Last week my foray into Windows 8 began in earnest. I discovered that I like the look of Metro with its apps displayed as “tiles,” though I’m withholding judgment on its user-friendliness. I also learned that I will need to get used to clicking on the corners of the screen to navigate between applications and access the new “Charms” menu. I lamented to loss of the Start key, but just briefly, before I found most of its functions hidden in a lower left corner right-click launched menu. This week I will explore apps, the cornerstone of the new Metro layout.
Upon launching Windows 8, your first tentative minutes exploring the new Metro interface will quickly clue you in to the reliance on apps, programs that appear as tiles on the screen instead of the smaller icons you grew accustomed to in earlier versions of Windows. Some apps scroll constantly updating information like news, weather, or your social media updates, others are just large icons.
You can easily customize the look of your home screen. Drag tiles to different locations on the screen, or right click the tile to launch a menu with options to unpin the application from your start screen, uninstall it entirely, or make the icon larger or smaller.
After a little more than a week using Windows 8, I am underwhelmed with the pre-installed apps. They are, not surprisingly, Microsoft centered and I am a Google-girl. If you use Gmail, Google Calendar and Google Maps like I do, be prepared for the quick realization that there won’t be “an app for that” in Windows 8. Accessing your Google data will have to be done online through your browser, though you can install a Chrome app if you prefer Google’s browser over the default Internet Explorer and there’s a Google Search app. Otherwise, you can pin shortcuts to the applicable Google weblinks to your Metro homepage.
“Travel” looms front and center on my screen – it’s simply a link to Microsoft-owned Bing Travel. Maps takes you to Bing’s mapping program. Default Music and Video apps link you to Microsoft-owned Xbox Music and Video stores to purchase content through the XBox streaming service. Playing video content you already own will likely require you purchase the Windows Media Center application for $9.99 as the integrated Windows Media Player no longer includes MPEG-2 support, a common video format.
The calendar is lacking in features. You can pull data from additional sources like Google Calendar or iCal, but you can’t push data entered via your Windows 8 calendar to these applications. If you use an online calendar, you’ll likely be able to view your schedule in your Windows 8 calendar but not make updates as they won’t sync to your other devices.
The People app lets you view notifications and updates from Facebook and/or Twitter, but clicking to view a profile or your newsfeed will lead to a browser window opening and launching the full application online. I chose to install Facebook+ Lite (http://apps.microsoft.com/windows/en-us/app/f9dbb3ff-a7fe-4251-8e61-39f5ea061836, free) to get a more functional Facebook app, though you could just access it online as you’re probably used to doing.
The included Photos app is for viewing only, similar to opening your “My Photos” folder in previous versions of Windows. If you’re looking to make changes to your photos, CameraStudio+ ($2.99) gives you some of the photo editing features lacking from the default photo management application, such as cropping, resizing, red-eye correction, effects and borders.
Next week I will explore navigation shortcuts and discover once and for all if it’s possible to split-screen multi-task as I once could in my beloved Windows 7.
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