When the Windows 8 Customer Preview was released I was
waiting for the download link to become active.
I have spent a good deal of time getting to know Windows over the
years. This is just another beta in a
long list of Windows betas that I have ran as my primary operating system. I have to be honest, I struggled with the new
UI.
I am one to figure things out on my own. That’s exactly why I run beta software hot
off the press. But here I am practically
running an IT department at times and I could not find the shutdown
button. Using the mouse felt awkward
because I can’t use it like my finger.
Do I seriously have to use the scrollbar? Why not click and slide? Once I did find the shutdown button, I could
not find the log off button. It also
felt awkward to pull out the charms bar to search the start menu.
I found myself using Powershell to shut down or reboot the computer
because I knew the command. It felt silly that I eventually had to google for
these simple things. I eventually made
my desktop shortcuts and set up my pinned apps.
Then something amazing happened.
The fact that I was running Windows 8 faded into the background. Once I stopped using the start screen, I
found myself working the exact same way I worked in Windows 7.
The building windows 8 blog did a very nice write up about
the design and ideas that inspired the new design. It was a wonderful read that gave me a lot of
insight. I deleted all but 8 items from
the start screen and was content to use it as needed.
When I got my hands on the RTM, I decided to give it another
shot. I took everything I knew and ran
with it. Things felt good at first. I was checking email, doing social media, and
browsing with IE 10. I found the Metro
IE 10 to be an interesting experience.
This worked for a while.
Once I stopped playing with things and started using my
system, I kept falling back to the desktop browser. I tried to stick with IE10 as much as I
could. It is very hard to resist using
Chrome though. So I am basically using 3 browsers. This is making my experience very fragmented. I flip into Metro for Twitter, I flip into
Metro for Facebook, and I flip into Metro for email. But I’m getting tired of flipping. I’m done
flipping.
I’m sorry Windows 8. I wanted to see the start screen succeed,
but I can’t force it. I may not install
a start menu replacement, but Metro is not going to be my main workspace
anymore. I’m going back to the desktop
and I’m going back to one browser.
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