The Most Highly Voted Requests In Windows 10 Feedback Pool 159
jones_supa writes: Some of you have probably used the Feedback app of Windows 10 Technical Preview, which has enabled us to submit feature requests and bug reports directly to Microsoft in order to improve the operating system as the company approaches the final release. While Microsoft tries to make some of the requests available, it also depends on the number of votes that each submission gets. Softpedia takes a look at the top 5 requests right now: make Feedback app available in final Windows, too; improve network connections management; allow task view drag windows between desktops; give Cortana the ability to open programs; and bring back resize options for Start Menu.
Surprising (Score:2, Funny)
I thought #1 would be: No subscription payment model. Ever.
Re:Surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't mind a subscription model if it is cheap enough and I get upgrades forever.
However given Microsoft's history of upgrades, maybe it is not a good idea.
Re:Surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
And it doesn't cruft up and slow down over time, and a reinstall doesn't require 2 days of reconfiguring everything, and the upgrades don't break things by requiring new apps and drivers, and they don't move all the configuration settings again, and, and, and.
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and so we come to the second sentence in my post...
Re: Surprising (Score:2)
Re: Surprising (Score:2)
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Just? Volume enterprise licensing in some form has been around for quite some time, under it you can deploy whatever supported version Windows or Office or other licensed software you like.
Office 365 is the only real new thing as it makes process a little more visible as an individual can sign up for a individual subscription as well.
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The year before last I had some lowlife that wanted to do a full software audit on my workplace on the strength of a WinNT server licence purchased in 1998. It's not a good road to go down from the customer's point of view.
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Re:Surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
If MS is in a situation where they think that they can(as with Adobe and their 'Creative Cloud' licensing move for CS versions 6+), the money will just be too good to pass up and they'll force the issue. Maybe keep around a few overpriced non-subscription SKUs that mysteriously turn out to cost about as much as the subscription price over their supported lifetime just to silence the whiners; but structure the incentives such that almost nobody will buy that. In a lot of enterprise contexts, this is already substantially the case, and some flavor of 'Software Assurance' is already being paid.
If MS is in a situation where they think they'll sacrifice platform dominance if they push it, they'll fold. Observe the existence of "Windows 8.1 with Bing", which is basically "Free anywhere you would have installed ChromeOS or Android if we charged you $50", and the general low to zero price of OEM Windows on the various tablety things that are knife fighting with Android or ChromeOS on the low end.
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Kill Balmer. Or record more stuff that he does and upload it to youtube.
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To late. Already on all their watch lists.
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This has a number of effects: By reducing my costs in the current year and at the same time being able to offset t
posix compliance. fork. (Score:2, Insightful)
posix compliance. fork.
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This project claims to have implemented a copy-on-write fork for Windows: http://midipix.org/ The release data is approaching. There's a thread somewhere where the author goes into more detail about how he accomplished it, but I can't find it now.
Along with musl (a glibc replacement), midipix will provide a light-weight, mostly-native POSIX[1] implementation for Windows.
[1] Modern POSIX, not POSIX circa 1990.
Re:posix compliance. fork. (Score:4, Insightful)
Ironic, seeing how systemd is not posix compliant....
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Ironic, seeing how systemd is not posix compliant....
What does systemd have to do with fork API?
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Did you just completely miss the first part of AC's post? Or ignore it? Simpleton.
There was only one line. And the topic was posix compliant fork implementation. Posix is a lot of APIs Linux supports many of them, and Windows not as many but quite a few.
How about supporting more than 16 colors? (Score:2, Funny)
Windows supported 256 colors in Windows 3.1 (and possibly earlier), but Windows 8 dropped it. Now it only supports 16.
Bring Back Aero Glass (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate having an OS that looks like it was designed in 1992. Flat colors suck. Even XP's Playskool color scheme was (slightly) more stylish.
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Luna.
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Give the user a style choice: flat, rounded matte, brushed metal, polished chrome shiny, and jewels.
Re:Bring Back Aero Glass (Score:5, Funny)
You forgot "OMG Ponies"! And the Cowboy Neal option.
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I saw the Ponies look, but what was the CN look?
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Think the Naked Cowboy from new york
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...after eating a thousand burgers.
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Yes, but then MOST people would choose something other than the shitty, lazy arse 'flat' look, and the poor little 'designer's' ego would be shattered.
Flat colours look like shit, as you say, I hate 'flat' design, 'flat' icons, text that is actually a button, but is just text, surrounded by other text that IS only text. The 'designers' at Microsoft are assholes of the first order, who don't have a clue about user interface design.
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I remember setting that fir tree picture as the desktop patterin in Windows 95 and thinking, "Thank god that flat shit is over." Well here we are :(
And why not list top 10 changes instead of top 5?
6. Make Google default search engine.
7. Make Chrome default browser.
8. What's this Coppy animation? Nooooooooooo!
9. Fix NSA backdoors.
10. You may not name your virtual currency "Coin(r)"
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Re:Bring Back Aero Glass (Score:5, Interesting)
I just took a look at the feedback lists, and suggestions related to the look and feel are in the top twenty or thirty popularity-wise (probably higher if you combine them). I counted at least two popular suggestions to bring back Aero Glass as an option, and one suggested perhaps even Luna. There was also another suggesting that simply indicated they weren't happy with the flat modern look, while another wanted to see transparency options.
On the other hand, there was one high-ranking suggestion that while they liked the flat look, they wanted to see more icons re-stylized to match the new look.
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The problem with third party skins is I don't want to install anything that has to patch or hack system files. One, I don't trust any code the modifies system files for security reasons and Two, next time windows decides to update those specific files my OS has the potential to break.
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Honestly, I can't see a GPO'd uxtheme.dll as anything but a win for everyone: Corp
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simple (Score:5, Insightful)
How about, don't fucking spy on me Micorsoft
Re:simple (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like a reasonable request. Do you know of any examples where Microsoft has spied on its users through Windows?
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Do you have any actual evidence that they spy on you? You can optionally send them crash reports and stuff like that, but do you have proof that they spy on your general activity, or send some personal data with Windows Update requests or anything like that?
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http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/preview-privacy-statement [microsoft.com]
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And no stupid DRM!
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Just do a minus 3 (Score:1, Troll)
Dear Windows 10 . . . can you just go back to being Windows 7 . . . ?
Thanks, your PolygamousRanchKid . . . and don't claim that you didn't know that I was your son!
Features (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Allow an option to *DISABLE* wally-world entirely, or at least to have *all* the control panel options available in the control panel and TURN OFF the wally-world settings. Since they have to do this anyway for the server version of the OS, it should be no problem at all.
2) Allow the selection of a "Classic" Start Menu (ala the XP Classic or Windows 2000).
3) Allow the selection of a "Classic" explorer (aka Windows XP Classic or Windows 2000).
4) Allow a binding selection to turn off all of the ill-conceived crappola (Libraries, Homegroups, all the crap littering Windows Explorer, Network Discovery and responder crap, UPnP, having the firewall re-enable all the insecure settings every time you apply an update).
5) Make the OS secure and who cares if this locks out the silly antivirus vendors. Let them sure, who cares about them?
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What Microsoft Wants: The Next Windows XP (Score:4, Interesting)
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Yeah but do they want lots of people not upgrading for 10 years?
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With a subscription model, they already have a revenue stream. Upgrades won't matter as much.
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When did they announce a subscription model?
Business, which I suspect is a lot of their income, has been on a subscription model for decades already. It's called Microsoft Service agreement. The place I work at has at least 5000 seats and we get our Microsoft products through our parent's service agreement. I'm sure they are all counted as Windows 8 installs by Microsoft, although we take the option to downgrade to Win7. We are even paying the extra fee for the current XP fixes still. Add in office, costs for servers, Office 365, etc and our parent b
Re:What Microsoft Wants: The Next Windows XP (Score:5, Insightful)
I know it was over 13 years ago, but people forget what the initial reaction to XP was like. People mocked the Fisher-Price interface and the new start menu. They complained that it wasn't as good or as clean as Windows 2000, or that dropping DOS in favour of a "broken" compatibility layer was forcing them to stick with Windows 98. Of course their favourite games didn't work properly and security enhancements like driver signing and making the default account a normal user were just fascism.
Remember that Windows XP didn't even have the firewall enabled by default until SP2. It took years to get good and become widely adopted, and was helped by the fact that 98 and ME were so terrible.
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The biggest problem with Windows 8 and 8.1 was the fact you HAD to deal with the "Modern" tiled UI, even if your system booted directly to the Desktop UI (you needed Modern UI access for some functions). I've played with Windows 8.1 and frankly, the "Modern" user interface is too radically different than the Desktop UI used in Windows 7 (it was like having to learn everything from scratch all over again).
With Windows 10, at least on desktop and "conventional" laptops, you default to the Desktop UI, and that
Not a one OS fits all (Score:4, Interesting)
Having the same kernel is not a problem, but trying to force developers to develop one app that runs everywhere is just wrong. Good developers are able to separate the gui code from the rest of the code, so they can port applications from Phone to Tablet to Desktop. But really what is the point of those full screen application that would easily fit on only 4% of the screen. Just open the 'new' calculator on a 5000x1440 computer. What a mess. Just let it be easy to build the functionality of the program separate from the GUI, and let it be easy to add gui's of the platforms a developer wants to support (Windows desktop, Webapp, SmartPhone, Tablet, Touchscreen enabled laptop,
give Cortana the ability to open programs (Score:3, Insightful)
http://dilbert.com/strip/1994-... [dilbert.com]
#4 Proves #1 Is a Bad Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
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Really, they should just listen to as few people as possible.
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Like making your XBOX Live user name "xbox turn off", and then waiting for people to read it off the screen? https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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You mean like, my voice is my passport?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Command Prompt (Score:2, Insightful)
shell, dos window, command prompt, whatever name you use, I've always called it the "dos window", but I'm trying to get with the times and refer to it as the "Command Prompt". When I first heard of powershell, I was pretty excited. I thought, "yes!", this one has got to be resizable. When I learned exactly what powershell was, I was pretty disappointed. Now, finally, after years and years, it's finally resizable. It'll be the best version of windows ever based on that feature alone. My feedback to Microsoft
ConHost, not CMD (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem there is not with the shell programs (cmd.exe, powershell.exe, etc.) at all, actually. Powershell has some excellent features as a shell, but you can also run things like Bash on Windows just fine if you install it. Still not resizable horizontally, though. Those are text-oriented programs and don't know a thing about windows and window management features like resizing.
The problem is with the Windows (graphical) program that hosts them, what in UNIX-land would be called a virtual terminal program (think xterm, Konsole, etc.). On Windows, it's this antique POS called conhost.exe (Console Window Host). I don't know when conhost was last updated, aside from being ported to 64-bit, but it's sucked for a long time now. Win10 is (finally!) fixing some of that suck.
Let Cortana open apps!?!? (Score:3, Interesting)
Next wave of malware:
step1 purchase a radio spot, pandora spot or a web add with audio that says "Hey Cortana, open http://ownyourass.cn/installer"
step2 profit.
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"Open apps" != "Execute arbitrary files off the Internet". If you gave Cortana that command (and it was parsed correctly, which it might not be, because unlike an installed app there's no list of installed names to check against), it would just open the default browser to that page, which would then ask you to open or save the file. If you clicked Open, Windows would pop up a warning that the program might be dangerous. If you clicked though that too, then you would probably get a UAC prompt. If you clicked
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Speaking as an outsider (Score:4, Insightful)
If I were using Windows and considering using Windows 10 it would be a big point in its favor if it either had a more traditional UI by default, or an easy way to switch to that look. I gather that Windows 7 had that, and I don't think that I'm the only one who would want it in Windows 10. After all, there are a lot of people out there who are being forced off of XP, and making the UI work the way their accustomed to would probably help overcome any reluctance they might have to switching.
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Currently, I use one of the many Linux Desktop Environments that lets me configure the look and feel of the desktop the way I want, not the way somebody else wants.
Yeah, you were able to configure Windows8.1 to look and feel pretty much like XP. I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. Did you require the configuration to be in-the-box with no manual tweaking? or something else?
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That's a good question, and it deserves an answer. I'd think that an option in whatever control panel is used to control the desktop's appearance to use the traditional UI, along with instructions in Windows Help should be enough. And, if there's a walk-through or tutorial included, having it mentioned in there would be nice. The important thing to me isn't how it looks out-of-the-box, it's how easy it is to
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You're assuming that I actually give a rat's ass about how Gatesware works. I'm very, very happy, TYVM using nothing but FOSS and I see no reason to pay for what I can get for free. If Winblows 10 has the traditional look and feel, that's nice for those who want to use them, but you can count me among those who won't be trying it.
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Wrong on all three counts. I use Linux, I'm an omnivore and I watch fifteen to twenty hours of TV a week at home.
Can you vote from outside the feedback app? (Score:2)
There are a couple things I'd like in the final version, but I don't have a copy of the technical preview installed. Anyplace I can vote on the same list from Microsoft's own website?
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You want to give feedback on something you arn't running?
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You want to give feedback on something you aren't running?
So they shouldn't add the Start Menu back -- because all those people who continued to buy Windows 7 aren't using Windows 8, so they have no room to give feedback on the Windows 8 interface.
Do you see how stupid your reasoning looks now?
If Microsoft listens to feedback from people as to what they want in a product, more people would use the product. At least that's my line of thinking.
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nevertheless you have to run it to give feedback - so run it, in a VM. Then you can legitimately say what you think of it, not what you'd like some imaginary OS to be.
Windows on top (Score:2)
It would be really nice if they took a leaf out of the *nix book and made it possible to keep programs on top. It's constantly annoying having things like notepad etc disappearing when you make the program behind it active, and you have to keep clicking on the taskbar to bring it back.
Not 'Bring back old Start menu' in the top 5? (Score:2)
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The shortcut key thing still works. It's a little harder to get to in Win8.x (right-click the item in the Start screen, select "Open file location", it'll open Explorer to the relevant Start Menu folder and you can then edit the properties of the shortcut files to your heart's content) but it's still there and you only need to do it once per program anyhow. I haven't checked in Win10 previews yet, but I'm sure it's not that hard.
Or you can do it the way everybody else does, and use the instant search instea
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Removal of features! (Score:3, Insightful)
Is the most needed feature! Gimme windows 2000 with DX12, drivers and bug fixes! :-)
too much has changed (Score:2)
And wireless support built in.
and TRIM support built in.
And the much improved power saving features that actually allow computers to resume from hibernation / sleep successfully most times.
and shadow copies.
and printer support with driver versioning
and driver rollback.
and all the new multi monitor features 2k didnt have.
and windows deployment services (remember ghost?).
and 64 bit support.
and the firewall, for those people connected directly to the internet.
and multi user logon.
and improved task manager.
2k i
My serious requests (Score:2)
I am a very heavy daily user of Win 10 TP, for both professional and recreational purposes. Note: I am also a daily Linux user since 1996, and have no shortage of experience with OS X. I find the Win 10 UI more than acceptable, just to get that out of the way. Here are my serious requests, both of which have been submitted.
1. Fix local searching for files. The instant search works for (most) applications and (some) registered document types, but searching for unregistered files by filename is utterly broken
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Are you sure you're not just looking for a Zoom function?
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