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Improve Your Life With Windows 8 (Part 2)

12/8/2012 3:28:31 PM

Internet communications have changed everything. Emails have almost totally usurped letters (or ‘snail mail’) in both business and personal communications, and we can video-call far-flung friends and relatives as if they were in the next room. On top of this, social networking services like Facebook and Twitter let us catch up with friends, celebrities and the news.

Windows 8 is built around these core pillars of online interaction and makes it really easy to connect with the people you care about. All your favourite methods of communication and social networks - Messenger, Facebook, Twitter and email - are pulled together in a number of handy in-built applications. As a result, you only ever have to look in one place for all your updates.

The People app includes a What’s New tab, which provides you with a continuously updated stream of information from Twitter and Facebook.

The People app includes a What’s New tab, which provides you with a continuously updated stream of information from Twitter and Facebook.

Even Windows 8’s login is based on your Microsoft account, which is usually an @hotmail.com or @hotmail.co.uk email address. Once you’ve logged in using this, you can begin herding all your other online accounts - including Google, Facebook and Twitter - into your Microsoft identity. An added bonus is that, in future, you can log in to your Microsoft account from any computer and catch up with what’s going on in your connected networks.

Messenger, Microsoft’s own hugely popular instant communications service, is built into Windows 8 and is accessible from the People app. Here your contacts span horizontally across the page and clicking one lets you chat with them online and see their latest status updates. If you’re used to Windows Live Messenger it’s a bit of a shift, but all the traditional functions are available, along with newly designed smileys.

Of course, these days people also connect through a range of other social networks, the biggest being Facebook, which now has 1bn users worldwide. Luckily, Facebook chat is fully integrated into Windows 8 so you chat seamlessly with your friends and family.

The People app includes a What’s New tab, which provides you with a continuously updated stream of information from Twitter and Facebook. Any images included in tweets are shown in posts, and you can reply to and retweet messages straight away. It makes the important business of managing follows, likes and favourites so much easier.

Even if you’re not a Twitter or Facebook user, you can still make good use of Windows 8’s shiny new communications features. The email app makes sending and receiving those vital messages a joy, and you can switch between email services from Hotmail, Gmail and your internet service provider with ease. As with the social networking services, having all these tools in one place makes things far easier and more convenient.

Windows 8 includes a Photos app, which handily puts all your snaps in a single stream, automatically grabbing pics from sources such as Flickr, SkyDrive and Facebook

Windows 8 includes a Photos app, which handily puts all your snaps in a single stream, automatically grabbing pics from sources such as Flickr, SkyDrive and Facebook

Digital photos have taken over from physical prints and we now show off our favourite holiday and family snaps on screens rather than in photo albums. The fact that you can send photos around the world without having to spend a fortune on postage is a godsend, and online services such as SkyDrive and Flickr mean you can back up all your precious memories in one convenient place.

Windows 8 includes a Photos app, which handily puts all your snaps in a single stream, automatically grabbing pics from sources such as Flickr, SkyDrive and Facebook. From here you can browse your photos and set one as your desktop background in a couple of clicks. You can share and print photos stored on your PC, too.

If you want to share a particular photo with a far-flung relative on their birthday, for example, Windows 8’s Calendar app comes in handy. It trawls through Facebook to find people’s birthdays and handily displays them in one place. Adding events is simple, too - just click on a desired date and add a description, frequency and reminders. You can also invite people to events, which is great if you’re planning a party.

It works in real time

As well as making you a master of media and a sovereign of social networks, Windows 8 can serve as a fantastic source of information, gathering news on a local, national and global scale. These are inherently useful features and ones that make Windows 8’s interface even more useful and brilliant.

The best apps are often the simplest, and the built-in Weather tool is powerful but user-friendly. Windows 8 will automatically detect your location and give you a detailed forecast for the next five or 10 days. Clicking the down arrow at the bottom gives you more detailed information, including weather predictions from services such as Weather Underground and Foreca, so you can get a better idea of what the future will hold in terms of precipitation and humidity.

Scroll to the right and the weather app gets really clever. An hourly forecast lets you know whether it’s safe to hang your washing out at the moment, and maps give regional and local animated previews of the movement of clouds and estimated temperatures. You can even see historical weather for your area.

 

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