You can thank the executive management team of Windows, specifically the now departed Steven Sinofsky. I used to manage the media player team among others. Steven took over Windows in 2006/2007. I had my first 1:1 meeting with him. To thaw the ice I said, "would you like me to tell you what my group does?" His answer? "No. I don't own a radio or TV. I don't watch any movies or listen to music." Imagine having 1,000 people reporting to you working in that area and hearing that from your new boss! Needless to say, I moved out of the group quickly but had to leave the media player team in Windows. Windows 7 came with almost no improvements. And it is not surprising that Windows 8 has none either. There is a great team there that could do more. But it simply is not a priority.I was hoping there were significant improvements to Media Player and Media Center (not included in Windows 8 but a free download through 1/31/13, too). I haven't seen any major changes and definitely wouldn't switch from J River.
The library manager for music in Media Player is still poor in my opinion. Identified 600 albums correctly but another 600 or so are still "unknown," to Media Player at least.
I also downloaded Classic Shell for free to get the start button back.
You can thank the executive management team of Windows, specifically the now departed Steven Sinofsky. I used to manage the media player team among others. Steven took over Windows in 2006/2007. I had my first 1:1 meeting with him. To thaw the ice I said, "would you like me to tell you what my group does?" His answer? "No. I don't own a radio or TV. I don't watch any movies or listen to music." Imagine having 1,000 people reporting to you working in that area and hearing that from your new boss! Needless to say, I moved out of the group quickly but had to leave the media player team in Windows. Windows 7 came with almost no improvements. And it is not surprising that Windows 8 has none either. There is a great team there that could do more. But it simply is not a priority.
The media center situation is even worse. They moved out of the Windows and put next to the media room team that did software for set-top boxes. One of Steven's rules were that if a group did not report to him, they could not put any code in windows! That group then started to languish once it lost its main driver (windows sales). Not surprising that is unbundled altogether. Longer term I suspect it will go away.
I have not kept up with the development process and strategy for Windows 8. All I can say is that I am surprised. The Microsoft that I left would never ever let you get away with that. Bill (Gates) as a minimum would have beat you into submission if half a dozen other people did not. I don't understand why they did not finish the metaphor. It is like it would have been that much work to write a new control panel for changing resolution and such to force people to use the old model. I also don't understand why there is not an equal citizen on the classic desktop side. Every corporate user wants that. When I was there, there was no way you could sacrifice the bread and butter corporate use for some consumer feature. To let the classic desktop get worse than it was in Windows 7 just doesn't make sense to me.And Amir, I understand it was Sinofsky's idea to have the two Windows running side by side (Metro and the old), with 2 Control Panels, 2 IEs, etc.. ?
Friend of mine just got a new PC with Win8 and hates it. Plus it won't work with any normal email client; reading some articles and forum posts about it, seems like they want all email to be web-based. That is a big problem for me...
If you found that video interesting, you will definitely get a kick out of this one:That video is VERY disconcerting and does not inspire confidence in their new product.
If you found that video interesting, you will definitely get a kick out of this one:
I really, really can't understand how all of this was missed. Fortunately they can fix it. Hopefully with Steven out, that is what they are doing.... If Steven was there by the way, his edict would have been to wait 3 years for the next release....
I don't understand...what does that mean?
Outlook, or Outlook Express, as an email client to download emails from an Internet Service Provider (ISP) no longer works. If you use Hotmail, Gmail, Yahoo, or other web-based email nothing changes. If, like me and many others, you use Outlook as an email client that downloads emails from your ISP (cable/satellite company like Comcast, ISP like Earthlink, etc.) to your computer (local storage), Windows 8 will not work. People are going ballastic over that...
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