windows-8.1-start (1)

 

Microsoft released its latest operating system on last Thursday, Windows 8.1.  The system is the next step up from the Windows 8.  However, many users of Windows 8 criticized the operating system for its failure to bridge the tablet and PC world together as planned. Therefore, Microsoft made a few tweaks and updates and now one year later Windows 8.1 is here.

 

Windows 8.1. contains the same updates as 8, but features some additions to make the user experience more functional and exciting. According to the Associated Press, The features that Windows 8.1 offers are as follows:

 

START ME UPThe Start button is back in desktop mode, although not the way it was before Windows 8 came along. In Windows 7 and before, a click on Start would have brought up programs and important folders in a list. Now, one tap on Start flips you back to the new tile interface, where you can click or tap tiles to open programs. A long press brings up crucial settings such as the Control Panel.

 

BOOT TO DESKTOPYou can now start up the machine in desktop mode, bypassing the tiles for a short time. That removes some of the headache for companies that want to use Windows 8 but don’t want to buy a touch-screen monitor for every employee.

 

TOUCH AND GESTURE UPDATES

 

ONSCREEN KEYBOARD SWIPES The onscreen keyboard now includes the ability to type numbers or punctuation marks by swiping up or away from certain keys on the standard “QWERTY” layout, eliminating the need to toggle between numeric and alphabetic layouts. You can also select from suggested words mid-stream using side swipes and taps on the virtual spacebar.

 

GESTURE-ENABLED APPSYou can now wave in the air in front of the front-facing camera to get a response. For example, in the new app Bing Food & Drink, a right-to-left wave in “Hands Free Mode” flips through pages of a recipe.

 

QUICKER TILE ORGANIZING You can tap and hold Windows tiles with your finger to move them. Another couple taps will allow you to resize them in one of four sizes. In the previous version, you had to go back to the mouse or touchpad and right-click on tiles to do this, and you were limited to two sizes.

 

EASIER APPS ACCESS Finding all your apps takes just a swipe up on your start screen, as long as you don’t do it from beyond the bottom edge. Before, you had to swipe up from the bottom edge, then tap on the All Apps button.

 

SMALL CONVENIENCES

 

AUTOMATIC UPDATESApps update in the background, replacing the constant reminders to go to the Windows Store to update the apps yourself.

 

SMALLER TABLETSWindows 8.1 now has a home screen that looks good in portrait mode on screens measuring 7 inches to 8 inches diagonally.

 

LOCK SCREEN ACCESSYou can now answer Skype calls or take photos from the lock screen without having to log in. Just swipe down. You can also set other apps like Twitter to send notifications when the screen is locked.

 

FUNCTIONAL CHANGES

 

BETTER MULTITASKINGIn Windows 8.1, you can run up to four apps at once side by side, double the previous amount, though you need a large, high-resolution monitor to do so (On their own, Microsoft’s Surface tablets are not big enough for more than two). You can resize panes using a slider that moves side to side, instead of being limited to one larger window and one slender one. This is still not as capable as Windows 7 or in desktop mode, where you can open dozens of items in windows that can be resized horizontally, vertically and diagonally. And many app makers have yet to adapt, meaning some apps still appear as a thin sliver, even if you want them to take up half the screen.

 

GLOBAL SEARCH Typing while on the tile-based start screen will pull up multiple search results – if applicable – from your computer, the Web and the Windows app store. If you’re searching for a musician, you’ll see a list of popular songs you can play using Xbox Music, and if it’s someone famous (like President Barack Obama) you’ll see biographical details, videos and other information. Before, you had to choose where to search: in apps, settings, computer files or on the Internet.

 

EMAIL UPDATEThe standard-issue Mail app now has a “power pane” on left-hand side with folders for updates from social networks like Facebook, messages from favorite contacts and newsletters. Some of these features work only with Microsoft accounts such as Hotmail and Outlook.com, though. A new “sweep” command deletes multiple messages with a couple taps.

 

BETTER BROWSINGNo longer are you limited to 10 open tabs in the tile version of Internet Explorer. Before, Web pages automatically closed without prompts when you try to open more. You can open as many as you want now. Better yet, you can have two different websites displayed side by side, the way you’ve long been able to before Windows 8 came along.

 

FUN STUFF

 

XBOX MUSIC REFRESH The music streaming app now optimizes playback over discovery with a layout that has more lists and smaller photos. It also adds the ability to create playlists from any website with a couple taps. When on a website featuring artists, swipe in from the right edge and tap the Share button followed by the Music button. It will create a song playlist based on those artists, which you can then stream for free.

 

PICTURE EDITINGA picture editor with pre-set effects comes with the update, allowing for photo touchups, cropping, contrast changes and other features.

 

XBOX ONE INTEGRATIONYou can pick up where you left off if you start playing a video purchased on Xbox Video on a tablet and then watch the rest on Microsoft’s upcoming game console, Xbox One.

 

Despite the new updates, Windows 8.1 caught a lot of flack for several glitches it contained. Complaints came in about the system crashes the new OS has caused once downloaded.

 

As of Sunday, Microsoft quickly pulled the free download from their website. They issued an apology and promised users that they will update everyone when the issues are resolved.

 

“RT 8.1 is an operating system for tablets and light, thin personal computers. It only runs built-in apps or apps downloaded from the Windows Store.” – Microsoft