Jzero
Member
Yes and it's so much easier than doing it through software.You can shut down computers using the Power button?
don't think i've ever tried that in my life .
Yes and it's so much easier than doing it through software.You can shut down computers using the Power button?
don't think i've ever tried that in my life .
Yes and it's so much easier than doing it through software.
1. That optimization test was done with a preview version of Windows 8, running unoptimized Windows 7 video drivers on Windows 8. Surely you can understand that lunacy in that right? Windows 8 is far more efficient in every way over 7, and once proper drivers utilize and tap that power .. theres no going back. That test was bait for clicks on a site desperate for views and ad revenue. Real tests, and testers will surely wait for appropriate hardware and software in order to do an apples to apples comparison.
2. Yes you can do an in place 'upgrade' from Vista/7 to Windows 8. I did this on both my Enterprise versions and Ultimate to Pro versions. All my applications remaned installed, my user data.. everything. I clicked upgrade, waited 20 minutes, 2 reboots and bam.. I was running Windows 8, never having to re-install, or restore 1 god damn thing! Its also nice that its lightning fast, nothing like shotty Windows upgrades of yesteryear.
Microsoft finally figured it out. These features are just parts of the little things that make this OS far superior to Windows 7.
Now that i think about it... i was taught young to press start and click shutdown.
But my dad worked in IT.
You can shut down computers using the Power button?
don't think i've ever tried that in my life .
Years ago, you had to first shut down Windows, and then Windows would give you a message saying it's safe to turn off your computer and you then had to click the power button to actually power it off (that couldn't be done via software back then). Good times.
Also, search for "power button" in settings and you can configure what pressing the power button will do.
my god.
Learn shit everyday.
@reckless: Office Home & Student 2013 RT.
Everyone should be ashamed.
@reckless: Office Home & Student 2013 RT on the Asus Vivo Tab RT.
Is dignity even possible in this, the best of all possible worlds?
my god.
Learn shit everyday.
It seems like Nilay Patel, from the Verge, is reviewing the Asus Vivo Tab RT.
Files. Managing files. Endless files, in formats. Remember files? With file extensions? And sizes and bad metadata and missing cover art and all those weirdo checkboxes in iTunes that make compilation albums either go together or not go together or maybe make tracks appear in seemingly random order throughout your huge list of music files? Using the seventh-generation iPod nano in 2012 involves taking a trip back to a world in which files really matter. Files, man. Files in iTunes. You want to listen to music with an iPod nano? Then you better get ready to open iTunes and plug in a cable and transfer some hot nasty files. It’s like taking a time machine to 2010, before Apple itself started pushing everyone away from files and towards iCloud.
...
The problem is that asking regular people to manage their iPod’s music files in 2012 is basically the same as asking them to actually code their own iPhone apps.
...
Apple has a new version of iTunes coming soon, but for nano owners it’s essentially a paint job — the core experience is still all about managing files on a hard drive. That’s what makes the new nano feel like such an anachronism: streaming services like Spotify and Rdio and Pandora are clearly the future, and the idea of downloading MP3s and then copying them to another device from a local hard drive feels clunky and archaic. The iPod was a dominant product because the iTunes Store utterly changed the music industry, but we don’t live in that world anymore. We live in a world in which most teenagers have unlimited access to music on YouTube, and not even the iPod nano’s fancy new Lightning connector can plug into that kind of world.
What’s weird is that Apple knows this better than anyone: a key feature of 2011’s iOS 5 was “PC Free” operation for the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, which let people use them without ever plugging into a computer. Steve Jobs himself demoted the Mac and PC from their status as “digital hubs” when he introduced iCloud alongside iOS 5, saying that he’d been trying to render the traditional file system obsolete for a decade. That’s also when Jobs introduced iTunes in the Cloud, which lets people download their purchased music from any iOS device without plugging a cable into their computers. It’s not hard to imagine Apple building iTunes into a proper competitor to Spotify or Pandora and turning the iPod into something else entirely; the path forward is blindingly clear. Moving files around on cables is just not how the future works.
He's probably going to start ranting about files again.
Files, man.
I think you gotta separate the ability to work with files and the need to do so.Don't you just love it that the perception of the intelligence of the human race just keeps going down over the last few years?
Hollywood was right, let me just randomly press keys on my keyboard to hack the internets!
It seems like Nilay Patel, from the Verge, is reviewing the Asus Vivo Tab RT.
Can't wait for the reviews
it was possible at least since Windows XP.
my god.
Learn shit everyday.
does it behave the same as software shutdown, like install updates and what not?
Weird... when my computer freezes, I just pull out the power cable lol.
crazy stuff.
You know nothingJon Snow
Now that i think about it... i was taught young to press start and click shutdown.
But my dad worked in IT.
You can shut down computers using the Power button?
don't think i've ever tried that in my life .
You know nothingJon Snow
I'm still baffled that 'shut down' isn't a button on the start screen.
I had to google that a while back, how would your grannies figure that out?
Can you even create a shut down icon for the start menu?
Years ago, you had to first shut down Windows, and then Windows would give you a message saying it's safe to turn off your computer and you then had to click the power button to actually power it off (that couldn't be done via software back then). Good times.
You know nothingJon Snow
I'm looking at that touchpad to use as a daily driver with my desktop, but I'm wondering:Does anyone here have any type of touch mouse yet? I think i rather buy a touch mouse than a touch screen monitor.
I'll probably wait until they are less expensive though.
@WinAppUpdate: [...] Almost exactly 5K in the US alone as of today. Almost 7,000 worldwide.
Looks like the app pace is picking up nearing launch.
Windows 8 might get close to that 5-digit app number for launch, after all.
Very few, less than whats available for Win 8 (which has now 5000 apps).How many tablet apps are available for Android?
Very few, less than whats available for Win 8 (which has now 5000 apps).
This new version of Windows is a disaster. Power users can't wait to replace the UI, and businesses are avoiding it like the plague. I'm talking, of course, about Windows XP. Ah, how quickly we forget.
People will eventually adapt?
That's a bad quote, especially in the context of Windows 8. You could technically revert back to the 'old UI' in Windows XP without any issue. Windows 8... not so much.
You know nothingJon Snow
I wouldn't invest a dime into an Android Tablet at this point.
You know nothingJon Snow
Yea i got it yesterday. They added a couple of themes as well. I still suck at solitaire though -_-Minesweeper and Solitaire just got big updates. Daily challenges are working.
$40 for the download version of the Upgrade.Wait, I thought Windows was going to cost me 40 bucks.
I am going to install Windows on a Mac using bootcamp. No upgrade, but a fresh install. I thought from now until the end of the year it was going to cost 40 bucks to get a fresh install copy of Windows 8. But, reading the OP, am I write in thinking that it is going to cost me 100 bucks? Yikes.
You're screwed unless you can get your hands on a key for xp, vista, or 7So I heard that you have to have a previous paid for license of Windows on your PC to get the $40 deal thing but I put the release preview version on a comp I built. Does it still work with me or am I screwed.
You're screwed unless you can get your hands on a key for xp, vista, or 7
They were going to give the $40 offer to people on the preview as well but they changed their mind.
Yea pretty much.What are medals? Are they basically achievements without having points to tie to your account?
Also, minesweeper daily challenges are terribly hard.