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The World Post-Windows 8: Getting Better All the Time

Given that the Theme for Windows 95 Was “Start Me Up” (check out this classic ad), Windows 8 likely should pull from the old Beatles hit “Getting Better.” As we approach launch, it truly appears to be getting better all the time. It is clear Microsoft has been holding some things back for the launch.

You see, I’ve been working on a Windows 8 tablet for some months now, and I just did my first system build from scratch with Windows 8. A lot of the features that I hadn’t noticed earlier are now turned on, and the experience is far more interesting.

We are still limited by the lack of good multitouch touchpads or inexpensive touch monitors in market, but both should hit shelves in a couple of weeks.

However, this is clearly not your dad’s Windows. It is vastly different, and I expect a lot of us will struggle with the differences. Once you figure a few things out, you’ll find that it is actually much more fun to use than Windows 7 was and different in ways you didn’t realize. It’s better than earlier versions at reflecting the world we currently live in.

I’ll close with my product of the week: the 13-inch Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga Tablet, one of the best examples of the quintessential Windows 8 mobile device.

Windows 8 From Scratch

As I mentioned, I built a system from scratch last week using one of the new high-performance APUs (combination of a CPU and a GPU) and Intel SSD, and a current generation high-end Gigabyte motherboard. I have to say this was the easiest build I’ve ever done. The improvements to the installation process are amazing. The only issue I had was with the cheap power supply I’d selected, and once I switched it out, everything worked very well.

This was also the fastest build I’d ever created and likely the most power-efficient in a full-sized case because I wasn’t running a separate graphics card. Taking out the difficulties with the power supply, the total build time — including loading the OS and Office 13 — would have been under an hour. Typically these builds take me much longer — mostly loading the OS and getting everything working.

4 Things to Remember

There are four things that are very different in Windows 8, and once you learn them, the experience goes much better. First, the Windows Key allows you to switch in and out of the different modes, so if you need to move off Metro quickly and to the legacy desktop, this is how you do it.

Second, the right upper and lower corners are where you get to the control menus. Instead of clicking on them, just hover — or with a touchscreen, touch — and the menu slides in from the side.

Third — and this one wasn’t obvious at all — the Windows key + X (hit both at once) brings up things like the ability to get to a command prompt or the control panel. Finally, if you are in Metro and can’t find an app, type its name and it likely willappear — you can then pin it so you can find it again.

Now once you get these four things, you’ll find moving around Windows 8 is actually a lot faster than it was with earlier versions.

Mouse, Touchpad, Touchscreen or Kinect

If you want to make things bigger or smaller or use gestures, you have to use a pointing device that does gestures. However, if you want to use Office (even the new version) or any legacy app, you’ll likely prefer a mouse. Bringing up menus or executing commands in Office with your finger is iffy on a small screen with touch unless you have a stylus, and a mouse remains my favorite approach even if you have a touchscreen.

The best blend currently is a multitouch touchpad, but the best in market is Apple’s, and Windows 8 doesn’t have native drivers for it, so advanced features like multitouch don’t work. I know this is the best approach because I’ve used notebooks running Windows 8 that have an advanced touchpad, and they work very well.

The issue I’ve found with touchscreens comes in two parts. First, if you have a large monitor, say 25-inch or larger, you probably tend to put it just out of reach, making touch inconvenient — though likely good for exercise — and you end up with fingerprints all over your display, which I find annoying.

The wild card is Kinect, and it could not only be a better solution than a touchscreen — because you can retrofit it to an existing display and you don’t need to touch the screen — but also open up new ways to interact with your computer.

Kinect can see you and has high-resolution cameras, so it should also be able to authenticate you. It opens up three-dimensional gestures, and since the vision is stereoscopic, it might even open up 3D video conferencing.

Of course, gaming improvements are a given because of this product’s roots, but I think Kinect may be the biggest underplayed change to this new OS, which will support it.

Back-End Services and Sync

What became obvious with this latest Windows 8 build was how much the Web services that Microsoft has wrapped around the product remember me. Once I logged in, my wallpaper and preferences were already there, the services I liked had been selected, and much of what I typically take hours to do restoring my personalized experience had been done for me. This is what made the build incredibly fast, and it largely worked because I’d already been using a Windows 8 device.

This means that if you are on an older version of Windows now, you may have to do a lot of this using the normal migration tools once more — but going forward, getting your personalized experience will simply mean just logging in.

Once you couple this with Office 365, you’ll likely find that you’ll never again worry about the pain of changing PCs.

Wrapping Up: Screen Size and Office 13

I know Windows 8 is all about getting the Windows experience onto an iPad-like screen, but 10 inches with Office isn’t a great experience, and Office is as close as we get to a killer app for this platform right now.

I think you’ll find that bigger will be better if you actually want to use this for more things than you’d use an iPad for; the platform does all the iPad-like media things in 10 inches just fine, but creating, editing and other productivity tasks require more real estate. It’s likely 10 inches will seem too small again. Notebooks have never sold well under 12 inches, with 13.3 inches the current sweet spot between size and portability.

One of the mistakes I think Microsoft has made historically was to decouple Office from the OS, and Office 13 wasn’t designed around the new interface. On the other hand, this means it is much more similar to the Office version you are using, and you may like it better as a result. The usability improvements are pretty impressive, and you’ll likely find, as I did, it is much faster.

So I actually like Windows 8 now. It just took me a while to get over the changes and seem them as improvements. But the subtle change is that your stuff is now mostly in the cloud if you fully use this product as intended, and that means the entire experience is actually more different than you realize.

While we were all looking at the interface, Microsoft snuck in a vastly better and more up-to-date user experience. Sneaky bastards.

Product of the Week: Lenovo 13-Inch IdeaPad Yoga

Product of the Week

You’ll be seeing a bunch of new products wrapped around Windows 8 that showcase this platform’s unique ability to morph from notebook to tablet and back again. These products generally come in two classes — convertibles and hybrids.

Convertibles transform from a notebook to a tablet but leave the keyboard attached like a current-generation convertible car does with a hard or soft retractabletop. Hybrids have a keyboard accessory that they dock with, and that can be removed — like some of the earlier cars that had T-Tops that you’d store in your trunk when you wanted a top-down experience.

Hybrids tend to be more complex, heavier with the keyboard attached, more expensive with the keyboard — and you are more likely to leave the keyboard behind. But they are lighter and cheaper without the keyboard, provide a more pure tablet experience, and often have a second battery in the keyboard, doubling battery life.

If you want more of a tablet experience but occasionally want to workon the device, the hybrid is the best choice. If you work more and play less, the convertible is probably for you.

The convertible tablet that initially stands out best is the Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga, which uses an innovative hinge that allows the keyboard to fold easily underneath the screen, transforming it into a tablet.

It also comes in that 13-inch size (basically an Ultrabook that can be a tablet) I’ve highlighted as ideal for work, and a smaller 11.6-ince size that I think most folks will prefer over 10-inch, initially.

IdeaPad Yoga 13

IdeaPad Yoga 13

Now Lenovo also launched the Lynx, which is a hybrid — and better at the 11.6-inch form factor for those who want more of a traditional tablet experience. In effect, Lenovo has bracketed the Windows 8 tablet segment with a full set ofchoices, but the 13-inch Yoga is the closest to how I work, so it is my product of the week.

Rob Enderle

Rob Enderle is a TechNewsWorld columnist and the principal analyst for the Enderle Group, a consultancy that focuses on personal technology products and trends.

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