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Windows 8 Mail Leaves Users Pining For the Desktop — or Even Their Phones

jbrodkin writes "The e-mail client in Windows 8 is the shell of a potentially good application — but Microsoft hasn't given it the proper care it deserves. With less than a month before Windows 8 hits RTM, Mail is a mess that doesn't support IMAP, can't connect to servers with self-signed certificates, and lacks basic features like flagging messages for followup. Metro Mail is feature-deficient compared not just to other desktop and tablet apps — it's behind Microsoft's own phone platform. Whether used on a tablet or desktop, this in-depth look concludes that Metro Mail in its current form will have users pining for a real desktop application."

308 comments

  1. Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Quakeulf · · Score: 1

    I only use online mail these days, so do all of my coworkers and all of the coworkers at my previous companies too. I guess there is still a niche for this called the public sector.

    1. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's the problem - with gmail being the single largest mail service in the world, followed by various other online mail services, nobody wants to put a lot of energy into legacy mail applications any more. Why go through all the bother of having to set up an app with a bunch of arcane settings people don't understand (*), when you could just go to a web page and be done with it? Then your mail is backed up for you, it is available from any machine you are using at the time, and is right there in a browser tab.

      (*) Try walking your grandmother through setting up a local mail prog. Well, Grandma, is the server using STARTTLS, or SSL, or neither? What's the POP3 server name, we need to enter it here. Meh. That's the 1990's way to do email. Life moves on.

    2. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by couchslug · · Score: 4, Informative

      I only use online mail, but via Thunderbird so I can ignore the asstastic web pages and don't have to view ads.

      Online mail is fine, but better in a conventional format with a portable archive.

      Thunderbird Portable rocks for this, and you can copy the whole program folder to DVD for read-only archiving which won't be changed by sync'ing online.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    3. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Interesting

      with gmail being the single largest mail service in the world,... nobody wants to put a lot of energy into legacy mail applications any more.

      Yes, but we're not talking about just anybody, we're talking about Microsoft here. If anyone wanted to pour enormous amounts of money into projects just to hurt Google, it'd be them. I'm surprised they aren't trying harder on this thing. Sure, you might point to their own competing online mail service, Hotmail, but that thing is doing horribly these days. You'd think they'd want to pour resources into anything that competes with Gmail.

    4. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by foradoxium · · Score: 1

      ..who doesn't use adblock??

    5. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by foniksonik · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Uh. Any OS or Mail app worth a damn has smart presets.

      OS X Mail.app has Gmail as an account type. Select it and all it asks for is your username and password. Done. It's even part of the OS set up.

      You can also pick me.com, hotmail, yahoo, Exchange or Advanced (custom).

      At no point are you asked for a server or setting for anything but a user and pass, except with Exchange and Advanced.

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    6. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Adblock doesn't download for offline viewing and backup, or replace the whole web page interface.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    7. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      with gmail being the single largest mail service in the world,... nobody wants to put a lot of energy into legacy mail applications any more.

      Yes, but we're not talking about just anybody, we're talking about Microsoft here. If anyone wanted to pour enormous amounts of money into projects just to hurt Google, it'd be them.

      And let's face it - how hard can it be to write a decent client? Web based email just seems like trying to drive a car where the steering wheel doesn't change the direction fo the car until a few seconds after you turn it. Although I'll note that Yahoo's webmail sucks less than say gmail - but that's just opinion.

      Then again, I just have Mac Mail access my Yahoo and gmail and other accounts and work on them that way.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    8. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's compare....

      Linux has no outlook... HELL on Earth. Unusable! Unforgivable... Linux is useless for daily use. We NEED Outlook on Linux otherwise it is crap!

      Windows 8 has no Outlook... nah .. Oh well... Who is using Outlook anyway... no big deal...

      Weird....

    9. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

      Because Windows Mail doesn't make them any money? It's a free add on.

      Why they've dropped IMAP support is beyond me. I can see why you might not want to make any "improvements", or changes. But they could just include a previous iteration of the Windows Mail client (perhaps with a new skin on it, to make it look like they've done some work on it) and be done. There are plenty of other IMAP clients out there, so it's not even like they could put some ad space on it.

    10. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they don't care either and want to have some sort of online 'cloud' mail offering too. Donno what they might call it, how does "hotmail", or "Outlook web access" sound for names?

      Kidding aside, they don't really care about competing mail systems, never really have.. They want to make using them 'less optimal' so you move toward their offerings instead, such as exchange.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    11. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm with you on that: the weird configs. Much more complicated than it was back in the day.

      I think Thunderbird does it right: you just enter your email address and username/password and it tries to figure out the rest by guessing common server names (mail.blah.com) and protocols/ports. Mostly, it succeeds.

      Compare that to Evolution. I would have thought they would have a nice wizard like Thunderbird, but no, you have specify the exact incantation and even ports!

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    12. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, but if more people move to Gmail, that makes Google money, and that make Ballmer throw more chairs around.

    13. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Grishnakh · · Score: 0

      I have to use Outlook Web Access for work, and it's a total piece of shit. Hotmail sucks too, and no one uses it any more (Slashdot had an article about this not long ago).

      Sure, their intention is to get people to move to their other offerings like $$$Exchange$$$, but what's really going to happen is they'll move to Google's services (like the other poster here said he did at his job), and then Ballmer will throw more chairs around.

    14. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why go through all the bother of having to set up an app with a bunch of arcane settings people don't understand

      I just installed Thunderbird. To set up my Gmail account, I had to enter:

      * Name
      * Email address
      * Password

      Everything else was configured automatically.

    15. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Wasn't debating the value of their offerings, just that it is their end goal to lock businesses in as much as possible.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    16. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Well of course; that's always been MS's end goal in everything. My point is just that, as the previous poster said about shooting themselves in the foot, their actions aren't going to drive people to their own overpriced and crappy offerings, but rather to their competitors.

      It's kinda like GM eliminating their low-end cars, thinking everyone will just buy a Cadillac or Corvette, but instead they switch to the competition.

    17. Re:Ready? Oops! Oh noooooOOOO! by robsku · · Score: 1

      My other mailbox is gmail, yet I use the webmail interface only occasionally when I can't access my mail software (which I can also use via SSH+VNC when not home) remotely (once I used my old nokia J2ME phone's Opera Mini browser - didn't know that they have very nice trimmed down mobile version, even able to show PDF attachment within Opera Mini's limitations). Normally I use Thunderbird and while able to choose individual accounts Inbox I usually browse "global Inbox" folder to see mails on both accounts at once. Good thing gmail too supports IMAP.

      My other mailbox has web interface too, but the provider really focuses to mainly document how to configure different email clients to access mail.

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  2. Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by busyqth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're stuck between a rock and a hard place.
    Give Windows 8 users a real email client and cannibalize Outlook/Office sales
    Give Windows 8 users a stripped down client and get pilloried in the press and taken to the woodshed by Apple.

    Good ol' Microsoft internal politics at its finest.

    1. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outlook is mainly used in the enterprise, so having a mail client at least on the level of Thunderbird would not be stealing sales.

      MS should error on the side of too much than too little in this case. Already, there is negative press about the force UI changes, and MS doesn't need another issue that would slow down sales.

    2. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Asic+Eng · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It seems the user can either install Outlook or get e.g. Thunderbird. How many people use Windows in a business setting and then don't use MS Office? (And when you do that you get Outlook.) So for desktop users I don't see any problems. (Apart from the Metro interface itself that is... I don't think anybody wants that on the desktop.)

    3. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Bullshit, Microsoft either supports consumers in what was touted as a bold move into the hardware market, or it proves that it hasn't learned from its own history of similar failures, like Vista compatible systems, Zune or Bing.

      Windows 8 is supposed to be the basis of a response to the development of Apple's iPod/iPad/iTunes and Google's Android tablets and phones, all of which caught Mighysoft flat-footed. It's also supposed to emulate Apple's attempt to give a similar look and feel to the lap/desktop, tablet & phone. M$ has a history of playing catchup and making their customers suffer through their rushed attempts.

      This article/assessment either makes it easier for MS to claim that the kloodge being pre-reviewed has been improved when it's actually released, no matter what its state, or it indicates a reiteration of the internal failure of the MS culture that's driven by sales & marketing and incapable performing when ordered to innovate as Mr. Balmer claims it will.

      But I for one would love provide him with the relish for his crow.

      BTW - does this indicate the Microsoft's software development teams are having a hard time porting a standard application to their own newly created OS, or are they truly that focused on becoming a hardware manufacturer that they can't do either one well?

    4. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by jbolden · · Score: 2

      I don't see many hardcore Outlook users not wanting the rest of the Office suite. Everyone I've ever met whose a heavy Outlook user either uses Word daily or lives in Excel.

    5. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Outlook is mainly used in the enterprise, so having a mail client at least on the level of Thunderbird would not be stealing sales.

      Outlook is used by tons of companies, big and small, and they pay handsomely for the privilege. If they included a free client on the level of Thunderbird, I think it's entirely reasonable to think this would negatively affect the sales of Outlook to many small-to-midsize firms. Of course, however, by not including a free Thunderbird-like client, they may also be losing marketshare to Gmail, as many smaller firms are moving to that.

    6. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      That doesn't make sense. A "real email client" was offered for free for a long time now - first Outlook Express, more recently Windows Live Mail - with no worries about "cannibalizing Outlook sales". And if you RTFA, they are actually complaining that the new Metro client isn't on par even with Live Mail feature wise.

    7. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by iserlohn · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Outlook is a absolutely terrible mail client that no-one should be paying for. The most important feature in email clients nowadays is search. Outlook search is terrible - finding the message you want is almost impossible in the default search and is worse yet in the advanced search. Gmail has been doing this for properly for years - it just works, so why do I have to set up an exchange environment to get an email service which is worse than gmail (or Google Apps)? It's not like it's any cheaper!

    8. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be more precise, they're complaining that the new application wasn't on par with Live Mail feature-wise in a preview release given out three months before RTM. Maybe it will be improved for the final release.

    9. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Outlook Express was a superior email client, and even had some features that Outlook didn't have. Windows Live Mail is ok (and still better than Outlook IMHO)
      Neither of those cannibalized Outlook sales...

    10. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Outlook's Message Recall feature - one that works if the server is Exchange server - is fantastic. I can't count how many times mails that needed to be recalled were sent out. But yeah, Outlook is only worth having if Exchange is the server - otherwise, use anything else - Windows Mail (for Windows 7), Thunderbird, or whatever.

    11. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just moved my transportation companies e-mail to Gmail with Google Apps for business.
      The web client works great and I slam everything via IMAP to a server for local storage.
      This is cheap and effective for a company of our size. I am running 40 accounts. This means I get a great and useful email client. Backup storage "in the cloud",
      Document sharing and collaboration that does everything that my company needs and more, Document backup and groups for $2000/year.
      I know it is not perfect, but as the only guy at my company responsible for the phone system, dispatch system, mobile data terminals in 300 vehicles and the call center as well as email and PC management. Google apps for business is better than what I had time to do before and much easier to implement.

    12. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you stop using Office when it was at the 2003 version? I don't have many problems using Outlook 2010 on Windows 7 and finding stuff, and I'm horrible at filing and deleting, my mailbox is full of crap.

      I'm not meaning to troll here, I've always found Outlook (2007 onwards) to be OK at finding stuff, a pleasant change from prior versions (which it sounds like you are describing).

      Outlook 2010 on windows XP (the SOE on my work computer... urgh) needed the downloaded desktop search app that I can't remember the exact name of, but once that was installed it gave me a similar experience. And outlook prompted me to go install the required app, gave me a link to the download page for the desktop search util I needed to install.

      I agree with your comment about the price. Office licensing is far more expensive than Exchange licensing though, the Exchange CALs aren't too expensive and they have a standard CAL so that small businesses don't have to pay for the enterprise features if they aren't using them. Exchange is especially reasonable when compared to the named-device-only + must license every "qualified desktop" (even if they don't use Office) anal rape licensing model of Office under an EA, or the massively increased cost per license under a Select agreement.

      Outlook works with Sharepoint also although I hate sharepoint and am not sure how well they've integrated the search between the two, but MS even have a free search server for indexing content these days (google windows search server) and that does an OK job, for something that's free. Not everything they do costs a gazillion dollars (just most things).

    13. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Agreed. As someone whom works as a Consultant/Sysadmin for a managed service provider, I see plenty of SBS Servers out in the field. Oh, and Microsoft shoots themselves in the foot yet again! SBS 2011 will be the last version made.

      Q33. Will there be a next version of Windows Small Business
      Server 2011 Standard?

      A33. No. Windows Small Business Server 2011 Standard, which includes Exchange Server and Windows server component products, will be the final such Windows Server offering. This change is in response to small business market trends and behavior. The small business computing trends are moving in the direction of cloud computing for applications and services such as email, online back-up and line-of-business tools.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    14. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The small business computing trends are moving in the direction of cloud computing for applications and services such as email, online back-up and line-of-business tools.

      Interesting: so Microsoft is actually officially telling customers they should switch to Google Mail and Google Docs? After all, no one uses their crappy Hotmail service for business use (and not much for personal use any more either).

    15. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Be Uncle Fester and decide that collecting a percentage from sold apps is everything and piss off your customers out of the gate by stripping down everything possible forcing them to buy apps to make up the difference. Use patents to try to force people to buy your stripped down software. Patents, patents, patents, app store, app store, app store, chairs, chairs, chairs, it's just M$'s way of shooting itself in the foot before the products even gain dominant market share. They just believe they can get away with stuff on the phone that they are used to doing on the desktop.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    16. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      How many people use Windows in a business setting and then don't use MS Office?

      A fuckton of them, actually. They're the minority, for sure, but not a small minority. We're talking millions of corporate users that have OpenOffice installed instead of MS Office.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    17. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my corporation (a big one) we get laptops with Windows and Outlook but WITHOUT MS Office. So don't be so sure about it.

      We use Libre Office, and I'm sure it's not because of the price. If I want, I am also allowed by IT to install Thunderbird instead of Outlook.
      Microsoft is (slowly) dieing in business with their products, one by one.

    18. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      That's because Outlook generally *comes* with the rest of the Office suite. Those who want Outlook's functionality without the rest of the suite generally use something like Outlook that isn't Outlook.

    19. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by jez9999 · · Score: 2

      Did you stop using Office when it was at the 2003 version? I don't have many problems using Outlook 2010 on Windows 7 and finding stuff, and I'm horrible at filing and deleting, my mailbox is full of crap.

      Problem is, they completely fucked up quoting in Outlook 2010. You used to be able to have multiple levels of quotes (multiple blue lines down the left), and break them up with inline responses. Now you can't because they switched to Word's stupid editor which generates hideous HTML or OOXML.

    20. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Sadly it is THIS, this right here, why after a great OS like Win 7 they are gonna take a big steaming dump all over everything. Anybody remember AOL? Remember how even when they'd have a GOOD product like WinAMP they'd royally fuck it up by trying to tie it into "the service" even if the user didn't want their shitty dialup? THAT is MSFT right now, with a shitload of PHBs trying to tie everything into Windows and Office and screwing over anything that doesn't promote Windows and Office.

      Just look at what we've learned so far...WinRT will have Office, even though its designed for consumers and hasn't got GPO and AD support...WTF? Their trying to tie log in and everything else into their crappy services like live nobody uses, and now they put in a broken mail app because god fricking forbid somebody might use it over Outlook.

      I've said it before, i'll say it again: The best thing that could have happened to MSFT was the DoJ breaking them up, because as they are now their mobile and entertainment divisions have two giant boat anchors tied to them called Windows and Office. It doesn't matter if using the Windows name makes no fucking sense in mobile, doesn't matter if having Office in a consumer designed tablet is stupid, doesn't matter if Metro is a retarded idea on a 27 inch widescreen desktop, its ALL gotta tie into the cash cows no matter what.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    21. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Agreed. But that means that they wouldn't be cannibalizing sales of Outlook if they offered a strong email client which was my point. You are agreeing with me not disagreeing, just saying it different.

    22. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Monoman · · Score: 1

      Uh no. I am sure the MS plan is to get SBS customers to migrate to their online/cloud version of SBS ...Office 365.

      --
      Keep the Classic Slashdot.
    23. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by klubar · · Score: 1

      I looked into Google for SMB mail, but if you need permanent archiving and search there isn't a good solution. Deleted emails are really gone and there isn't an easy was to search across all of the users emails if the need ever arises.

      For many businesses this isn't a big deal, but if you're in financial services, health or other regulated industries it is important.

    24. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are better options than Windows 7 which doesn't include any email client at all. Seriously, a top 3 feature (maybe top) doesn't even ship with Win7?

    25. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'm sure that's what they're telling themselves, but they're also probably telling themselves that Hotmail is great, when everyone but spammers have abandoned it.

    26. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      No. Microsoft is telling the entire industry they want to go after the mobile/entertainment segment. They don't really want to pursue the SMB and generic PC market anymore. They still have this fantasy of catering to the large enterprise market however. Which is laughable because those markets are filled with Linux clusters and ESXi boxes. Rumor has it the next version of Server will be PowerShell CLI only. Think Server Core edition for everything. GUI will be replaced by CLI more or less.

      Microsoft is leaving their bread and butter under the assumption that the grass is greener on the other side. Steve Balmer should be FIRED!!!! The only reason Apple is succeeding as well as they have is because they opened up and exploited new market opportunities. By Microsoft leaving the turf market the they have now via chasing rainbows and waterfalls, they leave a lot of pissed off people in the wake and a gargantuan vacuum to be filled by....someone else. Will that be Google or Apple? Who knows. It sure as hell wont be Microsoft though. That's for damn sure!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    27. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      "Windows" without a GUI? Surely you jest. But we are talking about the company that's made some totally laughable blunders many times, so I guess it isn't totally unfathomable.

      Personally, I think Ballmer should not be fired. This is just too much fun to watch; the last thing I want to see is someone really smart and competent take over MS and turning it back into a highly effective monopolist.

    28. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      About the only thing going for Microsoft aside from Windows is Office and Exchange. I could live with Google filling the void left over by Microsoft. But if you want to talk about monopolist behavior, Apple defines the very definition. They're not quite up to the status of 'too-big-to-fail' like Microsoft is, but when they get there, we will all wish Microsoft and Google banded together to banish Sauron from these IT lands.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    29. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Vlado · · Score: 1

      Why would you say that?

      There were email clients in the last N versions of windows, that were completely OK for basic email usage. Especially for services like web-based emails of the Gmail and Hotmail type. I'm not sure in which version of Windows, but there was even a usenet support built in, once upon a time.

      The only thing that was lacking was collaborative support that Outlook with Exchange does quite well.

    30. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Vlado · · Score: 1

      This would probably depend on how you use your email.

      But even if you don't sort your mails into folders or categories, I never had any problems with Outlook search, whatsoever.
      With advanced search, especially, I've always been able to find exactly what I was looking for and, at most, I had to click about 3 or 4 settings, if I wanted a more strict filtering of my results.

      I use Gmail web interface as primary private email client, pretty much since it was released and Outlook as a primary work email client pretty much since it was released also.
      I honestly cannot say which one works better for me in regards to searching. I can, however, say that I like that you can sort your results by whatever parameter you choose in Outlook, which you cannot do in Gmail web interface.

    31. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      sort:from
      sort:to

      You should try that in gmail. Works a treat.

    32. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yes, Apple is very worrying. However, it is a little early to see how effective Tim Cook is at replacing Jobs. Hopefully, Cook will turn out to be just like Ballmer.

    33. Re:Have sympathy for poor old Microsoft... by robsku · · Score: 1

      Reminds me, my MSN account is a result of my ooold Hotmail account - which was my first email account, registered when Hotmail was not part of MS and which I abandoned soon after MS had bought it (the interface got worse soon after) - and years later noticed that my credentials still worked on MSN network / messenger.

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
  3. Okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's behind Microsoft's own phone platform

    Isn't Windows 8 Microsoft's own phone platform?

    1. Re:Okay by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Windows Phone 8 != Windows 8. Windows 8 is referring the successor to Windows 7.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows Phone 8 != Windows 8. Windows 8 is referring the successor to Windows 7.

      I thought the whole point of Windows 8 was to be a phone OS that also runs on desktops/laptops. Otherwise, what use is Metro aimed at?

    3. Re:Okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just had a quick youtube look at Windows 8 and that thing isn't going anywhere near a phone I own, let alone a PC.

    4. Re:Okay by rjr162 · · Score: 1

      I wish that was more of the truth and the metro interface would disappear on the desktop!

    5. Re:Okay by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      I wish that was more of the truth and the metro interface would disappear on the desktop!

      Yeah, me too! I hate everything new, especially things I've never used.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    6. Re:Okay by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Windows Phone 8 shares the kernel with Windows 8, but otherwise it's still a different OS.

      Otherwise, what use is Metro aimed at?

      Tablets.

    7. Re:Okay by rjr162 · · Score: 1

      ah, but I have used it.. and tested in it A LOT in a VM for both existing apps we have as well as other tests to make sure it what we use will work. I know it's an early release but with our end users (as most are) not very tech savvy I can already see a lot of potential issues.

    8. Re:Okay by rjr162 · · Score: 1

      But Windows 8 uses Metro, and to get to the "classic" desktop you have to find it within the Metro interface (as well as control panel and all that). It also has no start menu, which I can see being a headache when it gets deployed to enterprise setups like colleges and all that where the end users aren't going to be able to find various apps creating helpdesk tickets that don't really need to exist (among other issues)

    9. Re:Okay by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      But Windows 8 uses Metro, and to get to the "classic" desktop you have to find it within the Metro interface

      Yes, it does (though finding it is pretty easy - it's that huge tile labelled "Desktop" and showing your desktop wallpaper on the Metro start screen). But what relevance does it have to the difference between Win8 and WP8?

    10. Re:Okay by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 0

      Otherwise, what use is Metro aimed at?

      Tablets.

      I for one am looking forward to the tablets being hosed every patch Tuesday, maybe being bricked like they did to the Windows phone that one time.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    11. Re:Okay by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, me too! I hate everything new, especially things I've never used.

      I think we need to go back the the good old days, when we had to replace our computers and operating systems every two years.

      What you are confusing is the difference between new-better, and new-just different.

      After years of operating in one fashion, Microsoft is trying to force people in a different direction. Does this direction allow me to work faster? How much time is this new OS going to shave off of that job I have to get done before I go home tonight?

      In addition, many people confuse the operating system as more important than it really is. The purpose of the OS is to allow people to quickly get to their work, then get out of the way, and work in the background. Considering that I had to go onto the web to find out how to shut the computer down when I checked out W8 consumer preview, I think it kinda fails right off the bat. Spent a few days testing it otherwise, and W8 will never be put on one of my machines. Feels like Vista all over again.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    12. Re:Okay by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, desktop environments have been annoying me of late. I don't like OS X (not enough customization), never been a fan of KDE, I liked GNOME but GNOME 3X has missed the mark, currently I'm using MATE which is a fork of GNOME 2X. I've never had many complaints about the UI of Windows except for one problem: you can't move windows around on the bottom bar. You can move things -somewhat- around in Windows 7 but I can't have, say, a word document, Firefox, another word document, another Firefox window, Outlook, another word document. But Metro just makes no sense on the desktop, on phones its great, but I'm not staring at a 3 inch screen when I'm on my laptop.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    13. Re:Okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      some of us have actually used windows 8. metro ui has no redeeming values in my household.

    14. Re:Okay by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      Do you prefer the model where your tablet has a remote code execution exploit triggered by opening a PDF file in the browser from any random website, for several months?

    15. Re:Okay by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      thankfully fallacies like yours don't make good arguments..

    16. Re:Okay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Colleges will just pin IE, word, excel and powerpoint to the start bar. Very few students will touch any other programs and for those that do you can just pin the extras for them too.

    17. Re:Okay by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Try it, its free to download, and then you'll find out as i did in the shop that this is typical of the user experience on Windows 8. I'm sorry, but whether you are a fan of MSFT or not its just not a good UI design. its NOT intuitive, NOT easily discoverable, hell it not only doesn't follow desktop conventions but it doesn't follow cell phone conventions either, and its lack of tooltips or any kind of prompting just leaves the user feeling lost and frustrated.

      So please, don't take anyone's word for it, download the RP and see for yourself. I've had everyone from teens to little old ladies trying out the CP at the shop and I have yet to see anyone "just pick up" Windows 8 without seriously struggling with it, its just not a good design.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    18. Re:Okay by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Do you prefer the model where your tablet has a remote code execution exploit triggered by opening a PDF file in the browser from any random website, for several months?

      No. But is there a reasonable expectation that W8 is not going to be like every other OS they have brought out? People can mark my posts as trolling, but I supported a number of Windows machines that went bonkers after updates, including one that I had to take off line because it would get to a certain point in the update list, then go into infinite reboot mode. Bricked. Machines that have programs that just quit working. Updates that make system changes that were unwanted, like making the system "more secure" by turning off features that you then have to re-enable to get a program to work. Even automagically turning on automatic updates on a personal machine, which I found out about at a cafe when the machine downloaded an update. There's a reason I turn off auto updating, and it's because I use my machine at these places some times. Sounds like a security conundrum to me.

      I don't want any of that stuff. I want a working machine that isn't a fight to keep running.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    19. Re:Okay by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So long as we're trading anecdotes, I have an iPad which refuses to update ("network connection timed out"). I also have a PC and a laptop, both running Windows 7, that have had WU enabled with auto-install, and haven't been bricked in the three years that have passed since they were set up that way.

    20. Re:Okay by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Sounds like we are both happy. I don't have to support or use Windows any more, and your experience with Windows has been problem free. Everyone wins.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  4. Don't understimate the forbearance of Windows-user by rainer_d · · Score: 1

    I'm sure, the large majority will put up even with that. But maybe MSFT will be using some spare change and license Opera.

    --
    Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
  5. Pine-ing, eh? by Phasma+Felis · · Score: 5, Funny

    I see what you did there.

    1. Re:Pine-ing, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Windows 8 prefers keepin' off self-signed certificates! Remarkable OS, isn't it? Lovely benchmarks!

    2. Re:Pine-ing, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      itt: people who don't get pine jokes

  6. Pine pun? by Misanthropy · · Score: 1

    Windows 8 mail might make me pine for Pine also.

  7. Tablets are great by pegasustonans · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tablets are great, and an optimized tablet UI can be both intuitive and efficient so long as you're using a fucking tablet.

    Seriously... it's like MS is trying to put the umbrella down the chimney up for this one.

    --
    And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. --Will
    1. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      They admit that's what they are doing. They are trying to drive manufacturers towards using high quality touch screens. They intend for the Windows 8 platform to be tablet + keyboard.

    2. Re:Tablets are great by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      They intend for the Windows 8 platform to be tablet + keyboard.

      More like tablet + keyboard + precision pointing device (note how Surface has pen with a digitizer, and trackpad - and so do most third-party Win8 convertibles).

    3. Re:Tablets are great by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      I may be wrong, but that doesn't sound like it's a good idea. The whole thing that makes tablets so great is their portability. Making a tablet with a keyboard is going to cut into that by making the whole thing bigger, bulkier and heavier, even if the keyboard's too small for the average adult to do any touch typing. Plus, if it's hinged, so that the touchscreen can sit up at an easy to read angle, you end up with a netbook with a touchscreen. And, if the keyboard's separate, it's even less convenient. I can't imagine something like that being any more than a nitche item, or a toy for geeks with more money than sense, but of course, I might easily be wrong.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:Tablets are great by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Tablets are great, and an optimized tablet UI can be both intuitive and efficient so long as you're using a fucking tablet .

      Seriously... it's like MS is trying to put the umbrella down the chimney up for this one.

      Great bolshy Yarblockos! THIS, a million times THIS! Mod this guy up!

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    5. Re:Tablets are great by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      I think they're making it more Tablet-like because Tablets are selling big right now. And they'd like the Tablet crowd to turn to Windows computers. Because if everybody starts using tablets, then they won't be forced to buy a copy of Windows with their device.

    6. Re:Tablets are great by joocemann · · Score: 0

      And just like every other attempt to copy good ideas they once dissed, microsoft will fail again. Even windows itself is based on copying and it was only so highly profitable through antitrust acts they are too scrutinized to pull off now.

      Sell sell sell!

    7. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I'm an Apple guy. However if I could get Fuji laptop (i.e. a fully convertable durable tablet) running OSX I'd buy that in a second. Touch is really really nice. And applications like One Note work very well with stylus based input. Things like web browsers work well with even less refined input like a finger. At the same time, things like /. require a keyboard.

      What Microsoft expects is a diverse world of hardware, like what exist on the x86 ecosystem. Some consumers go for finger based tablets others want an optional keyboard, others use primarily a portable laptop and a phone. Others don't need a laptop at all an do have a keyboard for the few times they need to do heavy text input....

    8. Re:Tablets are great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My mother has never had a tablet but does have an n900 has in blonde moments started swiping down the edge of a laptops screen. So no matter what we think the neuro typical will end up with the interface they deserve and we will have to find or make a platform to live on bbecause our requirements are niche at best.

    9. Re:Tablets are great by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But it won't work, and here is why: The X86 market is a low margin cutthroat business that is driven by numbers more than anything. Apple CAN do this because they control the whole process, so you either buy what Apple wants you to or you don't buy Apple period. With X86 people are gonna see desktop A with nicer specs and a bigger NON touchscreen monitor for X, or a worse specc'ed system with a smaller monitor for X+Y. The same will be seen with laptops, where if you'll look the biggest sellers are in the $400-$500 range. At those margins adding a high quality touchscreen would jump the price to $650+ which would drive away a good portion of their sales, so again you'll get a quad core loaded laptop with no touch for $400 or a dual core with touch for $650, no contest as to which the customer is gonna choose.

      The sad part is I've never seen any corporation so blatantly ignore market reality as we are seeing now with MSFT. Its like Ballmer and Sinofsky have truly deluded themselves ito think Windows is a premium brand like Apple and that by just forcing the OEMs to bump the price suddenly people will treat MSFT like they do Apple. In reality the non touch screen systems will outnumber the touchscreens by probably 100 to 1 and when people see what a lousy experience Win 8 is without touch the sales will tank and it'll be Vista all over again. i have no doubt if they release by Oct before XMas we'll be seeing Win 8 machines sold "Preloaded with Win 7!" just as we did all those "Vista" machines that came with XP and a Vista disc nobody used.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    10. Re:Tablets are great by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      but of course, I might easily be wrong.

      I would just say misinformed assumptions.

      Microsoft's Surface has a thin keyboard that connects magnetically (its a separate piece), and the display is propped up when in "notebook mode" by a simple flap on the back of the display rather than by hinges at the keyboard/display junction. The keyboard itself seems to be able to be connectible in 3 different configurations.. as a display protector/cover, tucked away on the reverse side, and free "hinged" (magnetic) for actual use as a keyboard.

      Judging by this 1 minute video the keyboard appears to be no thicker than the cover of a hardcover book.

      All-in-all the device itself looks extremely nice. The Win8 OS on the other hand... not so much.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    11. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I understand your point and agree that PC customers are cheapskates. Moreover Microsoft has driven the profit from the hardware side to the software side with their grey box strategy. But Microsoft does have a substantial advantage here, they control the copyright to the operating system everyone wants to use.

      Microsoft can very easily shift the economics.
      -- So for example they can set high standards for Windows 8 boxes and not license Windows 8, for boxes that don't qualify. They can charge a a steep premium for Windows 7.
      -- Or they could avoiding micro managing just ban it all together and set a minimum price for manufacturers of $800 or so.
      -- Or they could combine the two and punitive licensing to inexpensive machines. Something like, for every $100 your computer at time of final sale sold for less than $100 the final cost of the Windows license goes up by $50. People would have to have a strong preference for junk to pay 70% (which is likely what it will would work out to be final sale) for nothing over getting quality hardware.

      etc... Now all of those approaches do create an opening for Linux at the low end. But if I'm Microsoft I'm thinking OSX, iOS and Android are much more significant threats than Linux in 2012 and I have to pick my battles. Linux's shortcomings, especially when sold to the bottom of the market, are likely to repeat what happened on the Netbook and even if they gain ground it will be easily retaken. That does mean that Lauren ad has to be a thing of the past.

      If Microsoft doesn't do anything like that... then they repeat the mistakes of Vista. There are a small fraction of machines that run Windows 8 well and Windows 8 gets a terrible reputation. People hate Metro. Slowly the price of good touchscreens, and the associated hinge (you forgot that rather expensive part) come down and become standard features around 2015 or so and Windows 8 becomes usable on standard hardware. Then Windows 9 is released into a hardware market that can actually support it and this gets positive press. The question then is what does the consumer space look like with a 3 year surge of "windows sucks". For example is Apple / OSX up to 20% marketshare or worse, Vista was wonderful for Apple.

      Conversely if Microsoft starts driving prices up again lots of other premium hardware starts seeming less premium. For example going all SSD on light laptops or a large SSD cache plus HDD. Taking a $500 computer and making it a $1000 computer to go SSD might be too much. But taking a $1500 computer to $2000 isn't going to be the same thing at all. Its not like Dell, HP, Lenevo, Asus, Acer... don't know how to make good computers its just that the customer base, especially in consumer has been demanding crap. As people use more premium parts, parts manufacturers can start to create more expensive parts. For example there is no reason that Windows people shouldn't be switching to retina displays. We might go back to the world where $4000 premium laptops aren't rare but represent a decent sized chunk of the market, $2000 is the average and $1000 represents the low end junk. And in that world, the $500 Windows 7 machines are seen as legacy junk. The market psychology just shifts as the software gets more demanding. And this drives upgrade cycles to be fast again as more powerful hardware leads to both more powerful hardware and more demanding software.

      As an aside, Fujitsu pretty much makes the ideal Windows 8 computer today and those do sell well abroad and in medical. I wasn't an Apple guy I'd be getting a Fujitsu machine and running Windows 8. Even with an OS I don't want, I'm always sorely tempted to switch back to get the Fujitsu because of that versatility and durability. Microsost One Note is a great product, on the right hardware. There is no reason it couldn't be another Outlook, Excel, Word if the hardware manufacturers were making the machines en mass to support it.
       

    12. Re:Tablets are great by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But without the OEMs they are seriously boned, and if the OEMs get together to support a single Linux? Actually sinking money into it instead of MSFT? They are fucked. look at Gabe from valve, who would have thought you'd have Steam on Linux, or a Steambox to compete with the X360? THAT is what happens when you fuck over your business partners and they have a shitload of money, they'll happily spend it to fuck you right back.

      Finally do not forget the elephant in the room...Google. Don't think Google would be more than happy to help those OEMs with Android? hey it'll have all the casual games, all the web, and everything is tied into Google. Bet it would sure make Google happy, and it really wouldn't be hard to turn a decent chunk of the consumer market away from Windows when more folks are living on the net than ever and all the developers are working on Android and iOS.

      In the end I think the OEMs are just about sick of MSFT's bullshit and if they push too hard you'll see 'em bail. just look at how HP bailed on WinRT, or how you see plenty of machines with Win 7 Starter whereas except for the Walmart specials you hardly ever saw a Vista Basic system. I seriously doubt the OEMs are gonna slit their own throats and give up a good 45%+ of their sales just because Ballmer has delusions of being the head of Apple, if MSFT doesn't want that business I'm sure they'll find another OS happy to take that share and MSFT would do well to remember that more and more people only care about the net, not the Winflag.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    13. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      But without the OEMs they are seriously boned,

      Of course. But increasing margins is good for the OEMs as well. There is no reason OEMs should want to live in a world of thin margins either. There is no reason that OEMs wouldn't want to back to the lucrative hardware markets of the 1990s. Dell, HP, Toshiba... would love a situation where there is plenty of money to go around and they can differentiate themselves based on features or quality. But they can't do that individually because Apple has skimmed off the price insensitive buyers and for most of the remaining Windows consumers they have shown time and time again that they would rather a $500 piece of junk than a $2000 excellent machine.

      On the other hand if the $500 piece of junk didn't exist anymore.

      and if the OEMs get together to support a single Linux?

      Assuming they avoid anti-trust issues.... OK they do. And the situation is very much like Netbooks vs. laptops before the XP price cuts, or PCs vs. Commodore Amiga. Linux machines run on cheap hardware offering a poorer environment while Windows runs on better machines offering a much richer environment. Especially since the OEMs do not want to do for their consumer division what they are currently doing in their server division (and some of the companies like Toshiba and Acer don't do at all) in terms of the complexity of Linux support. Heck read your own posts on the topic of Linux support.

      Don't think Google would be more than happy to help those OEMs with Android? hey it'll have all the casual games, all the web, and everything is tied into Google. Bet it would sure make Google happy, and it really wouldn't be hard to turn a decent chunk of the consumer market away from Windows when more folks are living on the net than ever and all the developers are working on Android and iOS.

      I agree. I don't think that Android is ready yet though. Most consumers still have need for a few pieces of desktop software for which there is no internet equivalent. Android and iOS apps really are still fundamentally phone apps and very poor from a feature sense. SaS apps are somewhat better but even still limited. If Microsoft is going to have to fight this battle, far better in 2013 when Google isn't ready yet than in 2017 when they likely will be. It is far easier for Microsoft to move the cost of their hardware up, then for Google to create an entire infrastructure of full featured software. Meanwhile Apple is explicitly structuring iOS to act as a supporting OS for OSX, so they may likely never be ready.

      if MSFT doesn't want that business I'm sure they'll find another OS happy to take that share and MSFT would do well to remember that more and more people only care about the net, not the Winflag.

      I don't agree that's true. I think its a minority something like 1/4 of all users. There is not much Microsoft can do for the web only crowd. ARM is a better platform for them, and there is no reason for them not to buy an iPad or just use their phones other than inertia and that won't last.

      I do think a lot of consumers will think that's true until they try and live without a desktop. To my mind its a lot like Google Docs. While it is absolutely true that most people don't use more than a few percent of Word's advanced features most people do need a few percent and they often all need a different few percent. Same with Excel. I have a lot of friends that have had to move up Excel to Quantrix, because they are actually pushing their system and Excel breaks down badly as the amount of rows goes over a few thousands and instead is more like a few million. Lets not even discuss Google Docs for sheets of that size.

      The same thing happens when people don't have recourse to a desktop machine. That few percent for which they really do need power becomes a problem. And that's true even with web apps. I use Evernote on my phone all the time. I manage Evernote from my desktop. Without the management features that the desktop client brings, I couldn't use it on my phone.

    14. Re:Tablets are great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a full fledged convertible tablet (Fujitsu T5010) and love it (incorporates a wacom). I use it to take notes of things such as math that use special symbols and greek letters. The digitizer is essential for being able to take digital notes in science and mathematics classes (I tend to lose paper notes). The main problem is that none of them incorporate higher end hardware such as decent discreet graphics cards, so photoshop can be laggy.

      However, I have to agree that it is a niche. It's great for students or artists, but for most people, the tablet functionality isn't useful. The hinges not being totally locked in place makes it useless unless it's completely flipped around into tablet form, hiding the keyboard. Two separate halves would probably be even more annoying to juggle. During normal use, I never use the tablet functionality. Additionally, tablets with high end active digitizers (such as wacom) are far more accurate than a mouse, making the usefulness of large buttons nil. Capacitive displays suck for getting any actual work done, and are only really useful for highly portable devices.

    15. Re:Tablets are great by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      You can't magically give everyone more money in a dead economy friend, and you can't magically raise the prices and expect not to end up like HP, selling Touchpads at a loss on Woot! My biggest sellers are the $400-$500 units why? Because that is all people are willing to spend and more features won't change that opinion, they'll either go elsewhere or not buy at all. I should be thankful for MSFT because that kind of douchebaggery could seriously boost the repair side of my business, as more will be willing to actually buy desktops that can be fixed instead of cheap $400 laptops.

      As for what killed the netbooks? The OEMs didn't give a fuck frankly. Did you TRY some of the shit they put out? drivers that didn't work, shitty UIs, lousy performance, it was obvious the OEMs were just using it for a quick make a buck. i would argue that it wasn't XP that saved the netbook, it was decent quality builds like the EEE that still sells today, with AMD Fusion and ION graphics so you could actually watch videos on the things. This will be different if MSFT decides to fuck the OEMs, because you are talking about giving up ALL your sub $550 sales, which is a good 80% of companies like Dell. When a third party tries to fuck you out of 80% of your sales in a dead economy? Your company WILL do something about it.

      And the reason Android isn't ready is because again Google hasn't had a reason to give a fuck, MSFT was like Pepsi, a commodity product that is simply too cheap to care about competing with. All that changes if they hand over the sub $550 market to anybody that wants it, that's hundreds of millions of dollars right there for the plucking. And don't forget Google makes money TWO ways, their appstores AND their adviews. they could make out like bandits and frankly the Wine guys have taken the sting out of a lot of Windows software, all it would take is Google packaging it into a friendly Crossover style installer, really not hard.

      Finally i'm seeing a lot of places like Geeks selling "No OS" laptops and desktops cheap and you KNOW what that is about...piracy. hell probably 30% of the Windows boxes I see are Windows Pirate Edition and I have no doubt MSFT fuckes the OEMs even harder there will be more "No OS" systems sold that will be loaded with "wink wink" Windows and be done with it. Hell Win 7 is supported until 2020 and the pirates have it cracked so well now that it even gets updates and looks legit to WGA.

      In the end you can't just raise the price and expect KFC to be treated like Olive Garden, it just don't work that way. if they were starting a new brand then MAYBE that would work, but people think Windows they think cheap PCs and if its not then they will simply keep what they got or look at the iPad.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    16. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      My biggest sellers are the $400-$500 units why? Because that is all people are willing to spend and more features won't change that opinion, they'll either go elsewhere or not buy at all.

      Maybe, maybe not. But if the market is really just a bunch of people in the $400-500 range who don't care about features Microsoft has already lost the consumer space. Game over. At that price point the windows ecosystem doesn't matter and the ARM based system are superior to x86. But even if it were the case that those sorts of skinflint customers were going to keep buying Windows systems forever, the $400-500 systems are generally sold at thin profit margins or a loss. Its a worthless market for the major vendors.

      I should be thankful for MSFT because that kind of douchebaggery could seriously boost the repair side of my business, as more will be willing to actually buy desktops that can be fixed instead of cheap $400 laptops.

      Oh absolutely. Not only that you'd make a ton of money refurbing old $1200 laptops to resell. There is no question that with a move towards more expensive systems the used market would be vibrant, just like it is for Apple where because Apple won't sell a system under $1k there is a huge resell value for used systems to fill that void. You'd do as much business as you could possibly handle.

      This will be different if MSFT decides to fuck the OEMs, because you are talking about giving up ALL your sub $550 sales, which is a good 80% of companies like Dell. When a third party tries to fuck you out of 80% of your sales in a dead economy? Your company WILL do something about it.

      I don't think its quite 80% of their sales. The median system is $515. But lets even assume it were 80%, that 80% probably represents almost 0% of the profits. Apple when they had 8% market share was already pulling 90% of the profits down. What Microsoft would be doing was reintroducing profits again. Systems would sell with real margin. Its not like that 80% completely walks. It probably looks something more like this:

      1/3 don't buy a system at all. 2 years later though they have no choice and fall into one of the other 2 groups.
      1/3 buy used or buy Linux or buy Android ....
      1/3 buy a $1k new system and love it.

      Dell sacrificed market share to move their net from 2.2% up to 4.4%. How much share would they be willing to lost to go back to 20% margins?

      And lets not forget all those vendors are seeing their year over year sales drop by 10%, even with the low margin strategy. The PC business is miserable for them right how.

      And the reason Android isn't ready is because again Google hasn't had a reason to give a fuck, MSFT was like Pepsi, a commodity product that is simply too cheap to care about competing with. All that changes if they hand over the sub $550 market to anybody that wants it, that's hundreds of millions of dollars right there for the plucking.

      There is billions there for anyone who cares to pluck it. There is no question a high value approach will create a large opening for Linux, Android, iOS... to fill. Microsoft, if they are going to push their products up market is going to have to accept more of the market.

      all it would take is Google packaging it into a friendly Crossover style installer, really not hard.

      Of course its hard. Google is getting their ass handed to them on Android patents. You think they want to try and implement the Windows API without patent violations? IBM even without the patent threat, since they had immunity agreements couldn't keep up with the full API. No, the new systems will not support x86. You want x86 you are going to have to buy a Windows license. Microsoft can hold that line.

      Finally i'm seeing a lot of places like Geeks selling "No OS" laptops and desktops cheap and you KNOW what that is about...piracy. hell probably 30% of the Windows boxes I see are Windows Pirate Edition and I have no doubt MSFT fuckes the OEM

    17. Re:Tablets are great by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But you are missing the elephant in the room friend which is we are in a depression which means your customers? DO NOT HAVE IT, they just don't. I could raise the price of my AMD triples from $475 to $1000 tomorrow and even if I didn't have competition i doubt I'd sell more than one or two because THEY DO NOT HAVE IT. You look at the Apple demographic, the average Apple user makes $100,000 a year. Now look at the Windows demographic? the average Windows user? $35,000. That is a BIG fucking difference friend, and with food and gas prices being so volatile someone with a $35k a year job simply isn't gonna spend $1k of that on a PC, they just won't. They'll either keep what they have (no sale for X86 OEMs) , buy used (no sale for X86 OEMs because it'll take years before all the cheap duals, triples, and quads are worn out) or look at ARM netbooks and pads (no sale for the X86 OEMs). Now seriously how many of the X86 OEMs are gonna be willing to close their doors so MSFT can pretend to be Apple? Its been reported that dell and HP make between $8 and $35 a sale but when you are talking millions of customers that adds up to some pretty big numbers. think they are gonna give ALL that up? just to make MSFT happy? They gain NOTHING because as we've seen with Intel pushing ultrabooks they just aren't selling.

      You still think that by slapping a $100k price sticker on a Mustang you can turn it into a Ferrari and it just can't be done friend, it doesn't work that way. if MSFT wanted to do that they should have spun off metro and made a premium brand but nobody and I MEAN nobody is gonna accept a $1k+ for Windows PCs, at that price they'll just go Apple. You can't change the global economy by simply sticking a higher price tag and pretending its 2006 and that is EXACTLY what MSFT is attempting to do and I'm telling you it WILL fail and fail hard. Know what one of my biggest sellers is ATM? $150 or less Android pads. great for Google, suicide for the X86 OEMs. For your scenario to work about 3/4ths of the companies will just have to close their doors and walk away which would be the complete death of AMD and Intel would probably lose a good 60%+ of its global sales. No more Pentiums, or Celerons, or Atoms, no more AMD anything, it would ALL have to go. All you would have is the i5 and i7 with touchscreens and SSDs and I'm telling you that will be suicide for most of the X86 market.

      Hell I'm a PC guy and have been since the days of Win 3.x but the ONLY reason I have a netbook is the fact that I got one that would play 720p video and hold 8Gb of RAM for $350 with the RAM included, just as the only reason i have a gaming desktop is the fact that I could have a hexacore with 8Gb of RAM, 3Tb of HDDs, an HD4850 and Win 7 HP for less than $650 before MIRs. Raise those prices to $1k? i'll just buy a pad and get a console like the PS3. Again great for the pad makers and sony, sucking the end of a shotgun to the X86 OEMs. You can sell PCs for a million dollars each but if you only sell one you simply aren't gonna stay in business and that is what you will see here, massive layoffs and closed businesses in a dead economy.

      The only nice thing I could say about such a scenario is rather than close their doors I have a feeling most of the OEMs would simply get together, pick a distro like Debian, and sink money and support into making it as easy peasy as Windows. Its not collusion if they are contributing to a free OS that anyone can help themselves to, hell they could probably get a tax break for giving to a non profit. And with Valve porting Steam that would even take care of the gaming problem. Again great for FOSS, not so much for MSFT. Personally i think the OEMs will revolt and Ballmer will finally get punt kicked like a 30 yard field return and the board will bring back someone like Ozzie or Allchin to right the ship, i seriously doubt they are gonna give away a good 60%+ of the X86 market because Ballmer would rather work for Apple. Oh and if I had no choice but to buy X86? I'll get a Mac, no way I'd spend $1k+ on Windows, never happen.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    18. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Hi Hairy good response I'm enjoying this conversation. I think we are agreeing on quite a bit. There is one major point of disagreement which drives the rest. Are OEMs concerned about volume or profits? I'll use your $8-35 because I think its right. So lets say average profit is $20 / system. Conversely if they were selling $1k systems at 20% total margin they could sell 90% less and still make the same money. There is absolutely no question in my mind that if you offered the OEMs an opportunity to lose 1/2 of all their customers and in exchange go back to the world of 20-30% margins they would elated, even with 10% margins losing 1/2 their customers would still be a no brainer. And this is where I think you are disagreeing with me.

      Part of the reason I think you are disagreeing is perhaps you haven't seen expensive PCs in widespread use. Up until a few years ago PC vendors were doing 10m units plus in the $1k and over market. So obviously there are a lot of people willing to buy expensive PCs. I've mentioned the Fuji before, this is absolutely standard equipment in medical. Urine is acidic so it can wear through seals, has salts and water so highly conductive and gets on everything in a medical setting. At the same time it has to be light, usable as a touch screen, cable of running medical apps... Fujitsu doesn't sell an under $1k computer. And incidentally this year they have weakened their $1200 line to push people up towards the $1700 models. Now Apple's move from 2% to 12% of the market has been aimed squarely at this group of higher end buyers. And it is certainly true there are far less of them then there were in 2007. But part of that has been the fact that Microsoft, Intel, the 3rd party software vendors and the OEMs have targeted marketshare over profits with disastrous consequences for all of them. That market should belong to a modern day Commodore, not to a Dell.

      Dell wants to be an IT services company like IBM. The "Dude you are getting a Dell" has been undermining their branding and undermining their ability to compete. It takes 200 $500 PCs at $20 profit to make up for losing one $14,000 server with $4000 profit; and frequently the guys buying the $14000 server wants lots and lots while the $500 PC buyer buys one system every few years. Back in 2001 incidentally I bought a $4000 Dell laptop the absolute top of the line Inspiron 8000. This was before the Inspiron became total crap: 1600x1200, .5g ram, 50g hd, 1ghz pentium3 which was an excellent desktop replacement system for the time, I could run Windows 2000, Oracle client and server (not with huge data sets but I didn't need huge data sets), running scripts against the data in cygwin and still be making notes in Word So when you say no one would buy those systems, I did buy those systems. And I owned a Macbook at the time. Now I'll agree that isn't exactly home use, but I've never owned a "home only system" whatever computer I use for watching movies also has to do professional work.

      And before you say I'm totally a typical... the economic differences between Apple users and Windows users are not that large. median household income Mac = $98,560, PC = $74,452. When you are down at $35k you are starting to hit the population that doesn't own any computers, or one very old one for the whole family. I can see as a greybox store owner, your builds might be catering to this population and that might be giving you a biased view of how broke the average PC user really is. The top 2/3rds of PC people aren't people who can't afford a better computer they are people who just so reason to buy luxury goods in general and their Windows 7 machines are "good enough". That's the group Balmer is going after, to keep their computer business and to get their cellphone and tablet business. The cost might be losing the $35k group but at least if you grant they are in serious danger of losing consumer all together its worth it.

      So the final thing I'd throw at you is I get the impression you disagr

    19. Re:Tablets are great by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I see where the problem is, you think that the OEMs will get that money and you know what? Won't happen and here is why: Apple is X86 too now. the people that spend a $1k+ on a PC, and I do know quite a few, do NOT buy Windows, they buy workstations running Linux or buy Apple, hell I even know a few that went and built Hackentoshes because Apple was being too slow on the Mac pro upgrade and they needed moar power.

      Ultimately look at the ultrabooks, look up their numbers...they aren't selling, people don't want them. Again it would be like what dell did when they stuck an Atom in a rotating screen so it was a conversion tablet and tried to sell it for $650...now you can buy those at places like Geeks for less than half that and they STILL don't sell.

      I think the problem is you seem to be under the impression that by hanging some nicer curtains you can turn Mickey D's into Olive garden and it just don't work that way, believe me I know. I've been working retail PC sales and repair since the early 90s in 3 different states selling to everyone from the kids of one of our governors to Suzy the checkout girl. I've been through the dotbomb, the thinclient fad, the MHz wars, and I've seen what'll sell and what won't sell and you just can't push enough units at $1k a pop to make up for the volume decrease, you just can't do it.

      Lets take the $20 figure, which is probably right about in the center. i personally make from $50-$80 per unit but since i build custom and do the initial setups as well as after the sales service i can get away with more, but $20 is probably typical for an OEM of say Asus size. Now Asus probably sells a good half a million or more of the EEE series, I see those everywhere, the local college kids eat them up like candy, hell i liked them enough i got myself one, they are nice little units. Now if we use the $20 figure (I'd argue there is probably more money in the lower end than we think due to the price of cheap parts, i know that AMD sells the E350 chips at something like $12 and that covers CPU+GPU+NB, so I wouldn't be surprised if they make more than $20 a unit for those EEEs) at a half a million Asus just made $10 million in profits.

      Now we switch to the $1K price point, already your cost for parts has gone WAAAY up as the lowest chip you can probably get away with at that price point is the high end i5s which Intel sells at around $400 a pop for a tray of 1000, and of course you are gonna have to have nicer metal cases, touchscreens (average $175 a pop in bulk for resistive, capacitive more, I've checked), SSDs of decent capacity, so that by the time you are done with the much more expensive parts you really aren't making much more profit, lets say $70 a pop. Now from what I've seen the average high end units only sell around 30k units since again you've just made sure that a large portion of the market simply won't buy from you, so by replacing the EEEs at $450 with an i5 at $1000 you've gone from profits of 10 million to 2.1 million, a net LOSS of 8 million bucks.

      Now I don't know about you but as a retailer i like having customers, and while bumping the price of my AMD triples to $1k might in THEORY equal more money for less work in reality people simply won't pay $1k for the same parts you'd put in a $450 unit, they just won't. again it'd be like you slapping a $100,000 sticker on the new Mustang, how many do you think you'd sell? 1? 20? Certainly not enough units to keep a factory cranking them out as you'd soon end up with warehouses filled with Mustangs you couldn't move which is coming out of YOUR pocket. Then you figure in how small the market for $100,000 cars is and you'll see it can't sustain even a fourth of the companies currently making cars, hell it probably wouldn't even support 1 twentieth the current market.

      In the end the ONLY reason Apple can get away with this is because its a boutique brand, like Prada and Gucci. I know people that have bought iPhones and iPads and don't have a fucking clue what to do with them, in fact they are treated li

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    20. Re:Tablets are great by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is you seem to be under the impression that by hanging some nicer curtains you can turn Mickey D's into Olive garden and it just don't work that way

      No I'm saying if you rip the kitchen and chairs out of a Mickey D's and then redecorate you can still use the walls and floor to have an Olive Garden. You don't have to burn the whole building to the ground. But more importantly I don't think of Windows as Mickey D's. I'd consider myself if anything a bit anti-Microsoft and I don't have nearly as low an opinion as you do. Dynamics is not Oracle Financials but it is a terrific package, and I think every company under 10,000 employees has to consider, not necessarily pick but consider, when choosing an ERP. . Sharepoint is not Documentum but it is a terrific package that allows people to setup rather advanced sharing features really cheaply. SQL server is a very compelling product that for going on 15 years has allowed people without DBA skills to not notice they don't have them while running large databases.

      Going more towards the home market. Office is far and away the best office suite. The NT Kernel is possible second to the Linux kernel in terms of complexity and features but it is head and shoulders above XNU (the OSX kernel). The Visual Studio compiler is bar none the best compiler on the market. I don't even like Microsoft and I don't think of them down where you are putting them.

      I am the Apple customer you are talking about and I consider the better Windows machines. I'd consider Mickey D's to be something like JavaVM-OS (what runs on lots of clock radio type stuff through low end phones), or if you want to focus on systems where people interact with the VM something like Chrome operation system which offers nothing but a browser.

      Same with AMD, they make good processors The 16 core AMD Opteron is a really interesting processor that allows you to run a simple simulation of a few thousands agents cheap. And the 8 core are only a little slower than a high end Xeon for much less. Just to show that do sell in higher end boxes like the HP ProBook 6565, the Samsung series 3, and for business HP Proliant D165,

      I agree with your sales figures in today's market. The high end of the Windows consumer market is dead, dead as a doornail. Where I disagree is that is something intrinsic. I think that happened when Microsoft decided not to bring out the original vision for Longhorn (later Vista) as a higher end OS with XP owning the low end. Instead they constantly ended up pushing Vista down market first by remove two key features (WinFS and Palladium) and later with their "ready for Vista" approach. In other words I think Microsoft chased the low end of the market in both enterprise and consumer. And that's why they lost much high end.

      But the main thing is that its been recent. This is not something that's been true for 10 years. If your negative assessment of Windows were true they wouldn't have been selling high end systems well 5 years ago.

      I agree with the hardware upgrades though I don't think it would be quite so bad as the expectations change. Let me just add to the hardware costs you mentioned:
      -- high quality touch screens
      -- a hinge that allows the touch screen to move relative the keyboard, which is not a cheap part generally about $150

      So we agree there. Now the thing is the sales of 30k exist because Windows consumers would rather buy a $500 PC than a $1000 PC even if the $1000 PC is much better. I'm talking about a situation where the $500 PC option (except for Linux or used) doesn't exist. Where Microsoft shifts the market. Those sales figures wouldn't apply.

      Let me put it THIS way friend...if someone said they would sell the ultimate laptop for you

  8. So you are telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That prerelease software isn't finished yet? No fucking way! I'm shocked!

    1. Re:So you are telling me by HarrySquatter · · Score: 2

      You would have a point if the RTM date for Windows 8 wasn't is in 3 weeks.

    2. Re:So you are telling me by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      They should release it as a public BETA. That's what Apple did for the first year of OS X 10.0. I fondly remember how incomplete it was but how you could port lots of UNIX apps using X windows easily with a few linking switches in the make file. Nobody used it professionally, everyone loved it (except the printing houses, they had a huge investment in OS9 stuff).

      MS could learn from that.

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    3. Re:So you are telling me by LurkerXXX · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's has been available as a public beta for a few months. I tried it out and hated it.

    4. Re:So you are telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should release it as a public BETA. That's what Apple did for the first year of OS X 10.0. I fondly remember how incomplete it was but how you could port lots of UNIX apps using X windows easily with a few linking switches in the make file. Nobody used it professionally, everyone loved it (except the printing houses, they had a huge investment in OS9 stuff).

      MS could learn from that.

      It has been widely available as Beta for quite awhile actually.

    5. Re:So you are telling me by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Uhhh...missed the memo? Here you go friend, help thyself and try it, you'll hate it just as much as we do! BTW just FYI but they've been releasing public betas since Vista and IIRC its good until early next year so more than enough time if you want to use it to port apps.

      But please, don't think those of us who dismiss Win 8 as crap are haters, just do as we did and try it yourself. I've got it set up on an Athlon X2 at the shop and after trying to use it for nearly a month I just gave up, it feels like the thing is fighting me every step of the way and if you aren't a tweeting twit or need FB updates every second it just feels...kinda pointless actually. Again don't take my word, please do try it yourself. There are instructions on how to use VBox or VMWare with Win 8, so it isn't like you have to have a spare box free to give it a go. try it, you'll see why so many of us do not like it.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    6. Re:So you are telling me by DeathFromSomewhere · · Score: 1

      Well that's great because TFA is complaining about the version of the mail app that won't be what ships. We know the one that ships will have IMAP support for example. Also it's in the store so it will probably be iterated on and improved more often then the OS will.

      --
      -1 overrated isn't the same thing as "I disagree".
  9. ship it, then finish it by v1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    THIS is one of MS's biggest problems IMHO.

    Compare that to some of their competitors that will suddenly toss out a fully functional product, available NOW. Not complete and polished maybe, but at least it works acceptably well just out of the gate, and isn't months away from release.

    That crap only works when selling to businesses. If they're going to compete in the private sector they're going to have to get their act straight and get some hustle going.

    Semifunctional products scheduled for release months from now won't compete well with products that work that are available today. You'll either enter the market with few available new customers or catch all sorts of bad PR about needing several patches just to get it working as expected/advertised (or both) like the others already in the market already do.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:ship it, then finish it by Teun · · Score: 1

      That crap only works when selling to businesses. If they're going to compete in the private sector they're going to have to get their act straight and get some hustle going.

      Semifunctional products scheduled for release months from now won't compete well with products that work that are available today

      Who is that competitor you seem to know?
      The past 15 years +99.999% of all PC's come pre-installed with Windows and by that avenue we'll all be made to enjoy this new Genuine Experience.

      Anyhow, I feel the learning curve from XP/Win7 to the Win8 GUI is steeper than to KDE or LXDE.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    2. Re:ship it, then finish it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where you put "private sector" did you mean "consumer market?" Or did you mean something else for "businesses?" As read, this essentially means:

      that crap only works when selling to businesses. If they're going to compete in selling to businesses...

      I swear I'm not trying to be pedantic - I'm just not 100% sure from context what distinction you're drawing here.

    3. Re:ship it, then finish it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is that competitor you seem to know?

      They're called Apple.

      How popular do you think Apple would be if they launched products like Microsoft does?

    4. Re:ship it, then finish it by BevanFindlay · · Score: 1

      The annoying thing is that if you wait for a product to be *ready*, someone beats you to it and you get shafted by the competition. The way the tech industry works now, it's "hit the market early with a basically-functional product, clean it up later once you've captured first-mover advantage". Those who wait around miss out.

      How many companies do you think are kicking themselves they didn't beat the iPad to market? If you get there first, you win - it doesn't matter whether you're better, just that you're first. Microsoft know this, and yes we suffer a bit with rubbish releases, but we wouldn't have Windows 7 if we hadn't had Vista, so yeah.... it sucks, but it's life.

      (Admittedly a mail client is far from "entering the market early", so you are still mostly right - I expect either it's a late-inclusion, or they're going for heavy web integration, or both).

    5. Re:ship it, then finish it by BevanFindlay · · Score: 1

      +99.999%: You may want to work on your maths. :-)

  10. desktop mail client? by Wierdy1024 · · Score: 0

    The general public don't use desktop mail clients...

    They use webmail.

    Geeks use desktop mail clients, and geeks can install their own. I'm surprisedMicrosoft even included a mail client really.

    1. Re:desktop mail client? by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1, Informative

      Where do you work? In cubeland, practically everybody has been forced to use MS Outlook for about 20 years or however long it's been around. If their phone can't use Outlook properly, boy, they in a heap o' trouble.

    2. Re:desktop mail client? by Stormtrooper42 · · Score: 1

      I really don't see the problem:
      Those who use webmail will continue to use webmail.
      Those who use Outlook will continue to use Outlook.

    3. Re:desktop mail client? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      I've been in the silicon valley for the last 25 or so years. not once was I forced to use outlook. I was always allowed to use unix on the desktop (linux, bsd, solaris, even irix) and engineers could choose to use windows/outlook OR use their own workstations email clients if they are unix based.

      managers often are forced to use 'all windows' stuff. I'm not one of those guys, though. in my world, we have been given choices, at least if it mattered to you (I used to insist on qmail on my workstation, but lets not go there, shall we? I got over that in short order.)

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    4. Re:desktop mail client? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Huh? My mother, father, brother, wife and daughter all use email clients. Possibly my influence but I've yet to meet anyone who likes webmail over a client once its been setup for them.

    5. Re:desktop mail client? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's why mail clients came out, after all... you know, mail clients wouldn't have gone anywhere if it weren't for the web apps sucking so bad in the first place.

      Oh, wait...

    6. Re:desktop mail client? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

      agreed.

      my first email was on a vax/vms using one of 3: decmail (ha!), vmsmail or all-in-1 mail. mostly it was vmsmail (what you got from a regular vax account with node::username). I used that for about 6 years (while at DEC) and mail in the 80's and 90's was just fine! it worked, it was fast, it was secure and the only real issues were translation of addresses from public to private internets.

      fast forward to the 90's and early 2000 era. I was still using ELM or maybe mutt. it worked, it was fast, it was secure and it was on every system that I used, in every company I was at.

      finally, fast forward to the web-age and gmail. I had an early adopter gmail acct (in the invite-only days) and I surely gave gmail enough of a chance. I hated it, got burned by it, had to keep up my adblock-element-hider frequently updated by hand (just to get the UI back to where I wanted it after each google 'upgrade'). it was more work than I wanted and got progressively slower and less responsive as the years went on.

      now, I've dumped it. went back to local email (using thunderbird and imap from my own paid isp) and things are as good as they were back when email was still young.

      email is not really a complicated thing and it does not need 'advancement'. the funct that I used 20+ yrs ago is what I still use today. I could even still be happy with ELM and an xterm ;) the web-based shit just doesn't impress me and has caused me to reject 'the cloud' for email use.

      tl;dr: if its not broke, don't re-invent it! 're-writing email systems' has got to the be the stupidest thing you could do, today!

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    7. Re:desktop mail client? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use webmail.

      This. The Slashdot groupthink will deny it, but that's the usage reality on the ground. Last numbers I saw were from a year or two ago, but had something over 70% of all email going through web mail services, by far the biggest of which was gmail. However, ALL email is declining at the rate of 8 to 12% per year, as people move to other services. The decline is fastest among the younger demographic: in the 12-18 age bracket, email use is declining by 24% per year.

      Even Thunderbird is scaling back development in the face of web mail. No app you have to install and configure can beat the convenience of just loading a web page, and having your email available anywhere, from any computer, or any phone, at any time, all backed up for you by Google.

      The average person doesn't use Outlook or Thunderbird, they use gmail. The use of dedicated mail programs is a niche now - it still exists, but it's overwhelmed by the usage of web mail these days.

    8. Re:desktop mail client? by sqrt(2) · · Score: 1

      Almost every Mac user uses Mail.app, and anyone with an iOS device who uses it for e-mail does too, and anyone who works in an office probably uses MS Office including Outlook Mail.

      --
      If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
    9. Re:desktop mail client? by tftp · · Score: 1

      tl;dr: if its not broke, don't re-invent it! 're-writing email systems' has got to the be the stupidest thing you could do, today!

      The fashion industry reinvents itself every year by cyclically going through old designs and selling them as the new thing. The pendulum of "thick clients" vs. "thin clients" is well known in the computer industry. Reinventing things is necessary to create new markets and fill them with new products. A smartphone allowed telecom companies to sell $100/mo plans with extra charges where previously a $25/mo plan was seen as an overkill. A smartphone is nothing but a new Tamagotchi that you are expected to continually buy software for and pay for the connectivity, and listen to its every beep. But in the end it is not more valuable than the original Tamagotchi or a pet rock.

      Indeed people are tired of the endless race, and when Microsoft reinvents Windows all they get is angry complaints. This is because the new Windows does not solve almost any new problem, but it creates lots of problems out of thin air. Progress is good, but humanity would be better off if MS would stop at Windows 7, continue to maintain it, and if they are that anxious to do something new they can create a new product, call it "Glass" or something, and promote that, completely separately and without messing with millions of users of Windows.

    10. Re:desktop mail client? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I used all-in-one myself. Very nice system for the 80s. Its a pity that DEC just like Nokia moved themselves from having a rich product to just trying to be a Microsoft OEM. I also was a very long term elm and then pine user. I always used to admire the people who used emacs mail which was so feature rich. I resisted moving to an HTML enabled email client for a long time but eventually far too high a percentage of my emails had rich content or attachments.

      I think rich clients are the best of both worlds. I've been using yahoo mail for like 15 years now as my personal email. I have a rich client, but if something goes wrong logging on directly has been a big plus.

    11. Re:desktop mail client? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of your comment but not your assessment of Windows 8. Microsoft did not create the situation of everyone having a cell phone with rich content on it. Microsoft did not create the situation of this cell phone requiring a whole slew of SaS services. Microsoft did not create the situation of these SaS services being better used mobile and managed from a desktop. That is a genuine new problem which didn't exist a decade before. The same way that in the 1990s the possibilities of WAN based applications via. the browser introduced new problems or the same way that the shift to 64 bit processors introduced new problems that required the shift to .NET. Microsoft cannot keep offering the same product forever even if they wanted to. Staying still would be to effectuate change.

      The new problem that Microsoft is addressing with Windows 8 is this list which is new:
      a) Every consumer owns a smartphone for every person loaded with apps and rich content.
      b) A large number want to use tablets that are ARM (low power, low functionality CPUs) with very high battery life and touch based
      c) A large number want to use tablets plus keyboard to be able to do work
      d) Virtually every consumer wants a laptop, a full featured portable personal system with a high functionality CPU.
      e) Virtually every consumer needs a workplace computer, which is either a desktop or laptop. Many want to be able to do some level of sharing between their workplace and home systems either work on a BYOD or access home services from a workplace computer. This frequently is addressed by virtualization i.e. guest operating systems in addition to their native operating systems.

      The problem that Microsoft / Windows 8 is addressing is that society does not want the cost and integration expenses of (a)-(e) evolving into 5 totally separate technology infrastructures. That is a real problem and it is new. This isn't something Microsoft created or that Windows 7 is capable of addressing. Someone may agree or disagree with the Metro approach to solving this problem, but I don't think it is reasonable to argue that no problem exists.

    12. Re:desktop mail client? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac users use a desktop mail app that also connects to webmail. The line is sufficiently blended that most users don't even know the strengths of a desktop client UNTIL they only have webmail.

    13. Re:desktop mail client? by BevanFindlay · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. A lot of customers I had to work with would use their ISP-assigned email address and whatever mail client shipped with the machine (or was most readily available - Windows Live Mail, for example... bleck). It would be nice if these people used webmail, because then they'd not suffer quite so bad from catastrophic HDD failure. (Joe Average user not backing up is a good argument for the cloud, incidentally).

      Also, if you get at all rural (I live in New Zealand and worked at a shop that served rural customers), webmail is not an option if you're on dial-up, trust me.

  11. Shame that Mozilla gave up on thunderbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They could of took the opportunity to say don't like your Windows mail client, switch to Thunderbird.

    1. Re:Shame that Mozilla gave up on thunderbird by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Could be a good chance for them to shift back some of their team if by some weird streak of fate, Win8 is actually popular. I mean, it *is* Friday the 13th after all. Weirder shit has happened, like Apple becoming popular again and rising from the grave.

      Next thing we know, a temporal vortex will open up and WinMe will be a fantastic OS.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  12. Re:So you're telling me by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    people still use email clients!?

    I certainly do. Best way for me to manage my multiple email accounts with multiple servers.

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  13. Not a "Mail" app, but a hotmail/livemail/xbox app by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's obviously been designed for use with Microsoft services and less as a generic mail app. Most people use web based email clients anyway. Desktop email clients seem like an unnecessary complexity nowadays.

    I'm sure google will have their own mail tile.

    Everyone else? Well, Thunderbird may still have some life in it yet..

  14. Know your strengths by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    The only reason people look at Microsoft is to use the desktop software and GUI's they know like the back of their hand. MS is NOT going to be able to compete on technology alone because they are behind that curve. If they can't give you a mobile version that works like the MS desktop and Office, they are hosed.

  15. Developer and PM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Developer: Almost done, another day or so!
    PM: Great!
    Developer: Oh shit, it's going to be another 3 weeks

  16. Re:So you're telling me by lymond01 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Like Star Trek, every other number is good. Starting, in Microsoft's case, with X. Or something.

  17. Quit whinging already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least the tablet will ship with something resembling an email app. Some tablets didn't. Can you believe it?!

    There might be a lesson to be learnt. Look what happens to companies that don't ship basic apps with their tablet.

  18. What's the issue? by Haxagon · · Score: 1

    I don't think it's the version going to be included in gold, is it? Besides, who gives a fuck?
    It's a god damn Microsoft mail client, if you're at that level, you probably don't need much more than "hurr press button it sends email".

    1. Re:What's the issue? by HarrySquatter · · Score: 1

      How much do you expect them to change in 3 weeks? Or did you miss the fact that RTM was the first week of August?

    2. Re:What's the issue? by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      What they include in RTM isn't set in stone. It will be updated with all your other apps through the marketplace. But I agree with Haxagon: aren't there 10000 email clients out there? If you don't like the one shipped with your system, use another.

    3. Re:What's the issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you missed the fact that the release preview was put out six weeks ago. They're not pushing out every new build during that time to end users.

    4. Re:What's the issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why only 3 weeks? The preview came out in may, and the preview was new to MS at the time. by my calculation that gives them somewhere in the order of 3 months not 3 weeks and I would expect a LOT can change in that time, especially as it is an app rather than a core OS component.

    5. Re:What's the issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You DON'T know anything about the art of programming if you think 3 months will make a difference.
      Software with the functionality of Microsoft's own Outlook, or Mozilla Thunderbird, or OS X's Mail, or gmail don't suddenly appear from another dimension with all the necessary features by magic.

      You can't make a SHITTY mail client great with 3 months of work. It is simply NOT possible at all. There isn't a programming language or method in the world that would be productive enough to let you do such a thing.

  19. gmail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares about the Windows mail program? Just use gmail, and forget about that shit.

    1. Re:gmail by bloodhawk · · Score: 1

      I don't know how anyone can stand the shit interfaces of gmail,hotmail, yahoo etc. even the metro mail is a step up from them. regardless their are a ton of good email clients out their that have the features whined about in the article, and for the majority that don't give a crap about them they will continue to use whatever is installed on their machine of choice.

  20. Who really cares, though? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    With even Microsoft's own Outlook trying to migrate to online/cloud/browser-based solutions, who even cares about stand-alone email clients at this point? This program isn't intended for much more than checking your AOL email; even my POP-only ISP email account has more/better functionality through the web interface.

    Don't forget that Vista's mail client was deprecated practically from day one, and 7 didn't even ship with an email client.

  21. Shooting of their own feet by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

    Whelp, there goes a big toe...

    1. Re:Shooting of their own feet by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 2

      Whelp, there goes a big toe...

      A corporation without leaders is like a foot without a big toe. And Steve Ballmer isn't always gonna be here to be that big toe for us. I think that we owe a big round of applause to our newest, bestest buddy, and big toe... Steve Ballmer.

    2. Re:Shooting of their own feet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guy kind of looks like a toe.

  22. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So either

    TOS
    (No TNG) -- ROFL
    DS9
    Enterprise -- ROFL

    or TNG
    Voyager -- ROFL
    ???

    Rethink your position :p

  23. Re:So you're telling me by kirbysuperstar · · Score: 2

    That saying is about the movies, not the series.

  24. windows 8 mail client by chentiangemalc · · Score: 2

    I've been using the Windows 8 mail client instead of outlook on my MacBook Air with my exchange email for a few weeks and mostly like it. It reads mail/sends mail, is bloody fast, never hangs or slows down. That being said 1) it's a beta product 2) it does have the option to provide feedback to Microsoft within the app It is short on some features, I await final release to pass final judgement.

  25. Re:So you're telling me by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I converted back from web-based shit email (had enough of google's mail, yahoo's mail and all the rest of the big CRAP mail ui's they throw at us) and I went back to thunderbird. have been loving it for the last year or so, now. its great. local typing, no lost stuff, no hangs, no delays, no network-reachability issues or timeouts, no ads, no jscript, no worries about blocking and maintenance.

    my life is a whole lot simpler using good old IMAP and local email pulled down.

    the cloud can go fuck itself ;) I'm back with local apps and enjoying the speed of my machine and a *stable* UI experience.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  26. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like Star Trek, every other number is good. Starting, in Microsoft's case, with X. Or something.

    KHAAAAAAAN disagrees with this statement and as such hereby unsubscribes to your newsletter!

  27. Re:So you're telling me by nzac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    The thing about vista almost everyone who ended up with, spent money upgrading to 7 because it fixed everything.

  28. Shocking! by MetaDragon · · Score: 1

    A free e-mail client from a for profit company doesn't support every feature that users could want?! Why does everybody think they should get first class quality software for free these days?

    1. Re:Shocking! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Maybe because the paid for it and it was not free?
      I'm not sure why you think windows 8 is free.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Shocking! by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      1. You're paying for the features of Windows 8.
      2. Windows 8 Mail is an included feature of Windows 8.

      Sounds an awful lot like it's not a free email client.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    3. Re:Shocking! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      awww... are your having your open sores outbreak again?

    4. Re:Shocking! by MetaDragon · · Score: 1

      I never said Windows 8 was free. I said the bundled mail client was. Unless you want me to believe that the mail client is a core component of the operating system and not a candy coating freebie to entice casual users who couldn't care less about the features of a full mail client to purchase windows?

    5. Re:Shocking! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha! Old school Trollgrove back in the cut! TROLL EM' HARD, BOY!

  29. No IMAP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Doesn't support IMAP? Whaaaaaa? How in the hell can they forget that?

    Designer: "Hey boss! We finished the new model of sedan for next week's unveiling!"
    Boss: "Great! Show me!"
    Designer: "It's got a great interior, class leading power, even cheaper than the competition! And the milage? It's great!"
    Boss: "That's awesome news! Hey, where's the steering wheel?"
    Designer: "Steering wheel? Wait, the car's supposed to turn?"
    Boss: "...uh, yeah. They all do that. And kind of need to."
    Designer: "...crap! I knew we forgot something!"

    1. Re:No IMAP? by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      POP3 is the standalone-ish way of handling mail. Microsoft misses that standalone time very much.

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    2. Re:No IMAP? by funkboy · · Score: 1

      Well, hotmail^W live mail doesn't support IMAP either, so no big surprise there...

    3. Re:No IMAP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't support POP3 either, according to TFA.

  30. vs Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who ships a smart phone without MMS support and is praised as an "innovator".

  31. Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to add by nzac · · Score: 1

    They are still supporting it they just killed the dev team who were adding features that added a little bloat* but failed to increase market-share as TB is still not outlook.

    What do you need in a mail client seriously? It has more features than pretty much everything else excluding the exchange stuff.

  32. It really does suck by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    I am not the only one who has noticed it.

    Basically you do not need METRO at all to experience. Go open IE and then do fullscreen at www.hotmail.com and that is it. It is not even an app more than a container. The news app sucks on Metro as well but not quite as badly.

    It really is bare knuckles with fullscreen IE 10 instances. iOS got it right with its version of apps having toolbars, tabs, and other features. The safari for my dad's ipad is identical to the desktop version except for a few menu items.

    1. Re:It really does suck by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The safari for my dad's ipad is identical to the desktop version except for a few menu items.

      Try opening more than 10 tabs in it.

    2. Re:It really does suck by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Try opening more than 10 tabs in it.

      The best thing about lots of tabs is how they all bunch together until you have no idea which tab is which.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:It really does suck by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      There are many ways to handle this. One is to start scrolling the tab bar at some point - it's actually pretty convenient with touch, just swipe back & forth. Another, which is what Chrome for Android uses on phones rather than tablets, is to use a "card stack" model instead.

  33. Outlook Express by rueger · · Score: 1

    Reality Check - however much we may love our various e-mail tools (I'm a g-mail man myself, 'cause it works well with my Linux box and my Android phone) Joe Average user is in a different camp.

    They don't want to change e-mail clients every year or two. I'd love to know how many Outlook Express installs are still out there. For many, many people it has been Good Enough for - ten years? Especially for the millions still using Windows XP.

    I recently moved my Girlfriend from OE to Windows Live Mail (that is, the desktop version of Windows Live E-mail, not the web version) and have to say that it was not an easy transition. After that experience I'd think long and hard before moving to another MS client.

    (Always found Outlook more irritating than useful, but that's my taste. Fondly remember Pegasus Mail when it was the pinnacle of e-mail clients.)

    1. Re:Outlook Express by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Outlook Express is a pain to move from, but Windows Live is not as much so.

      Of course, Outlook Express is very very very old.

    2. Re:Outlook Express by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Live Mail is Outlook Express with a ribbon interface, and a useless search. No other difference.

  34. Re:So you're telling me by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Funny

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    The thing about vista almost everyone who ended up with, spent money upgrading to 7 because it fixed everything.

    Yep, a Win win for Microsoft.

    I'll get me coat.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  35. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hasta la Vista baby.

  36. Re:So you're telling me by bmo · · Score: 2

    people still use email clients!?

    Sure! Why the fuck not?

    Google and Yahoo both support IMAP. If I'm not interested in doing it through a shitty Java webmail client, I can fire up T-Bird, Claws, M2, Pine, Alpine, and any other MUA that supports IMAP and get the job done.

    It allows me to use real editors, complex filtering, flagging, foldering, archiving, etc. It makes sending encrypted mail a whole heck of a lot easier.

    Why aren't you using an IMAP MUA to connect to your webmail?

    --
    BMO

  37. Re:So you're telling me by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's about the movies, not the series. Please turn in your geek card.

    It's not entirely accurate, at least IMO, but it's pretty close:
    1) ST:TMP - boring, boring crap
    2) Wrath of Khan - probably best ST movie ever, though the bit about a nebula being a short distance from a planet at sublight speed irks me.
    3) Search for Spock - underrated IMO, not as good as II and IV but not horrible.
    4) Voyage Home - great
    5) so horrible that many fans disclaim its existence; William Shatner directed this abomination, but never again directed a major motion picture
    6) Undiscovered Country - excellent
    7) Generations - big disappointment, though not nearly as bad as ST5
    8) First Contact - excellent, great triumph for director Jonathan Frakes (Riker)
    9) Insurrection - pretty disappointing, esp. since it was also directed by Frakes and didn't measure up at all to First Contact
    10) Nemesis - this is where the trend totally breaks down, because it's even-numbered but it sucked. It had some great visuals and effects (I liked the part about Picard piloting the small Reman ship), but otherwise it was pretty lame. This movie was also a big flop and ended the whole Star Trek movie franchise for a while until it was rebooted with entirely new actors in JJ Abram's movie (and upcoming sequel).

  38. Re:It's a Richard Stallman & Monty Python refe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the other coward is suggesting that Microsoft is selling Win8 in the same manner a pet store owner will sell a dead bird ? And it's all somehow tied down to the ravings of our ( \. ) favourite programmer \ loon ?

    You see, this is how you ruin a joke...

  39. Please no more Monty Python. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Dead.

    1. Re:Please no more Monty Python. by H0p313ss · · Score: 2

      My tablet is full of WebKit.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  40. the real question here is... by logicassasin · · Score: 1

    ... Did Microsoft ever get around to fixing the "begin xxxx.xxx.scr/exe/whatever" bug in their basic email client?

    --
    Fifty watts per channel, baby cakes.
  41. Re:Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to by jbolden · · Score: 1

    I've use mail.app for compatability and Thunderbird as a secondary client.

    1) The encryption stuff should not be such a pain. It should be on and self configure by default.
    2) Task manager integrated into calendaring. Preferably allowing for task assignment. If you really want to push workflow (i.e. john should be able to read this hit approve and the email forwards to Suzie automatically with John's approval).
    3) Digital signing
    4) Labeling / tagging, integrated with gmail for gmail IMAP.
    5) Twitter, evernote, linkedin... feeds and uploads
    6) Link large files i.e. large files get replaced with links off a webdav and/or dropbox.
    7) automatic multiple RE: Fwd reductions
    etc..

  42. See when I open it.. by Severus+Snape · · Score: 1

    It says "APP PREVIEW"

    What a stupid article.

  43. Re:Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    What do you need in a mail client seriously? It has more features than pretty much everything else excluding the exchange stuff.

    These, for starters:

    • Built-in PGP support
    • Built-in anonymous remailer support
    • Built-in uuencode support
    • Built-in support for hashcash
    • Built-in support for syncing with my tablet offline (i.e. without an Internet connection)
    --
    Palm trees and 8
  44. Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by cryptizard · · Score: 4, Informative

    It only lets you set up accounts for Exchange, Hotmail and Gmail right now, but it definitely does support IMAP. If you add a Gmail account to it and then disable POP retrieval it still works. Disable IMAP and it suddenly doesn't. I imagine they will add the option for arbitrary servers before it gets released, but even if they don't it will satisfy 98% of the people that use it (those without Outlook and who don't know what Thunderbird is).

    1. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It only lets you set up accounts for Exchange, Hotmail and Gmail right now, but it definitely does support IMAP.

      No, it supports Exchange, Hotmail and Gmail. If you tell me "supports IMAP" I'd better be able to point it at my IMAP server and have it work or you're a goddamn liar.

    2. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My web browser definitely supports HTTP but it only lets me visit MSN.com and NOIMAP.com. I imagine there will be a fix to let me visit any website some day.

    3. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Did you forget your medication this morning? If you switch off IMAP and email stops working it's using IMAP.

      If someone making a simple observation results in you throwing a tantrum then your a goddamn baby. Diddums.

    4. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by cryptizard · · Score: 1

      I was just saying it is disingenuous for the summary to imply that it doesn't support IMAP. That is factually wrong. If you want to complain about it not supporting custom servers then that is fine, but it was obviously a calculated decision made by Microsoft and not, as the summary would like you to believe, the result of lazy or incompetent developers.

    5. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      I was just saying it is disingenuous for the summary to imply that it doesn't support IMAP. That is factually wrong.

      That is factually right. It doesn't support IMAP. It uses certain aspects of IMAP, but it doesn't support it.

    6. Re:Summy wrong, it does use IMAP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Via the IMAP protocol. You're a goddamn pedant.

  45. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was the even numbers that were the better ones. Pretty much was valid until Nemesis laughed at it though.

  46. Re:So you're telling me by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "no lost stuff, no hangs, no delays, no network-reachability issues or timeouts, no ads, no jscript, no worries about blocking and maintenance"
    which describes my gmail experience.
    With the added bonus I can access it anywhere.

    You? you're pretty much a slashdot hipster.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  47. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows ME revisited in 3...2..1

  48. Re:So you're telling me by geekoid · · Score: 0

    1) No, it wasn't. It required you to think..so maybe is was boring to you.
    2) there is nothing wrong with that. statement in the context of a ST universe.
    3) Enjoyable
    4) Sucked.
    5) Yes, crap
    6) fine, but hardly excellent
    7) as bad as 5
    8) You're kidding me, right? It wasn't only mediocre, it was insulting to the fans.
    9) bad as First Contact
    10) stinko.

    I thing you are letting your predetermined bias of "ONly the even number are good" influence you decision. Calling 8 excellent kind of backs that up.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  49. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that and the financial sector... Both are rewarded for failures.

  50. Re:So you're telling me by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    I agree. Every other roll out MS has done was a money grab. 98 should have been 98SE, ME should have been XP. Vista should have been 7. I have been telling people for a year to avoid 8 until it is 8+ or whatever. Of course they would avoid using "+" on anything because it might bring Google to mind... but if history is any gauge 8 will suck so hard you'll need a CRT to avoid screen puckering.

    --
    You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
  51. Re:So you're telling me by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Informative

    You have your opinions, but most Star Trek fans don't share them, as evidenced by reviews and box-office figures. ST1 didn't do that well. ST6 and 8 both did well. ST4 got great reviews and is easily the most popular of all the ST movies.

    BTW, there's nothing about watching endless footage of the Enterprise slowly going into a giant cloud, with some wacky 70s sound effects, that "requires you to think". It's just boring.

  52. You've got to be kidding me.... by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

    This comes on the heels of Ballmer saying that Microsoft will no longer allow Apple to out innovate them? A mail client that doesn't even support IMAP? Apple's Mail application isn't the best but at least you can connect to Exchange servers and connect to Gmail over SSL. So do any number of Linux based mail systems. I like having a desktop client to cobble together my gmail, yahoo and corporate mail all in the one box. I suspect that a lot of others do too. They have to get this fixed. I want MS to succeed, I really do, but it's gaffes like this that have Windows ME and Vista written all over it. Although we should all know better by now. MS has a history of unfulfilled promises when it comes to operating systems so it should come as no surprise. I think Metro can work on a tablet. I've seen it on phones and it looks pretty cool. But for the desktop? I've got grave reservations and without even a proper email client it's dead in the water as far as I'm concerned.

  53. Re:So you're telling me by fotoguzzi · · Score: 1

    Re: ST:TMP: I just remember that the scenes were so dark that you couldn't tell what was going on. When I went, the movie was projected through a dusty window. Not sure if it would have been easier to clean the window or just open up the film camera a couple of stops when they shot the movie.

    --
    Their they're doing there hair.
  54. Re:So you're telling me by wicka_wicka · · Score: 1

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    Thanks for being explicitly clear about what you mean. People are continually comparing Windows 8 to Vista in completely insane ways, but this is one example I can agree with. It feels like Microsoft are rushing a lot of what they do these days. I mean, shit, I owned a Zune, I currently own a Windows Phone, and I love both. I think Metro is a great UI and has huge potential on tablets (I tried the beta on my desktop, and while it's surprisingly decent with a mouse/keyboard, I'm still not optimistic). But they really need to make sure it gets the appropriate level of polish before they put it out to market. I'll just sum it up this way: they can't expect to deal with the tablet or desktop market the same way they've dealt with the Windows Phone 7 to 8 transition and expect to have any level of success.

    --
    hi
  55. Re:So you're telling me by LurkerXXX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You? Your pretty much a 'I only use google products' hipster.

    Lots of us have many mail accounts, and many/most/all of them are not with Google. A good mail client is invaluable when you use many mail servers.

  56. Re:Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exchange support.

  57. Metro anything sounds awful by istartedi · · Score: 1

    I haven't even seen Metro, and I've heard nothing but complaints about it.

    Metro sounds like a... wait for it... train wreck.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:Metro anything sounds awful by elabs · · Score: 1

      I love metro! People don't always use it to its potential but when they do it's incredible.

    2. Re:Metro anything sounds awful by ninjacut · · Score: 1

      Exactly, only non-users seem to make bold predictions of Windows 8. The OS is absolute pleasure to use, and great improvement even over the established Win7. Microsoft is doing a great job this year.

    3. Re:Metro anything sounds awful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For all INTENTS AND PURPOSES

    4. Re:Metro anything sounds awful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an intellectual vaccuum. If you don't care then don't comment. If you care enough to comment, at least do a goddam google search to see what it looks like. Your opinion is beheath meaningless.

  58. Re:So you're telling me by jackbird · · Score: 2

    Using Thunderbird to pull down GMail through IMAP, you get the best of both worlds.

  59. Re:So you're telling me by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

    Best way for me to manage my multiple email accounts with multiple servers

    Just fyi, several mail accounts (Gmail, Google accounts mail) can be opened simultaneously in different tabs, in the same browser.

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  60. EPIC MEGAFAILFEST by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Win8 makes ME, Vista, Clippy, Bob and even GFWL seem like well-thought-out good ideas in comparison.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  61. Redmond has determined by gelfling · · Score: 1

    That everything will of course be in the cloud-social media collective. They have determined you don't want or need a functioning email client. And the scales will fall from the eyes of the usual fanbois and cheerleaders who suddenly gush with the paid for epiphany that Redmond was right all along and a new paradigm of computing is upon us.

    1. Re:Redmond has determined by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      That everything will of course be in the cloud-social media collective. They have determined you don't want or need a functioning email client.

      What does being in the cloud have to do with having a functioning email client? I have a functioning email client, and yet I can still access my email from a web browser if I wanted (I could also poke my eyes out too)

    2. Re:Redmond has determined by gelfling · · Score: 1

      They're returning to everything being on the web. They just call it something different now.

  62. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since when does Yahoo support IMAP? They make you pay 19.95 a year for POP3

  63. Re:So you're telling me by couchslug · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thunderbird gets rid of the webmail UI and other bullshit quite nicely.

    Portable works great on Windows and backing up the whole program folder to DVD for portable archive love is easy.

    If I switch ISPs, no problem.

    Cross-platform too.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  64. Re:So you're telling me by Teresita · · Score: 5, Funny

    Windows 1.0 the Motion Picture: Lame. No support for the V'Ger graphics adaptor.

    Windows 2.0 the Wrath of Copy Con: Good. First overlapping windows allows you to hide your ploy to drop Reliant's shields from the superior intellect.

    Windows 3.1 the Search for WinSock: Lame. Program manager was clunky, the program group icons were all the same and not configurable. Look at it sideways and it crashed faster than the USS Enterprise on the Genesis planet.

    Windows 4 (95) the Voyage to Start: Great. Established a GUI paradigm copied by KDE, Gnome, and many others.

  65. Why is this a suprise? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Windows 1.xx-2.xx - Crap
    Windows 3.11 Good
    Windows 95 - Crap
    Windows 98 - good
    windows ME - Crap
    Windows XP Good
    Windows Vista Crap
    Windows 7 Good
    Windows 8 ....

    No I dont count NT and 2000 in there because those are Professional OS's and they both rocked.. 2000 Was better than 98 by a long shit because of the security and pro features. Problem is Windows 8 is a consumer home OS not a Professional OS.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Why is this a suprise? by gtall · · Score: 1

      How many fucking times does this list need to be repeated on Slashdot?

  66. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    I agree. Every other roll out MS has done was a money grab. 98 should have been 98SE, ME should have been XP. Vista should have been 7. I have been telling people for a year to avoid 8 until it is 8+ or whatever. Of course they would avoid using "+" on anything because it might bring Google to mind... but if history is any gauge 8 will suck so hard you'll need a CRT to avoid screen puckering.

    And How!!! Windows ME was an attempt to lighten 98 and push new technology. It pushed alright...itself out the door. I actually bought ME too. Traded it for Unreal Tournament G.O.T.Y. Best move in technology I've made thus far. And, I'm a Systems Admin

    Vista/7 = Yep...same deal.

    I don't mind M$ being around at all though...they keep food on the table!!! Which were words used to me when I just despised of them. Anyways, it's also Bill's thoughts...mo money, mo money, mo money!

  67. Re:So you're telling me by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    That's funny, it was actually my experience that Win95 crashed faster than the Enterprise on the Genesis planet, whereas Win3.1 was fairly stable. I even refused to upgrade to Win95 or Win98 until I decided to switch to Linux because I got so annoyed about my Win95/98 computer at work crashing several times a day.

  68. Re:So you're telling me by Teckla · · Score: 1

    I converted back from web-based shit email (had enough of google's mail, yahoo's mail and all the rest of the big CRAP mail ui's they throw at us) and I went back to thunderbird. have been loving it for the last year or so, now. its great. local typing, no lost stuff, no hangs, no delays, no network-reachability issues or timeouts, no ads, no jscript, no worries about blocking and maintenance.

    my life is a whole lot simpler using good old IMAP and local email pulled down.

    the cloud can go fuck itself ;) I'm back with local apps and enjoying the speed of my machine and a *stable* UI experience.

    I use Gmail (the web-based interface), but once a week, use Portable Thunderbird + IMAP to ensure I have a local backup.

    Thunderbird's UI is...OK. It tends to hang up a lot (I get the old, "Thunderbird (Not Responding)" in the caption a lot.) They seem to have some UI problems, letting the UI thread get hung up for too long.

    Of course, I wouldn't expect a non-tech geek to be able to figure out this setup...

  69. The bigger point: Win 8 *has* a mail client... by funkboy · · Score: 1

    Previously windows users either had to buy Outlook or go download something else like Thunderbird or whatever.

    No, Outlook Express doesn't count...

    1. Re:The bigger point: Win 8 *has* a mail client... by chrismcb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, Outlook Express doesn't count...

      Why not? it is better than those other two you mentioned.

    2. Re:The bigger point: Win 8 *has* a mail client... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Why not? it is better than those other two you mentioned."

      Not better than Thunderbird if you want portability and the easiest backup (copy the program folder) of any email client.

      I install it on Windows whether or not the goal is "USB drive portability".

      http://portableapps.com/apps/internet/thunderbird_portable/

      Just copy the program folder and your backup is ready to run elsewhere. Even my non-geek friends like it since it's easy for them to use. It's easy for them to archive too. Burn the program folder to DVD and a sync later on won't trash your archive even if you deleted messages from the server.

      Sure, you can export messages from a conventional client for backup, but then you have to import them to read them. Too much like work for me.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  70. This is the area MS really fails out consistantly by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

    MS just cant seem to get it through their heads that they need to provide a complete experience that is solid.

    They are scared to because they think everyone will file a lawsuit against them. Its why Media player sucks, why an email program doesnt ship with windows 7... and why windows 8 will fail if MS keeps doing this to themselves.

  71. Re:So you're telling me by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    Technically Yahoo supports IMAP on mobile devices BUT not on desktop clients! Even if you are a paying customer.

    Yahoo sucks.

    i.e.
    http://img361.imageshack.us/img361/443/yahoovsgoogle1996to2005ys4.png

  72. So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Newsflash: Windows 7 didnt even come with an email client.

  73. Re:Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two things. First, give postbox a try. I'm using the old 2.5 version but I really like it (commercial tbird fork). It does most of that list (suspiciously so...maybe we're both undercover postbox employees).

    Second, why do so many people want a calendar in their mail client? Communication between different a calendar and a mail app I understand for things like invites. However, if you want the enterprise level features that come with Exchange/Outlook, just use them.

    I am correct.

  74. Really...? by Brawlking · · Score: 1

    So you people really think they are going to release the OS without a decent mail Client/App or some 3rd party replacement in place? And I thought my dog was stupid...

    1. Re:Really...? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      What makes you think MS would ship an OS with an email app in place? It's not like Win7 ships with one, so evidently your dog is stupid.

    2. Re:Really...? by Brawlking · · Score: 1

      No one has ever shipped an OS (not even Microsoft) without some viable way to get your Email... Why would they do it now?

    3. Re:Really...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 7 doesn't ship with a mail client. You can go download one in Windows Live or some nonsense, but good luck explaining that to granny who wants to check her emails in the interwebs.

  75. Re:Not a "Mail" app, but a hotmail/livemail/xbox a by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    Desktop email clients seem like an unnecessary complexity nowadays.

    For vanishingly small levels of complexity.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  76. Re:So you're telling me by vux984 · · Score: 2

    Just fyi, several mail accounts (Gmail, Google accounts mail) can be opened simultaneously in different tabs, in the same browser.

    Thanks (and useful in a pinch), but no thanks. I don't want to work like that.

  77. Re:This is the area MS really fails out consistant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's why Apple gave Office to Microsoft.

  78. Re:So you're telling me by SurfsUp · · Score: 1

    Hear, hear. Gmail is the best of the webmailers and it still sucks ass.

    --
    Life's a bitch but somebody's gotta do it.
  79. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a lot I do like about win8, but I agree with you. We don't need a shitty email client. We don't want to move backwards. Mind you, there are always other email options, such as Thunderbird, which do an okay job. I suppose Outlook is an option too, but it's focus is too narrow.

  80. Still stuck with The Metro by k(wi)r(kipedia) · · Score: 1

    Maybe Microsoft is adapting the old "First they laugh at you" strategy. Say Windows 8 fails or fails to succeed on the scale of 7. But by the time 9 comes out, people would have been so used to The Metro interface that they'll just sigh and accept it for what it is, a dumbed down desktop UI for the smartphone generation.

    Win7 didn't introduce any great UI changes from Vista. Win9 is likely going to be an enhanced version of 8.

    1. Re:Still stuck with The Metro by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

      Win7 didn't introduce any great UI changes from Vista. Win9 is likely going to be an enhanced version of 8.

      The completely redesigned taskbar was pretty big, and a great UI improvement. I can't stand to use older versions of Windows now. In some ways, it's even better than Apple's Expose.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
  81. Re:So you're telling me by hobarrera · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, you get the worst of both worlds. Deleting/moving emails in thunderbird will have unpredictable consecuences in gmail, and you're likely to see the same email in diferent mailboxes (folders in thunderbird, tags in gmail).

    You'll see gmail mailboxes as [GMAIL] in thunderbird, and the thunderbird ones in [IMAP], and have plenty more issues.

  82. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alpine FTW.

  83. Re:So you're telling me by Kjella · · Score: 1

    I agree. Every other roll out MS has done was a money grab. 98 should have been 98SE, ME should have been XP. Vista should have been 7.

    I don't really mind as long as they release products that are better than the last one. 98 was better than 95 so fair enough IMO, even though SE came shortly after. Vista was a "had to ship" release, it was 5 years since XP and they couldn't wait another 3 years for it to be Win7. But WinME... yeah, that's what computers run in hell. Not the one Satan and the devils use of course, but all those for the (soon to be) tormented souls. And there's a full library with every flavor of Linux, but the USB ports are all glued shut and there's no optical drive. Oddly enough, the user support is still the same service outsourced to Hydrabad...

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  84. Re:So you're telling me by jackbird · · Score: 2

    I don't see that with the Google Apps for Business account I read through TBird at home and webmail when I'm not. There's one extra [GMail] folder in the inbox tree, but once you click it open, it stays open forever.

    My GMail tags are interpreted as folders by Thunderbird, and my Thunderbird folders show up as tags in GMail.

    I have seen nightmare scenarios with Mega-multi-subfoldered Outlook inbox trees becoming a wall of impenetrable garbage when imported to GMail with the poorly-supported (and non-free!) Google Apps Sync for Outlook plugin. Is that what you're thinking of?

  85. Re:So you're telling me by joocemann · · Score: 1

    Sort by author. I bet your life that you can't.

    Basic feature, not present. Ooh! Dat google logo make noise an I can clikkit!

    Google made a moog dedicated web audio interface.... gmail still lacks basic features. Trash company. Nacho cheese quality products for the "always owned chinese products" low expectation generation.

  86. Re:So you're telling me by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    I have multiple web email accounts, and most of them aren't google.

  87. Re:So you're telling me by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

    1) No, it was boring because it was boring. Did you know that the cameras used to film this movie were the same ones used to film the iconic shots in Bay Watch?

    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  88. Re:So you're telling me by joocemann · · Score: 1

    That's because everything google does is half baked.

    Do no evil? Do nothing well! (Except search)

  89. PINE-ing? by xenoc_1 · · Score: 0

    Windows 8 mail leaves users Pining

    I see what you did there.

  90. Use GMail ... It works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'Nough said 'Dano.

    Oooops!

    Did M$ remember to install ipconfig and all support files!!!!!!!!!!!

    Balmer ... that bastard! They ... did not!

    What a riot!

    Oh well. W8 will be the Vista of the 'London' Whales for sure.

    M$ and Balmer will loose butt loads on this catastrophe.

    But that is on par for M$.

    PS. Billy G (William Beatrix) is the Abortion Poster Boy that Malinda G. could not bring to herself to speak, Cough Cough Fizz Fizz, given the amount of his money $$$$$$$ she has squandered over the years for insanity causes, name in person.

    What a Circus!

    LoL

  91. Re:This is the area MS really fails out consistant by Streetlight · · Score: 1

    MS has embedded its security software in Win 8. Will Semantec, McAfee and free Antivirus software makers sue MS?

    --
    In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. George Orwell
  92. I love the mail app(s) in WP7 by elabs · · Score: 1

    I almost never check mail on my laptop anymore. The mail apps that come bundled with Windows Phone 7 are so quick, reliable and easy to use that I use them exclusively. I still write lengthy emails on my laptop, though.

  93. Email clients? by jimmyfrank · · Score: 1

    Wow, people still use these?

    1. Re:Email clients? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because not all of us are total n00bz.

  94. Oooh - an email client! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How quaint!

  95. Re:So you're telling me by jimmyfrank · · Score: 1

    Gmail works offline. With a connection it works great too are you on dial up?

  96. Re:So you're telling me by bmo · · Score: 2

    Technically Yahoo supports IMAP on mobile devices BUT not on desktop clients! Even if you are a paying customer.

    Lo, what is this? I'm using Tbird to connect to Y! mail via IMAP!

    http://ompldr.org/vZXFsYg/Screenshot.png

    Obviously, you've been doing something wrong.

    --
    BMO

  97. Re:So you're telling me by bmo · · Score: 1

    since when does Yahoo support IMAP?

    Since Gmail has offered IMAP for free. Because Y! has to find a way to remain relevant somehow.

    19.95 for pop3 access doesn't cut it when Gmail offers both IMAP and pop3 for free. To stop the exodus, they had to drop this.

    --
    BMO

  98. Re:So you're telling me by Dan541 · · Score: 1

    I agree, nothing beats a good local mail client.

    A few years ago I was on a cruse ship and using a mail client saved me heaps on Satellite internet charges. About 30 seconds to sync my email, then offline for the next hour or so while I read and reply to people. Another 30 seconds of syncing, done.

    I did feel sorry for the poor sods using webmail. I saw some of the smarter ones saving pages as html docs for offline reading. They would then type their reply offline and later copy/paste it into the email they where replying to. The less smart users just copped huge usage charges.

    --
    An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
  99. Re:So you're telling me by Dan541 · · Score: 1

    "no lost stuff, no hangs, no delays, no network-reachability issues or timeouts, no ads, no jscript, no worries about blocking and maintenance"
    which describes my gmail experience.
    With the added bonus I can access it anywhere.

    With IMAP the parent probably has the option of web access.

    --
    An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
  100. Re:So you're telling me by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

    Do you mind elaborating on why?

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  101. Then it shouldn't be on the disc! Cut it for now. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Release via an update later. Microsoft needs to learn, first impressions count.

  102. Thunderbird by Orphaze · · Score: 1

    This is precisely why I have been migrating all my XP clients using Outlook Express to Thunderbird when they upgraded to new Vista or Windows 7 systems. It was clear to me Microsoft was going to begin changing their mail app with each OS release (ie, it went to Windows Mail, then Windows Live Mail, and now whatever awful monstrocity this is) making it hard for users to adapt, and difficult for me to migrate messages, contacts, and settings. Thunderbird solves all of these issues.

    1. Re:Thunderbird by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now Thunderbird is left in the dark and not developed any further.... poor you.

  103. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've never had such issues, it works perfectly for me.

  104. If you have not noticed, its preview app by ninjacut · · Score: 1

    Most of Microsoft applications on Windows 8 are in preview mode, and not complete. So better to wait than making such post.

  105. Re:So you're telling me by silanea · · Score: 1
    Having one offline client allows you to
    • search across all your e-mails at once,
    • manage one address book with all your contacts,
    • create and manage filter rules - often in ways that the dumbed-down web interfaces do not support - in one place,
    • use such "advanced" features as multiple identities for one account,
    • handle attachments in a sane way, often with integration to the local file system,
    • read your mail even if the Internet is unavailable - I have a local mail client on my smart phone precisely for this reason,
    • use all kinds of encryption or cryptographic signatures (I have not seen this in any web mail interface to date unless done in a browser addon),
    • use addons or extensions for specific needs that no commercial web mail provider would dream of implementing (mailing list management etc.).

    Just off the top of my head.

    --
    Rudolf Hess edited Mein Kampf. He was the very first grammar nazi.
  106. Re:So you're telling me by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

    Not really. SP1 fixed most of the issues. There are still more people using Vista than OSX.

  107. who cares office15 is sick ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject

  108. Re:So you're telling me by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know it's not a popular option around here, but when it comes to e-mail clients, MS Outlook has always been the gold standard as far as I'm concerned.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  109. Re:So you're telling me by nzac · · Score: 1

    http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/search/default.aspx?alpha=Vista

    The still managed to kill mainstream support for it. So no one who's important is using it.

    I guess the the stats show that is just most upgraded.

  110. Doesn't surpirse me really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft has always been single minded about what they do. The original act was that they expected all the files you would deal with would be in their formats. All the products they provide should be all you need to do everything. I spent an incredible amount of time getting software elsewhere to do what I needed to do, and more time keeping them working every time a new Windows version or update came out.

    Now, their ideal to to make a "one OS to rule them all". Seriously, trying to shoehorn Windows and complementary software into a hardware platform it was never designed to do. Sounds as horrible as Ubuntu's Unity. They have gotten like Sears in that they are trying to be the everything store that does nothing well.

    They don't get the idea that if they attach the name "Windows" to the operating system on a tablet, people will expect that tablet to operate with the same power as a desktop. It isn't going to happen. At least Apple was smart enough to make sure their customers understood that an Ipad was a completely separate product from their other products.

    As a side note, portable computing is currently using less processing power, memory, and storage than non-portable. The trend in innovation it toward less power consumption, smaller devices, and new user interfaces. I wonder where Moore's Law plays into that?

  111. Re:So you're telling me by Tarlus · · Score: 1

    Many do. If you think about it, most people who use a smartphone and/or tablet (which are many) are using an included e-mail client in lieu of web-based interfaces. With Win8's ambition of being a tablet-friendly OS, the Metro e-mail client should be at least on par with all of the commonly-used clients seen in iOS, Android or even WP7.

    --
    /* No Comment */
  112. Re:So you're telling me by Tarlus · · Score: 1

    Woah! When did this happen?

    T-bird just auto-configured IMAP for me in a matter of seconds!

    --
    /* No Comment */
  113. Re:So you're telling me by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

    Actually, you forgot one: Star Trek: The Animated Series!
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_The_Animated_Series

    So in that case, it goes (good): TOS, TNG, Voyager. Personally, I only liked TOS and TNG of any of the Star Trek series. I know a fair number of people who like Voyager, but it always seemed "meh" to me. Same with DS9.

    Of course, as noted below, the "rule" refers to the movies, in particular the even ones. I've never agreed with it, because ST4 is painful to watch, and I like the first movie, even if it's slow. I had a hard time with the Klingon in Undiscovered Country that was constantly quoting Shakespeare, alongside other quirks with the film, but it's not terrible.

    And, I'll say it (which will invalidate any credibility I may have had until this point): I liked Generations. It's definitely flawed, and stupid the way Kirk dies, but I've always enjoyed Data's storyline in it, to the point that it redeems the movie in my eyes.

    --
    If you can't convince them, convict them.
  114. Re:So you're telling me by DerPflanz · · Score: 1

    Lots of us have many mail accounts, and many/most/all of them are not with Google. A good mail client is invaluable when you use many mail servers.

    That is why you have Google pull your other mail into Gmail and add a label to it. All your mail in one convenient location, always available.

    I ditched Thunderbird for Gmail some months ago and am very pleased with it.

    --
    -- The Internet is a too slow way of doing things, you'd never do without it.
  115. Re:So you're telling me by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

    For the first several points, Gmail works fine. Gmail can load POP email from other accounts/providers (no IMAP, though, which is a bummer), have a unified address book, reply from specific accounts, and has an offline mode.

    For the vast majority of people, the webmail interface is more than fine--it's the best option for them. It lets them easily check email wherever they are and does exactly what they need. For certain (small) sets of power users, webmail interfaces aren't enough. For myself, I go back and forth between using webmail or a local client. Right now I'm using Sparrow, which is basically just a local version of Gmail that integrates nicely into OS X's Notification Center (or Growl for pre-Mountain Lion OS X). It doesn't have the advanced features that the big clients have, but it has basically zero configuration time and you're basically guaranteed that your inbox and labels will match what Sparrow shows, which is something I can't say for other clients I've used (at least, not without work).

    --
    If you can't convince them, convict them.
  116. Re:So you're telling me by datavirtue · · Score: 1

    Dude, your internet connection is worse than mine. Don blame the cloud for your shit connection. I've been using shitty squirrel mail forever and it works fine--although it is clunky. I have all my mail no matter what device I'm on. I can see that if you never leave your mom's basement a desktop client would be peachy.

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  117. Re:Shame that Mozilla stoped looking for stuff to by jbolden · · Score: 1

    Your suggestion about postbox is a good one. And you are right. About halfway through writing that list I decided to grab a list from an existing rich mail client and picked postbox. :)

    Second, why do so many people want a calendar in their mail client? Communication between different a calendar and a mail app I understand for things like invites. However, if you want the enterprise level features that come with Exchange/Outlook, just use them.

    Outlook for Windows is a terrific client. The problem is it doesn't work well without exchange. I want exchange type features but with the client not the server doing the heavy lifting. The same way my client intermixes two email streams, and does invites is there any reason it can't do task management? People who don't work for large corporations still need task management and they need it on all their devices.

  118. Intentional... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    If MS made a good mail client that was built in to windows, then it could potentially reduce sales of outlook.. MS are very scared of competing with themselves and reducing sales of their existing products.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  119. Re:This is the area MS really fails out consistant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, they don't need to provide an experience, they need to provide a product. Everything you interact with provides some kind of experience. You call your car a car, not an experience. You call a restaurant a restaurant, not an experience. Why not call software software? This indirect language itself is an indicator of the problem, they sell appearances and seem to forget that an important part of a good user experience is the result of the software being functional.

  120. Look on the bright side ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it makes the rest of the PoS seem good.

  121. Re:So you're telling me by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

    Why did he get modded down? I honestly haven't seen a email client user in the shop in...ohhh...has to be at least 6 years now. Come to think of it I have exactly ONE email client user and that is my 74 year old ex landlady.

    While I'm sure there are some here using it, hell I wouldn't be surprised if we have some gopher users here, the consumers just don't use email clients anymore and haven't in years. i know what you are gonna say, that corporate does, but have you SEEN Windows 8? Its a tweeting twitting FB shitting social mess of an OS! Corporate ain't gonna take that crap! besides most corp users are addicted to all the extras in outlook like planning meetings more than the actual email part.

    Look we ALL know Win 8 is a half baked "Hail Mary" play by MSFT to grab a hold of some of the mobile sector, the odds of it working are practically nil, and the whole thing has the stench of desperation and failure about it, but that doesn't mean the guy doesn't have a point. Go talk to any 20 something around your local college, ask 'em what email client they use. You'll hear Google or Yahoo, the thought that you mean an actual program to access email won't even cross their minds. Email clients are as dead as Disco Stu's clothes, that is why Moz is walking away from TBird, people just don't use them hardly anymore.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  122. Re:So you're telling me by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

    I agree with your list 100%. Don't ask me where I heard this but once I read it it FINALLY made sense to me what was wrong with TNG Star Trek series, even First contact just kinda grated on me until it was explained to me then it was like a giant light bulb...there are TWO Picards!

    Watch TNG the series and pay attention to Picard, he was the chess player to Kirk's poker player. I mean this was a guy that when given a chance to completely wipe out the borg, after they had brutalized him, he refused because it would have meant genocide. Now compare THAT Picard to what you get in the movies, what you get in the films is "crazy action hero Picard" who is yelling and blasting and not even following common sense much less any logic or reason as was his character. Remember in First Contact, which is supposed to be "the good one" how he tells Worf NOT to shoot the deflector array, because it could be extremely dangerous? So what does he do? Why he shoots right beside it to blast a Borg! And notice how quick he is to blast is own people who get assimilated? The reason why the number theme doesn't work with TNG is they tried to get the main character to act like Bruce Willis instead of who he was in the series and it just didn't work.

    As for TFA? I'm just glad Win 7 is good until 2020, don't want that social media mess of a smartphone OS on my desktop thank you VERY much. The closer it gets to release the more half assed and half baked it seems, I mean WinRT with no AD support? No functional mail app when corporate is the one that still uses mail apps? Ballmer i hate to be the one who has to break the news to ya but you are NOT Apple, consumers don't give a rat's ass about Windows and you are screwing up the features that would get your bread and butter business customers to take your new OS. How they can royally fuck up so badly after the rock solid Win 7? I guess that is what fear does to ya, it makes you sloppy.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  123. Re:So you're telling me by cbart387 · · Score: 1

    We have that abomination at work. The poor quality of Outlook + google sync + Google is being used as a reason for explaining why Outlook is bad. At home I use Linux so I tend to be biased towards most Linux items, but Outlook's by far my favorite email / productivity client. (My wife uses Outlook to connect to Google "normally" with no problems.)

    So, agreed!

    --
    Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine.
  124. Re:So you're telling me by Geeky · · Score: 1

    Ditto - gmail + thunderbird for a local backup so I don't lose anything should gmail ever go AWOL.

    The best thing for me about gmail (in apps) is that I can point my domains MX records at it and avoid the issues of mail sent via an ISP from my domain being flagged as spam because domain lookups don't match. That, and being able to access the mail on my phone, tablet, work PC and at home. Oh, and the search blows away any desktop client I've used.

    --
    Sigs are so 1990s. No way would I be seen dead with one.
  125. Re:So you're telling me by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

    No, because I that would violate HIPAA laws if I did that. I recieve many emails that contain patient information. I need to reply back to them on the same mail server system that they originated from. Passing the emails to/through a foreign system is not acceptable. Most hospital systems I work with will automatically block any emails sent to outside addresses if the email seem to include HIPAA data in the content filters. Those must be sent through other, more secure means.

    Gmail is *NOT* the answer to everything.

  126. Re:So you're telling me by shiftless · · Score: 1

    That is why you have Google pull your other mail into Gmail and add a label to it. All your mail in one convenient location, always available.

    Except Google's web mail interface is shit, so why in the world would he do that?

  127. Re:So you're telling me by shiftless · · Score: 1

    Not even their search works as well as it used to; at least, the email search doesn't.

  128. Re:So you're telling me by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    Just update the rule to "even digital sum". The digital sum of one-digit numbers (1 to 9) is odd iff the number itself is odd. The digital sum of 10 is 1, which is odd.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  129. Re:So you're telling me by Monoman · · Score: 1

    Yes, people with jobs. Jobs in corporations, government, education, etc. Communications in the business world are not conducted via FB messages/IM and SMS. You may think email is quickly dying but I can assure you it is not. Don't let your personal/social life perspective mislead you.

    --
    Keep the Classic Slashdot.
  130. Re:So you're telling me by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2

    Strangely, I agree with the guy. Although I'd like to add:

    ST:TMP -> probably good if you didn't see 2001. It was released over 10 years after 2001 when Star Wars was everywhere and people weren't expecting to see things like 2001.

    ST:IV was... corny nostalgia, but I can't argue. It was a very successful film.

    ST:Nemesis was an okay remake of ST:The Wrath of Khan, but there are a lot of fans who never got into TOS, so it's forgivable.

    ST:TOS has a lot of post-WW2 influence. Particularly in sub warfare. It's strongest in TOS (see Balance of Terror... big racial issues there too), but weakens after TNG, which seems to be mostly influenced by the boring era of cold wars, superpowers, stable politics and diplomacy.

  131. Re:So you're telling me by Jerry+Atrick · · Score: 1

    ...and Gmail is not a good answer to anything.

  132. Self-signed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's good that it doesn't use the way that's used on the web and prompts the user when it gets a bad cert. Users are very used to accepting certificates because they get warnings all the time, but it's a problem with mail. Specifically, when connecting to wireless networks with a HTTPS "landing page", the user would give their pasword to the owner of the gateway. Email tries to connect at once when you connect to a wifi network, so it gets the wrong server.

  133. Shouldn't that be Fail8? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, though... Microsoft does this all the time. Demolish competition using thug business tactics for which some people should be in jail, then once the market is good and cornered and the poor simple computer consumer has as close as possible to NO choice, start removing features to force them to pay MORE money for, once again... the same thing they've already paid for several times over (if this isn't the first computer they've bought in about 25 years).

    Business leaders, computer manufacturers, take CAREFUL note of this: The makers of Linux distributions, or of Linux itself, should use the same strong-arm illegal tactics that Microsoft used for decades to build and support its software hegemony based on fear, uncertainty, doubt, and outright lies, then force you to pay through the nose for the same software over and over again, except that in each version of the software, they should take the features they included for free to damage their competitors, and start reducing their functionality to nothing. Like Microsoft does, with... case in point today, Windows 8 Mail.

    BUT THEY COULDN'T DO IT. Leaders of businesses and manufacturers of computers should be smart enough to realize the implications of this fact. Because they're FOSS or FLOSS, they CANNOT keep you from doing nearly ANYTHING with their software, making the proposition of the copyright (or copyleft) holders or the maintainers pulling the same kind of CRAP that Microsoft has for decades IMPOSSIBLE.

    If you have trouble understanding this, look at OpenOffice.org, as compared with LibreOffice. LibreOffice, as anyone reading slashdot probably knows, is a fork of OpenOffice.org. Without going into too much detail, the people responsible for OpenOffice.org did something that a lot of members of the community REALLY didn't like. So they took a copy of the FREELY AVAILABLE SOURCE CODE, and used it to make their own version, calling it LibreOffice, thus allowing them to do pretty much WHATEVER THEY WANTED WITH IT, adding the features THEY WANTED TO SEE THEIR OFFICE SUITE HAVE, and the OpenOffice.org people couldn't do a thing about it.

    Not a good enough example? Okay, how about people taking software released under the even more liberal BSD license, and making it the core of their business? Without BSD, there'd have been NO Apple Macintosh OS-X. Apple has reaped untold benefits from the hard work of the students, researchers, professors, etc. of the University of California Berkeley Computer Science Department, (and let's not forget, AT&T's Bell Labs,) in the form of what was once called the Berkeley Software Distribution of UNIX. A descendent of this software, released under that very permissive license, became the underpinnings of their much vaunted OS-X. Even if the originators and maintainers of the various descendants of BSD (from the Regents of the University of California, to the BSD community, BSDi, the OpenBSD, NetBSD and let's not forget, FreeBSD communities and programers) didn't like or approve of what Apple did, the nature of the terms of the license made it impossible, legally, for anyone to stop them.

    SO WHY IN THE NAME OF THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD, THE FATHER, THE SON, AND YES... THE HOLY F'ING SPIRIT, IS ANYONE *** STILL *** USING _M_I_C_R_O_S_O_F_T_ SOFTWARE ? ! ?

    What are these people, lazy, or just f'ing STUPID?!? Do they enjoy the abuse? Can it really be that Microsoft finds at every single turn, with Delphinian Oracle-like prescience, the exact, correct amount of money they can bilk people out of, an amount that always ends up being just short of the amount of money they can squeeze them for before other companies realize that it makes more financial sense for them to ABANDON MICROSOFT?

    Or has Microsoft actually cost computer manufacturers so much that it has LONG SINCE made sense to their bottom lines to ditch Microsoft and their wretched, deliberately insecure and bug-ridden software, but they don't because they're COWARDS?

    Help me understand. Apple has made a KILLING selli

  134. Re:So you're telling me by vux984 · · Score: 1


    Do you mind elaborating on why?

    a) because having a separate tab or window for all my mail accounts is far less inconvenient than having it all in one in thunderbird.

    b) i tend to have a lot of browser tabs and windows open already. The last thing in the world I want is to have all my email windows lumped in with those. I like my email windows to be a separate icon and stack on the taskbar.

  135. Re:So you're telling me by nobaloney · · Score: 1

    I certainly do. Best way for me to manage my multiple email accounts with multiple servers.

    This thing has a Vista-rushed-to-market feel about it.

    Your post came at the right time for me; I'm in the middle of switching my company email store from POP3 to IMAP, mainly so I can see the same email on my laptop, desktop, tablet, and even (only in an emergency; I'm not a masochist) my smartphone.

    I finally decided to have only one main email account, and forward every email address to it. That makes it easier to sort and manage email (if you're reading more than one account with a desktop email client, you probably know what I mean). True I get my important business email, my junk email, and even my personal email, all in one inbox, but I'm learning how to use Sieve. Now it doesn't matter on which client I sort my emails into various folders, every client shows the result.

    True most email clients aren't that good at human interfaces to Sieve yet, but that will chane with time and use, and in the meantime, the RoundCube webmail client does the job admirably (and as I've written, the resulting rules will work no matter which client you use to read your email). You don't need a provider who uses RoundCube; you can run it locally and point it to any imap store.

    Note this is a work on progress for me; today is the first day I'm actually writing the sort rules. I may feel differently tomorrow, but today, so far so good.

  136. Re:So you're telling me by shiftless · · Score: 1

    For the vast majority of people, the webmail interface is more than fine--it's the best option for them.

    Cool story bro. What about me, though?

    I'll stick with Thunderbird--thanks.

  137. desktop? by cratermoon · · Score: 1

    People still use desktop email clients?

  138. Windows Live Mail by SpryGuy · · Score: 1

    I guess it should be noted that for Win8 Pro (not WinRT), if the lame Metro email client doesn't work for you, you can always install Windows Live Mail on the desktop and continue to work exactly like you always did in Windows 7.

    I imagine the Mail client, along with the others, will continue to get aggressive upgdates after Win8 release, via the Microsoft App Store. Since they finalized the WinRT APIs that Metro Apps use only since the "Release Preview" it doesn't really shock me that the apps are behind. But I think it's missing the point to assume that the state of the apps at release is exactly how they'll be a month or three after release... the apps can and will be updated independently, post-Win8-release.

    But yeah, as it stands now, it's lame enough for me to consider it unusable and worthless. There are some, though, who ONLY have email on gmail or hotmail or exhange, who will be able to function with it.

    --

    - Spryguy
    There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
  139. Re:So you're telling me by kiddygrinder · · Score: 1

    i think the releases where they try and add a bunch of new shit suck, then they scale it back for the next release and make it suck less.

    --
    This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
  140. Re:So you're telling me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Star Trek IV, The Voyage Home was almost good enough to forgive the faggy "save the whales" bullshit. Two was half-way decent.
    One, Three, FIVE, were basically dressed-up dogshit. Everything from 6 and after didn't matter, most of it was Next Yawneration bullshit that was all about how faggy the future could be with the "let's talk it over" captain Pick-Hard, and all the other bullshit after that. So basically, the only good Star Trek movie was Wrath of Kahn. All the rest are various levels of suck, although there were really only 6 Star Trek movies. From ST Generations on, they were NOT Star Trek movies. They were Star Trek the Next Yawneration movies, and were just complete horseshit based on that limp-wristed bumpy-forheaded DRECK they called Star Trek after the REAL Star Trek ended.

    If you like anything Star Trek after the end of TOS, turn in your geek card, you're gay.

    And yes, Kirk could kick the shit out of that pansy faggot ass Picard, who would be trying to reason with him the whole time. Gayer than two boys fucking. Star Trek The Next Yawneration RHUINED Star Trek. There was recently an article about "how to introduce someone to ST". Well, don't show them that new crap.

    The future never looked so good as when it's so shamefully, obviously 40 years in the past.

  141. Not behind for long by jrumney · · Score: 1

    Metro Mail is feature-deficient compared not just to other desktop and tablet apps — it's behind Microsoft's own phone platform.

    Windows Phone 8 will be released at the same time as Windows 8, so it will no longer be behind once it is released.

  142. Re:So you're telling me by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the info !