mikosoft
New member
I'm still wondering though, wouldn't you say that my view of what constitutes an OS is a lot closer to how the average consumer views and understands it?
I'm not sure if I would really go the "two OSes in one" route with an average consumer. Such a person doesn't even know what exactly an OS is and what it does and what it doesn't - I've experienced people equaling applications with OS such as "my Windows doesn't work - how so? - It won't load internet". In that case it's best to stay with "that is Windows and it can run your old apps and then these new ones that can use these tiles and notifications - see? And you can use that app on a windows phone as well, see? And it saves your data across windows devices, see?" - yeah, that would go out off hand pretty quickly for some but still it's better to keep it this way.
Probably the bigger issue for the user in this scenario is how can a common user tell the apps apart. If they don't install the apps themselves (which they rarely do, everybody has their PC guru) they don't really know if the app came from the store or not. Difference between one or 1,5 or 2-in-1 OS in that case is pretty useless. They view Windows as "that desktop with icons and start menu on my computer" and they often equal OS with computer or apps.
I'd probably see it useful for a particular group of users who don't view themselves as completely clueless but don't go any further than "OS is a software that runs on my computer".