Windows 8 First Thoughts

[sc:windows-category ]Windows 8 was released on to TechNet last week and I took the plunge and installed it on my laptop.

The first thing I have to say is that like everything Microsoft has done with Metro, or as they’re now calling it Modern UI, it’s fast a fluid.  Much more so then I expected really.

Boot up times are amazingly quick and the interface does feel polished as well.  For what had to be a pretty quick development cycle, MS has done a fantastic job of making it feel “right”.

Of course, not everything is perfect.  I did run in to some hiccups with my chosen desktop background disappearing, but moving the jpeg from my network drive to the local drive seems to have cleared that problem up.

Something I am surprised at is that there is no tutorial on the new interface provided.  Your just dropped right in to it cold turkey.  Not an issue for me, but I imagine less technically proficient people might wonder what’s going on in some cases.

First off the new start screen (its can no longer be called just a menu), its Live Tiles and it’s nice.  The tiles can be resized and just like on Windows Phone, provide information at a glance.

Something I often do in Windows 7 is use the search feature on the start menu to find the programs I’m looking for and I was pleasantly surprised that this functionality is carried over in to Windows 8.  Just pull up the start screen and start typing and a search list pops up.

One small annoyance I did find with the start screen was scrolling left and right by “pushing” to the edge of the display didn’t seem all that smooth and using the scroll bar at the bottom.  Obviously in the touch interface this is just a drag left/right gesture.  I did however find the scroll wheel worked quite well.

Speaking of the left/right scroll in the new interface, I found it very inconsistent between apps if “pushing” on the edge of the screen worked.  For example in the Start screen it does, but not in the Windows Store.

The charm areas in the four corners of the screen are another new feature in Windows 8.  In general they’re easy to use but every once in a while I do find myself hitting the right hand ones by accident.  Not a big deal and I suspect over time I won’t do it nearly as often.

The single biggest pet peeve I have so far with Windows 8 is the virtual requirement for a Microsoft Account.  I already have one so it’s not a big deal from that perspective, but it just grates me the wrong way that for most of the new stuff you need to be connected to a MS account.  It’s just a matter of principle.

The built-in apps are quite nicely done, even if they are a little simplistic.  Mail is the obvious big one and its nice that it connects to Exchange through ActiveSync.  Likewise Calendar and People automatically get hooked up to Exchange and my other social networks that I had already setup to use with my Microsoft account for my phone.

The one problem I did have with Mail was the folder list.  There is no way (that I’ve found at least) to filter the list and I have dozens of folders.  In Outlook I setup shortcuts to my commonly used folders as I receive most of my news through RSS feeds and they are buried deep in the folder list in Mail.

Something I do like is how you can split the screen in to two apps, one small and one large.  You can even do this with the classic desktop as one of them as well.  It’s very cool having MetroTwit on the left as a single column and the Windows desktop as the rest of the screen 🙂

At the end of the day, Windows 8 is a major change and it will still take some getting use to, but I think Microsoft has the right idea.  Something I have noticed in various people I’ve talked to is that views are very different between techies and regular users.  Techies seem to see it as some kind of assult, the dumbing down of their PC’s.  Users just don’t seem to care nearly as much.

I don’t think it’s the end of the PC as we know it, just the PC finally growing up and showing it can be more than just technology.

Office 2012 Preview and the Microsoft Account

[sc:software-category ]Microsoft has release a consumer preview of Office 2012, with the Office 365 label, what exactly does that mean?

First off is the most obvious requirement for a Microsoft Account to install Office on your PC.  This is a little troubling as I really don’t want Microsoft (or anyone else for that matter) to have any more information about me then they actually need to have.  I decided to take a look any why and I have to admit the install and integration was very slick.

The new, more Metro look of Office 2013 is a little jarring at first, but it works quite well once the initial shock has worn off.

With this version of Office there is no way to remove the online connectivity, though you can work offline of course.  SkyDrive is now the default save location and that rubs me the wrong way.  Why should I eat up bandwidth to store files on a remote server when I have terabytes of hard disk space sitting locally?  I know most non-technical people probably won’t even give it a second thought but its a choice Microsoft made that I just don’t like.

In the initial flurry of news releases they were all focused on this new Office 365 version of the preview, but Technet now has a non-365 version up for download.  I uninstalled the 365 version and installed the Pro Plus version to see how they handled the Microsoft Account integration.

unfortunately it looks like the preview doesn’t remove all its settings so it picked up my account from the 365 install.  I’ll have to try installing it again on a clean system.

I don’t belive for a moment that Microsoft will force all Office 2013 users to have a Microsoft Account, after all any large company would never let software with that kind of requirement to be installed on their network.

I can see why MS has gone in this direction, to complete against the purely web-based suites, I just hope they don’t throw the baby out with the bath water in their rush for the cloud.

Opera 12

[sc:software-category ]I love Opera, it’s a great web browser, but the recently released version 12 was kind of a let down.

After all it was a full whole number release but there wasn’t any real user visible major changes.  The only thing that was really visible to users was the removal of Unite/Widgets in favour of extensions.  Which is fine and all but I was kind of expecting more.

I guess when you’ve had such a great run of major releases like Opera, the expectations are hard to meet every time 😉

The new theme engine is nice and all, but I really don’t use theme’s on any of my apps, I want function over form and the default theme is pretty much the definition of this in Opera.

I wonder if they’re working on a Metro version for Windows 8?

Firefox Memory Usage

[sc:software-category ]Currently I’m using three different desktop browsers, Opera as my main day-to-day browser, Firefox as a secondary browser (for sites that don’t work in Opera, or where I have multiple accounts) and IE as the fall back.

That means in general I have a dozen tabs open in Opera, 3 in Firefox and 1 in IE.  Recently I was looking at the memory usage on my PC and realized that Firefox was using over a gig or RAM for 3 sits and decided to take a look at why.

First, to be fair, I’ll say that my main PC only gets rebooted once a month during the MS patching cycle, otherwise it is always on and all three browsers are also always running.  This is of course not the standard use case scenario of most people, but for me it is ;).

Because of this, if there are memory leaks in the browser, memory usage will continuously go up the longer the browser is open.  Likewise, any page that runs scripts that never really terminate (like Gmail and Hotmail) will also cause memory usage to continue to climb over time.

For me, this was a double whammy, I use Firefox for both Gmail and Hotmail.  Those tabs are kept open for weeks at a time and they just never release memory correctly.

Even closing the tabs does not clean up the entire problem (in fact it only cleaned up a small part of it).  Practically I have to shut down Firefox to reclaim the RAM.  Both Opera and IE don’t have this issue (of needing a shutdown) though they both exhibit the ever increasing memory usage with Gmail and Hotmail, just closing the tabs cleans up the memory usage issue.

I’ve been a long time Firefox user, but between the continued decline in real world performance over the last few versions, IE coming on strong and coupled with the broken attempt to complete with Chrome’s versioning system, Firefox may finally be removed from my day to  day usage.

Some More WordPress Plugins

[sc:wordpress-category ]Finding WordPress  plugins can be a daunting task for site admins, the plugin repository just has too many plugins to realistically browse through to find what you want and searching can be hit and miss as naming and functionality only sometimes go together.

I’ve used WordPress for over a year here and I still find new plugins that are useful, two new ones I’ve started using are:

Duplicate Post is a nice little add-on to the posts/pages list that let you clone or duplicate a post, which is handy if you are making the same kind of post each week.  I’m actually using this primarily on another site where I do a weekly update to several projects I’m working on.  Duplicate Post makes it easy to copy last weeks update and make whatever changes are required and post it again.

Subscribe2 is an e-mail subscription plugin, allowing people to follow JumbleCat through e-mail instead of RSS.  I’ve been looking for this kind of plugin for a while and I’m not all that happy with Subscribe2, but it does work.  This biggest nit-pick I have is that it only send plain text e-mail unless you “upgrade” for $40 to the “HTML” version plus support and upgrade “packages”.  I’m sure for a site that makes money that’s no problem, but this blog is just for my own personal gratification.

I’m thinking I might have to build an e-mail subscription plugin myself, but I’m not that annoyed with Subscribe2 yet ;).