Microsoft on Wednesday released its first preview of Windows 8.1, a vastly improved update of its forward-thinking but flawed PC operating system.
On paper, the list of changes that Microsoft made to 
Windows 8.1 don't seem all that major. No, the app tiles aren't gone. 
Yes, the Start button is back, but not exactly as you remember it. 
But it isn't until you actually start using the latest version of 
Windows that you can appreciate the big benefits of little tweaks. 
Start button: The return of the Start button to its rightful spot on the desktop taskbar is a perfect example. 
The Start button's main function in Windows 8.1 is actually to call up the Start screen (the series of app tiles that Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500)
 calls "Modern UI," which was introduced in Windows 8) -- not the 
labyrinth of nested menus that it used to hide. But when you're in 
desktop mode and you click the Start button, it won't take you 
completely out of the desktop. Instead, a semi-transparent version of 
the Modern UI will float on top of the desktop, allowing you to choose 
an app. 
That
 feature also allows you to control how you organize the Start screen. 
You can quickly lump together all the icons for your desktop apps in the
 Modern UI and label them as such. 
![]()  | 
| Windows 8 says goodbye to the Start button | 
In other words, the new Start button brings back all the 
functionality of the Start button from Windows 7, but with the look and 
feel of the more modern Windows 8.1. 
Snap view: The
 biggest change in Windows 8.1 is the expansion of the "snap view" 
feature that enables multiple apps on the screen at the same time. 
Windows 8.1 will let you run up to eight apps side by side -- up from 
just two in Windows 8. (That's provided you have two 2560x1600 
resolution monitors. On a smaller device like the Surface, you can still
 only have two.) 
Unlike Windows 8, which ran the second app in 
snap view as a more limited widget in a small strip of the screen, 
Windows 8.1 lets users decide how much space each app takes up on the 
screen -- half? a third? a quarter? Your call! 
To make Windows 
8.1 users feel less locked into a single app, snap view will 
automatically launch in certain situations. For example, if you're 
reading an email and you click on a link, you will no longer exit the 
email app and go into the browser. Instead, the screen will 
automatically split itself into two (if it isn't already), and Internet 
Explorer will pop up right next to your email app. You can even 
rearrange panes and drag and drop files between them as easily as you 
would two windows in desktop mode. 
App improvements: Microsoft has put in a lot of work into more tightly integrating its own services throughout Windows 8.1. 
For example, if you search for a musician using the Bing search app, 
links and play buttons to that artist's songs and albums will be 
integrated into the results. 
When you receive a Skype call and 
your computer is locked, you will be able to answer the call without 
having to first unlock your computer. 
And most importantly, the
 SkyDrive cloud storage service will be more tightly woven into Windows 
8.1. SkyDrive won't just make your cloud files look and feel native 
inside Windows, but it will also sync all your Windows and app settings 
on the fly, so that you don't have to reconfigure every Windows 8.1 
device you use. 
Even littler things: It's
 not just tweaks to big conceptual ideas that make Windows 8.1 
promising. Microsoft paid attention to little technical details as well.
 
When you have more than one monitor, for instance, Windows 8.1
 will make sure you can independently adjust scaling for each one so 
that text, icons and other visual elements are optimally sized and 
proportioned on each display. (This was a major problem when using the 
Surface Pro with an external monitor.) 
Another tiny fix that goes a long way is how the Start Screen organization process has been cleaned up. Being 
able to name groups of tiles gives the screen an added sense of order. 
Instead of pinning every newly installed app to the Start Screen, 
Windows 8.1 now just adds new apps to a larger list of apps one menu 
level below. That helps cut down on the chaos of the Start Screen, 
making it just about the apps that matter to the user. 
And 
having the ability to move entire groups of tiles at once -- as opposed 
to one by one -- eliminates a tedious process of personalizing the Start
 Screen. 
Wednesday's release is just a preview for software 
developers. The final version of Windows 8.1 won't be released to the 
public until the holiday season, and we'll probably see some other 
little things changed and a few extra tricks added. 
No going back to the drawing board: Before Microsoft first pulled the cover off of Windows 8.1 last month, there were claims that negative feedback and poor sales of Windows 8
 had forced the company to rethink its strategy and largely abandon its 
futuristic overhaul of Windows. That couldn't be further from the truth.
 
With Windows 8.1, Microsoft is slowly pushing us deeper into 
its Modern UI. Many of the new tweaks to Windows exist to make the 
Modern UI more enticing as the primary mode of computing. 
Microsoft's execution of its PC/tablet hybrid operating system concept 
still isn't flawless, but its patience in adhering to its vision is 
commendable. By addressing some of Windows 8's more problematic aspects 
with subtle, iterative improvements, Microsoft is slowly transitioning 
its user base to this radical new mode of computing. 
That not 
only makes Windows 8.1 a promising upgrade, but it may go a long way 
towards validating Microsoft's somewhat risky strategy. 
Source: CNN 


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