Regarding Windows 8 in general, I feel like this:
http://techreport.com/discussions.x/22954And this was an interesting read from Mr. Thurrott about this specific change:
http://www.winsupersite.com/article/windows8/windows-8-release-preview-rip-aero-20032012-143133I’m curious why Microsoft never explained the need to remove Aero. But let me offer up a reason, one that the company had mentioned previously with regards to the downtuned Aero version that’s appeared in Windows 8 builds so far and is mentioned in this mammoth post, too, but not with regards to the desktop:
It’s all about battery life.
Aero, with all its glassy, translucent goodness, is bad for battery life. Metro, meanwhile, which is flat, dull, not transparent, and only full screen, is very good for battery life. It’s predictable. There’s no worry that people will run overlapping anything, eating away at power cycles, because you can’t run overlapping anything with Metro: Everything is full screen and app lifecycles are automatically maintained by the system. God, the desktop was so pesky. How didn’t we see this before?
Whatever.
Rest in peace, Aero. I liked you, a lot. Still do. And I’ll miss you. I’m curious why Windows 8 can’t simply include Aero themes in addition to something flatter and duller, especially for those desktop PC-using power users who will primarily use the desktop environment and not care about (let alone need) better battery life. But I’m starting to see more clearly what’s happening here and starting to accept that Windows is growing into something that isn’t so much for me anymore as it is for some mythical tablet user base that may or may not appear in the future.
That brings me back to my central complaint about Windows 8 generally and Metro specifically: This is a neat thing that Microsoft’s building, it really is. But it should have occurred in something outside of Windows. (It should have been just Windows RT, minus the desktop.) Windows 8 isn’t even Windows anymore. It’s a tablet OS that’s been grafted onto Windows like a monstrous Frankenstein experiment.
Even if I was never as enamored of Aero as Paul, I have to agree a bit here...
No Compromises
TM seems like it is working out to be Not Without Compromises instead. I hope it works out for Microsoft. Really, I do.
But it feels like Vista. And I wonder, can they survive another release like that? I mean, the company won't go anywhere, obviously. But if this doesn't work... I think a big part of the gig might be up.