[citation][nom]zcpro[/nom]Windows Metro UI is a complete nightmare! This will be a disaster of unimaginable proportions. Remember windows Vista? Well, multiply that experience by 100. I almost ripped my hairs out trying to use this thing.I provided technical support to end users working at a call center for over a decade. You could not pay me enough to walk someone through this piece of S%hit. You just CANNOT navigate through the system with a keyboard and mouse. Not everyone will be buying a tablet PC or touchscreen AIO where Win 8 excels in. The average Joe just wants to click on a icon to browse websites, facebook, etc. SIMPLE AND EASY!Customers will be screaming for refunds and/or demanding a downgrade to Win 7[/citation]
I have tried the dev preview, the consumer preview, and now the RC. I can honestly say that you're either crazy or that you are exaggerating to a huge extreme. I have no problem with navigation at all. Simply click the legacy desktop and put in a few shortcuts (my computer, control panel, other obvious things and this is all very easy to do in just a few seconds. That's right, seconds, not even minutes) on the desktop and/or on the taskbar.
However, even when using metro, I find that given a few minutes to get a feel for it, metro is not nearly as bad as most people have been saying that it is. For average work, it is fine. For more advanced work, it can be limiting, but you still have the legacy desktop UI and you can simply install a program such as Classic Shell or if you just want a start menu without changing anything, ViStart (or one of many other programs) will give you a start menu.
I'd say that the huge amount of improvements in Win 8 more than outweigh metro. Win 8's only problem is metro and once it gets more worked out, I think that Metro can be a pretty good thing, especially if it can be used in conjunction with the desktop instead of either the desktop or metro. It could be like a combination of a side bar and a partial start menu if MS wanted to do that (or a third party develops a way to make metro coexist with the desktop in such a way). Sure, not everyone likes that, but Metro is still fairly easy to disable (despite MS's seemingly adamant stance about trying to *fix* every *vulnerability* that lets people ditch Metro) if you know what yo're doing, so all it really is is just another option.