lopri
Elite Member
- Jul 27, 2002
- 13,303
- 682
- 126
You are assuming there is something in the store to be downloaded.
:biggrin:
lol so true.
You are assuming there is something in the store to be downloaded.
:biggrin:
I thought Ads in live tiles were not allowed? or does that go for everyone but MS?
Always the MS apologist, I see.
To most normal people, when you install Windows, whatever "comes with Windows" (during an install), IS Windows.
So yes, it would be entirely correct to say, "Windows 8 has ads".
I'm not a Microsoft apologist, I just think you're a typical Microsoft internet hater who looks for any reason to spout off. There's a lot wrong with W8, I don't care for a lot of the apps and the way they are set up. Most of them feel rushed and not well thought out. But you're getting your panties in a bunch because there's a small ad at the very end of a sports and news app that most people are likely to not even use. I'm going to guess you didn't even know they were there until you saw somebody else post about it.
I think it's worth differentiating desktop applications and metro "apps". Built-in applications like notepad, calculator and windows media player do not contain ads. MS's metro music app does contain audio ads between songs. As a 1st party pre-installed item, I find that to be very tacky.
Every OS that has come with a web browser has been "bundled with ads" (unless you never use it to go to public web sites or install ad block software , etc.)
Lets face it - that is what apps are becoming these days. Purpose built web browsers pre-configured to display a site's content.
If notepad came with ads, I could really understand complaints about it, but really what is being complained about are apps that are displaying content from MS web properties that would normally display ads (and more of them) if you went to them in a browser.
The music app only contains ads between songs if you aren't a Xbox Music Pass subscriber. But let me guess, since the Music app was sitting on the start screen when you installed W8, the entire Xbox Music catalog should be yours to stream ad-free because you paid your $40 for the OS?
Uh...way to make assumptions. Playing ads in between my own local, not streaming, content is tacky. iTunes doesn't do this. Zune software never did this.
I'm not getting that on my machine, just other Music app annoyances. All W8 machines are getting (I think) 6 months of free ad-supported music streaming. It's possible it is streaming the music you are listening to instead of playing it from your local machine.
Sorry to make assumptions, I'm just trying to help. If it's any consolation, I absolutely hate the Music app and am considering canceling my 6-year Zune pass/Xbox Music pass sub because of it.
No worries. I've since found the Music app's "matching" is spotty. Some albums are mixed with local content and 30 second previews, despite me having 100% complete and consistently tagged content. I believe this is my problem, and reviews for the app are saying much the same.
I didn't know about the 6 months free streaming. So maybe the albums where they have streaming agreements are getting the ads, and I can't tell what's local and what's not within the app.
I mean, I'll stick with iTunes (since I use the matching service), but I would definitely choose an alternative music app from the store until MS improves theirs.
That's extremely disingenuous. IE itself doesn't come with ads and trying to spin the fact that most websites have ads so IE has them too is spin worthy of a White House spokesperson.
I can understand something like the music app playing ads unless you're a paid subscriber because of the cost of music licenses and how f'd up that industry is right now. But even that rings of the crapware that everyone complains about when Dell does the same thing. So why is it ok for MS to include advertisements in their base OS for paid subscription services but it's evil crapware when Dell includes an AOL icon?
Differentiating Metro apps from Windows apps is pointless and shouldn't happen. An app is an app regardless of the framework used, how the content is retrieved and formatted, etc. If we don't bitch now this environment will end up as bad as cable TV where we already get effectively double-billed with subscription fees and ads.