Should I go on with Win 8/8.1 or go back to Win 7
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 222 posts since 5 Dec, 2007 from KSA
Hi, people.
It's been a couple of years since I last posted here. Was so busy with life requirement
I recently got a new laptop running Wind 8, and I'm thinking of installing all my music production software now (mostly FLs and Reaper). However, from the very beginning I didn't like how it looks and works (Win . Furthermore, some friends keep speaking negatively about it and how slow it is.
Based on the above, and being an old Win XP user, I'm thinking of using Win 7 as it looks similar to Win XP.
So what do you recommend guys?
I would appreciate your opinion highly on that.
Thanks.
Ahmed.
It's been a couple of years since I last posted here. Was so busy with life requirement
I recently got a new laptop running Wind 8, and I'm thinking of installing all my music production software now (mostly FLs and Reaper). However, from the very beginning I didn't like how it looks and works (Win . Furthermore, some friends keep speaking negatively about it and how slow it is.
Based on the above, and being an old Win XP user, I'm thinking of using Win 7 as it looks similar to Win XP.
So what do you recommend guys?
I would appreciate your opinion highly on that.
Thanks.
Ahmed.
See you later.
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- KVRAF
- 2550 posts since 13 Mar, 2004
From Win 8.1 on you can boot directly into desktop and don't have to deal with that Metro/apps starting screen stuff anymore. So with a few tweaks (which I did immediately after upgrading to Win 8) imo it looks and feels pretty much like older Windows versions.
- KVRAF
- 25852 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Mainstream Microsoft support for Win 7 ends in less than 6 months, so in the long run you are best covered by going for Win 8.1AMD wrote:Based on the above, and being an old Win XP user, I'm thinking of using Win 7 as it looks similar to Win XP.
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- KVRAF
- 21348 posts since 26 Jul, 2005 from Gone
While some of the changes in Windows 8/8.1 are a PIA, they're easy to learn to live with, and my music software runs fine on it.
No problems here, and if you don't have to, I don't see the point in hanging on to an older version of an OS.
No problems here, and if you don't have to, I don't see the point in hanging on to an older version of an OS.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 222 posts since 5 Dec, 2007 from KSA
Sorry, but what does that mean?
From Win 8.1 on you can boot directly into desktop and don't have to deal with that Metro/apps starting screen stuff anymore
See you later.
- KVRAF
- 9077 posts since 28 May, 2005 from Netherneverlands
It means that you automatically can skip the "Tiles Interface" (called Metro interface) and start right in the desktop environment, that you know from Windows 7 (and XP).AMD wrote:Sorry, but what does that mean?
From Win 8.1 on you can boot directly into desktop and don't have to deal with that Metro/apps starting screen stuff anymore
I've upgraded from W7 to W8 and on my system W8 boots faster and seems to run even smoother than W7. Had no technical issues either.
No band limits, aliasing is the noise of freedom!
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- KVRAF
- 6323 posts since 30 Dec, 2004 from London uk
Numanoid wrote:Mainstream Microsoft support for Win 7 ends in less than 6 months, so in the long run you are best covered by going for Win 8.1AMD wrote:Based on the above, and being an old Win XP user, I'm thinking of using Win 7 as it looks similar to Win XP.
Not necessarily true, Windows 7 extended support is up to 2020 :
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/lifecycle
BUT to downgrade a new laptop is not a good idea. You may not find device drivers for it and it wont be supported buy the maker when you change the OS.
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- KVRAF
- 1906 posts since 15 Oct, 2008 from Germany
Stick to 8.1. If you really can't live with the start screen and miss the start menu, get Start8. But it's really easy to get used to the tiles. Just don't bother with the ModernUI Apps, they suck IMO. Other than that, Win 8.1 is the best Windows version I've ever used and I'd consider myself a "power user". It feels extremely snappy.
Be careful when you hear a lot of negativity about it. I've heard sooo much crap from some people who have no clue what they are talking about, haven't used Win 8(.1) at all, are just afraid of changes or simply repeat what they've heard on the web - or all combined.
Just my opinion.
Be careful when you hear a lot of negativity about it. I've heard sooo much crap from some people who have no clue what they are talking about, haven't used Win 8(.1) at all, are just afraid of changes or simply repeat what they've heard on the web - or all combined.
Just my opinion.
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- KVRAF
- 3477 posts since 27 Dec, 2002 from North East England
I'm in agreement here. There's kind of internet hive-mind groupthink that unquestioningly says Windows 8 is awful. While there are a few tweaks to how things are organised, I've found that everything can be accessed with the same number or fewer clicks once you know where everything is. It is indeed resource-light and lightning fast with it.paterpeter wrote:Stick to 8.1. If you really can't live with the start screen and miss the start menu, get Start8. But it's really easy to get used to the tiles. Just don't bother with the ModernUI Apps, they suck IMO. Other than that, Win 8.1 is the best Windows version I've ever used and I'd consider myself a "power user". It feels extremely snappy.
Be careful when you hear a lot of negativity about it. I've heard sooo much crap from some people who have no clue what they are talking about, haven't used Win 8(.1) at all, are just afraid of changes or simply repeat what they've heard on the web - or all combined.
Just my opinion.
Most of the hate seems to revolve around the Start Menu disappearing, but I frankly think the Start Menu was a heap of crap anyway. On a well used computer, it becomes a bloated mess which leaves you navigating reams of tiny text to open another menu full of tiny text, being careful not to obscure the piece of tiny text you wanted by accidentally hovering over a different piece of tiny text which then pops open and covers the thing you were looking for. I know that familiarity breeds fondness, but I still don't understand the love for it. The Modern/Metro interface is IMO an excellent replacement for the Start Menu, and the one thing that makes it worth using.
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- KVRAF
- 4007 posts since 8 Jan, 2005 from Hamilton, New Zealand
Win 8/8.1 is awful, generally speaking, from a UI point of view, but once you install classic shell it becomes a lot better both from a UI and a technological point of view.
There are a shit-ton of objective reasons other than familiarity with the desktop metaphor as to why the win8 metro interface is bad and I won't even begin to tackle it here.
Suffice to say if you have any understanding of UI design and objective research it's a complete clusterfuck and public response unsurprisingly reflects that exactly.
There are a shit-ton of objective reasons other than familiarity with the desktop metaphor as to why the win8 metro interface is bad and I won't even begin to tackle it here.
Suffice to say if you have any understanding of UI design and objective research it's a complete clusterfuck and public response unsurprisingly reflects that exactly.
I make music: progressive-acoustic | electronica/game-soundtrack work | progressive alt-metal
Win 10/11 Simplifier | Also, Specialized C++ containers
Win 10/11 Simplifier | Also, Specialized C++ containers
- KVRAF
- 2083 posts since 28 Feb, 2011
Our household has 2 Win8 desktops I built, 2 Win8 Laptops, and 2 Win7 desktops I built. Both are fine for music production. I would stick with Win8 for multiple reasons. Downgrading a laptop to Win7 could be a real drag for many reasons. If you do it, make sure you do your homework on how the disk(s) is set up (be careful of Intel Rapid Resume, hybrid drives, GUID vs MBR disk partitions, UEFI disk protection, etc.).
Make sure you upgrade to Win8.1, and install Classic Start if you haven't already (it's free). Once you do this, you'll find Win8 has at least as many pluses as minuses. It boots quickly and has a few useful new features in Task Manager, File Explorer, etc.
Make sure you upgrade to Win8.1, and install Classic Start if you haven't already (it's free). Once you do this, you'll find Win8 has at least as many pluses as minuses. It boots quickly and has a few useful new features in Task Manager, File Explorer, etc.
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- KVRAF
- 21348 posts since 26 Jul, 2005 from Gone
It's far from awful. It's a pain in the ass to do things that were easier in previous versions, but overall there's nothing so bad about it that makes it anywhere near unusable.cron wrote:I'm in agreement here. There's kind of internet hive-mind groupthink that unquestioningly says Windows 8 is awful.
- KVRAF
- 2946 posts since 31 Jan, 2003 from Ghent, Belgium
There's also the "internet hive-mind groupthink" that unquestioningly says that the tiles UI is the best thing since sliced bread. And that you HAVE to get used to it, and then love it - and if you don't, then you're just afraid of change.cron wrote:There's kind of internet hive-mind groupthink that unquestioningly says Windows 8 is awful.
Anyway, apart from the Metro UI, that you can avoid in 8.1, there's not much wrong with Windows 8.1. I would still install classic shell, because I think the old start menu is better than its mini-tile replacement.
- KVRAF
- 2946 posts since 31 Jan, 2003 from Ghent, Belgium