Follow Us

Microsoft blocks Windows 8 Start button and boot-to-desktop hacks

Leaked copies of Windows 8 RTM cripple tweaks, says 'Windows 8 Secrets' author

Microsoft has blocked a popular work-around that let users boot directly to the Windows 8 desktop, a co-author of an upcoming book on the operating system has confirmed.

"Microsoft made some changes to Windows that prevent the .scf hack from working correctly," said Rafael Rivera. Rivera blogs at WithinWindows.com and along with Paul Thurrott, is the co-author of Windows 8 Secrets, a book slated for release next month.

The ".scf hack" Rivera referred to was first disclosed in April, and allowed users of Windows 8 Consumer Preview to circumvent the tile-based Start screen and automatically shift to the familiar desktop after logging on.

Well-known ZDNet blogger Mary Jo Foley first reported Rivera's conclusions earlier Monday. She also said other hacks, including some that restore the Start button to Windows 8, have been blocked.

The changes were made by Microsoft before it announced the Windows 8 RTM, or "release to manufacturing," milestone last week. Final copies of Windows 8 Enterprise leaked to file-sharing websites a day later.

Although previews of Windows 8 could be modified to insert a homemade Start button and with more work, bypass the Start screen at log on, Microsoft has invalidated those work-arounds in the RTM build, said Rivera.

The change wasn't a surprise: In May, Thurrott said Microsoft had been "furiously ripping out legacy code" in the new operating system to prevent users from adding a Start button or booting straight to the desktop.

Microsoft pulled the Start button from Windows 8 before it shipped the Consumer Preview in late February. The Release Preview, which debuted in late May, also omitted the 17-year-old iconic user interface (UI) element.

The lack of the familiar Start button and the inability to sidestep the new Start screen - two separate, but intertwined issues - have been sore spots among long-time Windows users, and among the reasons why some research firms have predicted businesses will be slow to adopt the new OS.

Start8, a free tool released in March by StarDock, may still work in Windows 8 RTM, Foley reported. Start8 adds a Start button to the Windows desktop and optionally allowed users to skip the Start screen at log on.

StarDock was unable to confirm that Start8 works on Windows 8 RTM, however, as legitimate copies are still a week away from release to developers, IT professionals and enterprises.

"The program should work, unless capability for it to function was intentionally stripped away," a StarDock spokeswoman said. "We're definitely excited to test with the RTM build and the new Start8 features we've been developing internally."

Instead of a Start button, Windows 8 uses a "hot corner" at the lower left. When that hotspot is touched or clicked, the interface switches from the traditional desktop UI to the tile-centric environment, or vice versa. At boot, Windows 8 presents a log on screen where the user must enter a Windows ID; at that point, the Start screen appears.

But Rivera hinted that other tweaks may be able to skirt Microsoft's lock-down.

"There's always a thousand more ways to skin a cat," he said.




Comments

Dr Munki said: Yes thats right MS only have 1 product so theyre bound to go under With the obsession with tablet and touch PCs this is going to be a goosd OS Businesses however will be slow to adopt as mentioned in the articleas its more training for users and would impact productivity

Rrabbit1 said: I hate to say it but the start button hack still worksLOL

Albatross said: Microsoft had been furiously ripping out legacy code in the new operating system to prevent users from adding a Start button or booting straight to the desktopAnd users are going to furiously avoid Windows 8Have MSFT shares Time to let go of themThe fall of Microsoft will be spectacular



Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Techworld White Papers

Choose – and Choose Wisely – the Right MSP for Your SMB

End users need a technology partner that provides transparency, enables productivity, delivers...

Download Whitepaper

10 Effective Habits of Indispensable IT Departments

It’s no secret that responsibilities are growing while budgets continue to shrink. Download this...

Download Whitepaper

Optimise Performance For Global eCommerce

Global is all the rage: eBusiness teams are feverishly building new international initiatives in...

Download Whitepaper

Gartner Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Information Archiving

Enterprise information archiving is contributing to organisational needs for e-discovery and...

Download Whitepaper

Techworld UK - Technology - Business

Part 2 of your journey to virtualisation

You can still access part 2 of our virtualisation journey - explore how you can improve your servers, storage and networks by developing your infrastructure.

Watch now...
Techworld Mobile Site

Access Techworld's content on the move

Get the latest news, product reviews and downloads on your mobile device with Techworld's mobile site.

Find out more...

From Wow to How : Making mobile and cloud work for you

On demand Biztech Briefing - Learn how to effectively deliver mobile work styles and cloud services together.

Watch now...

Site Map

* *