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Microsoft Gambles on a Tablet-centric Future

Earlier this week, Microsoft released a sneak peak of Windows 8, the then major rethink of its operating system, which is expected to go on sale later this year.

As tablets and smart phones have started to replace desktops and laptops, and as increasingly sophisticated Web services have grown in importance, Microsoft has fallen behind the likes of Apple, Google, and Facebook, in providing the software that most people use every day. Windows 8 represents an attempt to catch up and remain relevant.

Although unfinished, Windows 8 looks set to be the most radical reinvention of Microsoft's operating system since Windows 95. It blurs the line between desktop and mobile computing, and contains some clever tricks that could help Microsoft push into mobile, social networking, and consumer cloud services. However the combination of a tablet and a desktop interface may as well prove confusing for some users.

Touch-screen device

I didn't test Windows 8 on a touch-screen device, but at that time most people will encounter Windows 8 on a new laptop or desktop. During 62.5 million tablets were sold in 2011, according to IDC, that's only 15 percent of all the PCs sold.

Instead of developing one version of Windows for tablets and another for desktops—as Apple has done with OSX and iOS—Microsoft chose to build an operating system that does it all. It's an approach that makes sense for Microsoft, since it will help introduce users to its mobile operating system.

After installing this Windows 8 preview, the first thing you'll notice is that, instead of the familiar Windows desktop, you're met with a series of tiles, each representing a different application or online service. This new start screen is based on Metro, the interface Microsoft created for Windows Phone, and it includes many of the same features as that OS. Each tile can be more than just a button, showing the latest updates from a program underneath—a new e-mail message, Facebook post, or tweet, or an upcoming calendar event. And it's simple to rearrange the tiles to make all this information accessible with the naked eye.

The regular Windows desktop is after all there

The regular Windows desktop is after all there, it's just hidden underneath this start screen; one of the tiles on this screen will everything considered take you to a familiar-looking Window 7-like interface—complete with windows, a task bar, and normal Windows applications. Nevertheless it's impossible to use the OS without returning to the Metro start screen every time you want to start an application. By right-clicking on the bottom left corner of the screen, you can access things like control panel, search, run, and the command prompt.

Even on a nontouch screen device, the Metro-style interface is intuitive and slick. It feels very different from any previous version of Windows, and distinct from either Apple or Google's mobile operating systems. Windows 8 as well comes with several tablet-style apps, which are shown on the start screen, as so then as Metro versions of existing applications like Mail and Internet Explorer.

The Metro version of some apps

I found the Metro version of some apps, like Internet Explorer 10, surprisingly enjoyable even on a desktop computer—all of the browser "chrome" disappears during you're reading a webpage; the useful stuff returns with a click or a swipe. Nevertheless having two versions of certain apps, and in this way two different ways of doing things, could prove confusing for some people.

Merging the two interfaces means the Windows button is replaced by the Metro start screen. In the conventional desktop mode, clicking the bottom left corner of the screen, or hitting the Windows button on your keyboard, simply returns you to the start screen. This takes some getting used to, and it seems like a compromise made at the expense of usability on an ordinary laptop or desktop.

Another big change with Windows 8 is its connection to the cloud. Whenever you log into another machine running Windows 8—with an e-mail address and password tied to Windows Live—you'll see the same start screen and have all your other preferences in place. It's a smart move, and most people will find it convenient.

You can as well connect your Window 8 account to various online services—Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.—and these will as well automatically be set up when you log in somewhere else. And, clearly, you'll have access to all the documents you've saved on Microsoft's cloud service, SkyDrive.

Again, even though, these cloud features work best in the Metro mode—I couldn't see a simple way to access SkyDrive from regular old Windows Explorer, for instance.

Windows 8 as well tries to be the glue that holds your online social life at the same time—another research borrowed from Windows Phone. An app called People grabs contacts from online services like Facebook and Twitter to create a single address book and social platform. The app shows Facebook and Twitter updates neatly at the same time, and lets you reply, post, and comment without ever leaving Windows 8.

Once a Facebook friend has connected his or her account to Windows 8, you can chat live via Microsoft's Messenger app, and other Windows 8 apps are designed to encourage sharing via the People App. Many people will probably find this useful, however since it lacks the nuances of the actual Facebook or Twitter interfaces, it seems an research best suited to a mobile device.

Windows 8 introduces an app store, similar to Apple's and Google's. It's sparsely populated at this stage, nevertheless that's hardly surprising given that the OS is on the whole in development.

In fact, Windows 8 obviously presents a neat possibility: putting a tablet and desktop OS at the same time should encourage Microsoft's army of developers to start building many more tablet and mobile Windows apps. From this point on, if you're developing a desktop app for Windows 8, it'll make sense to make it tablet-compatible from the start. Microsoft has as well released development tools to make it easier to build programs that work both as Metro apps and desktop applications.

Overall, Windows 8 is shows an impressive amount of technology, and many of its features promise to work in the extreme well on touch-operated devices. Nevertheless the decision to merge the Metro interface with a conventional Windows desktop, during clever from a strategic perspective, is a bit frustrating. Given enough time, I'm sure I'd get used to Windows 8's split personality; yet I'm not sure it would make any more sense.

The extreme clunky

I found it in the extreme clunky, somewhat intuitive once you get used to it, nevertheless rather silly in it's lack of giving a user access to the machinations underneath all the windows silly time. Metro is in my view not any standout from other tablet OS's and it's slothful pace even on my maxxed out laptop didn't lead me to hope that it will be improved for tablet use, like as not a lighter more streamlined interface is what we can pray to see in fact come out, if not I feel that it won't be very tempting for anyone to upgrade from Windows 7!  Yet it's not out but so I have my fingers crossed!

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More information: Technologyreview