In honor of Windows 8, here are top
8 questions that Windows 8 has an answer to.
Question 1: Why can’t I have Hyper-V on my laptop? What ever
happened to Virtual PC?
Client Hyper-V, full featured
virtualization software, is finally coming to workstations in Windows 8! Client Hyper-V is installed as a feature, so you don’t have
to buy it separately. It includes all of the features that you expect from your
virtualization software: virtual networking, shared drives, and most
importantly, snapshots.
You can also use the advanced
features of Hyper-V on your installation of Windows 8 desktop. For example,
Client Hyper-V allows you to automate your virtual environment using PowerShell,
and if you’ve got a multipoint touch-enabled device that you’re running client
Hyper-V on, you can also use your touch screen on your VMs.
Question 2: When will I be able to use my own tablet as my
work computer?
One of the key devices Windows 8 has
been aimed at is the tablet. It’s touch ready, and ready for you to take it
with you. It has also been designed to help IT departments manage the huge rush
of personal devices into the workplace. The consumerization of IT is making
end-users the champions of new technology devices, a role that was previously
held by the IT staff.
Determining whether or not a
computer is yours, or one you’re just using temporarily, is handled by the
Windows 8 feature “User Device Affinity.” User device affinity uses usage
percentage, amount of time logged in, and number of times logged in to
determine if the computer belongs to you enough to call it “your computer.” If
it is the computer that you usually use, regardless of who actually owns the
computer, your Windows 8 tablet will identify it as a primary device. A new
feature in System Center Configuration Manager 2012 allows administrators to
target those primary devices for software installations, whether they are
company owned or employee owned.
Question 3: How can my Blu-Ray player and TV “boot up” in
under a second, but my computer still takes a full minute?
Windows 8 is faster overall, and in
many areas. One area in particular where it is dramatically improved is in its
startup time. Using partial hibernation, which stores a set of system files and
RAM on the hard drive (but not all of the running programs and RAM that would
be used in a full hibernation), Windows 8 systems have been booting up from
a cold start in under 10 seconds. Solid State Drives report it even faster,
almost instantly.
Question 4: Why can’t I take my programs with me to whatever
computer I’m at?
Brand new with Windows 8 is Windows
To Go. Windows To Go allows IT staff to load a full version of Windows 8 on
a USB drive, including the operating system, personal data, and installed
programs!
There are some differences in using
Windows To Go: You’re presented with a pre-boot password prompt; If you remove
the USB device, the computer freezes in place until the USB device is plugged
back in; and booting into your Windows To Go disables hard drives on the
physical computer to help prevent your data from being compromised.
Question 5: Where is the factory reset button?
If you’ve wished that your HP or
Dell PC came with a factory reset button like your home wireless router does,
you’ll be happy to see that Windows 8 provides two features that provide
functionality for doing just that: Reset and Refresh. Both are now accessible
from the Control Panel metro app, and both will fix problems with your PC. Reset
takes it back to the day it was purchased: all apps are gone and all user data
is gone. Refresh performs a full reinstall of Windows, but saves your user
data, most of your preferences, and saves your installed metro apps.
Question 6: Why does malware start on a PC before
anti-malware does?
In Windows 8, there looks to be some
great strides taken to prevent malware that starts early in the boot process
from being able to mess up your system. Trusted Boot in Windows 8 digitally
signs your bootup environment, validating the entire process. The loading
of anti-malware software is one of the earliest actions performed by Windows 8,
so it is running before malware even has a chance to start.
Question 7: How can the world’s largest software company not
have an app store?
Microsoft finally reveals an App
store on their desktop operating system with Windows 8. Microsoft has already had an app marketplace that is still
used with Windows Phone (via Zune software), but you can now have apps
purchased, stored, and delivered directly to your desktops, laptops, and
tablets running Windows 8.
Question 8: Why in the world can I not mount an ISO on a
Windows machine?
Now, after many years that I have
been asking this question, you can finally mount ISOs in Windows 8 as part
of the operating system. There are no third party utilities required. You
can also mount VHDs (Virtual Hard Disks) natively in Windows 8.
ISOs show up as a new CD or DVD drive, while VHD shows up as
a new hard drive. You can access either ISOs or VHDs by either double-clicking
them, right clicking them and selecting “mount,” or by selecting the “mount”
from the ribbon in Windows Explorer.
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