Quote:
Originally Posted by in_vino_vomitus
(Post 2104987)
I have W8 on my machine and it has the start menu - also have no probs with the mission editor, apart from I don't know how to use it properly yet.
FWIW I have all my installs on the D:\ drive, but I can't see that making a difference - although I'm frequently wrong about these things.
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What are you calling "the start menu?" Windows 8 has no start menu at all. The only way to pick real computer programs is the aforementioned carpet bombing your desktop or hit the Windows key and start typing the program name.
The only way to get some kind of start menu back is to load external software that kind of simulates a start menu. Why bother? Get a real operating system. I just bought a copy of Windows 7 for $69. It will sit on a shelf until Microsoft makes its customer friendly move to force all of us XP users to buy Windows 8. Then I'll install 7 and laugh in their general direction.
Just last night I had three S3D windows open, a Notepad++ window open and JSGME, all tiled nicely so I could truly multi-task and cut/paste between them. My desktop has rotating multiple 1600x900 millions of colors photos. What do I want with a 16 color monochrome Lego block monstrosity? My computer is a COMPUTER and it will never be a cell phone. How dare they try to nerf what I spent all this time buying and building? How dare they try to force me to buy what I will not permit on my computer because they can't convince anybody to buy it?
Even at the cost of losing SH4, I'd abandon Windows altogether and go to Linux (Ubunto distro) if I were left with a W8 or nothing choice from Microsoft. Steam is making more and more commercial games available on Linux and they play as well or better.
Even when Ubuntu first came out with the Unity GUI, where the first iteration was a rectangular array of tiles (over a good wallpaper of your choice unlike W8) alphabetically arrayed, there was a revolution. Actually, that is the case in Android now: little or no functional classification, just alphabetical array. The screaming was deafening. And Ubuntu's parent company, Canonical, listened. Today, Unity is a decade ahead of W8 and that assumes that Microsoft gives a rat's patootie about their customers, which remains to be proven.
But in Linux, there is a beautiful thing. You can choose from many different GUIs: KDE, Gnome, XFCE, there are dozens! It is as if you had W8's admittedly very excellent kernel and then could decide "I want the hideous (can't call it Metro) Lego block GUI!" or "Windows 7 interface it is" or "I liked how XP worked" and load up that exact interface. W8 would LOOK like XP but under the hood you would have this snarling 64 cylinder motor that blows XP in the weeds.
Well, Linux has had that exact function since the 1990s. You make your operating system work on the front end exactly how you like. Every time you log in, you can actually choose between all the available GUIs. I can even load up a GUI from another Linux distro in Ubuntu.
And of course, in the free virtual machine software, VirtualBox, I can run a copy of Windows inside Ubuntu if I need Windows for SH4. I bet you didn't know that Firefox is a refugee from Linux and it saves you from Internet Exploder prison.
My computer right now is set up for dual boot. When I'm on the Internet, chances are I'm running Ubuntu because it is totally immune from all that crazy malware. Tons of advantages to being a rebel and telling Microsoft to learn how to spell "Customer." And you don't need to miss a thing.