Greg,  
   
you can also do - SLUI 3  
   
This gives you a dialog to enter the key.

Bill Chesnut
BizTalk Server MVP
Melbourne, Australia
      _____  

  From: Greg Keogh [mailto:[email protected]]
To: 'ozDotNet' [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tue, 02 Oct 2012 23:31:40 +1100
Subject: RE: VS2012 and Metro Apps on Windows 8

  
  
>Enterprise edition requires you to enter the Enterprise MAK key to activate  
   
Take care here, as I could only activate by these commands:  
   
slmgr -ipk XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX  
slmgr -ato  
   
Overall though, I’ve got Win8 and VS2012 up and running in a VM and it’s going 
well. After a couple of hours of using Win8 in a semi-realistic way I’m getting 
a feel for the pros and cons. The gaping chasm between the world of Win8 Metro 
and our current shell environment is starting to sting. There are not yet any 
Metro apps that interest me, despite trying most the standard ones and some of 
the store samples. As smooth and lovely as some of the Metro apps are, they are 
huge, clumsy and full of empty space; I feel like a 2 year old fumbling with a 
coloured blocks. I can’t directly start any of my daily working apps from the 
old no-Start-button shell without making desktop shortcuts (not a habit of 
mine), I have to go back to the Metro Apps screen to launch something. So I’m 
continually going back and forth like a madman between the two worlds. It’s 
like having two different operating systems stuck together in an unholy 
embrace, each vying for my attention. When I’m on the Metro side I’m utterly 
fed-up with having each app fill my screen. I start IE, Music, SkyDrive, 
Calendar, etc and each one fills my gigantic screen and I have to Alt-Tab madly 
to find what I was doing as I can’t find a way of knowing at any time what is 
actually running (and my real work is back on the old shell anyway).  
   
So after a few hours my Win8 experience is not going well. Perhaps there are 
shortcuts and UI tricks I’m not aware of yet to help me, but they’re not 
obvious. Developers like us are not “ordinary” users, so perhaps it’s unfair to 
compare my experience with what your average suburbanite will feel. I remain 
bewildered by the split-personality operating system and the huge obtrusive 
clumsiness of Metro apps. I’m trying not to be biased by what I’m used to, but 
unless I find lots of UI shortcut tricks and tips Win8 will be mostly redundant 
and I’ll spend my working day in the old shell which still has things called 
“windows”.  
   
If there are developers out there now using Win8 in anger for daily work I’d be 
interested to hear your practical counter-arguments to my “newbie” complaints.  
   
Greg      
   
 

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