Tested News

Hands-On: The Four Best New Features of Microsoft Windows 8

Why I’m excited about Windows again, and why you should be too. New screenshots!

I spent most of the day yesterday in a room with a bunch of media types getting a pre-briefing on Windows 8. A parade of Microsoft execs walked us through the features they’re excited about--everything from the new UI to the development environment for Windows 8 apps to printer support and enterprise features. After the briefing, I got to spend some quality time with a developer build of the new OS running on a pre-production tablet. The developer build has many of the core Windows 8 apps stripped out--there’s no mail client, no People app, no Picture viewer, etc; but I was able to get a much better idea of how the OS actually runs.

After spending a few hours with it, I’m excited to see more.

Metro is New and Exciting Metaphor for Computing

The Desktop as a metaphor for desktop computers has remained relatively unchanged since the dawn of the graphical user interface. The core idea--a workspace with windows that contain the things you’re working on--has had many new features bolted on to it so that it looks dramatically different, but the core idea hasn’t changed since early versions of Mac OS. Although Windows 8 will include a traditional desktop, the screen you’ll see when you first log onto Windows is entirely new.

Windows 8’s new Start Screen is a full-screen, sized-up version of the Windows Phone 7 Home Screen, populated with tiles filled that display dynamic snippets of information--mostly images and snippets of text, but there are other modes as well. This new full-screen Metro-style menu replaces the Start Menu, at least on the developer build of Windows 8 that we got to try out. Desktop die-hards need not freak out (at least not yet), transitioning between the Start screen and the traditional desktop was seamless.

The tiles on the Start screen essentially replace application icons in the Start Menu or on the Taskbar. When you’re on the Start screen, the tiles are constantly updating and animating. Clicking on most tiles simply launches the app, but you can also create tiles that deep link to a specific part of an app. We saw an example RSS reader app that lets you create tiles for specific RSS feeds and the People app, which lets you make a tile for a specific person. This isn’t a new concept for Windows Phone 7 users, but it’s brand new for the traditional PC.

It’s much too early to say whether reimagining the Start Menu and Desktop is a good idea or not, but it’s an undeniably high-risk endeavor for Microsoft. The new Metro-style apps ditch the window--they’re either full screen or split screen--and must be designed to use new software interfaces. Legacy apps will just shell out to the old-school Desktop. It seems like Microsoft has gone to great lengths to make Metro apps easy to build, but if developers don’t embrace the platform, the new Start screen will just be constant reminder for users that Microsoft mucked up. Worse, it will be between them and the real desktop.

There’s a great deal more to say about how you actually use Metro, which leads me to my next point.

Designed for Fingers and Mice

In many ways, the current phone and tablet platforms use touch as a replacement for a mouse. Touch-and-hold menus open up the equivalent of right-click context menus on iOS and Android. Instead of creating touch equivalents for mouse movements, Windows 8 uses gestures for everything. Of course, if you have a keyboard and mouse connected, the OS works perfectly with them too. Hell, it even supports pen computing, if that’s your bag. Each input method follows its own set of rules, which was confusing at first, but quickly made sense to me.

The touch gestures are clearly the focus though, and it seems like Microsoft has designed Windows 8’s touch interface to be more than just a finger-driven mouse. Gestures are intuitive, simple to execute, and speedy. Want to resize a tile on the Start screen? Swipe down from the top of the tile and a context-sensitive menu appears at the bottom of the screen that lets you resize, uninstall, or unpin the app. Want to move it? Just drag. Want to switch between open apps? It’s as easy as swiping from the left side of the screen. Swipe from the top or bottom to access the context-sensitive menu for your current app. And when you need to access more advanced functionality that transcends a particular app? You swipe from the right side of the screen to access Charms.

Charms have an unfortunate name, but they’re important to the new UI. They’re designed to make advanced tasks available to users in the touch environment. There are five Charms: Search, Share, Start, Devices, and Settings. Each provides context-aware functionality to the user from within an app. For example, you can’t drag and drop files in Metro-style apps. Sure, drag and drop always sucks with touch, but the larger problem is Windows 8’s Metro UI lacks windows to drag files from or drop them into. Rather than gin up some complex gesture to replace drag and drop, Microsoft added new super-APIs (they call them Contracts) and exposes them using Charms.

Take the Share Charm for instance. When you tap the Charm from the Pictures app, it opens a dialog on the right side of the screen that lists all the apps you have installed that allow you to share photos.This works the other way too, if you want to add a picture to an email, click “Attach” and the file browser will open up. From there you can add pictures from your PC or any of the photo-sharing services you’ve connected to your PC. The other Charms add support for printers and projectors as well as Search and a shortcut that will return you to the Start screen.

And, if you don’t like touch, or don’t have a PC that supports touch, you can always just use a mouse and keyboard, whether you’re in the new Start screen or the traditional Desktop.

Windows Will Be Integrated with the Entire Cloud

Windows 8 will be tightly integrated with Windows Live, Microsoft’s cloud services. Your preferences, profile, and installed Metro applications will sync across all your Windows 8-powered devices seamlessly. Let me say that again. Your Windows preferences will sync across all of your devices. Seamlessly. When you change your lock screen wallpaper on one device, that will propagate out to all of your other machines in a matter of moments. Apps will also be able to save their data to SkyDrive, Microsoft’s cloud-based storage service.

In addition to Microsoft’s own services, Windows Live also aggregates the connections for your non-MIcrosoft services as well. Once you connect Windows Live to Facebook, Flickr, Picasa, Gmail, and others, those services will be available on any Windows 8 device that you’re logged into with your Windows Live account. This is a good thing--whether Microsoft’s photosharing service is good or not isn’t relevant, people with massive photo libraries on a competitor’s service are unlikely to switch. Windows Live essentially acts as a proxy for other services.

Windows 8 Loves Ambient Data

Whether you’re talking about the Lock screen or the Start screen, there’s ambient data everywhere in Windows 8. I’ve already talked about the constantly-updating Live Tiles on the Start screen, but the Lock screen is worth a look as well.

By default, the Lock screen includes the time and date, battery status, and wireless status. But you can add notification badges for specific Metro apps, as well. Because Windows 8 supports iOS-style push notifications, those badges will live update, even when the PC is in standby. Ambient data on the lock screen is nothing new for phones, but it’s something that hasn’t made the jump to PCs until now.

Sogemanon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:08 a.m.
Would be nice if WP7 games could save their stuff to Skydrive. I have all that space, might as well use it because I'm not.
Dudeon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:09 a.m.

Still not sure how I feel about Windows 8 and won't be until I try it out for myself.

pow1149on Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:11 a.m.

I'm not at all tempted by Windows 8 for my gaming rig, but if I were to get an 11" laptop it could be cool...

Twitchon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:15 a.m.
Price for upgrade is the make or break. Windows 7 is good.
vr00mon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:18 a.m.

http://smooth.akamai.istreamplanet.com/msft/build/default.html Windows 8 build conference live right now if you want to watch.

Foggenon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:19 a.m.

Don't care until I know how Steam works.

chickdigger802on Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:33 a.m.
@will any laptops made for win8 announced? I wouldn't mind a resurgence of tablet laptops.
Sealsj3on Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:37 a.m.
I am really excited for this metro interface. Can't wait to get my hands on it.
will staff is online on Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:38 a.m.

@Sogeman: Metro apps will be able to do that. They haven't talked about games yet.

@pow1149: Yeah. It's a lame term, but the point is that Live lets you integrate all your services with one account.

Thomperon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:39 a.m.

Not sure yet how great Metro will be on 'regular' PC's, but this seems like the tablet-OS to beat now. iOS works fine on iPad, but it can be incredibly static and might get cluttered quickly. Adding better notifications in iOS5 is better, but Windows 8 seems like something that should work much, much better on tablets. Really hope iOS6 will be a bigger leap in UI-design, or Microsoft will definitely have the advantage.

BlatantNinja23on Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:49 a.m.

i know its simple, but with the right background I find the lock screen on the zune hd, wp 7, and windows 8 to be simply beautiful at times.

MooseyMcManon Sept. 13, 2011 at 9:56 a.m.
Eh, I dunno. I kinda like Windows the way it is in 7. Of course, I thought the same exact way with Vista, and the same way with XP. Who knows.  
 
But I will definitely have to make sure I don't lose my Windows 7 install disk(s). You know, just in case. 
RhombusOfTerroron Sept. 13, 2011 at 10 a.m.

It looks like that Windows Mobile 7 rainmeter skin. nice.

1pon Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:04 a.m.

It's all about that printer support, baby.

darkjester74on Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:05 a.m.

All I really want to know is if you can turn that Start screen off completely.  If I wanted my PC to look like a phone I would buy a phone.
Scorch is online on Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:06 a.m.

If you're not sure about the Metro tiles on Win 8, there's an addon in Win7 right now that sort of emulates the experience: http://omnimo.info/ I installed it on my media/server PC to do the few functions I need there, and within half a day I was pretty sold on the general direction of the tile stuff.

I loved the slickness of the tiles on the Win7Phones but I thought the rest of the OS was lacking depth. If they can replicate the smoothness of it on top of the already solid Win7 desktop OS then I'm all over it.

PresidentOfJellybeanson Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:07 a.m.

Windows 7, the new xp. Windows 8, the new vista.

darkjester74on Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:09 a.m.
@PresidentOfJellybeans said:

               

Windows 7, the new xp. Windows 8, the new vista.


           

Well said, sir!  Couldnt agree more.
MordeaniisChaoson Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:15 a.m.

Will drivers sync at all? Even if it was just a temporary "Hit this button, reformat, and then download all your drivers" only leaving that stuff up during the duration of the format, it would be incredible.

Dizzyhipposon Sept. 13, 2011 at 10:18 a.m.
@darkjester74 said:
All I really want to know is if you can turn that Start screen off completely.  If I wanted my PC to look like a phone I would buy a phone.
this^ as many times as it takes to make that sink in
How To Rip DVDs to Play on Any Device—For Free!

Our ultimate DVD copying guide shows you how to use Handbrake to rip discs for playback on your laptop, Xbox, PS3, iPhone, Zune, netbook, iPad, PSP, iPod, and pretty much anything else

Tested: Apple Mac OS X Lion

The $30 upgrade from Snow Leopard seems like a no-brainer, but that's not the full story. Read the official Tested review.

Apple iPad 2 Review

Our definitive review of the iPad 2.

Tested: Nvidia GeForce GTX 580 Video Card

The green machine comes back swinging.

Apple iPad Wi-Fi Review

Apple's device isn't magical, but it is going to make the tablet a real category--for better or for worse

Video: How To Build the Best $1500 Gaming PC, Step-by-Step

Do you like saving money? What about playing PC games? Have you ever considered building your own PC? We show you exactly what you need to know to build an awesome $1500 gaming PC.

How To Build an Awesome $500 Windows Home Server

We pick the best parts to build a lean media backup and streaming machine.

The Best Android Phone for Your Network (February 2011)

Don't get locked in with the wrong phone.

Why I’ve Switched from Browser-Based Apps Back to Native Software on the Desktop

Moving from powerful, native Desktop clients to clunky web-apps isn’t always a good thing. In fact, it’s often a significant step backwards.

Qualcomm's Snapdragon S4 Integrates LTE, Tops Benchmarks

Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon SoC outperforms 2011's fastest chips by a wide margin and integrates LTE processing in the name of battery efficiency.

Ivy Bridge Chip Delay to Summer Gives Apple a Shot at Early Access

As PC makers hold onto new models in the summer months before Windows 8's launch, Apple will have plenty of time to launch new laptops with new processors.

Nokia Teases "Pure View" Camera, Which Hopefully Isn't Just More Megapixels [Video]

Nokia's next phone could mark the return of the Xenon flash, a large image sensor, or high quality 1080p video recording.

Future SSDs May Suffer from Speed and Reliability Issues

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego project doubled latency and tripled bit errors in SSDs as storage increases.

Purported 2048x1536 iPad 3 Display Spotted--Now Who's Making It?

A quad-pixel iPad display in the flesh, but it is unlikely that Sharp will manufacture it.

How Windows 8 Will Integrate SkyDrive for Cloud Storage and Remote PC Access

SkyDrive's omnipresence in Windows 8 extends from the profile to Metro apps to the legacy desktop.

Major Changes to Flickr to Begin Rolling Out February 28th

The Photo View and Upload pages are getting much-needed redesigns, which Flickr needs to stop the user bleed.

What Kind of Computer User Needs a High-End 17-inch Laptop?

According to Loyd, there exist three key uses that necessitate a high-end 17-inch laptop.

Why I’ve Switched from Browser-Based Apps Back to Native Software on the Desktop

Moving from powerful, native Desktop clients to clunky web-apps isn’t always a good thing. In fact, it’s often a significant step backwards.

Future SSDs May Suffer from Speed and Reliability Issues

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego project doubled latency and tripled bit errors in SSDs as storage increases.

Comcast Announces Its Netflix Rival: Xfinity Streampix

The streaming video service is launching this Thursday for existing Comcast subscribers.

Tested: The New and Improved Swype Beta on Android 4.0

After acquiring Swype, Nuance had updated the app for Android 4.0 and added some new features.

Everything You Need to Know About Ubuntu for Android

Linux gets more Linux-y when Android gets mashed up with Ubuntu.

Purported 2048x1536 iPad 3 Display Spotted--Now Who's Making It?

A quad-pixel iPad display in the flesh, but it is unlikely that Sharp will manufacture it.

Siri On OS X: Will Most Users Even Care?

One notable feature missing from the upcoming Mountain Lion release of OS X is Apple's Siri.

Submissions can take several hours to be approved.

Save ChangesCancel