Location: GUIs Windows > Windows 8 Screen Shots (NT 6.2)



<< Previous Page | 1 | 3 | 4 | Next Page >> | 1 | 2

Windows 8

(NT 6.2)

Screen Shots

Microsoft recently released Windows 8. I had joked about what Windows 8 might be like, but it lived up to the promises that Microsoft would make it "all different" to the point it isn't like anything anybody would expect. Wow, this is complete crap. Where to even start? To put it simply, Microsoft has draped a beginner's user interface (Metro) over the existing GUI. Such "beginners" user interfaces have been tried many times in the past such as GEOS 1.2, At Ease, and Microsoft BOB. Each time they failed because such user interfaces do not provide the power or flexibility of a proper windowing interface that beginners will eventually grow to need. Windows 8 totally pisses in the face of over 30 years of user interface research. It follows almost every one of my "Good User Interface Design Tips" as if Microsoft found that page and didn't realize the entire thing is sarcastic. The first thing Windows displays at bootup is the "lock screen". As if this were some toy cell phone. It fails to tell you what you should do next, so it may leave you scratching your head waiting for something to happen. Clicking anywhere on this screen proceeds to the login screen. Once logged in it displays the "start page".

This is the glorious new Metro "Start Page" you will see every time you log in to use your computer. It is all advertising! No, really, every one of these leads to something that requires Microsoft's internet services. This feels like Windows 98 all over again. This "interface" consists of a bunch of tiles, some which animate, that you can drag around the screen with the mouse or a touch screen. Now I hate to burst your bubble, but touch screens are NOT new. There were amber CRTs with touch screens back in the 1980s, and other similar forms of input even earlier than that. It has been proven over and over again that touch screens make make very poor input devices for destkop computers. Your arm will tire very, very quickly trying to use a touch interface on a normal vertical monitor for any length of time.

Touch hardware adds to the cost of a monitor, which you ultimately can not use.

Any person that gets their dirty, greasy finger prints on my monitor gets a FIST IN THEIR FACE!!!!!!!!!!!! Touch screens do have their place. Such as small mobile devices, kiosks, and large presentation displays. (But I do get a kick watching news anchors trying to use those, the world gets to see their backsides while they fiddle with the touch controls!)

So, let's take a look at some of the "apps". I should be able to start a simple calendar "app" and enter a few dates without Microsoft looking over my shoulder, right? Nope! Every "app" wants you to connect to the internet and log in to Microsoft's "Microsoft Live" internet service.

No Microsoft internet service account? No internet connection? No app! The only option these screens gives you is to "try again". Your only visible option is to stay stuck in a loop going back and forth between the two screens forever until you give in to the will of Microsoft. Even ignoring that this is all advertising, it violates all kinds of user interface principals out the yingyang: The "app" takes up the entire screen.

There is no visible way to close this application.

There is no visible way to cancel or return to the "start" page.

There is no visible way to do ANYTHING else! In this case the system is not connected to the internet. This is because Windows 8 sends all kinds of information back to Microsoft. At least ALT+F4 still works.

Another example of a Windows 8 "app". This one at least shows a pretty screen with some cached information. Lets see... Full Screen program

Requires memorizing keys or other non discoverable actions. This feels just like DOS programs I used to run on my 286!! Trying to look up how others deal with this it always comes back to remembering keyboard commands. It reminds me of WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS where you had to memorize 1000 different key combinations! Perhaps vendors will start selling keyboard overlays again!

If, and only if, your monitor resolution is wide enough, Microsoft will graciously let you view TWO "apps" at the same time. Portrait or non wide screen monitor? Only one "app" for you! Why did we even bother inventing the GUI in the first place?! Or visible buttons to click on? How about visible menus to choose options from? With Windows 8 we all get to go back to full screen DOS programs and memorizing keyboard commands!!! On top of all this Microsoft had the audacity to rename "Metro" to "Modern UI" at the last minute! This is NOT "modern"! Not even in any sick twisted sense of the word. Therefore I refuse to refer to it as "Modern UI", but only as "Metro" (or "crap"). The scary things is MS lovers will happily emulate this crap in their own applications. Which brings back bad memories of 1998 desktop programs full of senseless throbbers and embedded browser windows. Another keyboard shortcut to remember: start key + ">" Or blindly click and drag from the upper right corner, as shown in the screenshot.

Here is a sick Windows 8 trick: Running at 800*600. Windows 8 does not normally permit setting a resolution below 1024*768. All of the Metro apps stick their nose up and refuse to run at this resolution. Cry me a river and get off my lawn! I grew up on 256*192 in 16 glorious colors... on a blurry 14" TV screen, with RF interference both ways!

Tap my screen? How about NO! This appears when a drive is attached. They expect us to all have touch screens? Oh, I see Microsoft is trying to sell monitors now. << Previous Page | 1 | 3 | 4 | Next Page >> | 1 | 2

Back to The GUI Gallery