So it doesn't make you half as productive really does it, you say you never go into the metro screen so that presumably doesn't effect you at all. The only programs you can't resize are "metro" apps which you say you never use anyway, all the normal x86 apps you would use on Win7 work exactly the same way they did in 7 resizing and multitasking included. Metro apps will happily snap to the side of the screen and multitask. Search works fine for me and the occasional 1 second I may lose in having to chose which category it searches on the right side of the screen is more than made up for by it's ability to hand a search term off to apps (for example get an app like star chart and then search for "Saturn" from the start screen). The UX in Windows 8 is not terrible, that's just your opinion, try using a touch enabled device, or spend some time getting it how you like it as you would do with W7 setup and it makes sense. On a mouse and keyboard based device just use the start screen as a start menu, one click, list of apps, click app, get on with life (without having to drill down through Start:allPrograms

ublishe

regramgroup:select program) all your old x86 apps work the same way as ever they did. How is it that W8 has halved your "office" productivity? Which programs are you using? Perhaps we can help / have some suggestions?
If you want to work with W7 then use W7, don't try and make W8 into W7. Otherwise take some time to learn how to do things in W8 and accept things change over time and you'll save a lot of frustration.
Sorry, but the whole "W8 is for touch only and I can't work my computer anymore because I can't find the start button so w8 is rubbish" is a poor sweeping generalisation. If you can't cope with W8 stick with the older W7, it's a fine OS and sounds like it will save you a lot of frustration.