Windows 8 - News & Updates

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Re: RE: Setup A Network In Windows 8

Mr.sudhansu said:
camstesia studio
but am facing some problem with it on my windows 8
What problems ?
Tell me...i'll try to solve it



 
RE: Setup A Network In Windows 8

Mr.sudhansu said:
it does not record microphone properly.......
Mine works perfect...
Enable Front Microphone Boost...If possible, install Realtek HD Audio Manager...
 
Two Hours to Windows 8: An Upgrade Diary

Whenever a new version of Windows comes out, I'm always ambivalent. The idea of a new OS with cool, new features sounds great. Going through the long, sometimes mystifying upgrade process doesn't. But the Windows 8 Consumer Preview seemed so compelling that I threw caution to the wind and put it on an older Dell desktop I use at work.

The good news is that the process was a little shorter than I remember from previous versions of Windows and much clearer. I was able to get the Windows 8 preview up and running on my system in less than two hours.

The bad news? There were still a few unfortunate surprises. Here's a diary of my upgrade experience.

10:08 a.m.I go to the Consumer Preview download page. There's a standard disclaimer that the preview is prerelease software and isn't guaranteed, may be updated and could lead to premature hair loss.

The initial download is small, about 5MB, since it's just an installer, not the OS itself.

10:10 a.m.The installer scans my system, then spits out a four-page compatibility report. It tells me that 12 programs "need your attention." The messages vary depending on the program. In some cases, I'm told that I should get updates. In other cases, Microsoft reports that some program features might not work. In still other cases, the report says, I'll need to reinstall the app once Windows 8 is on my machine.

Microsoft reports that 27 other programs or devices "will work." Foolishly, I interpret this to mean that they will still exist on my PC when the installation is finished, especially since the report specified that some other programs would have to be reinstalled. In fact, all those programs listed as "will work" disappeared once the installation was done. (I assume that they "will work" once I reinstall them, but I haven't gotten a chance to do that yet.)

I would have known my programs would get blown away if I'd gone to Microsoft's FAQ page. The company says that programs will survive if you're upgrading from Windows 7, but not if, like me, you're upgrading from Vista, or from XP.

10:15 a.m.The installer provides me with a product key. I dutifully copy it into Evernote, but never need it again.

10:20 a.m.The installer starts downloading the OS itself. The program gives you an ever-changing estimate of how long the download will take. For me, the estimate, for most of the download, hovered right around 10 minutes. Once I was seven minutes in and only 35 percent of the file had downloaded, I concluded the estimate wasn't worth much. In the end, the download takes about 20 minutes.

10:40 a.m.Hooray! The download's finished; time to start installing, right?!

Wrong! Now the installer is "checking the download." Back to drumming fingers on table.

10:45 a.m.Hooray! The installer is finished checking the download; time to start installing, right?!

Nope. Now it's "getting files ready."

10:52 a.m.Hooray! Now it's done "getting files ready" and asks if I want to install now, install on a different partition or install later. I choose install now, ready for the magic to begin.

"Just getting a few things ready," the installer breezily informs me. What the .... that's what you said a minute ago!

10:54 a.m.All the things that have to be gotten ready are ready. I'm shown a screen with the license agreement, then a screen that asks what I want to keep in the Consumer Preview:-- Windows Settings and personal files.-- Just personal files-- Nothing.

A linked explainer says that Windows settings include Ease of Access configuration, your desktop background and internet favorites, but it says not all settings will be kept. If I'd been upgrading from Win7, I'd have had the opportunity to keep my apps as well.

10:58 a.m.The installer checks for anything I need to do before the installation. "A few changes need to be made before Windows can continue installing," it reports. That sounds a little ominous, since it doesn't specify what changes need to be made, but I take a leap of faith and click the Restart PC button on the screen.

11:05 a.m.My PC has restarted and the installer asks: "Ready to install Windows 8 Consumer Preview?"My options are "Continue from where I left off" or "Start over from the beginning". I find myself wondering what kind of masochist would choose option 2.

11:07 a.m.Now we're starting the installation in earnest, and Microsoft is finally straight with me: "This might take a while. Your PC will restart several times before we're done."

11:27 a.m.In this case, Microsoft has practiced the art of underpromising and overdelivering. The installation actually takes just 20 minutes, pretty brief as Windows installs go, and my PC restarts only at the end of the install.

11:29 a.m.Now the PC has restarted and there's picture of a Siamese Fighting Fish (or Betta fish -- get it?) and the PC says it's preparing.

11:35 a.m.My PC restarts again.

11:38 a.m.The PC's back on, but it's still preparing.

11:40 a.m.It's applying user settings.

11:46 a.m.Now it asks me to pick a background color for my Metro UI Start Screen. There's a spectrum of colors to choose from. I move a bar along the spectrum and the background automatically changes. I choose an earthy brown.

11:48 a.m.Now I have to choose Windows settings -- mostly privacy issues. If you're in a hurry, you can choose Express Settings, but that will give Windows access to pretty much any information it wants from your system. If you choose to customize your settings, you can stop applications from sending information about your location or stop sharing of your personal data with apps, among other things.

11:54 a.m.I've made all my choices and I'm ready to dive in and start trying Windows 8.

All in all, there are more pleasant ways to spend just shy of two hours, but Microsoft seems to have made great strides in making installing their OS understandable and relatively painless.

http://www.pcworld.in/news/two-hours-windows-8-upgrade-diary-65222012
 
RE: Two Hours to Windows 8: An Upgrade Diary

Good Post, i will soon post the bugs uptill now , 2 bugs i found till now
searching more.
 
Three Cool Ways You'll Benefit from SkyDrive in Windows 8

Though Dropbox is more popular with over 45 million users, with 17 million users, Microsoft’s SkyDrive is a strong competitor. SkyDrive’s most desired feature has been 25GB of free space, much larger than that of most rivals. On Monday, Microsoft revealed its desire to be the "world’s hard drive", integrating SkyDrive with Windows 8 to make it easier to access your data from any device.

Though SkyDrive has been available for over four years, it hasn’t gain mainstream acceptance. Despite its large amount of free storage and capability to share files and collaborate with your friends and colleagues, main reasons include its lack of a desktop client and any Windows integration to access that storage easily. It appears that Microsoft has taken note of SkyDrive’s shortcomings; its Building Windows 8 blog details three ways SkyDrive will be used in Windows 8.

1. Metro App on Windows 8

Microsoft developed a new Metro-style app for SkyDrive, based on Javascript, CSS, and HTML5. Doing this allows the SkyDrive app to display files of various types as data using the tiled Metro interface, and to use Windows 8 touch-based controls to interact with them. Taking it further, SkyDrive automatically integrated across all Metro-style apps, so they can all open and save files directly to SkyDrive. (Apple announced a similar feature in its upcoming OS X Mountain Lion, which integrates with iCloud.) This will make it much easier for workers to use their data without worrying about the uploading and downloading of files.

2. SkyDrive Sync to Desktop

Dropbox has been popular due to the easy way it syncs files stored on your local desktop to the cloud, and from there to other devices. Microsoft announced it will release a SkyDrive app for desktops that will do the same. Available not only for Windows 8 but for Windows Vista and Windows 7 as well, the app will run in the background and copy all the files in your SkyDrive account to a folder of your choice. Any changes to files in that folder on your desktop will be instantly synced with your online account. This not only functions as a backup and a way to access your files from anywhere in the world, but it can make your business files available on any Windows-based device you choose. There is even a rumored Mac client in the works.

3. Remote Files Through SkyDrive

The sync feature makes your files available in the cloud, but only for the files in your SkyDrive folder. Microsoft has taken SkyDrive further and added a “forgot something?” feature that makes the files on your entire computer--even if you have terabytes of data--accessible through the cloud. Security for this feature is provided through two-factor authentication, which not only requires a login but also verification through an alternate email account or phone. You’ll be able to browse photo albums just as you would on your desktop, and even stream video across the web to whatever device you have available. Though this will require leaving your desktop on so it can be accessed while you’re out, you'd likely find this a lifesaver when needing a file that you forgot to copy to your SkyDrive folder.


Source : pcw
 
Windows 8 Logo Garners More Brickbats than Bravos

Microsoft has never been known for its design verve, especially compared to its rival Apple, so it shouldn't surprise anyone that its new logo for its feverishly anticipated Windows 8 operating system is being treated like a piñata by both design and high-tech critics.

It's not like the Redmond bunch is trying to emulate the Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight. All you have to do is read User Experience Director Sam Moreau's blog from Friday to realize that.

"The Windows logo is a strong and widely recognized mark but when we stepped back and analyzed it, we realized an evolution of our logo would better reflect our Metro style design principles and we also felt there was an opportunity to reconnect with some of the powerful characteristics of previous incarnations," he writes.

In considering the logo revamp, Microsoft wanted to return to the windows metaphor embodied in the original logo for the operating system. What sold the company on the new logo, according to Moreau, was a question posed by Paula Scher of Pentagram, who was to become the designer of the new emblem for the operating system: "Your name is Windows. Why are you a flag?" That's a good question. You have to wonder, though, why someone at Microsoft hadn't asked it before now.

According to Moreau, the new logo meets a number of design goals set by Microsoft. The company wanted the logo to be both modern and classic. The new logo has the characteristics of signage at airports and subways, he writes -- probably not the best choice of examples for eliciting a positive response from users, considering the quality of many people's experiences associated with those venues.

The logo also had to be "authentically digital" -- whatever that means -- and it had to be humble but confident, which sounds like something an oenophile would say about a wine than a technologist would say about an operating system.

What Microsoft hoped the new logo would evoke and what it actually evokes, though, are two different things.

Joe Wilcox of BetaNews writes, "There's something poetic about Microsoft changing Windows' logo during the centennial anniversary of Titanic's tragic sinking." He says the new emblem isn't distinctive enough and called it "a branding disaster."

While E.D. Kain at Forbes likes the arrangement of the four blue panels in the new logo -- even if it does remind him of the Finnish flag -- he finds the emblem looks "washed out" when combined with the words Windows 8. "omething about that makes the whole thing feel very not-modern -- certainly not up to par with what looks to be a very sleek overhaul of the Windows operating system itself," he notes.

Graphic designer Armin Vit knocks the logo's combining a weak graphic with middle-of-the-road typography from the Segoe font family. The font is "extremely underwhelming -- pair it with the worst rendition yet of the Windows window and you have a real loser," he writes.

He compares the graphic in the logo to "A window in a $400-a-month studio apartment rental with beige carpeting and plastic drapes." We dare say not quite the "authentically digital" look Microsoft was looking for.

Admittedly, past Windows logos looked more like flags than fenestrations, writes Larry Dignan for ZDnet. "Unfortunately for me the Windows 8 logo gives me a window, but I want to jump out of it," he adds.

The new logo may be bland, but that's not bad, Harry McCracken writes for Time magazine. "I like the logo," he notes. "Or at least I don't dislike it."

"I don't think Microsoft is attempting to provoke profound emotions here," McCracken adds. "it's a simple, low-key iconographic representation of the concept of Windows, and it expresses the same aesthetic as the Metro user interface which is Windows 8's most important new feature by far."

The Register's Iain Thomson, though, probably expresses the feelings of many PC users about the logo when he writes: "[O]ne has to wonder why Microsoft puts so much effort into this sort of thing. After all, when was the last time somebody bought a Windows PC because they thought the logo looked pretty? Not even Apple fanbois take things that far."


Source : pcw
 
Windows 8 Consumer Preview crosses 1 million downloads in 24 hours

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There definitely seems to be a lot of interest in Microsoft’s next major operating system, with the Redmond giant reporting that the Windows 8 Consumer Preview had already been downloaded over a 1 million times, in the first 24 hours.

Released on Leap Day, the Windows 8 Consumer Preview has so far been well received by the industry, with the Metro-style UI seeming right for touch-based devices. With an ARM version also due, and wide compatibility expected, the new PC and tablet platform will certainly broaden Microsoft’s ecosystem, along with Windows Phone 8.

Apple is walking a similar path, with a convergence of mobile and desktop devices, not just in the cloud, evident in Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and previous iterations. Google, with its extremely popular (for smartphones) Android operating system, is still railing against Apple on the tablet front, despite wide vendor support - something its Chrome OS, does not have on the PC front.

Before we get started on the merits of each interface and breadth of ecosystems, we can be happy to note the consumer will have a lot of choice in the tablet and PC market in the near future, where intuitive interfaces, convergent devices, and always-on connectivity are the norm.


Source : Digit
 
Nokia to launch Windows 8 tablet in 2012

Nokia to launch Windows 8 tablet in 2012

LONDON: Mobile phone maufacturer Nokia is likely to launch a Windows 8 tablet before Christmas, sources have claimed.

The 10" device would be among the first to use Microsoft's new Windows 8 operating system,The Telegraph reports. Tablet manufacturers have been struggling to find a product to compete with Apple's updated version of iPad. Analysts are, however, enthusiastic about the prospects for Windows 8 tablets.

The paper quoted Forrester's Sarah Rotman Epps as saying that the new platform could allow manufacturers to differentiate their products in a crowded market dominated by devices using Google's Android platform.

Windows 8 had earlier received a boost when Mozilla announced that it would make a version of its Firefox web browser for the new platform, it added.

Quoting Digitimes, the report said that Nokia will outsource the manufacturing of its Windows 8 tablet to Taiwan-based Compal Electronics.

It claimed that initial orders would be at least 200,000 units.

Nokia officials declined to comment on the issue.

-Times of India
 
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