6/3/2011 6:00:00 AMBy: Tony Bradley
…Microsoft held its first major unveiling of what’s in store with Windows 8 at the D9 conference this week. Windows 8 looks bold. It looks slick. It looks impressively innovative. But, it also looks like it will be a major battle to convince business users to embrace it.
To be honest, I think that Windows 8 looks awesome. Despite my repeated pleas to Microsoft to abandon the concept of Windows on a tablet, and instead adapt Windows Phone 7, Windows 8 looks like it will be a very capable tablet platform. Perhaps that could be because Windows 8 looks more like Windows Phone 7, or the Zune interface than it does the Windows 7 I know and love.
Related story – Windows 8 expected to come in many flavours
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One of the selling points of Windows 8 is that it actually uses fewer resources than Windows 7 and will not require new hardware. But, I beg to differ.
It may not require new hardware to run and be functional, but in order to take advantage of the touchscreen features that seem to define the Windows 8 interface, new hardware will be required. Without new hardware that embraces the unique qualities of Windows 8, it seems like a less compelling move.
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Full Story from ITBusiness.ca: http://www.itbusiness.ca/it/client/en/home/News.asp?id=62763
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Microsoft called it a “reimagining” of Windows that will run on all types of devices from small, touch-sensitive screens to traditional large-screen PCs, and that can be used with or without a keyboard and mouse.
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The new interface is a significant departure from the traditional Windows desktop that Microsoft has relied on for decades.The start screen now has several large, colored application icons that look similar to those on Microsoft’s new Windows Phone 7 OS. Tapping an icon with a finger launches the application and allows it to take up the entire screen, without the usual Windows menus, system tray and scroll bars around the edges of the screen.
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Windows Explorer and the Windows desktop will continue to be available, and Microsoft says the OS will be compatible with current Windows 7 applications and peripherals.
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Microsoft has also said that Windows 8 — which it continued to refer to on Thursday as a “code name” — will run on ARM-based processors from the likes of Qualcomm and Texas Instruments, as well as on the x86 platform from Intel and AMD, as it does today. ARM chips are used in most of today’s smartphones and tablets.
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Full Story from ITBusiness.ca: http://www.itbusiness.ca/it/client/en/home/News.asp?id=62746
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