Silent_Buddha
Legend
My wife asked me why I don't have more gadgets. She has more than me. I pointed out that my deeper understanding of these things means I'm not fooled by marketing and "buy new stuff because it's new". I don't do Twitter or Facebook because it offers nothing of substance to me. I don't upgrade mobile phones every five minutes, I don't buy a new TV every year.
I love new stuff. I'm ususally an early(ish) adopter. I was looking forwards to Win 8. However, unlike a lot of people, I don't think something is better just because it is newer. I want to get a tangible upgrade, I want to see benefits, improvement, I want to see the old problems solved, not just replaced with a different set of problems. I want something to be effecient and give maximum benefit not just the next new thing that corporations want to sell me.
And that's my attitude to Win 8. It's not good enough. It doesn't give enough benefit without giving me new problems. I'm not going to buy it while it's harder and more clunky to use that what I've already got. I'm happy to change the way I do things if the new way is better, but if it's actually worse... then I've got better things to do with my time and money.
MS hasn't convinced me with glossy sign-screens and the promise of touch-screens (which I don't have), and the interface problems have actively repelled me. So I see no benefit to me, and MS lose a sale. Provide me an OS that is useful to me, and I'll buy it. Provide me with a messy mish-mash of tablet and desktop OS squashed together like roadkill, where people tell me to ignore the interface and use a keyboard and command line to make it work, and I'm not interested in going backwards.
There are a whole host of rather, IMO, massive improvements in Win8 versus Win7 that go way beyond the minor cosmetic changes between Win7 and Vista.
But because there's a start screen instead of a start menu and no start button, it's somehow worse overall. That's the bit that I find so strange. But when I look at the history of Windows adoption from people that just don't like Microsoft in general, then it isn't a surprise. BTW - not saying you are one of those people.
And really if it's just the start screen that bugs you, there are plenty of free or paid 3rd party methods of removing it and Metro and giving back the start menu. It absolutely boggles my mind that people would pass up the improvements that Win8 brings when they are so much more substantial than the improvements that Win7 had over Vista.
People that have an open mind just buy Win8, because it is so much better than Win7, and if the start screen bugs them, they just get rid of it and put in a start menu.
Regards,
SB