RTM is supposedly coming pretty soon...
Youʼll be able to install that one without a nuke/pave, obviously.
Well it looks like Microsoft realized that it was stupid not releasing the RTM version to developers, and itʼs
now on TechNet/MSDN.
I decided that I would “nuke” my system though—it has been acting strange in a couple of ways ever since I replaced the motherboard recently. (some permissions seemed to have messed up)
Hereʼs the problem with actually buying software; I had to get in touch with multiple companies to reactivate a lot of it after doing this. I forgot that software such as Photoshop, Acrobat, and others require you to deactivate them before you wipe the system, and I had to call up Microsoft to activate Windows due to the new motherboard—Iʼm surprised that I was not prompted to do this when running my Windows 8 install. So thatʼs been a bit of a hassle over the last couple of days, but itʼs not 8.1ʼs fault. Once again, DRM causes problems for legitimate customers, which pirates donʼt have to worry about.
Other than that, my experience with Windows 8.1 has been fairly smooth so far.
Rather than immediately installing
Start8 this time, I decided to give the new start button and related preferences a try—Iʼm trying to avoid running as much unnecessary third-party software as possible now.
Itʼs not
ideal, but after a couple of days using the 8.1 start button/start screen, I think the changes theyʼve made have been enough that I no longer feel a need for a third-party start menu.
I still donʼt think that using the full screen is as quick to access as a list of applications—at least not when using a mouse—and I do miss having quick access to “Devices and Printers” and Control Panel as a list. But whatʼs there now is
fine.
I think itʼs hilarious that I now have access to three different start buttons on the desktop though, rather than one in the taskbar:
I guess they just didnʼt think people moved the taskbar from its default position?
After being a Mac user for years, and due to the way that jump lists are presented, I find that having the taskbar across the top of the screen just suits the way I work a lot more than placing it along the bottom.
It would be nice if the (JRiver) Media Center bug where windows maximize
underneath the taskbar was fixed though…
While thereʼs still no option to disable the Charms Bar, you can set it so that it only opens when you mouse over the lower-right corner of the screen now.
If I recall correctly, in Windows 8 it would happen anywhere along the right edge of the screen. (I may be mistaken, as I just used Start8 to disable it altogether)
With the Charms Bar in the lower right corner, itʼs no longer an annoyance for me, so I donʼt feel the need to disable it. Iʼm sure it can probably still be disabled via the registry, or worst case scenario, installing something like Start8. The biggest problem I had with it in Windows 8 was that I use Aero Peek, so every time I activated that, the Charms Bar would pop up—no longer an issue.
The new small icon size is really nice to have on the Start Screen, though I wish it was a bit more flexible about placement. Everything is grouped together into “4x4” grids, and I would quite like to have a “quick access” column of 1x8 small icons down the left side of my screen.
Desktop apps now get a background color for their tiles, so they donʼt look nearly as out of place as they once did on the Start Screen—though it seems that Windows application icons have the same problem that iOS does (and I guess everything else)—the dominant color for most icons is blue, so most of the start screen is covered with blue or teal tiles.
I still think the “all programs” view is useless. With some relatively minor tweaks, it could be
significantly improved when trying to use it on a desktop computer. Even after removing all extraneous shortcuts from the start menu (uninstall links, readme links etc.) itʼs still poorly presented, and just doesnʼt read well at all.
For me, this isnʼt really a problem though because I used pinned apps (either on the taskbar, or the start screen) or I use search to launch programs. The only time I see the “all programs” screen is when I want to pin a newly installed program.
You can boot to desktop now, and while thatʼs nice to have, I donʼt really need it now with the improvements they made to the Start Screen. It was really only necessary when I was using Start8. (which had its own option for this)
It does feel even quicker booting to the desktop now, and applications do seem to launch faster. Some people complained that while Windows 8 was faster to boot, they felt it was slower to respond on the desktop immediately after booting—this was not my experience, but it does feel more responsive than it already did in 8.
Other changes: all of my SATA drives which have hot-swap enabled are now listed as being removable drives in the “safely remove hardware and eject media” tray icon by default. Previously this would only happen for the drives connected to my Marvell SATA controller, after installing the Marvell drivers. Now all the drives on Intel and Marvell ports have this option with the stock drivers. The Marvell SATA drivers have caused me problems in the past, so Iʼm glad that I can just use the ones that ship with the OS now.
The only driver I had to install on my system was the Intel MEI one, which I do by extracting to a folder and adding via device manager, to avoid extra software running unnecessarily.
Something Microsoft seem to have overlooked is camera raw image support. In Windows 8 there was an optional update that added support for Explorer to generate thumbnails and preview images shot on my camera. This is not installed by default on Windows 8.1, and it refuses to install if I manually download the update.
Thereʼs still no native PDF support in the OS. That useless Metro reader app is probably still there, but I uninstalled all the stock Metro apps as soon as I logged in. (on that note, there are a couple of apps you could uninstall on 8, which you cannot on 8.1)
I really wish there was native support for PDF thumbnail generation, and searching inside PDF files built into Explorer. For searching inside PDFs I will have to install the Foxit PDF iFilter, which is no longer supported (they no longer sell a consumer version) and there are only third-party hacks for generating PDF thumbnails or using the preview pane in Explorer. I donʼt think Adobe ship anything which does this yet. (Iʼm stuck with Acrobat X though, because I donʼt just use Reader)
One thing I did not appreciate was the installer trying to force a Microsoft Account on me. You have to continue as if you want to create a new Microsoft Account, for the option to create a Local Account to appear.
I really think itʼs a mistake the way that they are trying to force Microsoft Accounts on you. There are a couple of Metro apps that I would probably quite like to use (Flipboard is nice on iOS, and is coming to Windows 8) but you canʼt have access to them unless you link your local user account to a Microsoft store account. Not going to happen.
The way Apple handles this where iCloud and the App Store are handled separately from your local user account is much nicer.
Metro apps now get proper subpixel anti-aliased fonts, which is good, but worthless to me without Store access. I think the only Metro app I have access to is the Firefox one—which is a nuisance on a desktop machine, because I canʼt see any way to pin it to the Start Screen and launch the desktop version.
Something which I still canʼt believe Microsoft has overlooked is that there is still no XInput support for the Metro interface. With the
Xbox One using essentially the same interface, it seems like a massive oversight. Add native XInput support to Metro apps, rather than requiring developers to build it in, and you have a great HTPC interface.
Audio support seems like it might be improved in 8.1, as I did not have any problems using my DAC in driverless USB Audio Class 1 mode. In Windows 8, I would occasionally have glitches in playback. (pops & clicks or crackling) Unfortunately thereʼs still no native USB Audio Class 2 support like OS X has had for years. I would probably still be installing a driver to have access to ASIO
anyway, because it lets me set the buffer to a known size (crucial for correcting lip-sync) but it would be nice if it was not required.
Overall, it seems like Windows 8 but better—which was already Windows 7 but better.