I will not buy Windows 7 unless it has ... *Feature*


Recommended Posts

I haven't read every single post here, but I'm going to post my thoughts on the next version of Windows.

I like Windows Vista, on my laptop it runs fast, is secure, and just generally looks a lot nicer than XP. It comes with Windows Defender built in, even though I use the McAfee Security Center(turns of Defender) so I can manage my wife's laptop and my server all from my own laptop, the fact that it's there is awesome. Also the "Windows Firewall with Advanced Security" MMC is a nice touch. It makes the Windows firewall just as powerful and customizable as commercial firewall applications. Unless Windows 7 has some very huge advantages over previous versions other than the minimized kernel, I don't think I will upgrade. My laptop shipped with Vista and runs quite nice, so I think I'll stick with it. It seems more like this version will be aimed primarily at people who run servers with a very specific purpose and don't want to have to worry about this service depending on this other service even though they never interact or need one another.

windows 7 should not order folder contents according to what it thinks its best.

If i decide that i like viewing avi's in a list, each time i visit a folder with avi's they should be in a list. They should not appear as thumbnails or anything else. All ms os's to date including vista lay out folder contents the way they want, not the way i - the user want. Its so annoying to have to go in each time and set the view accordingly.

Ridiculous.

For me Windows 7 needs to be modular...

Install the basics, as mentioned here start menu, task bar...etc.. just the small bits and pieces to make teh PC run. Have ability to add/remove anything else...

I only use windows at home for gaming, so less system resources for the OS and more performance to games :p

Oh and reduce the footprint..and OS should not take 15Gb (even XP takes 1.5Gb) and OS should be small.....

there needs to be only 2 versions of windows ! a client and a server ... do away with all this ultimate and home premium ****
I know this may cause a flame war, but I think start again. Build a new OS from the ground up and have an emulator if required to run legacy apps. This way Windows can be solid, secure and reliable with having to support old products. Maybe even jump to 64bit. It can be done, Mac OS did it with the jump to OS X.
drop support for a 32 bit version entirely.. the line should be drawn with vista for 32 bit. by the time windows 7 comes out, everybody should have the hardware to run 64 bit, and if they don't, they shouldn't be running windows 7 at all.
I will not buy Windows 7 unless... Windows' marketshare declines significantly. If that happens they'll start putting in all those features we want.

I guess I'll have to steal Windows 7.

dunnoe if any of what im typing here has been posted before, i just clicked on the 9th page and replied straight away

right here goes, i wish that the cursor has motion blur, when you move it, you see it refresh across the screen, but everything else in the UI smoothly fades in and out

also give windows the ability to unload itself when your playing a game so that you get higher fps, its something like hibernate vs standby , as in when you quit the game you take longer to get back to windows but it will be worth it

dunnoe if any of what im typing here has been posted before, i just clicked on the 9th page and replied straight away

right here goes, i wish that the cursor has motion blur, when you move it, you see it refresh across the screen, but everything else in the UI smoothly fades in and out

also give windows the ability to unload itself when your playing a game so that you get higher fps, its something like hibernate vs standby , as in when you quit the game you take longer to get back to windows but it will be worth it

Hmm game mode. :)

as said in earlier posts, for me, a completely modular design concept would be a must.

If I get a laptop for uni and only want to type, use the net, and watch/listen to music/movies, there should only be parts of the OS that are RELEVANT to those functions installed. I guess I want software like nLite to become redundant for Win7.

I want the option to have an OS like 98lite, a tiny footprint that can still get things done, when bells and whistles aren't needed - except built on newer code to be more stable and with newer features (e.g. removable drive support)... but u get what i mean

Also, again as said, virtualisation is essential. Win7 should be targeted towards newer hardware and thus virtualisation would be a great feature to have to make it easy to use windows and install/uninstall/reinstall without worrying about registry issues and general slowdowns. Like having Thinstall built-in would be fantastic (Y).

And a better way of displaying information - the sidebar doesn't cut it when you need to check something while a program is open and you don't want to minimise everything to get to the desktop. The system tray and taskbar should be completely overhauled to maximise usability and to truly be an aid to the end user.

But unlike some people I LIKE the taskbar. I like to be able to visualise all the programs I have open - but just like Win95 was a revolution and came about from a complete rethink of what it means to be able to maximise use of your computer, so too should Win7 be grounded with the same approach and the same type of goal worked towards.

I will not buy Windows 7 until it has a COMPLETE new desktop, with something COMPLETELY new. XP -> Vista was just a redesign, nothing new. Still got the taskbar..
With the "taskbar" as your seemingly only criterion you have when you evaluate.

That would put Win95 on par with XP. Funny, that. ;)

1. A script type service for Windows First Time setup. Have a way for windows to ask for all you install information at the begin of the install. Vista is almost there but it still asks for some user input towards the end. I want windows to ask one time and one time only.

2. Installation of software. Why do windows need to have apps install itself all over you drive and registry. Come on, this is windows nt version 6 for love of mike. Isn't a better way of tracking where programs installed themselves on the drive and registry. Maybe have windows have a registry and file tracker for installs so when you want to uninstall the software it completely removes itself. I know there is restore points but who uses it for just removing one stupid program.

3. UAC. Fix it. Nuff said.

I will not buy Windows 7 until it has a COMPLETE new desktop, with something COMPLETELY new. XP -> Vista was just a redesign, nothing new. Still got the taskbar..

So you want something new just for the sake of having something new?

Is there anything wrong with the current UI scheme that NEEDS a total overhaul? There's a pretty good reason we've had it for so long: It works.

windows 7 should not order folder contents according to what it thinks its best.

If i decide that i like viewing avi's in a list, each time i visit a folder with avi's they should be in a list. They should not appear as thumbnails or anything else. All ms os's to date including vista lay out folder contents the way they want, not the way i - the user want. Its so annoying to have to go in each time and set the view accordingly.

Ridiculous.

+1

For me the feature is winFS. If gmail is using labels for things instead of folders, then why can't operating systems?

Same here, imho that concept rocks, and although I like Vista, I was really hoping for WinFS.

1. A script type service for Windows First Time setup. Have a way for windows to ask for all you install information at the begin of the install. Vista is almost there but it still asks for some user input towards the end. I want windows to ask one time and one time only.

I actually agree with this, and I don't know why MS backed away from it (the plan was to provide everything, including user names, at the beginning of install). I'd even be happy if they just switched setting up users and rating your computer. Why should I sit and wait another 5 minutes to do something that could have been done immediately after set up? I should be able to type in my user name and boom! get going.

2. Installation of software. Why do windows need to have apps install itself all over you drive and registry. Come on, this is windows nt version 6 for love of mike. Isn't a better way of tracking where programs installed themselves on the drive and registry. Maybe have windows have a registry and file tracker for installs so when you want to uninstall the software it completely removes itself. I know there is restore points but who uses it for just removing one stupid program.

I agree in regards to the registry, but last I checked, 9 out of 10 programs make a folder named after themselves in C:\Program Files, and they prompt you for an installation path when you install them anyway so you know exactly where it's going, if you want to make sure something is really really gone, just go to C:\Program Files and delete its folder.

*CAIRO

There is no way Microsoft is going to start including multiple shells with their operating system. The average user doesn't even know what a shell is and it would just confuse most people causing unneeded tech support calls. And if they did it would definately be designed in-house.

Not meaning to flame but that request just seemed a bit silly. It would be akin to Microsoft including unlocker or 7zip or something with their operating system.

Edited by cbosdell
I'd really like to see:

  • Wallpaper changer (I currently use Wallpaper Master, but I'd like to see something similar built-in)
  • Stop rearranging folders by what it thinks is best. This is annoying, especially in My Music, where it keeps rearranging most of the album folders into regular music folders.
  • An OS is meant to be secure, right? So how about bundling Windows Defender and Windows Live OneCare in Windows 7? That would increase the sales!
  • Bundle Office into Windows 7 (or at least a minimal version)
  • Include better games. You can only enjoy Minesweeper for so long. :D
  • Keep all the Vista features, but give it performance like XP, or better.
  • Automatic defragmentation tool.
  • The ability to use custom themes right out of the box, without having to download a modified uxtheme.dll.

Some of those things would be great, like Office Mini and unlocked uxtheme, but don't you think stupid EU officials will simply forbid Office Mini from Windows.

To be more costumizable to be abbly to change everything(thinking of gui) like in linux,afcorse Virtual Desktops,more 3d Improvement without hard hardware usage like vistas,and to think of samoething original not to copy fromother OS`s thats for now

I will not buy Windows 7 unless it has ...

... complete support in Windows Installation Setup to customize where Program Files folder partition and Users folder is created.

++ If there is a Users folder already in the destination, it is a bonus to have the support to re-use it -- just like in Linux if you mount /home then Linux is smart to re-use it.

++ If it also lets us specify the folder names, that would be a plus too. So instead of "Program Files" I can have "Applications".

So basically I can then have

C:\WINDOWS

D:\Program Files

E:\Users

Definately. I personally don't think Vista should have been or needed to be 32bit either.

The mobile Core Duo (Yonah) was Intel's last big 32-bit processor. It is by no means slow, and there were still laptops being sold with those last year.

I agree in regards to the registry, but last I checked, 9 out of 10 programs make a folder named after themselves in C:\Program Files, and they prompt you for an installation path when you install them anyway so you know exactly where it's going, if you want to make sure something is really really gone, just go to C:\Program Files and delete its folder.
No - you skip over the registry effects of a program that way and would leave registry/COM garbage.
... complete support in Windows Installation Setup to customize where Program Files folder partition and Users folder is created.
If at some point there is a Win7 beta and someone is on it, file bugs against "\program files" references in the registry, since ideally those should be %programfiles% or %programfiles(x86)% so that the system can properly sort it out. The system is definitely getting more portable, but there's a lot of registry entries that aren't as flexible as they need to be. If you compare XP vs Vista's registries, you'll see how much better it is, but you'll see there's still a long way to go. (I did a huge Vista registry scan for a fun side project and noticed all this.)
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Salesforce to acquire Fin, formerly Intercom, for over $3 billion by David Uzondu Image via DepositPhotos.com Salesforce today announced that it has reached an agreement with customer support software company Fin to buy the company for around $3.6 billion. Salesforce expects the transaction to close in the fourth quarter of its fiscal year 2027, and the acquisition will not change its financial guidance previously announced on May 27. Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, in its press release, claimed that acquiring the startup gives Salesforce an immediate AI agent that resolves support tickets across email, WhatsApp, SMS, and Slack: You might know Fin by its former name, Intercom. If you have ever been on a website or inside a mobile app and noticed a little chat bubble widget floating in the bottom right corner of your screen, often featuring a friendly face and a message like, "Hi! How can we help you today?" you were almost certainly looking at Intercom. Intercom became Fin just last month, transforming itself into an "AI-first" platform that handles customer issues with little need for humans to intervene. The new name originates from the company's highly successful AI customer service agent, which it launched way back in 2023. This digital assistant supposedly resolves about 76% of customer service volume end-to-end on its own, so the business rebranded to match its primary software tool. Fin's new owners, Salesforce, went on an acquisition spree over the last few years, and some of them you might recognize, like its 2020 $27.7 Billion acquisition of Slack. The last few months saw the enterprise giant buy several startups, including m3ter, Momentum, Cimulate, and Contentful. Salesforce said that when the Fin deal pulls through, customers will "deploy AI agents across" various service operations, which will complement Agentforce, the platform that enables businesses to deploy customizable autonomous digital workers.
    • Microsoft now allows you to tweak Visual Studio to new extremes by Usama Jawad Visual Studio 2026 recently netted a powerful feature that finally allows developers to review Git Pull Requests (PRs) directly in the integrated development environment (IDE), without needing to switch to the browser. However, that's not all that Microsoft introduced in the latest version, as it also offered a useful way to customize the IDE to their heart's content. Although Visual Studio 2026 already provides lots of stock themes based on Fluent Design principles, Microsoft understands that people still want to customize them further according to their preferences. The IDE now offers a new configuration page for themes under Tools > Options > Environment > Visual Experience > Theme colors. This allows you to set hex color codes for accent colors, hover states, and more, and apply them without requiring a restart. The Redmond tech giant further says that: Microsoft is also offering granular color tokens that allow you to customize various UX elements like the tab header without impacting the rest of the shell chrome. Your themes are also stored in JSON format in %LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\VisualStudio\18.0_xxxxxxxx\ColorThemes, which basically enables you to share it with others or override existing themes. This is a major improvement in terms of the user experience powering these customization capabilities. This is because extensions were required to replace the theme, and it was not very easy to make minor adjustments. This theme configuration UX solves this problem and is available in Visual Studio 2026 version 18.7, available here.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      rolfus earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      503
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      201
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      127
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      82
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!