Windows 8 is a revolutionary transition in Windows, easily the biggest change since the move from DOS to Windows in the early 1990s. Consider the wreckage that was created by that transition: Apple’s effort to retake the lead in personal computing was stopped dead, the leading app companies of the time were destroyed (Lotus, WordPerfect, Ashton Tate, etc), IBM was eventually forced out of the PC business, Microsoft, formerly an also-ran in apps, became the leading applications company, and a power in server software as well.
Will the Windows 8 Application transition be as disruptive? It is impossible to say at this point. But huge changes are possible. If the transition is successful, Microsoft could emerge as a much stronger, more dynamic company, leveraging its sales leadership in PCs to get a powerful position in tablets, mobile devices, and online services. On the other hand, if Windows 8 fails, Microsoft could break the loyalty of its customer base and turn its genteel decline into a catastrophic collapse. The most likely outcome, of course, is a muddled middle.
Whatever the outcome for Microsoft, what is certain is that because so many people use Windows as the foundation of their computing, the transition to Windows 8 will produce threats and opportunities for everyone else in the tech industry. Play your cards right and your company could grow rapidly. Mess up and you could be the next Lotus. You may love Windows 8 or you may it, but if you work in tech, you would be a fool to ignore it.
Although Microsoft calls it Windows, and a lot of Windows code may still be present under the hood, Windows 8 is a completely new operating system in every way that matters to users. It looks different, it works differently, and it forces you to re-learn much of what you know today about computers. From a user perspective, Microsoft Windows is being killed this fall and replaced by an entirely new Operating System that has a Windows 7 emulator tacked onto it.
The main Windows 8 interface is based on Microsoft’s Metro design language, which was supposedly inspired in part by the directional signs used in public transportation. Metro emphasizes typography (big words in clean fonts) and simple monochrome images, like the signs you would see on a subway platform.
Metro looks incredibly nice. The graphics are clean and bold, the animations are smooth, and overall it is one of the most visually literate things you would have ever seen from Microsoft. You will still be amazed that Metro is a Microsoft product. The simplicity of Metro is very appealing in many ways, especially when viewed against Apple’s interface, which is becoming more and more encrusted with strange textures and bits of faux 3D gewgaw.
Speaking of miscommunication, Microsoft didn’t clearly tell users that the Windows 8 preview is a one-way installation. The word “preview” implies to many people an advanced sample that you can play with for a while and then toss aside. But unless you have the original installation disks that came with your computer, the Windows 8 preview replaces your current Operating System and can’t be removed. Even if you do have those disks, on many PCs (including mine) the factory install disks wipe the hard drive and do a new install from scratch, deleting all your files and applications.
Microsoft did disclose this information on the Windows 8 preview site, but the disclosure was written in bureaucratic language that didn’t make clear the risk, and what’s worse, that text was below the “Install” button, meaning a user could easily miss it.
If you want a measure of how many people missed the warning, do a web search for “uninstall Windows 8”. Be prepared to read some angry commentary.
I think the next round in this cycle of frustration is going to come early next year, when the Windows 8 preview expires and preview users are required to purchase Windows 8 to keep their computers working. The fact that there’s an expiration date on the preview is something else that Microsoft didn’t prominently disclose.
If Windows 8 is a problem, what is it going to do to a typical Windows user who just wants to get work done and does not have time to learn something new? And what sort of support burden is it going to put on the IT managers of the world? At TOPS Technologies Pvt. Ltd..we believe that unlike the last few years Microsoft might just have something to put them back into the driving seat of this space.