Windows: 8 Ios

Windows: 8 Ios

In the early 2010s, two tech giants took very different paths to answer the same question: How do we bring a PC operating system into the touchscreen era?

Today, the two have influenced each other. iPadOS (iOS’s big sibling) now supports trackpads, external drives, and windowing—features Windows 8 pioneered. Meanwhile, Windows 11 has a centered Start menu, rounded corners, and smoother gestures—borrowed from iOS. Windows 8 tried to turn your PC into an iPad. iOS never tried to be anything other than itself. And that, ultimately, is why iOS won the hearts of mainstream users. windows 8 ios

Apple’s answer was —a mature, finger-friendly system built from the ground up for iPhones and iPads. Microsoft’s answer was Windows 8 —a bold, controversial gamble that tried to merge the traditional desktop with a new touch-first interface. While both systems featured tiles, gestures, and app stores, their philosophies were worlds apart. In the early 2010s, two tech giants took

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