1. triplealiali's Avatar
    Hey, do you remember Blackberry? Remember how for years, every white-collar professional who worked in every office had to have one? And how they made consumer smartphones, that some people actually bought, and wanted to be all cool?

    When I started work at the headquarters for a major media company in 2008, every executive had one. They were tied to them. By the time I left that company less than four years later, those executives mostly had iPhones (and the ones who didn't had Android devices). That organization was not atypical. By this year, the company behind Blackberry has all but folded, facing one financial disaster after another.

    The company whose product once defined its entire class has fallen, lost under the waves of newer competitors who can do it sleeker and better. And even if the best, sleekest, fastest, most stylish Blackberry in the world were to hit store shelves tomorrow, it wouldn't matter. The tide of popular conception has turned on the Blackberry. To see one is to start thinking of dinosaur jokes.

    So why the parable about smartphones? Because I am beginning to worry that Microsoft, and Windows products, are in danger of pulling a Blackberry.

    Windows 8 doesn't need to kill Microsoft, and it doesn't need to kill PC gaming. But it sure seems to be trying its hardest to. The newest version of the world's most commonly-used operating system is set to launch on October 26. And so far, Microsoft has provided essentially no reason for anyone to upgrade.

    Instead, major PC developers have expressed very deep, very public concerns. One after the next, they worry. The head of Stardock has described the killer problems in the OS. Blizzard execs are not thrilled with where Windows is heading in the future. Notch, of Minecraft fame, has cautioned that as it stands, Windows 8 could be very bad for indie developers. And most famously, and infamously, Gabe Newell of Valve said that Windows 8 "is a catastrophe for everyone in the PC space."

    Valve is putting their money where their mouth is. Steam already offers Mac OS support, in addition to Windows. They will soon be expanding to Linux, as a way to continue to hedge their bets. And just today, Valve announced that Steam will be expanding its store and platform to include non-gaming software, "to range from creativity to productivity."

    "Productivity" is a byword for business and office tools, the one area where Microsoft has remained unquestionably dominant so far. If Steam becomes a viable platform to bridge games and other software across multiple operating systems, Microsoft may have a large problem on its hands.

    Meanwhile, the entire concept of the PC itself is coming under fire in the age of the rising tablet. For many of us, a keyboard is still not optional. Students and professionals need to be able to write, a lot, and 85+ wpm on a tablet just isn't the same. But where fifteen years ago every household aimed to have the family desktop, these days that same household is more likely to hold a scattering of portable devices.

    PC gaming finds itself in an excellent position at the moment, as the consoles with which it competes are showing their age. One solid desktop or even laptop is still the all-purpose device that can bridge the gap between console and phone. But the time of the PC, and especially the Windows PC, naturally dominating the landscape for all is ending.

    As the 21st century marches on, Microsoft will have to actively woo both consumers and developers into using Windows platforms. Making Windows 8 into a blockier and more colorful iOS, accompanying tablet and all, might help them in some ways while it hurts them in others.

    But now, whether or not Windows 8 is any good feels like something of a pointless question. The tide of public sentiment right now is against it. As of May, nearly half of users and companies were still holding on to Windows XP, and hadn't even jumped to 7. That giant percentage of the market probably isn't going to run out and buy upgrades in October. And the way Windows 8 looks at the moment, neither will I.

    Microsoft stands poised right now to go one of two ways: either to continue their dominance, and in so doing to give customers some reason to choose their products, or to become another Blackberry. Personally, I really like assembling my own PC and I've never liked using any version of Mac OS, so I hope they don't do the latter. I'm just amazed that we've hit the point where Windows is something I feel the need to cheer on—and where I worry it might be an underdog

    Windows Is Its Own Biggest Threat to the Future of PC Gaming
    08-08-12 03:45 PM
  2. Bla1ze's Avatar
    No, it's not really that interesting at all lol.

    Sidenote: Personal opinion, Windows 8 is a disaster.
    08-08-12 04:02 PM
  3. James Nieves's Avatar
    No, it's not really that interesting at all lol.

    Sidenote: Personal opinion, Windows 8 is a disaster.
    Why is Windows 8 a disaster? I'm not a fan of their OS myself but have people been poorly reviewing the consumer preview? I'd like to be less ignorant
    08-08-12 04:31 PM
  4. JazzL5's Avatar
    The entire OP article is ignorant.
    omniusovermind likes this.
    08-08-12 04:58 PM
  5. ElGusta's Avatar
    ouch, another jab to blackberry
    08-08-12 05:13 PM
  6. 2c's Avatar
    too much to read please some one summarize it?
    08-08-12 05:24 PM
  7. hpjrt's Avatar
    too much to read please some one summarize it?
    I'm not sure it's worth the time it would take to summarize!
    08-08-12 06:04 PM
  8. JR A's Avatar
    The only thing I kinda agree with is that Windows 8 doesn't really give much reason for current Windows 7 users to upgrade, and that's for both Mobile users and laptop/desktop users.
    08-08-12 06:15 PM
  9. abwan11's Avatar
    I like how the author looks at what everybody else has. If this guy was your neighbour he'd be looking at your wife to make sure his was up to par.
    JR A likes this.
    08-08-12 06:39 PM
  10. papped's Avatar
    The correlation isn't there...

    Maybe in extremely generic terms of MS might be headed for a fall, but other than that almost everything else is completely different, so it's a stupid article.
    08-08-12 06:39 PM
  11. tmelon's Avatar
    Why is Windows 8 a disaster? I'm not a fan of their OS myself but have people been poorly reviewing the consumer preview? I'd like to be less ignorant
    They took Windows 7, mixed it with Windows Phone and the result wasn't pretty. I've used it from the developer preview all the way through the final RTM version and I still find it unusable compared to Windows 7 or Mac OS X.
    yvklondon likes this.
    08-08-12 09:03 PM
  12. bats84's Avatar
    I think people are just upset by the fact it is completly different than what they are used to. Personally, im looking forward to it.

    I think this PC World article sums it up quite well.

    "Unfortunately, I think it�s going to get rough welcome. People often don�t like change at first.

    We all know how the Internet works: there are people who will use something for two minutes (or not at all) and spend the rest of the day complaining about it on forums, comments, message boards, and social networks."


    http://www.pcworld.com/article/25088...pressions.html

    Sent from my BlackBerry 9380 using Tapatalk
    08-08-12 09:33 PM
  13. Saiga's Avatar
    Why is Windows 8 a disaster? I'm not a fan of their OS myself but have people been poorly reviewing the consumer preview? I'd like to be less ignorant
    Windows 8 does suck, I don't like it at all. But I didn't expect to like it. Years of using computers have taught me that Windows is only good every other OS.

    Windows 2000= good, Windows ME= bad, Windows XP= good, Windows Vista= bad, Windows 7= great, Windows 8= bad, at least according to my time with the preview.

    Its just the way Microsoft rolls.
    jmd.aKBar likes this.
    08-08-12 11:03 PM
  14. RJB55's Avatar
    My son's been an MS beta tester for years and he's walked away from Windows 8. MS is just trying to jam their vision of how things should be down everyone's collective throats. Nothing new really, Balmer is still scrambling to make it look like he has a clue after 10 or so years at the helm (check out msft's stock since he's been in charge). MS is great at not giving customers what they want but what MS wants them to have.
    08-08-12 11:20 PM
  15. Heliogabalus's Avatar
    PC gaming is great - and possibly terrible on Windows 8. I do not see a relevant correlation with Blackberry's situation.

    Is it perhaps that with BB10, developers and users will long for the previous's OSs?
    08-08-12 11:32 PM
  16. sashlon's Avatar
    I love the Windows 8 release preview. I can't wait to update my slate the Windows 8. I think alot of people have judged it prematurely.
    08-09-12 02:33 AM
  17. JazzL5's Avatar
    I love the Windows 8 release preview. I can't wait to update my slate the Windows 8. I think alot of people have judged it prematurely.
    That's it exactly!
    08-10-12 12:06 AM
  18. janeka's Avatar
    The OP needs to drown himself in a tub of cold water and ice.
    08-10-12 09:59 AM
  19. omniusovermind's Avatar
    Placeholder. If the naysayers are wrong and win8 succeeds I want to remember where all these posts are so I can distribute my "I told you so" posts.
    08-10-12 10:19 AM
  20. janeka's Avatar
    Placeholder. If the naysayers are wrong and win8 succeeds I want to remember where all these posts are so I can distribute my "I told you so" posts.
    That's a big IF...MSFT has a longer history of f*ck up than RIM does do I need to remind you
    08-10-12 10:27 AM
  21. omniusovermind's Avatar
    it is an IF but I'm willing to gamble if it means I'll have a chance of being able to rub it in if I'm right. Childish and petty, I know. Small things and all that
    08-10-12 11:45 AM
  22. janeka's Avatar
    it is an IF but I'm willing to gamble if it means I'll have a chance of being able to rub it in if I'm right. Childish and petty, I know. Small things and all that
    Fair enough
    08-10-12 11:53 AM
  23. kbz1960's Avatar
    Everyone is an expert when it comes to personal taste. Not so much when it comes to someone else's. It will come out in the wash.
    08-10-12 12:00 PM
  24. omniusovermind's Avatar
    Placeholder. If the naysayers are wrong and win8 succeeds I want to remember where all these posts are so I can distribute my "I told you so" posts.
    As I was saying...
    http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2012/...rs-in-one-day/
    10-20-12 05:14 AM
  25. kbz1960's Avatar
    What do you mean no desktop? On a wp8 or rt tablet? Sure there on your pc or laptop you still have the desktop and I'm sure games still work. One click and metro can be ignored.
    10-20-12 07:38 AM
LINK TO POST COPIED TO CLIPBOARD