Windows 8 required users to learn a handful of concepts to get around and perform basic tasks. When you know what those concepts are—swiping from the edges, clicking in the corners, and a few ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Microsoft’s final version of Windows 8 is now available for MSDN and TechNet subscribers to download. Microsoft’s ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is a senior editor and author of Notepad, who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 ...
MSDN and TechNet users are now hammering Microsoft's download servers and getting their hands for the first time on the final Windows 8 build. The various betas have been used and reviewed extensively ...
The long-awaited (but not terribly well-received) and likely final suture in the Jekyll-and-Hyde version of Windows has just hit the MSDN site. For those of you who have MSDN accounts, it’s time to ...
The final, RTM build of Windows 8 is now officially available to download for MSDN and TechNet subscribers after being made available on torrent sites earlier this month. This is the same code that ...
Microsoft today offered its MSDN and TechNet subscribers access to the release-to-manufacturing (RTM) ISO builds of its latest flagship operating systems. Subscribers can download the RTM versions of ...
Another good question regarding Microsoft's latest operating system, and I can answer it for you. Once you have got done generating your Windows 8 Pro key on the MSDN website, copy it and either keep ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Microsoft has released a fresh version of Windows 8 release to manufacturers (RTM) for MSDN ...
Microsoft released the Enterprise version of Windows 8.1 -- but not through the VLSC site, confusing volume license customers with Software Assurance agreements Causing no small amount of confusion, ...
It's now too late to whine about the user interface changes in Windows 8. They may be "confusing" and put a "cognitive burden" on ordinary users, but for now at least, these changes are there to stay.
Windows 8 is now available on the Microsoft Developer Network Platform and the subscribers of TechNet. While most developers have been eagerly waiting for this Windows update, some techies reveal that ...