1. Interactive tiles
The Metro start screen may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it does
have undeniable benefits, chief of which is the interactive tiles.
The Metro start screen may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it does have undeniable benefitsThe Metro start screen may not be everyone’s cup of tea, but it does have undeniable benefits
Unlike certain other mobile operating systems – yes, we’re looking at
you iOS – the icons in Metro do more than just open the app. They also
turn the Start screen into a dashboard teeming with live data.
The interactive tile for the Mail application provides snippets from
unread messages in your inbox, the Music tile shows which track is
currently playing, and the Calendar app displays forthcoming
appointments in your diary.
It’s great for getting an overview of what’s going on when you fire up your PC or tablet first thing in the morning.
There are limitations, however. It’s possible, for example, to create a Metro tile for old-school Windows applications such as Outlook 2010, but the tile won’t be interactive.
There are limitations, however. It’s possible, for example, to create a Metro tile for old-school Windows applications such as Outlook 2010, but the tile won’t be interactive.
Presumably, the forthcoming Metro versions of Office will solve this
particular issue, but it isn’t clear whether old, non-Metro applications
will ever receive interactive tiles.
There’s also (so far, at least) little scope for users to tailor the
data that appears in the interactive tiles; instead, this is determined
by the app developers.
2. Task Manager
Nobody really wants to spend any time in Task Manager, but should you
be forced to manually terminate a program or a task, the new-look
utility makes it much easier to find the guilty, resource-hogging
culprits.
Entries in the Task Manager are now heat-mapped, so it’s simple to
see at a glance which application is chomping through CPU cycles or
memory.
There’s also a column of attractive new graphs under the Performance
tab, allowing you to see at a glance if the CPU, memory or network
connection (either Ethernet or Wi-Fi) is taking an unexpected hit.
The App History tab, meanwhile, allows you to keep an eye on Metro
Style apps. Especially handy is the data counter, which shows how many
megabytes of data individual apps have swallowed. It’s a shame
traditional desktop apps are excluded from this view.
Finally, Task Manager now also plays home to the Startup settings,
allowing you to determine which programs are allowed to run
automatically on boot, without having to dive into msconfig. The
revamped tool also reveals what impact that each app has on startup
times; Adobe Reader is, for example, a “high-impact” application.
3. Run ISOs and VHDs natively
Windows 8 throws a meaty bone to power users – namely, the ability to
run ISO and virtual hard disk (VHD) images natively. It’s possible, for
example, to download the ISO of a Linux distribution or another piece
of software to the desktop, double-click to “mount” the file, and run
the setup executable without having to physically burn the ISO to disc.
4. No new hardware requirements
As with Windows 7, Microsoft isn’t raising the hardware requirements
for the latest version. That means – in theory, at least – that any PC
capable of running Windows Vista should be able to handle Windows 8.
Certainly, we’ve had no problems running Windows 8 on relatively
ancient pieces of kit knocking around the PC Pro office. A touchscreen
laptop running an AMD Turion X2 processor with 4GB of RAM coped
perfectly with the new OS, as did a Core 2 Duo laptop with a mere 2GB of
RAM onboard. Even a touchscreen Dell laptop with a lowly 1.66GHz Atom
processor and 2GB of RAM passed with flying colours.
In short, if you’ve bought a PC any time in the past three or four years, it should cope fine with Windows 8.
5. Airplane mode
With Windows 8, there’s no more scrambling around for Wi-Fi or Bluetooth switches.
A new option in the Settings menu enables a tablet or laptop to be
put into Airplane mode, just like a smartphone, so there’s no danger
that you’ll send your easyJet flight catapulting into the South Terminal
at Gatwick. Not that there was much chance of that happening in the
first place.
6. SkyDrive integration
Until now, Microsoft’s SkyDrive has lacked a purpose in life. Beaten
on features and flexibility by Dropbox and others, its chief benefit was
25GB of free online storage – but that was hard to take advantage of
due to stringent file-size limits.
The integration of SkyDrive in Windows 8 could be the making of the
service. The Consumer Preview includes a SkyDrive Metro Style app that
provides access to any documents, photos and music you’ve uploaded.
It isn’t flawless at this stage; click on a document in the SkyDrive
app, for instance, and you’re booted into the desktop version of
Internet Explorer and asked to enter your login details again. The
arrival of Metro versions of Office apps will hopefully smooth out that
particular wrinkle.
Elsewhere, however, the SkyDrive integration works well, allowing
documents, videos and photos to be saved through the Share facility
(accessed from the Charms on the right-hand side of the screen). When
emailing a photo from the Pictures app, the Mail app offers to upload it
to SkyDrive instead of attaching it to the email.
What’s more, any Metro Style app that has an Open or Save dialog can
access SkyDrive without the app developer having to add a single line of
code.
The once crippling file-size limit of 100MB has also been upgraded to
a far more generous 2GB. And SkyDrive will appear as a virtual disk in
Windows Explorer; you’ll see it in the left-hand navigation bar next to
local drives, although this has yet to be enabled in the Consumer
Preview.
7. Windows Store
The Windows Store, while sparsely populated for the Consumer Preview,
shows tremendous promise. Microsoft has borrowed the best features from
other app stores and added a couple of unique features of its own.
8. Interactive lock screen
The Windows lock screen is no longer a glorified password prompt. The
attractive, customisable lock display now includes snippets of
information, such as how many unread email messages are waiting in the
Metro Mail app inbox, or the charge state of a laptop’s battery.
To unlock a Windows 8 PC, simply swipe upwards on a tablet device, or press the spacebar on a laptop or desktop.
9. Split-screen apps
While other mobile OSes boast of multitasking, Windows 8 executes
this in a meaningful way. Metro Style apps can be run split-screen, with
most of the display devoted to one app and a thin slice down either
side to another.
This means, for example, the Music player can be left running on the
side – complete with playback controls – with the rest of the display
devoted to work.
There’s only a certain type of app that will squeeze comfortably into
that secondary slot, however, and on smaller screens it may simply be
easier to flick from one full-screen app to the next, but the
split-screen arrangement at least means users of large desktop monitors
aren’t wasting all those pixels on a solitary Metro Style app.
Traditional Windows desktop apps can be managed in the same way as
before. In fact, it’s possible to treat the Windows desktop as a Metro
app filling most of the screen, with a thin Metro Style app running
alongside.
10. Split touch keyboard
Nobody could accuse Microsoft of failing to put enough thought into
its soft keyboard for touchscreen users. There are two types on offer: a
keyboard that spans the full width of the screen, and a split keyboard
that makes it easier to thumb-type on larger tablet screens.
Usefully, the split keyboard can be zoomed to different sizes, and it
cleverly places the number keys between the two banks of letters,
leaving them easily accessible – but not in the way.
In addition to the two soft keyboard options, Windows 8 also offers
handwriting recognition, allowing stylus users to write in web forms or
the browser bar, or jot notes. As our Real World Computing contributing
editor Simon Jones noted in a recent column, the handwriting recognition
is excellent, which is a boon for professional tablet users in the
field.
It isn’t clear whether Microsoft will impose its own keyboard on users or allow third-party alternatives.
11. App contracts
Microsoft has published a set of APIs common to all Metro apps that
allow them to freely exchange data. It’s possible, for example, to give a
Twitter client access to the Photos app, massively simplifying the
process of photo sharing.
12. Fewer surprise restarts
Desks across the country have fist-sized holes in them, caused solely
by Windows’ habit of restarting to implement a security update, often
losing unsaved work in the process. Windows 8 doesn’t promise to abandon
forced restarts, but it’s much more considerate about them.
Desks
across the country have fist-sized holes in them, caused solely by
Windows’ habit of restarting to implement a security updateDesks
across the country have fist-sized holes in them, caused solely by
Windows’ habit of restarting to implement a security update
First, Microsoft promises only to restart for the security patches
that arrive on Patch Tuesday once a month – unless a “critical security
update to fix a worm-like vulnerability” crops up, in which case
Microsoft will push out an update that will restart machines.
Second, it will ease off on the nagging: there will be no more
pop-ups interrupting presentations or DVD playback. Microsoft will
instead place a prominent warning about necessary restarts on the
revamped lock screen.
Furthermore, it will give three days’ notice of any restart, as
opposed to the 20-minute default countdown that Windows 7 offers; the
latter is often missed entirely by people who pop out for lunch and
return to find their PC has restarted.
As well as the three-day deadline, Microsoft says Windows 8 won’t
restart if there are applications running in the background or if
there’s unsaved work open.
Only once work has been saved will Windows force an update to
install. How Microsoft defines “unsaved work” is, however, unclear:
would data in a web form or CMS that hasn’t been submitted count as
unsaved work?
13. Cross-device synchronisation
The Windows 8 installation screen practically forces users to set up a
Windows Live account. This not only becomes the PC’s primary login, but
it also gives access to the Windows Store and allows settings to be
synchronised across different Windows 8 devices.
The lock screen, Windows desktop wallpaper and Metro theme are all
synchronised by default, providing visual consistency across all of your
PCs, laptops and tablets. Internet Explorer history and bookmarks are
also shared, as well as other Windows settings.
Infographic
The Sync menu also allows the synchronisation of “certain settings in
your apps”, although frustratingly, it doesn’t reveal any further
details. On our test PCs, we saw our social network setting synchronised
in the People app, but not much else.
Indeed, it could be argued that Windows 8’s synchronisation doesn’t
go far enough. It would be nice if Microsoft at least offered to
synchronise the Metro desktop and any installed apps, provided that both
devices had sufficient storage space. Fingers crossed it will be sorted
by final release time.
The Windows Store does at least contain a list of apps you’ve
previously purchased, making it easier to re-download them onto a new
device.
14. Improved 3G support
Windows 8 offers native support for 3G and 4G (the latter of which
won’t be of use until we get the next-gen networks found in the US).
Given that most high-end tablets have 3G slots in the back, Microsoft
could do little else. However, this isn’t the only concession that it’s
making to mobile broadband users.
15. Built-in antivirus
Microsoft seems reluctant to shout about it – perhaps through fear of
attracting unwanted anti-trust attention – but Windows 8 is the first
version of Windows to include built-in antivirus protection. And not
before time.
Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE), the optional free antivirus
package for older versions of Windows, now appears under the Windows
Defender umbrella in the Windows 8 Consumer Preview.
As with the Windows 7 version of MSE, it’s light on features, but as
an unobtrusive minder to keep an eye out for anything untoward, it
should suffice. Microsoft is also vetting Metro Style apps before they
appear in the Store, adding another layer of protection.
Those measures, together with Windows 8’s built-in firewall, could
convince many people not to bother with extra, paid-for security suites.
Whether it will eventually prove a bonus for malware writers – who may
only have to worry about worming past Microsoft’s security software
instead of an entire field of third-party security suites – remains to
be seen.
16. Picture passwords
Tapping in passwords on a tablet, even using Microsoft’s excellent
soft keyboard, is hardly ideal. Picture passwords are an inventive
alternative.
Select a photo from your library, make three gestures with your
finger on the chosen photo – tapping each of your children in
alphabetical order, for example, or swiping across three letters in a
picture of fridge magnets – and that becomes your Windows login. Picture
passwords can be used with both touchscreens and mouse controls.
Should you forget your Picture password, you can switch back to the
more conventional methods of logging in with your Windows Live ID or
with a simple text password.
17. Instant search
Without doubt, the single biggest criticism of Windows 8 from laptop
and desktop PC users is the absence of the Start button on the
traditional Windows desktop. That this is a culture shock is beyond
dispute, but after a little acclimatisation, the reimagined Windows
search compensates for the Start button’s absence – at least in part.
18. Windows To Go
Another one in the eye for those who claim that Windows 8 has little
to offer businesses is Windows To Go. This allows companies to provide
employees with a locked-down installation of Windows 8 on a USB thumb
drive.
This means that the IT department could give remote workers an OS
image with all the corporate applications preinstalled, which employees
could then run on their own hardware. Alternatively, it could be a
secure way to give temporary staff, contractors or even schoolchildren
access to the company/school network, as Windows To Go doesn’t receive
access to storage on the host PC.
The USB disk can be encrypted with BitLocker, ensuring that the data
is safe if the drive is lost or stolen. Plus, it can be disconnected
from the host PC for up to a minute without causing the system to crash.
If the drive isn’t reinserted, the system simply shuts down, leaving no
trace of its existence on the host PC.
Windows To Go isn’t built into the Consumer Preview, but there are various methods published online for creating your own drive.
19. Secure Boot
Secure Boot is one of the more controversial new features in Windows
8. This anti-malware measure will prevent any software not signed by a
trusted certificate authority from starting before Windows 8 is up and
running. It’s designed to head off rootkits and other forms of malware
that attempt to hijack the boot process.
Unfortunately, it could also intercept other operating systems such
as Linux distributions, which has caused uproar in the open source
world.
Our own Jon Honeyball has argued that it “isn’t reasonable for the
majority of PC users to have to put up with unsecured booting, simply
because an alternative OS vendor can’t be bothered to go down the same
route”. Linux vendors and computing experts have argued that PCs are
unlikely to ship with any secure keys other than Windows’ own, giving
Microsoft an effective monopoly on the hardware.
“The extension of Microsoft’s OS monopoly to hardware would be a
disaster, with increased lock-in, decreased consumer choice and lack of
space to innovate,” argued renowned security researcher Professor Ross
Anderson in his Light Blue Touchpaper blog. “It is clearly unlawful and
must not succeed.”
20. Revamped Explorer
Although, on the surface, the traditional Windows desktop is very
similar to that of Windows 7, changes have been made underneath. The
Windows Explorer is now graced with the ribbon interface that first
arrived with Office 2007 and has slowly made its way across almost all
of Microsoft’s applications.
Although it’s unlikely to improve matters for anyone familiar with
Windows’ keyboard shortcuts, the ribbon sports sizeable buttons for
common tasks, such as Copy, Paste and Rename. Microsoft claims that it’s
relied on years of Windows telemetry to determine which functions
deserve greater emphasis.
The Explorer ribbon also hides tabs until they’re relevant. Click on a
JPEG in an Explorer menu and the Picture Tools tab appears, for
example, allowing a photo to be set as the desktop background or
rotated.
Look to the left of the file-path bar and you’ll also notice a
significant returnee: the up-level button finally returns to Explorer.
21. Restore PC
We all have those relatives that install every toolbar, utility and
Facebook app they can point a mouse at, and then wonder why their PC is
slower than the thought process of a nightclub bouncer.
22. Thumbnail previews
One of the new tweaks in the Consumer Preview provides a peek at open
applications. Push the mouse into the top-left corner, then pull it
down: a column of thumbnails appears – Android style – allowing you to
click on the app of your choice.
Alternatively, clicking in the top-left corner cycles through open
apps one by one. Touchscreen users can flick a finger from the left-hand
edge to scroll through.
23. Metro groups
Install a few apps from the Metro store onto the Start screen and
things quickly start to look disorganised. In fact, trying to keep your
tiles neatly organised in Metro is a bit like a game of Tetris,
attempting to tessellate different-sized blocks into a gapless wall.
However, it’s possible to arrange your Metro Style apps in
customisable groups – Games, Work, Music and so on – simply by dragging
and dropping them into position.
After that, click on the little magnifying glass in the bottom-right
corner (or pinch to zoom out on a touchscreen) and Windows zooms out to
provide a helicopter view of the entire Metro desktop. A right-click on
any group of apps brings up the option to give it a name.
If you want to make a tile smaller or larger, right-click on it and
choose the appropriate option from the menu that appears in the light
green bar at the foot of the screen.
24. Kinect for Windows
Forgive us for a little crystal-ball gazing, as we’ve yet to see a
Windows 8 system running with Microsoft’s gesture-based controller, but
the potential marriage of Kinect and the Metro interface is too
significant to ignore.
The Metro interface was patently designed for touch controls, and few
people will want to sit prodding at a large, vertical touchscreen on
their desktops.
However, if it were possible to scroll through the Metro start screen
with a casual wave of the hand, rotate a photo with a flick of the
wrist, or skip to the next track with the brush of a finger – well,
suddenly Windows 8 becomes a much more compelling proposition on the
desktop.
Microsoft has already released a Kinect SDK for Windows, and adapted
the hardware to make it possible to use gesture control much closer to
the screen than before. It’s surely only a matter of time before Kinect
cameras are embedded in laptops and desktop monitors – perhaps even as
soon as the launch of Windows 8. Watch out for next month’s feature on
Kinect for Windows.
25. AppLocker
Although not strictly a new Windows 8 feature – it was first
introduced with Windows Server 2008 R2 – AppLocker gives businesses
another reason to stick with Windows tablets rather than the
alternatives.
The Group Policy feature allows IT
departments to stipulate which software users install on their machines
by product name, publisher or even file name.
The IT team can then apply the policy to individual users, specific departments or across the entire company.
There are two types of Restore available: a “thorough” clean that removes all applications and data, and makes them unrecoverable by writing over the deleted files several times. There’s also the “quick” clean that simply formats the drive and reinstalls the OS, which is the option to choose if you’re merely wiping your own PC.
Note that at the end of the Reset process, the Windows product key
needs to be entered again (yes, even on the free Consumer Preview), so
make sure you have this to hand before taking the plunge.
Click on “More details” in the dialog box, and a little graph appears displaying variations in transfer speed and the average speed in megabytes per second, which is pleasingly geeky.
Even the estimated transfer time seems vaguely in touch with reality. Should any file transfer start to bog down the system, it can now be paused and resumed when the PC is under less stress. Sometimes it’s the little things…
When a PC is switched off in Windows 7, the operating system closes down both user and kernel sessions. In Windows 8, the user session is closed as before but the kernel session is hibernated.
“We’re effectively saving the system state and memory contents to a file on disk (HIBERFIL.SYS), and then reading that back in on resume and restoring contents back to memory,” wrote Microsoft’s director of program management, Gabe Aul, in a post on the Windows 8 blog. “Using this technique with boot gives us a significant advantage for boot times, since reading the hiberfile in and reinitialising drivers is much faster on most systems.”
What’s more, Windows 8 now takes advantage of all the available processor cores when reading back that hibernation file and decompressing its contents, accelerating boot times on today’s multicore systems. This also improves resumption times from Hibernation mode.
However, there’s been no word as yet on native support for the looming alternative Thunderbolt technology, which Apple has been building into new Macs since the middle of 2011. One to watch for potentially.
The IT team can then apply the policy to individual users, specific departments or across the entire company.
26. Reset PC
Unlike the gentler Restore PC, Reset PC provides an automated way to completely wipe a Windows 8 installation and start from scratch – handy, if you’re planning to sell on a PC with the operating system intact.There are two types of Restore available: a “thorough” clean that removes all applications and data, and makes them unrecoverable by writing over the deleted files several times. There’s also the “quick” clean that simply formats the drive and reinstalls the OS, which is the option to choose if you’re merely wiping your own PC.
Find out more
How to try the Windows 8 Consumer Preview27. File copy revamp
It isn’t going to have people queuing up outside Dixons on Windows 8 launch day, but the new file-copy instruction is a small fillip for those of us who frequently shunt large files from drive to drive.Click on “More details” in the dialog box, and a little graph appears displaying variations in transfer speed and the average speed in megabytes per second, which is pleasingly geeky.
Even the estimated transfer time seems vaguely in touch with reality. Should any file transfer start to bog down the system, it can now be paused and resumed when the PC is under less stress. Sometimes it’s the little things…
28. Faster boot times
Microsoft claims to have made Windows 8 boot times up to 70% faster than those of Windows 7 by making some subtle changes to the way the PC shuts down and resumes.When a PC is switched off in Windows 7, the operating system closes down both user and kernel sessions. In Windows 8, the user session is closed as before but the kernel session is hibernated.
“We’re effectively saving the system state and memory contents to a file on disk (HIBERFIL.SYS), and then reading that back in on resume and restoring contents back to memory,” wrote Microsoft’s director of program management, Gabe Aul, in a post on the Windows 8 blog. “Using this technique with boot gives us a significant advantage for boot times, since reading the hiberfile in and reinitialising drivers is much faster on most systems.”
What’s more, Windows 8 now takes advantage of all the available processor cores when reading back that hibernation file and decompressing its contents, accelerating boot times on today’s multicore systems. This also improves resumption times from Hibernation mode.
29. Native USB 3 support
Microsoft promises that Windows 8 will provide native support for every USB 3 drive and device on the market, while retaining compatibility with the older USB 2 and 1 devices.However, there’s been no word as yet on native support for the looming alternative Thunderbolt technology, which Apple has been building into new Macs since the middle of 2011. One to watch for potentially.
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