Although Microsoft designed its Windows 8 operating system to use a
computer’s touch capabilities to its fullest, the company can’t escape two facts
about its user base. One, many tasks, such as writing, are still best done with
an actual keyboard. Two, many users are not ready to be completely untethered
from a keyboard and mouse. That’s why a keyboard cover will always be a popular
option with tablets containing desktop operating systems such as Windows 8
Pro.
Microsoft lists literally hundreds of keyboard shortcuts that work with
Windows 8 and some of its native applications. Their existence means Microsoft
recognizes that, for some users, the keyboard is not going away entirely. This
will likely hold true for public-sector workers who want to combine mobility
with laptop functionality.
Most of the Windows 8 shortcuts Microsoft lists were in use with Windows 7,
but there are 22 new tricks that revolve around navigation and opening of common
utility screens, since many users aren’t accustomed to going back to the Start
Screen or making a special swipe to access these. Here are five that could prove
helpful to new users. Note that they all use the Windows Logo key which sits
between the Ctrl and Alt key on the left in most Windows keyboards.
This key combination opens the Search screen that shows any apps or
documents that match what the query. This feature is actually two separate
functions: hitting the Windows key to get back to the Start screen and then
typing in the query, which is how the Start screen reacts to any typing. This
shortcut will be a popular choice among new users who have trouble getting used
to a new OS. Since the Search screen breaks up results into Apps, Settings and
Files, there is a specific keyboard shortcut that goes directly to each of
these.
[Windows key] + Z = Show available commands. Many apps don’t display the
command menu because the developers hid it to maximize the app’s useable real
estate. Bringing up the menu in Windows usually is done with a quick swipe from
the bottom of the screen. For those who lack that level of manual dexterity, or
who happen to be on the keyboard at the time, this shortcut will do the same
thing.
[Windows key] + Tab = Cycle through open non-desktop apps. Most experienced
Windows users from versions past venerate Alt + Tab as a staple of their
keyboarding skillset. This new shortcut muddies these waters a bit by
introducing a swap function cycles through open apps like its predecessor did,
but it specifically leaves desktop applications (like Word) out of the lineup
while adding the Start screen at the end. The only thing that Alt + Tab seems to
be missing is the Start screen, so many users will probably never abandon it for
Windows key + Tab.
One function that Windows 7 introduced was the ability to “snap” an app to
the left or right of the screen, allowing the user to easily see two open apps
at once. In older versions of Windows, users un-maximized the two application
windows and manually tiled them side-by-side. This feature works the same way on
the Windows 8 desktop screen -- drag an open app from the left and hover it over
either the left or right side of the screen. But for the touch-screen adverse, a
keyboard shortcut for this complicated process makes a lot of sense.
[Windows key] + O (the letter O) = Lock the screen orientation. Nothing is
more frustrating to a user new to tablets than when the screen orientation flips
with the slightest tilt of the device, which is why many Windows tablet
manufacturers have provided a physical button or switch to lock the orientation.
For those without the lock switch, this shortcut provides a software solution,
though it doesn’t always work with every tablet.
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