[citation][nom]ubercake[/nom]Why even bother with the extra layer of an interface? If you spend a lot of time running your VMs, you're doing it in the 'Desktop'. Also, if you're running any office apps, you're doing it in the desktop. If you're writing any code in Visual Studio or Dreamweaver, you're doing it in the desktop. If you're editing an image in Photoshop, you're doing it in the desktop. No live tile is going to get you there. Copy-paste operations as we once knew them are a thing of the past in the metro UI.What's the point of the live tiles? Just put f-ing live widgits and icons all over your windows 7 desktop and you're good to go?What about double-clicking an icon to access ebay or using a favorite from within the browser? Is that tougher than side-scrolling over (by default using the up and down mouse scroll wheel? wtf???) and clicking the appropriate icon? The interface for most apps (ie Kindle, Ebay, others) is a hell of a lot more robust inside the non-metro version of a browser. There is no metro interface better than it's browser counterpart.An advantage I do see is being able to sign directly into a live account (using the live account as your user ID on the PC). All of the casual use items are similar from the Windows Phone to the Windows Tablet to Windows 8, but if you're doing more than the things I mentioned above in my first post, you're not doing it in the default UI. You're doing it in the desktop. So what is the point for a power user? There is no good argument for Windows 8 other than for test purposes if you're designing finger-swipey apps someone might use on their tablet or touch PC.Other than that, BFD. It's like taking an extra click to go to the old-fashioned desktop where the real work takes place.[/citation]
...because I like to keep things tidy. I don't want a whole load of files sitting there on the desktop and I now have a nice, tidy, app/application launch interface. I spend 95% on the desktop and that's where I'm coming from... There's nothing at all wrong with Windows 8. I hardly ever, EVER, used the start menu and neither do any of the staff members in this building but the new Win8 interface has a valid purpose in my working day.
I have Opera, IE10, file explorer, Outlook 2013, notepad and remote desktop on my taskbar, nearly nothing on my desktop and everything else on the new UI. Tidy, quick, very easy to use.
If you don't want live tiles then disable them.
As for staff: Windows 8 will mean that staff spend more time within the network (Kindle, ebay, small games) than browsing the web clicking on who knows what.
At the end of the day... there's nothing really wrong with Windows 8 and when a rational person reads some of the posts here, today, that person might wonder what the world is coming to.