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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Commentary: Filling the gaps in Windows By Rupert Goodwins, 0 March 27, 2003 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/Commentary-Filling-the-gaps-in-Windows/0,139023166,120273228,00.htm
COMMENTARY--Microsoft always has grand plans for Windows, but it's the little things that need fixing first. With the launch of XP now a distant memory and Longhorn playing peek-a-boo from the far future, it's time to think about what we'd like to see in the next generation of desktop operating systems. If you listen to the marketing corps, you'll be told what you want: all sorts of tighter integration, .Net synergies, authentication and replication, XML smarts. But most of the things I'd like to see in Windows are plain and simple, wouldn't require phalanxes of PhDs to implement, and would make my daily life so much nicer.
Journaling filing system
Journaling does need a bit more disk space and a little more processing power--neither of which are in short supply. Done properly, it's a godsend. I was using it 20 years ago on VMS, and I'd swap every dancing paperclip and Smart Display ever to come out of Redmond to have it now. Microsoft says NTFS is journaling, but darned if it's ever let me roll back anything but my eyes.
A save-by-application sound mixing desk
How hard would it be for some sound management software to let me associate individual volume levels for known programs? Or have limiting? Not hard at all. Just think of it like an application-level audio firewall.
Location concept
Scroll management
A proper system console
But just in case this peak user experience is somehow delayed, I'd just like to know what's going on. I'd like to know what processes are running when thing happen, not just when I happen to look at the task manager. I'd like to log some of that weird IP traffic. I'd like to know what's going on with my USB ports. I'd like to know what all those files are in my system folder, and who uses them; I'd like to know who on earth put 20 copies of an apparently identical mystery key in the registry. I'd like to know what on earth is going on when I try to close down Windows on my laptop, and it sits there for a full minute meditating on the unfairness of it all. I can find out some of this stuff by juggling a slew of nutty diagnostic applications. I can find out other stuff by annoying friends who have better things to do, or dedicating an evening to the gods of the Googleshrine. But Microsoft knows all this stuff. It could put together a decent diagnostic/control application that monitored all this and has a decent database of information to put stuff in context. The company has such things internally: it should release the info with the OS, with every service pack and security patch. Trade secrets? Does the company really think that programmers gather in bars and ask themselves how on earth Microsoft produces such fantastic software?
BSOD-BGB interface
Got some better ideas? Is a little piece of Windows getting on your nerves? TalkBack below or e-mail edit@zdnet.com.au.
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