Calgary Herald

Latest Windows has users struggling to adapt

Jury out on Microsoft’s ability to take on ipad

- BILL RIGBY

As Microsoft Corp. prepares to show the world what its new Windows 8 can do on the next generation of high-powered tablets, initial reviews of the new operating system on existing hardware underscore the challenges the company faces with the radical redesign of its flagship product.

The world’s largest software company says millions of people are already using a downloaded pre-release version of Windows 8 on PCs, laptops and touch-devices ahead of its full introducti­on this autumn. At a media event in Los Angeles today, the company is expected to discuss its plans to take on Apple Inc.’ s all-conquering iPad this holiday shopping season.

So far, most reviewers have praised the look and feel of the touch-friendly “Metro” style of Windows 8, which is based on colourful squares, or “tiles,” that depict applicatio­ns such as e-mail, and update in real time. But they have also stressed how difficult it will be for users to move away from what they know and trust.

“It’s a bit of a struggle for people who are deliberate­ly oriented on a PC, that are used to a mouse feel,” said former Microsoft strategist Al Hilwa. Now an analyst at tech research firm IDC, Hilwa has been trying out the latest demo release for two weeks. “Without a touch screen, I struggled with a mouse to do certain things,” he said.

The new Metro interface only runs programs written for it, so users have to switch back to the traditiona­l desktop to do certain tasks, like listening to music on Apple’s iTunes.

“The thing that really infuriates me is that it seems like Metro apps, and apps running in the normal desktop don’t have any knowledge of each other,” said Forrester Research analyst David Johnson. “There’s no easy way to navigate between them, and I’m not quite sure why that is.”

The latest test version is not-yet-finished software. And outside of a few industry testers, no one has tried out Windows 8 on a tablet powered by ultraeffic­ient ARM Holdings chips, which is the closest Microsoft will come to challengin­g the ipad.

Microsoft is expected to say more about that on Monday, and there is talk that it might introduce a tablet under its own brand name. The company declined to comment on the reaction to the new system and its plans for the Monday event.

Neverthele­ss, Microsoft has not persuaded some of its most loyal users just yet.

“Right now, I’m not sold,” said analyst Michael Cherry of Directions on Microsoft, an independen­t research firm that focuses on the tech giant.

Cherry said he had persevered with Windows 8 for a few days, but had problems setting up e-mail on his test machine. “I can’t rely on it as a production tool,” he said. “I can’t switch over yet. At this point, I should be able to leave Windows 7 behind.”

A former microsoft program manager, Cherry worries that the initial complexity of the new system will prevent it from being an instant hit, like its predecesso­r, Windows 7.

“If a guy who has used Windows since Windows 1.0 can’t figure it out, then I’m going to guess there are other people out there who aren’t going to figure it out,” he said. “We won’t see lineups at Best Buy at midnight. I’d love to see that, but it’s just not there.”

The smattering of reviews on tech-centric blogs have generally praised the new look of Windows 8, but almost every one has stressed how difficult users will find the switch.

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