user interfaces that the OS manufacturers are experimenting with to stay relevant in the iPad age are interesting and will surely evolve into something useful, even if they do currently have some major flaws. i wish people would just give them a chance.
Either they were already considering making the switch, and the Windows 8 is not good enough to keep them on Windows, or they like to have the latest features in an OS - to have the most modern one, so then Windows 7 will not be good enough for them in the coming years, and since they don't like Windows 8, they decide to switch to Linux.
Personally, I'll keep Windows 7 for a little while longer. Definitely not going to use Windows 8, and I'm going to make my decision in a few years to what platform I'll switch , probably Ubuntu or Android if it becomes mature enough, and on the 64-bit ARMv8 architecture - 2014-2015 time-frame with the latest hardware. If Windows 9 looks like 8, I won't use it.
I, myself am an Apple-nerd - I've been with Apple ever since the Newton came out. I see in the case of OS manufactures (e.g. Apple, Microsoft, Canonical, etc), that moving towards a unified mobile platform is crucial when we all seem to live more mobile based than desk based. It seems to be the way the markets are shifting. Just as Apple has shown that they will (read: might) not be bringing people back for another OSX release in 11.x, and moving towards a more iOS-based system, I think it's safe to assume that Microsoft is following the same trend. In the case of the Xbox 360, the box-like interface has proven somewhat popular. Although users have been forced to play along with the Xbox version, the Windows 7 Phone has been a big success for Microsoft.
I'm not a fan of this mobile transition, because it means that many of the desktop experiences I have may not exist on mobile platforms for a while. However, on the flip side, the mobile/desktop similarities and integration might prove worthy to the mass majority of not-so-tech savvy users out there in the market.
I found that after a while of using Mac OSX 10.7.x on my MacBook Pro, that the only thing I needed was Logic Pro. So I stuck it on an old '09 Mac Pro and soon after installed Debian on my MacBook Pro.
Looking back, I can attest that this has been one of the best decisions, though tech-savvy-ness is required to get it working and working with it. I don't know why I didn't switch earlier.
If you're looking into a more smooth transition or fun-flavored OS, Ubuntu works a bit better.
I can see why the whole Metro UI thing is gonna make a bunch of long-time Windows users sad. Microsoft knew that.However, I feel like they're solving much bigger problems with Metro - namely, the huge gap that currently sits between tablet/phone sized devices and desktops. It seems like this is going to be the first proper attempt at bridging that gap: a minimum screen resolution, sensible asset scaling for high dpi devices, good strategies for handling different resolutions, and technologies that are architecture-agnostic. Google and Apple don't seem anywhere close, yet; Google's ChromeOS was kind of a flop (though I guess we have docked mode to look forward to in new versions of Android), and Apple seems to be more busy with the iPad and making sure nobody ever uses a mouse again.
Agreed. It's the innovators dilemma. At some point you have to break away from what your users say they want, innovate and give them what they don't even know they need yet. Or your disruptive competition will slowly bleed you dry.
For power users who want control over their computer (which the OP seems to want) Linux has been definitly the better choice than any windows version for years.
Commercial OS's are driving away from working to entertainment environments because there is the growth. The market for selling new working environments is saturated. But that does not mean that this market is dead or is going to die, since there are always going to be productive people. It is a big mistake to ignore this huge market.
It has taken 10 years and counting for large numbers of people and organisations to upgrade O/S from Windows XP. It may take a further 10 for people to upgrade from Windows 7, at which point, windows 8 style interfaces may be the norm for the devices we use.
So unless there are direct problems in Windows 7 you want solving, or features you want implementing (which an application doesn't solve), who cares that it's available now?
They want their interface and their way of working to be completely under their control. Which, until now, it always has been.
Not really, that's a lot of what attracted me to Linux. I don't understand why MS still gives users so little control of the window manager. (FYI, I use awesome wm under Arch Linux.)
[+] [-] nemo1618|14 years ago|reply
What Windows 8 needs now is a killer Metro app (sorry for the buzzword). So far the available apps have been pretty neat, if a little unintuitive. A must-have app that also showed off all the advantages of Metro and served a useful purpose would probably erase a lot of the Windows 8 hatred, and spurn more Metro app creation to boot.
[+] [-] tikhonj|14 years ago|reply
Also, if anything, Metro is farther away from OS X than Windows 7--the whole design is less like anything physical (Apple loves this, but Aero glass is also like this). The whole design aesthetic is what they call "authentically digital" and I like it quite a bit more than Apple's skeuomorphic (what random words I've learned on HN...) tendencies.
Overall, I'm actually really happy with Metro styling. I'm also happy with the related design of WP 7 and the Zune software before it. Plenty of color, no rounded corners, fewer gradients and generally simpler, more minimalist design is what I like the most about it. In some ways, it's not dissimilar to the design of HN, which I also like.
[+] [-] glesica|14 years ago|reply
Metro is neat looking, but I just can't think of anything that could be done in Metro, while maintaining the "look and feel" (and the tablet-accessibility) of the interface, that wouldn't be better as a web app. Sure, you might have a Metro skin that dumps you into the desktop to do complex tasks, but then there's no real value in the Metro component.
Take a look at the Metro-based ERP app "concept" MS has apparently demonstrated: http://www.zdnet.com/blog/microsoft/microsoft-shows-off-wind....
Literally everything about it looks like a (reasonably sexy) web app. Plus, it's an ERP, so there shouldn't be anything running locally, or very little. This is basically just a platform-dependent web application. In some ways, it even smacks of Active Desktop all over again. Aside from extremely loyal, MS-only shops (of which, I admit there are probably quite a few), I just can't see anyone using something like this for anything important enough to reach "killer app" status...
[+] [-] halefx|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] notatoad|14 years ago|reply
if people want to keep using XP because that's what they're used to, they should just keep using XP. if people want to keep using gnome 2.x, they should keep using gnome 2.x. software changes. all these new user interfaces that the OS manufacturers are experimenting with to stay relevant in the iPad age are interesting and will surely evolve into something useful, even if they do currently have some major flaws. i wish people would just give them a chance.
[+] [-] nextparadigms|14 years ago|reply
Personally, I'll keep Windows 7 for a little while longer. Definitely not going to use Windows 8, and I'm going to make my decision in a few years to what platform I'll switch , probably Ubuntu or Android if it becomes mature enough, and on the 64-bit ARMv8 architecture - 2014-2015 time-frame with the latest hardware. If Windows 9 looks like 8, I won't use it.
[+] [-] matzahboy|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] russfrank|14 years ago|reply
Where the hell did you get this from? Made me lol.
[+] [-] xspence|14 years ago|reply
I'm not a fan of this mobile transition, because it means that many of the desktop experiences I have may not exist on mobile platforms for a while. However, on the flip side, the mobile/desktop similarities and integration might prove worthy to the mass majority of not-so-tech savvy users out there in the market.
I found that after a while of using Mac OSX 10.7.x on my MacBook Pro, that the only thing I needed was Logic Pro. So I stuck it on an old '09 Mac Pro and soon after installed Debian on my MacBook Pro.
Looking back, I can attest that this has been one of the best decisions, though tech-savvy-ness is required to get it working and working with it. I don't know why I didn't switch earlier.
If you're looking into a more smooth transition or fun-flavored OS, Ubuntu works a bit better.
[+] [-] steele|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] krisrm|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] justncase80|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] andrewroycarter|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] john61|14 years ago|reply
Commercial OS's are driving away from working to entertainment environments because there is the growth. The market for selling new working environments is saturated. But that does not mean that this market is dead or is going to die, since there are always going to be productive people. It is a big mistake to ignore this huge market.
[+] [-] dazbradbury|14 years ago|reply
So unless there are direct problems in Windows 7 you want solving, or features you want implementing (which an application doesn't solve), who cares that it's available now?
[+] [-] sad_panda|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] decklin|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] majmun|14 years ago|reply
[+] [-] javert|14 years ago|reply
Not really, that's a lot of what attracted me to Linux. I don't understand why MS still gives users so little control of the window manager. (FYI, I use awesome wm under Arch Linux.)
[+] [-] mukaiji|14 years ago|reply