I thought that I had replied to these posts but can't find it anywhere...
Quote from learner2007:By any chance have you used 8 with IB or eSignal?
Thank you
Nope but give it a few weeks and IB will have it up & working. Same with eSignal. The OS only came out last week and usually these guys are all dinosaurs and refuse to "test or develop" on beta or pre-release operating systems simply because in theory it "could change".
Quote from colonial dr:Has anyone successfully installed it on VMWARE? I can't get it to work.
What version of VMware? Player? Workstation? ESX? ESXi?
If you are trying to install it on a legit hypervisor I'd strongly suggest using Microsoft's Hyper-V (totally legit and 100% free) and put W8 on that. W8 works fine for me inside VMware Workstation - but it's 8.0 and paid/licensed. No idea if it works on the free flavors of VMware. In ESXi you need to upgrade to the latest and greatest - the upgrade and patch process is a bit of a command-line-pain so I just left it as is (ESXi v5.0) and I'm going to migrate everything over to Hyper-V and Server 2012 vs. running ESXi and W7+Server 2008.
Quote from Cdntrader:just google it. Looks prettty easy. Apparently the Metro screen goes away pretty easy after starting an app anyways, or so I've read.
+1, just Google it... or spend 2-3 days and give it a chance. It's actually pretty decent.
Quote from Cdntrader:Funny to watch them try to shove "touch" down people's throats on desktops that's for sure.
It will be nice for touch - but the metro splash screen is going to be the new standard. It's like any PC-tablet or phone or iPad, etc.
Quote from colonial dr:Are they keeping Windows 7? I thought Windows 8 was two OS style options- one of them similar to WIN7.
You can turn off metro/the tiles/splash screen and it will look exactly like W7. You can also get an enterprise version that's a little different than the home/retail version but that's a volume-license type deal.
Quote from mgookin:Interesting to hear positive things about it from a qualified person who does real work for a living. I guess I'll have to install it on a system one weekend and see what I can get it to do.
As always, thanks for the input.
Thanks
The tiles do take some getting used to but it's essentially the same as a start menu, just bigger. Once people figure out how to customize the tiles and splash screen I think they will quit their b*tching. On the Server OS it's much easier/nicer but I do agree that the desktop OS takes some getting used to.
As I said earlier, if I was on anything earlier than W7 I'd skip right over 7 and go to W8. Who knows - W8 may turn into a disaster and end up being like Vista but in the grand scheme of things all the new technology that was introduced in 8 will be around for a long time to come.