What IT Should Know About Windows 8
The three faces of Windows 8 herald tough choices and significant changes ahead for corporate IT
Mon, September 26, 2011
InfoWorld — In the two weeks since Microsoft unveiled its Windows 8 Developer Preview at Build, more than a million people have downloaded the bits, leaving the vast majority of IT pros wondering what in the world their organizations may someday be getting into.
Windows XP to Windows 8: Don't Go There
Slideshow: Windows 8: A Visual Tour of What We Now Know
Here, Microsoft has been characteristically mum, except for the targeted and highly vetted postings of the Windows engineering team on its Building Windows 8 blog. That dearth of substantial information, not to mention reams of unanswered questions, has not prevented Preview users from providing meaningful observations on Windows 8 for the end-user's perspective.
[ See InfoWorld's Windows 8 preview visual tour. | Galen Gruman outlines how Microsoft may finally be making Windows winners. | Keep up to speed on the key Microsoft news and insights with InfoWorld's Technology: Microsoft newsletter. Sign up today! ]
But getting an understanding of the client-side nitty-gritty in the corporate world is no easy matter, especially when looking at pre-release code. Microsoft is not answering questions, and Windows 8 is no doubt a year away, meaning that nothing is set in concrete. But even with the usual pre-beta admonitions, from an IT and developer perspective there's still a lot to chew on -- most notably, how Windows 8's bifurcated interface and support for both Intel and ARM signal tough choices ahead for supporting corporate end-users in the post-PC era.
Shift in surface, change in architecture support
The first major change introduced in Windows 8 is its bifurcated interface. Terminology varies, but I'll call one interface "Metro," to refer to the UI with the tiles (see Figure 1), and the other "Desktop," because it looks and acts much like the Windows 7 desktop, except for the black hole in the lower-left corner. (For a more extensive look at Metro, see InfoWorld's Windows 8 Metro visual tour.)
Figure 1: The tiled Metro interface. When you install an application in the Desktop interface, in some cases Windows places a tile that runs the Desktop application in the Metro interface (c.f., the Google Chrome tile).
The other major factor for Windows 8 is that it is designed to run on both Intel/AMD hardware and the newer ARM-based offerings. Intel tablets coming out in the near term will be comparatively heavy, and the batteries won't last as long. ARM tablets will likely be lighter, longer-lived, and probably cheaper. Some day, Intel will catch up. But for the near future, at least, the most popular tablets will be based on ARM architectures.


