SAN
FRANCISCO: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says the latest update to
Windows is a "refined blend" of its older operating system for PCs and
its new touch-enabled interface for more modern, mobile devices.
After some hands-on time with it, the update seems to mea patch over an ever-widening chasm.
The
issue is that there are over a billion personal computers that use some
version of Windows as it existed until last October, when Microsoft
unveiled Windows 8.those PCs are responsive to mice and keyboards, not
the touch screens and other input methodsvoice and gestures that
represent the future of computing. Making it easier to cross that bridge
is one of the goals of Windows 8.1, a preview version of which
Microsoft released Wednesday.
After spending
several hours with devices running Windows 8.1, it remains unclear to me
whether a touch-based environment is what traditional Windows users
want to accomplish the productive tasks for which they've come to rely
on Windows.
But Microsoft has added to 8.1 a grab bag of fun features that make the free update worthwhile.
One
way Microsoft reaches into the past is by reviving the "Start" button
in the operating system's traditional "Desktop" mode. It appears as a
little Windows icon at the bottom left corner of the screen.
However,
other than the location and its general look, the button doesn't do
what it once did. A single tap brings you back to the "Modern"
interface, instead of the traditional Start menu, which used to bring up
a whole host of convenient itemsrecent programs and commonly used
folders.
An extended press brings up a list of
complex settings functions - the kind that most people would probably
rather leave to their tech department if they are fortunate enough to
have one.
So, instead of bringing back a
familiar environment, the revived "Start" button is mainly just another
way of directing you to the new one.
Another
way Microsoft attempts to appease its established PC user base is by
allowing people to launch their computers directly into the "Desktop"
environment. But again, with no way to access programs except through
the "Modern" interface, there is little cause for celebration among
traditionalists.
The main changes in Windows
8.1 offer an easier way to function inside its "Modern" environment,
better more integrated search results, and a hint of what's possible in
the future.
One feature that makes the new
environment easier to navigate: Now, a screen called "All Apps" is just a
swipe away the "Modern" tile screen. Swiping up literally displaysthe
apps on the computer, not just the ones that you have made as favorites
on the start screen. In the past, you had to swipe up the bottom edge
and tap another button to get there.
Unfortunately,
the "All Apps" page feelstoo much. An array of icons easily covers two
full screens. Although you can re-organize the apps into categories or
alphabetically, there are too many to make it easy to use.
It's
easier to use the search function, which can either be brought up by
swiping in the right edge, or just typing when in the "Modern" tile
screen.
Entertainers get terrific new billing
in Microsoft's improved search function. Type in an artist's name, say
Lily Allen, and Windows 8.1 brings up a lively and colorful
sideways-scrollable page that shows big photos, her birthdate, and a
list of songs and videos followed by decent-sized renditions of
websites.
Clicking on a play button alongside a
song instantly plays it. You don't have to own the song, because
Microsoft throws in the feature as part of its Xbox Music service -
which inserts ads unless you pay a monthly fee. You can queue upthe top
songs and even add them to a playlist for listening to later.
Windows
8.1 can also run on smaller devices, including Acer's Iconia W3, which
has an 8.1-inch screen measured diagonally and works with a wireless
keyboard that also acts as a stand. In the past, screens had to be about
10 inches or longer diagonally.
Some add-ins
didn't really excite me. The ability to resize the split-screen, which
lets you do more than one thing at once, lacked pizazz. On the Acer and
even Microsoft's own Surface Pro, you can only split the screen in two,
and only at fixed intervals. With the update, the screens can be
half-and-half or roughly cover one-third or two-thirds of the screen,
instead of one taking up a sliver as in Windows 8.
Another
feature is a predictive text function. Windows 8.1 offers up three
predictions for words you are typing on an onscreen keyboard when in
certain appsMail. To me, the feature seemed to be more annoying than
useful, even though you can the options with sideways swipes on the
space bar.
Yet another feature turned the
camera into a motion detector. In one demo, Microsoft's new "Food and
Drink" app lets users swipe through a recipe with mid-air hand gestures.
In practice, this often failed, sometimes turning pages in the wrong
direction or not reacting at all. Still, it's a way to struggle through a
recipe if your hands are coated with sauce.
At
Wednesday's presentation, Microsoft executives previewed future Windows
functions that could come in handy, including voice recognition in apps
and contextual understanding of spoken questions.
For
example, corporate vice president Gurdeep Singh Pall demonstrated a
prototype travel planning app that not only showed 3-D overhead views of
cities but gave computer-voice tours of various monuments. Speaking the
question "Who is the architect?" brought up a webpage showing the
answer, simply because the building that the architect designed was in
view in the maps app.
"Apps are going to have eyes, they're going to have ears, they're going to have a mouth," said Pall.
As
of this month, Microsoft says its new Windows platform will have
100,000 apps, and the company made it clear it hopes developers make
even more, incorporating some of the new tools it has made available to
them.
Ballmer said in his keynote he hopes
that Windows 8.1 also offers a "great path forward" for users of the
millions of programs that work on older versions of Windows. By showing
off a variety of enticing features of the new interface, however, it's
clear that path leads through the "Modern" world.
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