Wednesday, September 24th 2008
Windows 7 Will Not Include Email, Photo and Movie Programs
Talking to CNET, Microsoft has confirmed it will not be including any built-in programs for Email, Photo Editing and Movie Making. Instead the Windows Live Suite (found here) will be available to download if consumers still wish to use the relevant Microsoft Products.
Source:
CNET
Windows Live general manager Brian Hall said Microsoft made the decision to remove the tools from Windows for several reasons, including a desire to issue new operating system releases more quickly than it has in the past. The move also removes the confusion of offering and supporting two different programs that perform essentially similar functions.
"It makes it much cleaner," Hall said.
Lastly, he said, making the Windows Live tools completely separate from the operating system paves the way for Microsoft to work selectively with specific partners.
"We can do things with specific partners to enable really great experiences that might be hard in Windows," Hall said.
Antitrust rules make it hard for Microsoft to tie operating system features to specific services.
76 Comments on Windows 7 Will Not Include Email, Photo and Movie Programs
i dunno but a lot of crap you get free on linux dosnt take up that much resources
a lot of this should just be optional on the disk or an extra download
Because I might find a use for it one day, and then I don't have to going hunting down a program that is already there.
maybe thats how i should market my disk next time i go to work (at geek squad) ill take a customers computer pop in my disk and install a bunch of shit and tag it as an optimization then when they take it home they'll see 3dmark and auquamark and diskdefrag programs and be like omg WTF? lol
Now I go and do kill some of them off. But I do want it there.
As voted in another thread:roll:
All of us want things like IE removeable but I think we'd all like to see MS stream lined at least a little bit. I think the OEMs should still bundle Office/Entertainment packages for the average users. But those of us that custom build/custom order our rigs may not want those kind of bundles. I thought W1zzard made those?
"take a peek" at my OC's if you wish ;)
and w1zz doesnt make cpu-z
The only thing they should do is make a wizard start program for all the stuff that windows does. If you want to do default that's fine, if you want to turn on this and that they should make it easier for the average joe.
But, I'll continue my use of IE. I've been happy with it, never had anywhere close to the amounts of problems most complain about - I've been over that in other threads -
Just as I'll continue to use Media Player 11+ For what it is, it's better than most other media players out there. I'll admit it has it's quirks now and then - but it's one of the few programs I know that can rip .wma lossless or VBR correctly; which kicks the ever-loving bullpulp out of mp3s in both size and quality.
But, we can't go and blame all the suite removal on the EU - don't forget, there have been a few lawsuits here in the US against MS over the last 10 years over their "bundled" (read: integrated) software. I think MS is just fed up with the toddlers and their tempertantrums.
The answer is simple and has been stated a few times already: modularity.
At install, allow the user to choose what components to be installed and provide thorough descriptions of them (maybe even screenshots) and what they do to help some people decide if they need it or not.
For system builders (major ones like dell, etc.), they could have an integrated way to set it up so that everything is installed by default and when the user first runs, they get a simple wizard with three options:
- keep everything
- let me choose what to keep
- decide for me after I tell what kind of user I am (ie: answer a series of questions to determine what the user needs and doesn't need)
Not worded exactly like that of course, but I'm sure you all understand what I'm getting at.
But situations like that are a horribly small percentage of the market and anybody doing that is fully capable of nliteing windows or just using linux or something, so it's a pretty moot point but I felt like being a smartass and finding a reason for why that extra space might be important.
edit: sorry for double-post, I just thought the thread was moving fast enough and I was typing long enough that somebody else would've posted by the time I hit submit; otherwise I would've just edited into the previous post