I do get fed up with the never ending "the last OS was best" circus thats comes round every time a new OS is released by Microsoft, I've heard it since early dos days. Enthusiasts like the majority of members here live up to their name by being enthusiastic either for or against, nothing Wrong with that

the majority of windows users are not enthusiasts, they are home and business users who think windows is internet explorer or word or excel, they see what they use when on the computer, doing what the use the computer for. they do not spend all day worrying about aero or modern interfaces, if a tile can show them info they want or need they use it, if not they don't.
A lot is said about Windows 7 Being the best OS ever, I used it as my main OS from pre beta days, because it was a good evolutionary step forward from Vista, which was probably the more revolutionary OS. I think that the OS that made the most impression on me was Windows 2000, which spawned the eternal favourite XP, (Windows 2000 with a UI by Walt Disney), which was not a bad OS when they got to SP2, and ironed out all the bugs added when they re-packaged 2000 for the consumer market.
I spend 8-12 Hours a day in front of a windows machine and I see the OS for a hour or less of that time so interface bells and whistles are irrelevant to me, and this is more so of the majority of users who almost never do much at all outside of their applications.
As a point of interest I some months ago was running Windows 7 on my main machine and used RDP to link to a Windows 8.1 system and ran some applications, it was only when I went to log off about 6 hours later I realised I was in the Windows 8.1 environment and not windows 7 as I thought - That shows How much the OS UI is less important than the application UI for most of the time.
