Windows 8 Being Full Metro Will Be Your Choice
Windows 8 will feature a full-Metro mode where it will not even load the desktop code.
Windows 8 will bring with a brand new UI concept called Metro. This concept was first shown in the video above, demonstrating the new, slick interface that's inspired by Microsoft's work on Windows Phone 7 and touch-based hardware. It's a radical addition that will prepare Windows 8 for a whole new generation of PCs and very non-PCs.
Microsoft's Windows President Steven Sinofsky took the opportunity to talk about the new Metro UI some more on the Building Windows 8 blog.
"By now you've seen two different elements of the Windows 8 design—first, a Metro style user interface we showed previously and in a video seen by millions of folks. And recently, we have described in this blog some of the enhancements we’re making to familiar Windows desktop tools such as Explorer and the copy file dialog," wrote Sinofsky.
In what should quell complaints of what Microsoft's shown for Windows 8, Sinofsky confirms that users will have the ultimate choice of interface.
We believe there is room for a more elegant, perhaps a more nuanced, approach. You get a beautiful, fast and fluid, Metro style interface and a huge variety of new apps to use. These applications have new attributes (a platform) that go well beyond the graphical styling (much to come on this at Build). As we showed, you get an amazing touch experience, and also one that works with mouse, trackpad, and keyboard. And if you want to stay permanently immersed in that Metro world, you will never see the desktop—we won’t even load it (literally the code will not be loaded) unless you explicitly choose to go there! This is Windows reimagined.
But if you do see value in the desktop experience—in precise control, in powerful windowing and file management, in compatibility with hundreds of thousands of existing programs and devices, in support of your business software, those capabilities are right at your fingertips as well. You don’t need to change to a different device if you want to edit photos or movies professionally, create documents for your job or school, manage a large corpus of media or data, or get done the infinite number of things people do with a PC today. And if you don’t want to do any of those “PC” things, then you don’t have to and you’re not paying for them in memory, battery life, or hardware requirements. If you do want or need this functionality, then you can switch to it with ease and fluidity because Windows is right there. Essentially, you can think of the Windows desktop as just another app.
Windows 8 brings together all the power and flexibility you have in your PC today with the ability to immerse yourself in a Metro style experience. You don’t have to compromise! You carry one device that does everything you want and need. You can connect that device to peripherals you want to use. You can use devices designed to dock to large screen displays and other peripherals. You can use convertible devices that can be both immersive tablets and flexible laptops.
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Yeah, it's good for tablets but for PC's? Seriously how is this "Personal">???
Sounds to me like XP mode to run Windows 7 under Metro. Could be wrong of course...
I think it's the first innovation Microsoft makes in many years in an operating system. Finaly they're aiming at what most users will want to do (not refering to corporate computers, those should be setup by corporate IT). But for Consumers in general, they just want to use e-mail, instant messenger, listen to music, browse some web pages, look for online shopping. Most won't need to deal with filesystem (explorer) that's the OS that should deal with it.
As for us (toms readers) we know how to get things done how we want them done, so there's no point arguing.
Totally agree with may1.
I never comment on Toms, but this is awesome. If this was put on something like the Asus Transformer... I would pay any price.
What I want is one device, that when I want it to be is a tablet with a Metro-style simple OS that I can watch movies on, etc; and when I want to do work, I plug it into the keyboard and switch to a real productivity OS.
Man oh man.
it just feels like the media center taken on to its next logical conclusion, i doubt the currant generation will use it much. its for the people fetured in those lets make your house in to a pc store ads. much more exciting is the increased functionality and flexability of what their doing with things like the copy dialogs. its nice to see that the controll and power you have over your pc is being evolved just as much as the "prety" "appy" side