Windows Weekly 398 (Transcript)
Leo -Laporte:
It's time for Windows
Weekly. Paul and Mary Jo are here. We are going to talk about
Windows 10 one week in, we may have a little rant from Paul on the crapware on the PC, and the dude has got a Dell. It's
all coming up next on Windows Weekly.
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Leo: This is Windows Weekly
with Paul Thurrott and Mary Joe Foley, Episode 398,
recorded January 28, 2015.
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Leo: It's time for Windows
Weekly, the show where we cover the latest news. From Redmond, back from their jaunt to the Pacific Northwest, Paul Thurrott of thurrott.com, his hot new site. All
of the kids are doing it.
Paul -Thurrott: Yes they are Leo.
Leo: All of the kids are doing
it, doing the T.
Paul: Doing the T.
Leo: Also, Mary Jo Foley from
AllAboutMicrosoft.com. Both back in their native
habitats where the snow has come down. You survived snowmageddon,
huh?
Mary -Jo Foley: Yeah.
Paul: I had to look this up, my
wife had said that this was the most snow that my kids had seen at one time,
but actually in 2005 we got 27.5 inches of snow.
Leo: So up your way in New
England you got a couple of feet?
Paul: We got 2 feet, yeah.
Leo: But in Manhattan it was
less than a foot, right?
Mary Jo: Like 8 inches, 12 inches.
Leo: That's not too bad, good.
Paul: At least they didn't shut
down the subway or anything.
Mary Jo: Yeah they did.
Leo: They shut down the subway? Why did they shut down the
subway?
Mary Jo: They thought it was going
to be much worse than it was.
Paul: You know what is much
worse? When you need that thing to
be open.
Mary Jo: I know.
Paul: Don't you think?
Mary Jo: Yeah, they shut down the
subway the night before the storm and they also banned any cars that aren't
emergency cars, including cabs, from the streets after 11.
Leo: Oh my god. I saw pictures of empty
streets in Manhattan. I never see that, it's kind
of cool.
Mary Jo: It was, but people panicked
because if you are in Manhattan, and the last train has gone home, and you
can't get a cab, then what?
Paul: Then you are screwed.
Leo: Uber.
Paul: There is nothing that we
can't overreact to Mary Jo.
Mary Jo: I know. It was crazy.
Paul: It has never snowed before. What do we do?
Mary Jo: I should have rented out a
little space on my floor or something.
Leo: The irony is that at least
when I was a kid this wasn't unusual at all.
Paul: This isn't unusual now. We get these storms every
year.
Leo: It's CNN.
Paul: Every winter we have 3 feet
of snow on the ground.
Leo: I blame CNN for the whole
thing. They need ratings, so they
make it a big apocalypse, and the public service sector believes it, and then
the whole thing snowballs.
Paul: The last time that we
reacted to snow like this was when we were caveman wondering if the gods were
raining terror on us. What is this?
Leo: So we had a little bit of
apocalypse last week with this Windows 10 announcement. That was something else. It was very exciting. We've had a week now to
digest. Any thoughts?
Paul: It's not that good.
Leo: Ah.
Paul: Actually, before we get to
that what we need to do, and I think that Mary Jo would agree, is thank everybody who came to our meet up last week.
Leo: Oh yeah, how did that go?
Paul: It was amazing. Terry Myerson came, and Joe Bellifori from Microsoft.
Leo: You are kidding!
Paul: But honestly, more
important than that, there were people who drove more than 2 hours to meet us. People came from very far
away. There was a guy from Columbia who was joking, yeah, I flew in to come to your meet up. I was like please tell me that isn't true. He said, no, no, I'm here for training,
but I heard that you were doing this.
Leo: Oh, people do that? That's awesome.
Paul: Yeah, it was really nice. I can't thank everyone
personally, but we recognize the effort that these people went to. It was very nice.
Mary Jo: They even brought us a
couple of gifts. The couple who drove 2
hours, I forget their name, they make their own wine and they brought us each a
bottle. Someone else who makes silk
screen posters, he made us posters and hand carried them there. I was like, wow. It
was really great. Everybody came, and we drank a lot of good beer at
Bellevue Brewing. It was really good, really good meet up.
Paul: Yeah, it was great.
Mary Jo: Yeah.
Leo: That's awesome.
Paul: I hadn't been to Redmond in
a while, so this whole trip was an alcohol fueled family reunion. It was
nice.
Mary Jo: It was.
Paul: Okay, let's talk about
Windows 10.
Mary Jo: The funny thing was that we
didn't know when they were going to drop the next build of Windows 10 Desktop,
and it ended up happening on Friday.
Paul: I had heard Friday.
Mary Jo: You had heard Friday, but
they had told some of us next week.
Leo: I was saying next week on
the radio show and somebody said no, it's Friday.
Paul: They were very cagey, they
said within the next week, right? Two days later was in the
next week.
Leo: So they still call it the
Technical Preview? It doesn't say the Consumer
Preview?
Paul: Leo, Leo, you know Windows
is like the anti-Christ. Its names are legion, and internally this is
actually called Windows Technical Preview 2. It's trying not to get out
there in the public. The Xbox post actually made that suggestion of that
term, and the Windows Server team has used this term. That is in fact
kind of what it is called. I think of it is sort of what they called the
Consumer Preview before where the original Technical Preview was that set of
builds that came out in the fall and Technical Preview 2 is this next phase
where they are putting in tablet mode and all of that kind of consumer stuff.
Leo: So you've had a chance to
play with it now, and tell me a little bit about it. It is much different? Is it similar?
Paul: I would say honestly it
isn't much different. It's refined and there are
additional things. We made a short list of some of that stuff in the
notes. Visually it has been upgraded, the icons are kind of new, and
bright, and different, new backgrounds and new lock screens. There is an
actually a hidden lock screen that I hadn't written about yet as well. Then
there are some new features. If you have a Surface Pro 3 you can detach
the tablet part from the keyboard and Continuum will kick in. It will
say, "Would you like to go into tablet mode?", and back and forth.
If you don't have a Surface Pro 3 you can enable it manually through the
Action Center, which is also new actually, or improved anyway. Lots of
Windows Phone looking things in here, which I really like, because these things
are going to be the same OS now, so it makes sense that the UI's would
converge, and a bunch of new universal apps, which are those apps that will
also run on Windows Phone, Window Preview whatever in the notes, Maps, Cortana,
store Beta Photos in Xbox. So they are kind of moving us toward the
future of Windows 10 where all of these things will be universal apps as well.
What am I missing here? That's most of it, right?
Leo: Would it be safe to say
that most of what Microsoft does they will make universal? If it can be. I think that Xbox is.
Paul: So the point is obviously
there are going to be versions of Windows 10 that run on phones, fablets, and very small tablets. There are going to be
versions that run on big tablets, PC's of all sizes, and etc. It makes sense that the
universal apps would work on both. It may look different on a smaller
device because of the whole screen size and orientation, but it's the same app
and you can go back and forth and obviously the OneDrive sync of apps, data,
and settings between the platforms as well.
Leo: Okay.
Mary Jo: I think that the thing that
I have seen people talking about is something that is a little bit contentious
is the change to the Start menu in this build. People really don't like what they are doing with the Start menu.
Leo: Did it change from the
previous Technical Preview?
Paul: Well, why though? I'm actually confused by
this complaint.
Mary Jo: I like it from what I've
seen. I should say that I'm not
running the Technical Preview right now because it's still too buggy for me.
Paul: Think about we would have
to go back 6 or 8 months and I'd written at some point, I would have to look it
up, but at some point I wrote that the Start menu in Windows 10 will be
expandable to the full screen. Then they finally got the actual, right.
In the original Technical Preview builds there was actually a switch in
the properties for this where you could switch between full screen part screen
and a menu, right? The menu would the default on the computer and the
Start screen would be on the tablet. I thought that is interesting
because that is not what I had heard. I had heard that this was one UI
and you could stretch it out to full screen. Now in Technical Preview 2
you see that is in fact what they are doing. They are not going to have 2
UI's, its 1 UI. In using tablet mode it will automatically go full
screen, as will all of the other universal and modern apps, and that to me is
consistent. Honestly, if you are running this thing on a tablet, you are
in tablet mode, or you are just on a smaller device then everything is full
screen. It works a lot like it did in Windows 8. What is not to
like? I don't understand it.
Mary Jo: I like it. I think that it makes
sense. It looks very sensible to
me. I've seen people saying that they don't like the list combined with
the tiles. Everyone has their preferences.
Leo: This is not what it looked
like in the previous release?
Paul: It's different. Functionally it is the same
thing. We are not seeing the
version of the Start menu that we were promised back in October or the last day
of September where it does have that list of apps on the side, all apps and
recent apps, which wasn't available previously. It's like you said, it's
still a Start menu, you just can go full screen. You can't resize it in
this build, but that's a one build problem. They are going to let you
resize it. If you are running on a tablet to me it's better than the
version on Windows 8. I think this is better. I find it odd, you
know, all of the complaining that occurred during Windows 8, the incessant
complaining, and now they are walking away from that and now we are hearing complaining
from people who like Windows 8.
Mary Jo: Right, I know.
Leo: So I'm looking for a
picture of the new Start menu. Can I see that on thurrott.com?
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: You have a lot of posts but
nothing specifically about menu.
Paul: Sorry. Where would that be? Actually go the Enable
Tablet Mode tip.
Leo: Alright.
Paul: So yeah, if you scroll down
the second screenshot shows the Start menu and the third screenshot shows the
full screen version of the Start menu. You can enable that 2 ways, you can hit the full screen button
that is on the Start menu or you can go into tablet mode in which case this
becomes automatic. The difference between the full screen Start menu and
the Start screen from Windows 8 is that instead of having a separate apps
screen that is kind of on the fold.
Leo: There is this list?
Paul: There is this list. But the list duplicates the
Start menu, so it's the places menu, it is the most recently used apps, and
then you can also get to all apps.
Leo: Okay, right.
Mary Jo: I guess some people do not
like that they are having redundancy.
Leo: They want the tablet mode
to be different somehow? Really, all the tablet does
is explode the desktop mode menu.
Paul: The complaints that I hear
about this are all of the specious variety. If you swipe in from the left edge of the screen on a touch a
device, on Windows 8 that would bring up the switcher user interface, or
depending on how you do it you could switch between apps. In Windows 10
it brings up Oplus Tab, Windows Flip, or whatever
they are calling it these days. It's perfectly logical, the same thing,
fine. In Windows 8 if you swiped in from the right side of the screen you
would bring up the Charms which nobody liked until they removed it, and then
suddenly they did like it.
Leo: Where are my charms?
Paul: So in Windows 10 it brings
up the Action Center. In Windows Phone you will
appreciate the fact that Action Center has these quick action tiles, which that
big arrow is pointing to, and that could be expanded in there. This gives you access to a
lot of those quick setting type things that you would get to from the Settings
Charm.
Leo: It's customizable, you can put the stuff that you want there.
Paul: Yep, this is way better
than the previous build. I just don't get it. The other thing that I will
add just because we are on the topic of touch devices is that on Windows 8 if
you swiped in from the top of the screen or the bottom of the screen it would
bring up the app bar or the app bars for the current application. That's
where you would see all of the commands, big buttons, and big Fischer Pricey
type buttons. In universal apps which are a special kind of modern app
that runs across platforms they are not going to have app bars anymore so you
can have your own UI. A lot of these systems, Xbox Music is a good
example today, but any of the universal apps that are available in the Windows
10 Technical Preview 2, they use that kind of hamburger menu on the side to
bring in a navigational slider that has the commands there, or you can kind of
roll it on, so most of this applications will have ribbons, which are basically
tool bars with tabs. It looks a lot like Office Apps for iPad. So
again, perfectly consistent with the way that it worked before. You still
swipe from the top or bottom to get to app commands, they are just displayed in
a more professional manner.
Leo: It would seem to be prudent
also to say...
Paul: I'm sorry, what I just said
was a mistake. Actually if you swipe up
from the bottom you will actually see the task bar. It's not actually exactly
the same.
Leo: What we see now is still
just a technical preview and not a final UI.
Paul: Yeah, so your complaining
could change it again. Keep bitching and moaning
people, because that is how you get things done.
Leo: Even in the chat room some
people are saying that it's a disaster.
Paul: It's not a disaster. This is better. I feel comfortable that I
use Windows as much as anyone on earth. This is better, absolutely better.
Leo: I think that this is
continued splash back from Windows 8 and the people from Windows 8 are now
saying well crap.
Paul: It's moving forward nicely.
Leo: Except the charms bar.
Paul: Because yes, the charms bar
is not there, but the most important reasons that you would go there are there.
Leo: So all of the same things
can be there?
Paul: Yeah, these are not major
issues. The bigger deal to me is
that the important part of Windows 8, just the general touchness of it is still there. The app platform, which is
huge, is still there, and in full screen mode. That modern app platform
was kind of powerful and full featured under the covers, but the apps
themselves were kind of childish looking with big buttons and stupid UIs. They
fixed that too. To me this is a giant win win.
Leo: Some concern about the apps
menu getting awfully long if you install a lot of stuff.
Paul: Well yeah, sure. It works like the Start
menu in Windows 7, Windows Vista, whatever, you don't see all of it, and you
can scroll it. It was like a tile area,
you can actually pan it up and down if there are more tiles. Same thing on the left side. You see the most recently
used or the most used, you don't see all of the apps.
Leo: There is a see all apps
button there now.
Paul: Just like there has been by
the way in every single version of Windows dating back to Windows 95.
Leo: What I kind of like, it was
not explicit that if you start typing it will start searching, but now they
have a ask me anything box that really kind of invites typing.
Paul: And if you are a power user
you can turn it off and it still works.
Leo: Okay, you can type
anything.
Paul: You can say I don't want 6
inches of my tablet taken up by that box.
Leo: You can turn it off.
Paul: Guess what? When you
hit the Start button and start typing it works just like Start search has all
the way back to Windows Vista.
Leo: I kind of think that this
is a good direction for Microsoft to take which is to get the option to turn it
off. I can't see how anybody could
be unhappy about that because you get control. And for novice users,
people who are new to the UI, or the version, or to Windows in general, there
are some hints there for you. That was one of the problems that I had
with Windows 8 was that so much was hidden and
obscure.
Mary Jo: I don't know. I guess that I use Windows
8.1 on my laptop. I still have my Surface RT,
but I don't use it anymore. I hated the Charms bar, I
never could remember to use it, and I think that the changes that they are
making now are meant to make Windows more intuitive for people who are used to
Windows.
Leo: I agree.
Mary Jo: I guess that people who
ended up liking Windows 8 after all are now sad. I guess I think about it as in the end it's going to make Windows
so much more easy to use for all of the people who didn't upgrade, or
downgrade, if you want to say to Windows 8.
Leo: And, if you love Windows 8,
it's not going to take you a long time to accommodate this.
Paul: By the way, all of the
Windows 8 UIs that people are apparently all attached to are not at all
discoverable. You will recall that one of the big controversies when
Windows 8 was coming out was whether Microsoft would implement some sort of how
to video. The only way that you could figure this stuff out was by
mistake. You would click on something and say, oh look, what just
happened? So in Windows 8.1 remember that they added that little did you
know that you could swipe in to do this? This stuff is not discoverable.
If you as a power user have figured out how to use Windows 8.1 then
Windows 10 will be very logical to you. We are not just changing the
paradigm again. It's an evolution.
Mary Jo: My whole Twitter stream
right now is full of people saying "I hate Windows 10 on touch
tablets."
Paul: To which I would say why
would anyone use Windows on a tablet anyway? There is nothing there.
But if you are into it for some reason, again I feel that it is a very
logical step up.
Mary Jo: People are saying that it's
harder to use if you are just using it with touch now.
Paul: I disagree.
Mary Jo: I can't say from firsthand
experience because even when I had my Surface I never used it as a touch tablet
because it never really worked well that way. I know that a million people are going to disagree with me on that
but I used it with the keyboard only, almost 99% of the time.
Paul: Yep, I think that a lot of
the time that you go into a metro app, like a news app or something, and you
launch it with a keyboard and mouse, but then you might pan to read a story. That would be about the
extent of it. Again, I can't stress this enough, people are stressing
over a single build like Microsoft has locked something in stone or whatever.
Mary Jo: It's going to change. It's going to change.
Paul: It will continue to evolve.
Mary Jo: Yep, and we haven't yet
seen Windows 10 on these really small tablets because the Windows 10 SKU is
going to work on phones and tablets under 8 inches in size. It will be
interesting to see what they do there and how that evolves.
Leo: You know, Twitter is made
for hate, so.
Mary Jo: It is. Twitter is made for hate.
Paul: I just want to make sure
that I understand what you are saying. Are you suggesting, I'm spitballing on
what you just said, that people take things out of
context and personally attack you over something that Microsoft did? Is
that what you are saying?
Leo: Twitter appeals to the
monkey mind. I think not actually even
that. It appeals to the baby in
us. A lot of what I see on Twitter
is kind of babyish knee jerk reaction to things.
Paul: It's a mind without filter.
Leo: It's mind without filter.
Paul: I wrote this of the
internet today, but I described it as the misguided being misled by the
misinformed.
Leo: I think that there is a
place for it, but you have to take it in that context when you read stuff on
Twitter. It's just very much people's like top of mind not considered
opinion in most cases. It's just like bleh.
Paul: 90% of the time my reaction
to something that somebody says to me on Twitter is are you f'ing kidding me? Like and then you sort of
realize that it's the medium. I know that Mary Jo knows that as a writer
a lot of times it's really hard to convey real meaning, especially in something
very short. People will often misunderstand each other. Something
might come across as especially brutal when it wasn't meant to be. That
happens a lot.
Leo: It's also the case that
people sometime post stuff on Twitter, and then they think about it for 5
seconds, and then go, but that's okay.
Paul: Sometimes I will respond to
someone just trying to feel out where they are coming from and they will respond
with something funny and you realize that they didn't mean anything by that.
Leo: No they don't. In fact that's probably why
it's not good to take too seriously. It's all id.
Not that that is 100% true. There are lots of people who use Twitter
for thoughtful and considered opinion, but honestly why are you doing it in a
space that allows you 140 characters?
Paul: I was going to say that
there is not a lot of thought when you have 140 characters.
Leo: I look at what I see on
Twitter as id and probably to gauge what the kneejerk reaction will be to
anything, but I wouldn't, if I were Microsoft I certainly wouldn't, use it as
guidance for future builds.
Paul: My favorite part of Twitter
is when I make something that patently intended to be humor, should be obvious
to anyone, and then you get these serious responses. Well, Paul, have you
considered the...nope. I was just making a joke.
Leo: There is no, it's text, so
it's very difficult and subtle to express things like humorous sarcasm.
Paul: I know, oh I know.
Mary Jo: It is.
Leo: Actually I think that
Twitter is great. I'm not knocking it, I'm
just saying...
Paul: Oh, I'm on Twitter all day
long. That's why I am an insane
person Leo.
Leo: It will make you crazy if you
pay too much attention to it.
Paul: Mary Jo serves as sort of a
psychiatrist for me. I will react to people
publicly on Twitter and then privately with Mary Jo. I say you need to
get me down from the cliff here.
Leo: That happens to me all of the
time. People in my life will call
and say stop posting. Stop talking now.
Paul: I actually also joke with
Mary Jo that I'm going to give her access to my Twitter account.
Leo: It's not just their id Paul, it's your id too.
Paul: If people are like you are
done for the day Paul, why don't you just go outside?
Mary Jo: Yeah, but you know that the
bottom line is that it is going to keep changing. Windows 10 is far from
done.
Leo: That was part of my point,
that you shouldn't make any conclusions now.
Mary Jo: I know, yeah. That's why they have user
voice, and the forums, and they are telling you to up those things. They
are, unlike previous regimes, listening to what people are saying, and taking
that into account when developing the operating system.
Paul: That's true, and by the
way, I don't think that something as specific as Charms is coming back, or
placeholders in OneDrive, but it doesn't mean that enough complaining or
constructive feedback in those things won't bring some form of functionality
back in a way that is more acceptable to you than the current system. So
the feedback part of it is crucial. I don't know that they are paying
attention to what people are saying on Twitter. I think that it is important
to go into the app and use the built in feedback form to ensure that it hits
the right people. And not me. I love
discussing this stuff sometimes.
Mary Jo: All I can tell you guys is
remember when we first started talking about Windows 8, and I saw it, and I
said wow, everyone is going to hate that. Do you remember that?
Paul: Yeah.
Mary Jo: When I see this I feel
like, and I am just judging it from my own perspective and probably thinking
like more of the average user and the IT user, but this to me is like wow, I
can figure this out without having to spend hours being like where do I go?
How do I do this again? It looks very intuitive to me.
Paul: Windows 8 was like the 7
stages of grief to me.
Leo: I became comfortable with
Windows 8 and I liked 8.1, I thought it was a good improvement. But Windows 10 is a big,
big improvement.
Paul: Oh huge. I mean, I'm not going to
embarrass people at Microsoft, but I remember having conversations over the
course of development and when they announce certain things, but I will never
forget the conversation that we had about the Charms. It's very important to me.
I write books about the stuff. I went through this with the Windows
Phone guys very early on. I was like, I need names for everything.
We don't have names for everything. You have to refer to it.
You have to, I have to, and I’m not the first person to think of this;
except that I apparently was. You know, but I remember with Windows 8 in
particular, I said this Charms thing that is on the side, the toolbar system?
The toolbar? Nope, just Charms.
Leo: Just charms.
Paul: Right, so is it like The
Charms? Or the Charms Bar? Nope, just Charms.
Leo: They are magically
delicious.
Paul: Right, like a bowl of
cereal. Charms.
Leo: Lucky Charms.
Mary Jo: I'm glad that Charms bar is
gone. That's all that I'm saying.
Paul: You can almost imagine that
some engineer was sitting there with his bowl of Lucky Charms in the morning
and he was like eureka!
Leo: It's magically delicious! Raspberry red, lemon
yellow...orange...
Paul: We are seriously talking
about a technology topic here people. It's amazing.
Leo: I think that there are of
course people with muscle memory now that program their brain.
Paul: Absolutely yes, muscle memory, that is one of the big complaints.
Leo: That's sad, but your muscle
needs new memory now.
Paul: Windows 8
itself was a destruction of muscle memory. Remember, going all the way
back to Windows 95 you would go to the left side of the screen by default,
click on the Start menu, and you would shut down your computer. Windows
8, they moved it over to the right off of a Charm, you would go to settings and
then it was there. It's back on the left again folks. This should
be good news, but it's not. It's not good news, people are not happy,
some people.
Leo: Ah Leo, the raspberry red,
lemon yellow, and orange orange is Twix, it's not
Lucky Charms. I think that you may want to correct yourself on that.
You've got the wrong cereal my friend.
Paul: Yes, and I want you to
correct yourself like the New York Times does and have a disclaimer on the
bottom of every single post that explains exactly what was wrong.
Leo: No, I love it. I'm not complaining, I love
you internet.
Paul: Do you?
Leo: Yeah.
Paul: I think that we put up with
you internet as the breeding ground of indifference.
Leo: Okay, by the way, should I
install on my brand new, spanking new, Dell XPS that is arriving next week,
should I put this on there?
Paul: I have not installed it on
this machine.
Leo: I'm not saying specific to
this machine. Is it time to use Windows 10 or should I really wait?
Paul: Honestly, I've heard from
people that this is unstable, that they have had problems, that they have went back to Windows 8.1 in some cases. I have installed this thing
on virtually everything in my office and I haven't really had any problems.
Leo: I was actually thinking of
putting it on the S7 since that is getting replaced by the XPS 13.
Paul: So one thing that I haven't
done, and this is actually new to Technical Preview 2, is there is a rollback
functionality now, so when you boot the computer you actually have the choice
between Windows 10 and the old system. I think that if you choose the old
one it will actually roll it back. I think that you can go to the
recovery tools in settings and in addition to the refresh, reset, and whatever
else is there, backup or whatever, there is an option
for rolling back to the previous version. So that's what I would say to
you is to make sure that you have all of your recovery stuff set up. If
you have something with ASUS, or Acer, or whatever it is, make sure that that
is ready to go just in case. You should always be prepared. You
should always be ready to scoot back to where you were if you have to. I
have had good luck so far.
Leo: Of course this is in the
knowledge that Mary Jo has not done it for completely sensible reasons.
Paul: Well Mary Jo being a
sensible and normal person has not installed this and you and I are trying to
figure out ways that we can destroy our expensive pieces of equipment.
Mary Jo: If I had a bunch of PCs
lying around I probably would, but I do not.
Leo: Yeah, so maybe I will put
it on the S7. To be honest, I just hate
Windows 8. I feel like I would like
Windows 10 a whole lot better.
Paul: Yeah, yeah, yeah. So in the week or 2 before
this event I rolled a lot of my machines back, including my desktop, to
whatever version of Windows. So my desktop I had been
using Windows 8.1, on my Ultrabook we went back to Windows 7, some other machines
went back to Windows 8.1, and then I upgraded them to varying degrees of
success. But in that time that I was using the old system the thing that
I realized was that all of these things work fine. I can go into Windows
7, access Word, and OneDrive, and Chrome, and everything works great. I
can go into Windows 8.1 and access the same applications and everything works
great. I have the modern apps in Windows 8.1, but they are full screen so
I tend not to use them as much unless I install like Modern Mix. If you
go to Windows 10 everything works great. Honestly, for day to day stuff
everything pretty much works I think.
Leo: I know that I will
eventually. I'm just trying to resist. I never warmed up to
Windows 8 and even Windows 8.1. I just never warmed up to it.
Mary Jo: Yeah, I know.
Paul: You are not unique in that
regard Leo.
Leo: It's not that I hate it.
Paul: You are like a lot of
people.
Mary Jo: It's just, I don't know, I
have it on my Acer laptop and I still feel like when I use it that I am less
productive than I am with Windows 7.
Leo: Wow.
Paul: I don't have an issue with
it but I do get the complaint.
Leo: One of our esteemed members
of the chatroom says that he has to go pee, so this would be a good time to
take a break. We can give everybody a chance.
Paul: Why don't we all go do
that?
Leo: Let's all go the lobby.
Paul: Nice. We are going to go to the
lobby.
Leo: I understand your
biological urges, but you know, one of the most
important biological urges in life is sleep. We spend a third of our lives or more for some of us in bed. Your bed ought to be a
haven, a place you go for comfort and relaxation. If you don't love, I mean
love, your bed, well that's not good. I want to recommend something that
is really wonderful, something that has really changed my relationship to my
bed, and that's Casper; an online retailer of premium mattresses, and by the
way, for a fraction of the cost. I would pay almost anything for a good
night's sleep. So for me even the cost is secondary to the fact that
these are great mattresses. They are just the right amount of sink and
bounce. They combine latex with memory foam so it's firm, but the
mattress conforms to your hips, your head, your shoulders. It is so comfy. Now, if money is tight you are going to
love the fact that Casper mattresses are a fraction of the cost of mattresses
in the store in the showrooms; $500 for a twin and the biggest they sell, the
king, $950. I have got to tell you that the best part of this is that you
get to try it for 100 days before you are committed. Free delivery, there
is no showroom, although if you went to CES I know a lot of people in our group
were on Casper mattresses for the first time at CES and they say wow, these are
great. You can return it within a 100 day period and it is very easy to
do that. They put it in a box, which is amazing. I don't know how
they get it in there. Here is actually video of them putting it in the
box. If you live somewhere, I talked to someone who lived in a place that
he couldn't get his king sized mattress in so he had 2 twins. That's not
good. You get a big lump in the middle. You have got to try this.
You have got to go to casper,
c-a-s-p-e-r.com/windows, casper.com/windows, it's completely risk free, it's
made in the USA. I will tell you, one of the concerns that I had was
maybe when it comes out of the box that you have a latexy smell or something. No, no, they really do this right. They are
giving you an amazing experience. Really nice. I don't know how to describe it any other way other than just to say try
it, you will love it. I got one for my son. He is in college and he
is on like a 3rd floor walkup. I said, look, I got it for you, and they
deliver this box to your door. He wanted a king size I think. I
can't remember, maybe a king or queen. I said
that you will never get a king or queen in there but you will get a Casper in
there. He loves it. They do sell a California King if you want the
extra height and width. The queens, the twins, the twin XL, this is a
great mattress at a great price, you will love it. Casper.com/windows,
just go to casper.com/windows so that they know you heard it on Windows Weekly
and use the offer code WINDOWS. You will love it.
Paul Thurrott and Mary Jo Foley, they are getting a good night's sleep right now as we do
Windows Weekly in the snowbound Atlantic Northeast. Let me look at the
notes. Let me see what is next. There is a new calendar clock
widget.
Paul: Yeah, but people hate that
too Leo.
Mary Jo: Do they? They don't hate it.
Leo: Come on. What? What do they hate? What?
Paul: This is all that I deal
with now is hate.
Leo: How could Microsoft do this
to us? What do they not like?
Paul: Well look at the comments
on this article. It's awful. It's so terrible, what is
wrong with you people?
Leo: Look at that? You know how much people
paid 10 years ago for a Geoclock? You've got
one built in.
Paul: Sure.
Leo: I will try it out, but I
think that I preferred the old one. This looks like too many clicks. Too many clicks. It looks like a step
backward. The analog clock was much
nicer.
Paul: Someone in there, I don't
know if someone posted a picture of this, but if you remember back in Windows
Vista you could add clocks. So like Mary Jo if you have Windows 8 or
Windows 7, and you click on the time in the taskbar it comes up and there is a
calendar and like an analog clock. In Windows Vista you could add clocks,
so you could see the clock with current time, the clock for Paris, the clock
for Redmond. I always thought that was kind of a cool feature.
Leo: Actually somebody is
commenting. He is in Brazil. I
miss the world clocks. Can you still do this?
Paul: No.
Leo: But again, maybe they will
put that back in. It's not over.
Paul: Yeah.
Leo: I actually use this feature
because we are always talking about time zones here. So I actually use it.
I always have UTC as one of my clocks. But you know what, I bet
you, just a crazy thing, somebody might write an app
that would do this.
Paul: Leo, if only Windows were
an extensible platform for somebody.
Leo: I can't get too upset about
the build in accessory apps because it's just an app.
Paul: I just thought it was
pretty.
Leo: Yeah, I think that it is
fine. I don't know, I think that
it is fine. Paul, you obviously have
very low standards. You probably hate yourself.
Paul: I do, look at my hair.
Leo: Yeah, no one would do that
to their head unless they hated themselves.
Paul: By the way, I've already
told a couple of people this story, but I saw a documentary about the Vietnam
War, and part of it, and of course they are shaving everyone's heads so that
they could go off to war. Here is my question. Why can you shave a
man's head in like 30 seconds flat, but it takes 45 minutes to butcher my head?
Leo: Those are trained military
barbers. They are using militarized clippers. Those are weaponized.
I know, I know, you look at that movie and they go zip, zip, zip in 4
stripes and your hair is gone. It's kind of funny. Anyway, I like
our new look Paul.
Paul: I do too.
Leo: I've almost caught up to
you.
Paul: My hair is growing very
fast and this is the second morning in a row where a portion of it was a little
mussed.
Leo: Oh my god I dream of that
day. Mussed hair.
Mary Jo: Oh boy.
Leo: To this day I get out of
the shower and go, oh I wish I had something.
Paul: You do the Fonzi thing? Like ehh.
Leo: Ehh. Ehh. By the way, there is
somebody in the chat room saying that you can have up to 3 clocks in Windows
8.1. I know, that's what we are saying. It's gone.
Paul: Oh, was that still on the
Windows 3 clocks thing?
Leo: On 8.1.
Paul: Actually Mr. Thurrott.
Leo: It wasn't Lucky Charms, it
was, I can't remember the cereal, Trix. Trix are for kids. The Windows, are there
really 10 Windows 10 SKUs? No. How many SKUs are there?
Mary Jo: We don't know yet.
Leo: They are still going to
have Pro, and Enterprise, and Home?
Mary Jo: We think when they come out
with the editions, we don't know for a fact, but we think there will be Home,
Pro, Enterprise, there will probably be a Mobile of some kind, there will
probably be a Windows 10 for China specifically; but we don't know.
Leo: Will there be Windows 10
with Bing?
Mary Jo: I would be there will be
Windows 10 with Bing.
Paul: Sure.
Leo: How about this? Will there be Windows 10
without Bing?
Mary Jo: I bet there will.
Leo: Actually Cortana is pretty Bingy, so if you have the Cortana you are going to need the
Bing.
Mary Jo: The thing that I saw a lot
of people getting very confused about this week on Twitter again was which
version are you going to put on your PC if it is a certain screen size? Again, we haven't really
heard this yet from Microsoft. What we have heard is about under 8 inches. Under 8
inches is where you get the Mobile.
Leo: It's the cut off that's the
key.
Mary Jo: But then this week Joe Bellifori tweeted that if you have an existing Intel based
7 inch Windows tablet you can put the desktop SKU on that. So now people
are kind of like wait, what? From what I've been hearing from my contacts
Microsoft is thinking again about Windows in terms of profiles. So they
are talking to OEMs and they are saying what are the most
common types of devices that you guys are building? They will say,
you know, a high end flagship phone, or a touch tablet, or they give them like
categories like that. Microsoft said okay, here is the version that you
are going to put on this type of device. People are getting all upset and
they are like am I getting the desktop? Am I going to be able to run Win
32 apps if I have the mobile SKU? The answer is no to that. But,
you know, what if I want to run the desktop and I have
a 7 inch tablet? Could I put the desktop SKU on it? That depends on
how Microsoft allows OEMs to do this and how they allow customers ultimately to
do it. Right now I think the way to think about it is under 8 inches you are probably going to prefer the mobile SKU because that's going
to be optimized for touch and it's not going to have desktop. If you have a
device of any kind 8 inches or over you might want the whole Desktop SKU,
especially if you care about running your Win 32 apps. People are just
getting very twisted about this right now and worrying about it. The
Mobile SKU is not even out, it's going to be out in
February for the first time for people to try. Again, I feel like saying
just be patient everybody, you are going to see this plan evolve. It's
still early days for Windows 10 and we are trying to figure it out along with
you. I'm not sure how much Microsoft itself have figured out but we are
telling you bits and pieces that we get as we learn them. Keep asking us
questions, but don't panic yet. It's not time to panic yet.
Leo: Well also if I parch Joe's
comments, he's not saying this is what will ship with that device, he's saying that you could put it on that device.
Mary Jo: Right, yep.
Leo: There will probably be
rules about what goes with what size, right?
Mary Jo: New devices, yeah. On new devices I think that
there will be rules.
Leo: But there is no rule saying
that you can't put full Windows 10 on a 7 inch device. It's just that no new 7
inch devices will be sold that way.
Mary Jo: Do you want to?
Paul: You may, right? For that kind of docking
situation.
Leo: Right.
Paul: There are people who sort
of dream about that sort of thing. On Windows Phone today for
example, it doesn't support the Bluetooth keyboard capability. Windows obviously does, so
it's conceivable that the phone, the version that would be on phone, would, but
as Mary Jo and I were discussing yesterday I don't think that they are going to
do that. But could you put a Pro version on a phone type device and get
that functionality? Or do like an anytime upgrade? I don't know,
maybe. And who knows, there might be a PC maker or hardware maker that
comes along and says hey, I want' interested in Windows Phone before, but now
that it's Windows we would like to make this new type of device where you could
dock it onto the back of a laptop screen and use it like a computer, but then
you could carry the thing around in your pocket like a phone. Obviously
there have been devices like that, but maybe it becomes a thing. Anything
is possible.
Mary Jo: Right, right now though we
don't know. People are asking us a lot
if it is going to be possible for us to do that. Can I just dock my phone and use it with a keyboard or a monitor? We don't know for sure. I don't think that
Microsoft has said that yet. So we don't know, we don't know, there are
so many we don't knows.
Leo: We are 9 months away from
the release of this program. Come on kids, there are
lots of things that are going to change I would guess between now and the fall.
Paul: There is nothing that can't
be over analyzed Leo.
Leo: That's right, I forgot. That's my job. Sometimes I forget that
this is what we do. How about my Windows RT
device?
Paul: That's screwed.
Leo: Dead end is what you are
saying. Cul-de-sac.
Paul: I don't know how I could
have so completely misheard what he said, but...
Mary Jo: You didn't. He didn't say enough to
actually...
Paul: He would appreciate that my
ears are tuned to Microsoft speak, but that one went right over my head.
Leo: So you assumed that there
would be an upgrade through RT?
Paul: Assumed is a strong word,
but I thought I heard it. I was mishearing.
Mary Jo: They said there will be an
update. You assumed an update to
10.
Paul: You mean you as an English
speaker?
Leo: I must be learning from you
guys, because I was sitting through the keynote and I was like I noticed that
he didn't say update to Windows 10, he merely said we are not done, we may
update this. For all we know those could
be security updates. We don't know.
Paul: Right, to clarify,
Microsoft issued a statement later saying that we will not, as Mary Jo said,
get the Windows 10 upgrade, but there will be some upgrades that will bring
some features of Windows 10. Not to get off on this topic again, but oh my god
is my email insane over this topic? People are saying will I be able to
run a no desktop mode on Windows RT then? It's like guys, seriously.
Leo: You must have heard from
every single person who owns an RT Pro. I just don't feel like that is a
big, big number.
Paul: Somewhere there are these
sad hulking guys who have an RT device, a Zune, a Media Center PC, and they are
just wondering where their life went wrong.
Leo: I have had all of those by
the way.
Paul: I do too actually.
Mary Jo: So Surface 2, I don't know
how many people bought those, also ARM based, they are also going to get this
mysterious update.
Paul: The non-Windows 10 update,
yeah.
Mary Jo: Right, we don't know how
many features are going to be in that update, we don't know when it's coming,
and people have asked me does that mean that I'm going to be able to run the
Touch First Office on that device? Who knows.
Paul: Who knows?
Mary Jo: Nobody knows the answers to
any of those. Somebody does.
Paul: I would just say don't
assume anything if you are running Windows RT. If only someone had warned against using Windows RT years ago it
would have all been okay. It's too bad no one thought
to. Oh, right.
Mary Jo: I think they are going to
try to make it work because a lot of people who bought Windows RT and Surface 2
were early adopters who are very loyal to Microsoft. It would be like
Windows Phone 7.8 all over again if they don't.
Paul: I think it is literally
going to be like that. On the one hand you want to
do right by your early adopters. It's the right thing to do. On the
other hand that crowd is small enough that the engineering and support costs
that would go into making that happen may be prohibitively high.
Mary Jo: May I read the show note
that goes with this item? Because I think that it is rather entertaining.
Leo: Okay, should I just focus
really tight on Paul while you are reading it?
Mary Jo: In our show notes on this
item it says, "Paul must humbly admit that Mary Jo was right about this.
I will do 20 pushups sir, might I have another. I said, luckily you
have the proper military haircut for this type of thing."
Paul: Yep, not positive that I
could do 20 pushups right now, but I could work towards 20 pushups.
Mary Jo: Remember that Leo planked
on the show one time.
Leo: I forgot about that. I'm sorry that you brought
that back up.
Mary Jo: Sorry, actually you did a great job planking. It's not easy.
Leo: No, planking is one of my
real strengths actually. I'm very good at planking.
Paul: We all need something to
hang our hats on.
Leo: I can plank for hours.
Paul: During commercials I plank
while I am watching TV.
Leo: I have a core that just
won't quit. Looking for strategy in
Satya's words. I don't know how I became a Windows fanboy in the period of a 2 hour keynote, but somehow I did. I liked Satya's
closing statements. I will be the first to recognize that as with any
keynote these are forward looking statements. The devil is in the
details, we will have to see how everything is implemented, but I felt like we
saw a cohesive strategy from Microsoft, a positive way forward, and I also feel
like, I asked you last week, is this the old
factionalized Microsoft or is this a new Microsoft that can row in the same
direction? Because, you know, you can announce the HoloLens,
Microsoft has announced a lot of great products, but if you can't deliver then
it's meaningless. I felt like Satya showed that he got it.
Paul: Right, look, Satya Nadella
is surprisingly controversial within Microsoft. Depending on who you talk
to they either love him or they are like, meh, not so sure.
Leo: Factionalists don't like
him, right?
Paul: That could be. But there is also an
element of people who have been involved in layoffs, and they are not too sure
that they layoffs were done in a logical or correct fashion. I think
externally Satya Nadella has been a big win for Microsoft overall. Obviously
there have been the hiccups, the what should a woman
do when she wants to ask for a raise kind of thing was a kind of a glitch.
The fact that the way that they make money is changing dramatically during
his tenure, and will go down in many ways through no fault of his, just through
the normal evolution of the business is something that he will have to deal
with. I went back and rewatched that part of
the keynote later, and there were those 3 things that he talked about with
Windows that were really important. Windows is a service about my theory
that I increasingly believe to be correct, that if you agree to this free
upgrade and install Windows 10 then you are going to have to let Microsoft
upgrade that system and treat it like we do with Office 365. It's going
to be something that is always being serviced and kept up to date.
Leo: Who wouldn't want that? I guess except for some IT
professionals.
Paul: Businesses, yes,
absolutely. So they are going to have
the exceptions for those businesses. But over time the system changes where a lot of the businesses
will come on board too. I don't see that happening anytime soon, but...
Leo: Why do you think that they
want to do it that way?
Paul: They don't trust Microsoft.
Leo: No, I understand
businesses. Why does Microsoft want to
do that?
Paul: Because right now what we
have out in the world and what we have had out in the world for decades is
multiple versions of Windows, multiple versions of Internet Explorer, multiple
versions of DLLs, and ServaLite, and Java, and all of
this stuff. It's a support nightmare. When you talk about this kind
of interconnected world, we need all of these things to be on a common platform
that can be easily serviced where we don't have to do, I say we like I have
anything to do with it, where someone, whoever it is, Microsoft or anyone else,
doesn't have to make 100 different versions of things to make sure that
everyone is up to date or up to date as possible. It's just a more secure
and reliable way to do it. Assuming that they can
deliver Windows updates that actually don't screw up your computer, which they
have done too. That's a bit of a challenge.
Leo: We should just take any
conclusion from the Microsoft stock price plummeting.
Paul: We will get to that in a
minute because that is related to their earnings.
Leo: That's more earnings than
anything else?
Paul: Yeah, honestly the big thing
to me is what we talked about last week where he finally did say Mobile First,
Cloud First, Windows Best. He used the word
best.
Leo: Love that.
Paul: Love that. I think this is maybe the
most important thing that came out of it. He also reiterated something that Mary Jo and I have been saying
over the course of the last year when we talk about Microsoft putting their
apps on IOS or putting their apps on Android which is, you know, this is not a
subtle strategy, it's practical. It's customer first, you have to go
where the customers are. Now that they have sauced that out I think that
you can see them put an emphasis on Windows again. I mean, you know, Mary
Jo and I basically have careers where we parse what Microsoft says. I find
his comments to be very interesting on a number of levels. I do think
that he has kind of struck the right note there.
Mary Jo: You know, I was reading
what you wrote about this Paul, and I agree with you that when I heard him give
this talk about all of the positive things about Windows last week at the
Windows 10 thing I didn't really hear it. So when I read the transcript I
realized that he actually didn't say much specifically.
Paul: That's why you have to
parse it out.
Mary Jo: So his point was the proof
that we love Windows more than the other platforms is that we are building into
the operating system things like Cortana, and OneDrive, and Xbox Live, but the
part that we didn't hear and that I still don't really know is why is it better
building that into the OS than as having those as free apps like you do on IOS
and Android? What is better about it? That's the part that we don't
know.
Paul: You have to go service by
service, and in some cases it's a little more obvious than others. I think that the big thing
right of the top is discoverability, and the fact that it is just there, and
it's integrated into the system, it's not just a bolt on app. Depending
on the operating system and where we are at in time the extensibility and
capabilities are more limited on those platforms then they are in Windows.
For example, in IOS in the very latest version they finally added this
way for those Cloud service engines to kind of be built into the OS and to
share things more simply. That capability did not exist until September,
or October, or whenever it was. So there is going to be stuff like that.
You are right, ultimately for an end user is it any easier or better to
use OneDrive with Word on Windows then it is to use DropBox or OneDrive with Word with what's the Apple thing, whatever it is called.
Mary Jo: Pages.
Leo: Pages.
Paul: Pages. If it isn't then we have a
problem. That's the question.
Mary Jo: Just because it's
integrated. Because the part that's
mysterious is that we have OneDrive for free. It's free, the app is free also for
Android. So why is it better that
it's bundled with Windows for free also?
Paul: Yeah, on the Microsoft
solution I think that being cross platform they offer an interesting thing that
is not always available elsewhere. For example, if you are an
Apple guy there are probably advantages to using Safari on the Mac and on IOS
in that you can maybe save articles and they appear on your phone and that's
really neat. But with Microsoft system the idea is that this stuff should
work cross platform. That you could run around with your Lumia handset
that has some kind of Sensicore technology or maybe
use a FitBit and maybe that information is going into
Health Service that Microsoft owns and controls and it appears in the MSN
Health App on IOS because you have an iPhone instead of an iPad let's say.
I mean, it's that kind of cross platform capability that I think is a big
part of it as well.
Mary Jo: Yeah, right.
Paul: The other ecosystems semi rely on you staying within their hardware and software. Not 100% obviously, Google
has a lot of stuff on iPhone too. It's hard to say. That's the big
question. I didn't want to get too far into the Satya Nadella criticism
thing, but the one other thing that I have heard, and this is externally to
Microsoft, not internally, about him, and I think that you kind of eluded to this, is that he says a lot, you know. But
he really doesn't say a lot.
Leo: That's a good CEO.
Paul: He takes a lot of words. It could be. That's why you have to kind
of go through the transcript to listen to him speak where you are kind of in
front of a keyboard and can pause it, and go back, and kind of distill it down
to what is essentially just a few basic points. It's kind of the
opposite.
Leo: He's CEO talk, but I feel
like I heard things.
Paul: For example, the next item
on the list. One of the other comments
that he made during the same event was we want to get people from needing
Windows to wanting Windows and loving Windows. This is one of those moments where the Windows community was like
thank you, this is a big deal, this is so great.
You don't really think about it, you kind of walk away feeling great
because he said the right thing and it's great. You know what? That
can't happen. It can never happen. And
there are a bunch of reasons, but I think that, no. Not because there is
anything inherently wrong with windows, the OS. But because before you get it,
as a consumer, they give it to HP, and to Dell, to Lenovo, Acer and Asus and
all the other goon squad, hitler's henchmen companies out there and they´ve ruined
it. And they´ve ruined it with crapwear, , and
they´ve ruined it by loading up double drivers, or out dated drivers, and deliver to consumers in a way where
there´s like 57 Windows updates that have to be installed. There is crapwear, putting up advertisements in the corner. There´s
a useless antivirus thing, that by the way is going to
expire in 15 days, oh my God you better get updated right away. They completely
ruined it, and until they fix that problem, you can talk all you want about
people loving Windows. I think people do love Windows, they just don´t get
Windows. They get Windows with all this crap on top of it. And
that´s a huge problem.
Leo: Yeah,
it´s really true, the consumer edition of Windows, is very much skewed by.
Paul: And you
get this little device, that´s got 16 gigs of storage, 32 gigs of storage, and
you install Office on there, you have 0 gigs of storage, you know. And, because there´s crap on there, it´s just, the stuff that you
do not need. And you don´t know. Some of this stuff might be useful,
there´s no way to tell. This is , you know, it´s like
the good side, bad side of the distribution model that has worked so well for them in the past. But, you
know PC makers aren´t in many ways the best thing that´s ever happened to
Windows. They are absolutely the worst.
Leo: Well now
you know why Microsoft is making hardware, I guess.
Paul: By the
way, there´s a reason that everyone´s making a Chrome book. It´s
not because Chrome books sell well, although they have. It´s because
screw you Microsoft, you didn´t serve us. That´s
exactly why that happened.
Leo: Although, some of the chatters pointed this out. This is very similar to the
experience Android phone users have when they get an Android phone crapped up
by HTC or Samsung or LG. It´s not Android it´s something
else.
Paul: But, to
the user it is Android, it is Windows. They won´t think, screw you Samsung or
maybe they do actually.
Leo: A lot of
people think that. Let me retract that statement. But, I think a lot of people
blame Microsoft, for what´s wrong with Windows, when in fact it´s Dell or
Lenovo or some other company.
Mary Jo: Well you
know a lot of the reasons when you heard people justify why put crapwear on PCs it was because Windows is so expensive
for them and they have to offer the
costs.
Paul: Is
Windows expensive though?
Mary Jo: Now it´s
not.
Leo: Not anymore. Holy cow, it´s 35 bucks.
Mary Jo: Well,
it´s actually, if you get the Windows with Bing SKU it´s 15 dollars, and 0 if
it´s under 9 inches. So that argument is kind of out the window. I just wish, I
wish Microsoft could just say, You know what the rule
is everyone does signature PCs from now on, if you want to get the free SKU.
Paul: That´s
exactly what I´m asking, and, right. That´s a big step though, isn´t it? You
know in the past, that would´ve been an antitrust issue. I think we´ve reached
the point where we can argue, you know what, all of our competition is doing just
this. This is the only way we can compete in this world which is very different
than it was in the year 2000. It´s time to grow up and move on.
Leo: Has
Microsoft abandoned the signature PC?
Paul: They are
like crack addicts addicted to it. These guys are saying, oh no, I can stop. I
can stop any time I want. The next version we´re not going to do this, So it comes out and it´s got 23 pieces of crap on it, the
boot times are astronomical.
Leo: Look at
download.com or any of the shared download sites now which do the same thing.
They crap up your download with that ware. And that´s just
horrible greed.
Paul: I get
it, times are tough.I understand needing to make money. I write books, I understand what it´s like to
make no money. But, of the 7 or 8 things that I install on my PC every single
time I start from scratch, at least 2 of them, you have to, God, you have to
pay attention during set up. Cause you click next and
you´ve just installed some insane toolbar or the adword thing.
Leo: I think
that´s the big issue for Microsoft. It´s too easy to screw up Windows, almost
everybody does.
Paul: It´s
almost like the should´ve created a new modern app platform where you could´t do that anymore, oh wait.
Leo: Is the
signature PC dead? Or are we going to see signature PCs?
Paul: Oh no,
signature PC is going strong and we´re going to see more of it. The only
problem with signature PCs is they can´t reach everybody. Microsoft´s retail
stores are basically in the United States and maybe I think Canada.
Leo: They
need to roll out more of those.
Paul: Even the
Microsoft stores, need to be available everywhere. I just wish some PC maker ,
but i wish some major PC maker Dell, HP, somebody, would offer these 2 things side by
side, and say, hey we´ll charge you extra for it. $15 dollars
extra, $25, $100 dollars.
Leo: Dell
used to do that, you´d say if you pay another $50 bucks you don´t get crapware, didn´t
they? Do they still do that?
Paul: That sounds
familiar actually. I just wish it was more available. They´re
doing lots of work over there.It´s good stuff.
Leo: I will
let you know on this new XPX cause I didn´t see that option, there were´t that many customization options.
Paul: These HP
streams are a good example, Any Lenovo product.
Leo: HP used
to be the worst culprit.
Paul: They
still are. That´s what I´m saying, They´re still terrible. As good as these machines are, you still have to spend 30 or 45 minutes right
off the top, just, what is this junk? It´s awful. It´s really, it´s a big problem.
Leo: Big way
to solve this, just , I somewhat blame Microsoft because OEM stopped long ago
shipping Windows install disks, and if you shipped a Windows install disk, then
you would just wipe the drive and install Windows and you´d say bye bye.
Paul: That´s
what i want. I want Windows
and drivers you know. And the drivers thing it should just be an application that checks on line and grabs the latest.
Leo: Yeah,
let me decide what crapware I want to install.
Paul:: It´s too bad.
Leo: I have
to say, that´s something that Apple does well. They uh, you just don´t, they
cost a lot more
Paul: If you
really want people to love it, you have to control the widget from the
beginning to the end. If you don´t, if they were middle men, it becomes like
the situation with liquor stores in Massachusetts, I can´t just get any alcohol I want from
anywhere in the country. I have to go through this like seudo mafia organization. And you kind of ,you know, you either don´t get it at all or you pay a
lot for it.
Leo: I might also point out
, though, when you get to these Dell XPXs, you kind of, I´m paying $1150 bucks
not a cheap laptop
Paul: But you
know what, it´s a problem at every end of the spectrum. Let´s say you´re buying
a $99 dollar HP stream tablet or a $200 HP stream laptop, nothing drives home the fact that you
have no money to spend on anything more than having to waist your precious time
trying to figure out which of this crap is crap and then trying to figure out
how to uninstall it, by the way, none of it uninstalls. Or
your case.
Leo: Here´s
the great option on the Dell buy the XPX, the option is: Operating system recovering options, Operating system recovery media not included,
and there´s no other, Help me choose, choose what?
Paul: What
happens when you click help me choose?
Leo: There´s
no option! Worried about possible OS recovery? They don´t give me 2 options.
Paul Thurrott : That´s amazing. Really is amazing. How do PCs
ship without recovery media on the box?
Leo: It
drives me crazy. People call the radio show all the time and the first thing I
ask them is, um, tell me you have a Windows install disk, nobody does.
Paul: It´s
like, making people buy peanuts
Leo: But
that´s, I have to say, Is Microsofts fault, thats that, going way back to Bill
Gates paranoia about piracy. No, they don´t want people to do
that. Don´t you think? They incentivize OEMs not to include disks
Paul: This is
an unholy and unhealthy relationship Leo, that´s what I´m saying.
Leo: They say
that you can purchase separately an OS recovery DVD, but it´s not an option as
far as I can tell.
Paul: So that
must cost about, what? $.50 cents? That´s
how much a DVD costs.
Leo: And I
know that in modern Windows 8, you have a part recovery partition but that doesn´t
restore it to pure Windows, that restores it
Paul: Actually
it could, PC makers can and do obviously change that to have their own stuff in
it. You could use the built in Windows tools and still get back to crapper
central, through no fault of your own.
Leo: This is
the option on my Dell, it’s called additional software. I guess I opted in for
the additional software option.
Paul: Yeah
it´s called , you know, we do all the stuff that you
just fixed
Leo: I don´t
want additional software.
Paul: The
system needs to be fixed. I realize I´ve kind of beaten this to death.
Leo: And I´ve
got to tell you, if Microsoft didn´t incentivize OEMs to do this, and partly
it´s our fault, Ok, I´ll take both, there are 2 parties to blame, Microsoft but
it´s also us because we´re demanding $250 PCs. We´ve killed the margin for the
PC industry demanding really low cost PCs, by being poor. You know what, I
blame the Koch brothers. They´re rich and we´re poor so we
have to live with crapware. I bet you, they don´t
have crapware on their PCs
Paul: Economic
disparity in this country could actually be at the causet of this. Yeah they just hire people to remove the crapware.
Get Bill Gates on the phone, I want a clean version of this computer. Except
Bill Gates left Microsoft like 8 years ago buddy.
Leo: Can I
actually go and download a pure Windows disk now that I have a computer Windows
license?
Paul: Actually
yes, yes you can.
Leo: See
there you go.
Paul: Here´s
the thing, so a retail Windows key would work on that, Windows 8 key, would a OEM key work? Probably not.
Leo: You have
to get the OEM version for that to work.
Paul: I´ll
test that though. That´s interesting. I don´t think so
though, this are different
Leo: I would
love it on Thurrott.com wow we even got an echo on that, that´s good. I need an
echo, Thurrott.com, com, com, for, you know, just to make, how to get a clean
install on them, on modern versions.
Paul: It´s
ugly Leo, there´s no pleasant way to do it.
Leo: Well
I´ll be doing it next week I can tell you right now. Thank goodness for nite nite. That makes it easy.
Paul: The decrapifier as well.
Leo: See what
I want, I don´t want to uninstall, I feel that there´s still stuff lying
around, I want the clean version.
Paul: I
haven´t seen this in a while, I mean I don´t have access to a million PC,
actually yes I do, what am I talking about, but anyways hahaha,
I haven´t seen this in a while, but there used to be some, Dell used to do this
where there would be a multipart set up when you restore the system and so you
would install the OS and then it would install the drivers, and then it would
say would you like to install any of the Dell accesories?
No, I don´t, thank you. And then you would just kind of move on from there, you
know, that would be perfectly acceptable.
Leo: Like I
said, they used to have an option, $50 bucks more and you won´t have to have
any of this stuff. And I noticed it´s not there anymore. Like I said I´m buying
an $1150 laptop, there´s plenty of margin for them.
Paul: The
margins are razor thin on the $99 laptop, but on the $1500 laptop, absolutely
not.
Leo: Well I´m
with you, I´m with you on your call to make signature mandatory.
Paul: I think
we´re losing Mary Jo.
Mary Jo: Yeah,
you´ve lost me. That´s ok.
Paul: I´m
pretty sure she just wrote an entire post while we were
Mary Jo: Wait are we talking about Xboxes? No, no we´re not.
Leo: We were
ranting, sorry.
Paul: We´ve
got to move on and talk about Xboxes.
Mary Jo: I agree
with all of what you were saying and you know, I´ve got Richard B in the chat room saying the disks
are not in the box because OEMs don´t want them, they don´t want it. I´m not sure who they is though.
Leo: I think
it´s Microsoft that doesn´t want it because they´re afraid of piracy.
Mary Jo: No, he
says no. He says Microsoft wants OEMs to use recovery partitions that´s what
they´re encouraging. Ok I don´t want to talk about this anymore.
Leo: Yes maám, let´s talk about surface 2.
Mary Jo: Let´s
talk about Spartan.
Leo: Alright,
I love that. I was on the horn as I am every morning with our web developers, I
just want to say, agile, is about process more than anything I´ve ever experienced in my
life. There´s a lot of process, but one of the bits of that is, you scrum every day, stand ups, lots of them. We had a stand
up and a, a, oh there´s all these slangy terms, we had a stand up and we had a
sit down, anyway, one of the things I asked about, because we´re using new
technology to do this front end, is, I´m old school and in the old days
different browsers had different implementations of java and you had a lot of
code in your website, Well is it IE 5? IE 6? Is it IE
7?Is it Safari? And you would branch like crazy,
depending on what browser you were using. Fortunately I think those days are
kind of numbered. But anyways, the team was saying, we have tools that do a lot
of this automatically. So I said, well what about Spartan? Like for instance,
we design this now, but Spartan will be out this Fall.
How hard is it going to be to accommodate any differences in Spartan? And they
said, you know what, it´s a plug in system, there´s
something called sas that works with CSS, it´s
straight forward. But I think Spartan is going to be very standards compliant
right?
Mary Jo: Yes,
very standards compliant.
Leo: That´s
key, for, I think for me.
Mary Jo: Yes, and
this week we learned a couple of new things about Spartan, which is that new
web browser, that Microsoft is going to make a part of Windows 10. So it´s
meant to be a replacement for both modern IE, you know the one that was the
version that ran in the entire world, and it is also meant to be a replacement
ultimately for regular IE.
Leo: Wait a
minute, You mean there will only be one browser on
Windows 10?
Mary Jo: No, for
the mobile version there will only be one browser, and also for the desk top
version. If you´re an enterprise customer or somebody else who still needs IE
for backward compatibility, you´ll be able to download that and put it on your
system. So technically there´s still 2, but the way it´s going to ship, I think
is just with Spartan.
Paul: Really?
Mary Jo: I think
so. That´s my take away from what they were talking about yesterday, in the ask
IE chat. Yeah, so, Spartan is the browser for Windows 10, but, if you´re an
Enterprise customer, don´t painc, you can still get
IE 11. The other interesting thing though is the rendering engine. It´s very
interesting, some people in Microsoft call the rendering engine that´s in
Spartan a new rendering engine.
Leo: Right,
This has been unclear, because we´ve also said, it´s trident.
Mary Jo: Right,
so what it is, it actually is a fork of trident, that um, it was like pulling
teeth to get Microsoft to tell me this for some reason. It´s a fork of trident
that is called EdgeHTMl.dll it bares very little resemblance anymore to trident
because they´ve changed it so much since they forked it, but it still is
trident. For all intents and purposes. It´s not webkit, it´s not gecko, it´s a
fork of trident. So, you know,
it´s new , yes it is new and Microsoft´s going to call
this a new browser, it´s going to work differently, but, it´s going to be able
to, kind of act like other webkit browsers and I am
not technical enough to explain how that
works, I know it has to do with user agent string.
Leo: So,
they´re going to identify as webkit? Not as …
Mary Jo: I don´t
know if they´ll actually go so far as to identify as webkit but I think they will identify in a way that it won´t make it look like there´s
some different non-standards compliant browser.
Leo: Yeah I
think that´s critical. I think currently don´t they identify as Mosaic? I´m trying to remember what the user agent string is right now.
Paul: It says
Mozilla in there.
Leo: Mozilla,
that´s it, yeah.
Mary Jo: Right.
There was a really good, I´m going to refer anyone who cares a lot about this
kind of under the hood stuff, to an article that was in Smashing Magazine this
week that was written by an engineer who works on an IE named Jacob Rossi. You should go read that article. It
has everything you want to know about trident and the new rendering engine in
Spartan in that article.
Leo: As you
might imagine web designers are very, very intrigued and concerned and want to
know as soon as possible.
Mary Jo: The
other thing we found out this week about Spartan is they are going to support
extensions. They said this also in the ask IE dev chat this week. Somebody, I think it was Brad Sams from Neowin who said : Are
you guys going to do that? And they confirmed it. They said we are working on a
plan for extensions for a future updates projects. They would´t give a time frame or
explain what that meant. If it meant you could use Google Chrome extensions,
they didn´t say that, but it is going to happen. They are going to support
extensions.
Leo: And
interestingly, I got this from the Smashing article, you can enable the new
engine in your Windows 10 technical preview today, you could try HTML on your
existing code and see what will happen. You have to change your bout flags and
enable experimental web platform features. So that´s good though,
that´s good.
Mary Jo: Yeah,
it´s good, they´re doing the right thing I think with Spartan, Yep.
Leo: It´s so
funny because this is kind of fundamental now to the ecosystem now.
Mary Jo: You´ve
got to do this. Also they´re testing out new potential names
for Spartan.
Leo: How
about Vivaldi? I like that, it´s kind of
Mary Jo: The ones
they´re are testing are all Es, Elixa, Evo, Endeavor, Edge, but most of us just want them to
call it Spartan, so I hope they end up calling it Spartan.
Leo, Nah, no they´re not going to call it Spartan.
Mary Jo: You
don´t think so? Why not?
Leo: It
conjures up the image of a naked man with a beard. i don´t, It´s not
Mary Jo.
That´s not what I think of when I think of Spartan.
Leo: Maybe
it´s just me.
Paul: No
judging Leo.
Leo: How
about something like Bingle?
Mary Jo: Bingle? no.
Leo: Something with Bing in it.
Mary Jo: No, I
think the´re either going to do Spartan or. just plain old Spartan like they did Cortana, right? They
kept Cortana.
Leo: Who was
it that said they should call it the Covenant? Ha ha ha, with a little Halo reference there. It has to have
something
Mary Jo: Spartan
has to do with Halo.
Leo: Right.
So it has to have something to do with Halo.
Mary Jo: They
could, they could do it.
Leo: Bing
Explorer (Registered Trademark) Microsoft Corporation, 2015.
Mary Jo: No oh
Leo: Yeah
that´s a little old. Evolve? Evo? So, that´s what all these E things are.
Mary Jo: Yeah,
all those E things.
Leo: Evo, Evolve, Elixa, Elixa?
Mary Jo: No, no.
Leo: Wasn´t Elixa the host of the Late Night Horror Movies on , she was the Queen of the night?
Paul: Elvira?
Leo: Oh
Elvira! That´s it.
Mary Jo: That´s
how paul pronounces Elixir
Paul: Elixa.
Leo: Would
you like some Elixa to go with your lobster? Elixa. Ok, Ok, let´s see, let´s take a break, come back, we got more to talk about
Office next, oh you know the earnings. We really didn´t talk about that yet. And we still got our
back of the book, we got a ton of stuff still to talk about, we´re just getting
on our way here folks. In fact, let´s uh, yeah, I´ll do ITProTV,
we got to talk about them, they´re great guys, doing a wonderful product for
anybody who wants to get good at IT. Maybe you´re already in IT or support and
you just want to polish up, or maybe you´re looking
for a job. And you know you need those certs, don´y you, to get that IT job. ITProTV is the way to go, I
got to tell you. These guys are wonderful. And I say that because they
unabashedly copy, or should I say it´s an homage,
imitate what we do. ITProTV is very much like Twit, in fact they were
doing IT training for years. And Tim Broom and his partner,
there´s Tim right there, and there´s Don Peasant. They said, we like what Leo´s doing with Twit, would´t it be cool if we could do like a Tech Tv, or a Twit Tv for IT training? And if you look at
what they´re up to, that´s exactly what they´ve created. Live on the
air, 30 hours a week, with a chat room going on, behind the scenes, you can
watch it everywhere including on Roku, they got a Roku Channel which is
fabulous. And if price is right, especially if you´re looking at the costs of,
you know, a technical school or IT boot camp, or even some of the study
material, we´re talking here $57 dollars a month, $570 dollars for an entire
year, and I´m going to get you 30% off because I´m really, big believers in
this. If you´re studying to get your A+ cert, or your MCSA, or any of the Comptia certs, any of the Microsoft certs, Cisco, they´ve
got these new ISC squared security
certs, and a really great trainer on these, they´re wonderful. But that´s a skill. We´re about to talk about Office, yes
they have great Office training, Excel, Microsoft Word, PowerPoint access,
Project Management, if you´re studying for the PMI cert, they´ve got classes.
VMWare, Citrix, Hyper V, WireShark, that´s a great course by the way if
you want to use WireShark, Google apps, lots of
incredible material, more added every week. Hundreds of hours of content, I
want you to go there right now, itpro.tv/ww , find out more about it. And then I said I was going to
add a discount, 30% off right now when you use our offer code ww30, what you´ll
do, is that you´ll be able to try it free for 7 days, and get 30% off, and I´m
not talking about the first month, the first year forever. Forever. In fact, if you do get the year subscription, which i recommend , you can download everything, drm free. So listen on the airplane. They have video and
MP3s. There is, by the way corporate and group pricing available. Clients
include HP, UCSD, Penn State, Stanford. And, once you´ve reached a 13th month, they´re going to cut the
subscription price even farther. That´ll get it down to $24.95 a month,
$249 dollars for an entire year. That´s less than like 3 books. This is really
a good deal. Itpro,tv/ww. They got Powershell courses
now and Chromecast support so you can, not just the Roku, you can watch it on
your Chromecast. Linux plus. Itpro.tv/ww. If you´ve been wanting to polish up your skills or get
a better job, this is the way to do it. We thank Tim and Don at ItProTv, they´re great, we love them. You see I always have
my ItProTv mug with me. Paul Thurrott,
Mary Jo Foley, lets talk about Office. What do we
know about, they´re calling it Office Next?
Mary Jo: No, the
naming on this is going to get a little confusing. So last week Microsoft said
that the new touch-first Office that they´re building for Windows was going to
be available for free on Windows phones and on small under 8 inch tablets. So
we knew that. Then a couple of days later, they put out a blog post and they started
calling this touch-first Office, um, what are they calling it? They have a
funny name for it. Office for Windows 10. Yeah that
was one of the code names. Office for Windows 10, is
what the Touch-first Office is called. But, there´s another version of Office,
that´s called Office, It´s the full
fledged Office, the full functional Office that runs on Windows, all
versions of Windows, not just Windows 10. That is called Office 2016. Even
though it´s going to ship this year, in 2015. Yeah, so we´ve got Office for
Windows 10, thats the Touch-first Office that´s going
to come out later this year, and we´ve got Office 2016 which is your full Word,
Excel, PowerPoint that´s not just Touch-first. I know, it´s so confusing.
Leo: Does
Office 2016 include Touch?
Mary Jo: Hmm,
Does it support Touch? It´s not built for Touch.
Paul: It does.
Mary Jo: It does?
Leo: But
that´s the super set.
Paul: if you
have a Touch screen, it will go into Touch mode. Which makes
the ribbon items bigger, it´s not a lot, but yeah. It´s
on Windows RT right? And that´s how it´s, on those types of screens
that´s what it´s set up to by default.
Mary Jo,
So, Office, the one that´s Touch-first, it´s Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote
and I think Outlook. The one that is Office 2016 has Word, Excel, PowerPoint,
OneNote, outlook, Access, Publisher, bla, bla, bla, probably Sway, all the
apps. are in that one. That also supports, the Office
2016 will support macros and other features that the Touch-first one won´t
have. So there´s 2 Offices for Windows, the Touch-first
Office, the other full fledged Office. They
both, we think are coming out in this calendar year at the end of 2015, maybe even at the
same time. So that´s what we know now. And neither of
them is in public preview yet. The Office 2016 is in private preview with some
testers, outside of Microsoft. But so far it does´t have any major new features.
Leo: I don´t
even want to start this conversation. Is this superseding Office 365?
Mary Jo,
No, this is, no.
Paul: It´s not
a hard differentiation, this is for touch-first devices. It´s
a mobile version, it´s not the full thing. You know it´s equivalent to
iPad versions of Office.
Mary Jo: Yes. Right. We think it´s going to work with the subscription,
that you´ll have to have some kind of subscription to unlock the full set of
features, maybe not the basic features.
Leo: You´re
talking about touch-first Office? Not Office 2016.
Paul: The
thing about it, in the context of Office 10, this will be bundle with the OS,
you´ll get it on small devices for free with the OS, instead of an Office 365
subscription. Right, and so, that makes more sense than Microsoft than not
giving away as much, but it gives people and those kinds of devices the basic
functionality that they need.
Leo: And with
my Office 365 subscription I´ll get, when it comes out, 2016.
Mary Jo: Yep, and
you´ll also get, I think you´ll also be able to use that with touch-first
Office.
Leo: I would
hope so. I can now with the iPad, I would presume they would give you the same
Paul: The point
is though with the 365 subscription you´ll get the full feature set of all of
the mobile features of Office, iPad, android, iPhone and not Windows.
Mary Jo: Unless
you have certain Office 365 subscriptions like small business doesn´t give you
the actual apps. I don´t think. You know what I mean, Office 365 Small
Business, I have that subscription, it doesn´t give me all the Office apps. it gives me access to the back end. I don´t have a home or
consumer or a professional subscription.
Leo: They
could really rationalize this system.
Mary Jo: But,
it´s coming, so Office is coming and if you have Windows phone or the small
tablet, you´re going to get it, the touch version for free. We don´t know if you´re
going to get the Touch version free with all of the Windows 10 SKUs. That we
don´t know.
Leo: Dare I
ask about Office for the Mac?
Mary Jo: Second
half of this year. That´s all we know.
Leo: Will it
be now, feature complete with the Windows version? Will they match up?
Paul: I think
it´s going to match up more with the 2016 than to a mobile version. I think Mac
users aren´t going to get the, you know.
Leo: Yeah, we
don´t need that, that´s alright.
Mary Jo: Paul
gets the next topic. I can´t even pass this blog post. I´ve read it like 5 times and I´m still
not sure.
Leo: Major
updates coming to photo experiences at Onedrive.
Paul: This is
a Sinofskian blog post, but it kind of boils down to
3 things that are happening.
Leo: That´s a
new word I like. It´s like Sinofskian.
Paul: Some of
the stuff is happening immediately, some of it´s going to happen over the next
few weeks or months or whatever. OneDrive as you know, you can back up your
photos to it, you can do this from Windows phone, Windows devices, iPhone,
iPad, Android, whatever. And that´s neat, but, the problem is it all gets dumped into a, like a camera role folder, and it´s just a
raw dump ordered by date. And so in my
case, I´ve been doing this now since the middle of
2010. I have 11,300 and something photos, in my camera role folder. And that
thing is useless, it´s I mean, you can go back and see photos that just
happened, but once you get past a couple of screens, it´s impossible to find
anything. And so, they´re going to improve
that stuff and so part of what they´re doing is up on the server if you will,
up in the cloud. They´re going to add an albums feature which we´re also going
to see in the on the client apps. which is the ability
to automatically and then manually create albums of things inside your camera
role, So for example, it will look at the date, location and time, and say Hey,
you just did a bunch of stuff at the same time, in the same place. This is an
event, it´s an album, you know, that kind of thing. You can share albums kind
of a nice interface for that, you´re going to see that on the web, you´re going
to see this on iOS, eventually you´re going to see this on Android, Windows
phone and of course on Windows 10 as well. What else? There´s a, well the other
big one is changes coming to the desktop phone and actually outlook.com when it
comes to interacting with your photos and so I guess it´s Windows 7 or Windows
8.X there´s a Onedrive sync client. And it´s going to
be updated in this coming month and that update is going to allow you to back
up photos from a camera, a USB stick, an external hard drive or whatever is
connected to your computer to the cloud. And there´ll be a new folder for that
called camera imports. When you take a screenshot, and these 2 systems as well, Windows 7
and Windows 8, meaning you hit the print screen button, not the Windows 8.1
special key code or Windows 10 special key code, but if you just hit print
screen it usually goes to the clipboard, also will be saved automatically to
One Drive, so you can take screenshots on one device and have them be on the PC
you´re actually working on automatically, that´s something I can actually use
every single day. And then in OneDrive, last week or a couple of weeks ago,
they added the ability to save attachments to OneDrive if you´re using
Outlook.com on the web, now they´re going to have a one click save for photo
attachments same thing. If you get an email with photos you can save those right to OneDrive immediately. And so It happens up in
the cloud, there´s no copying that you have to worry about down on the client.
And then the third one, is, a new search functionality, it´s kind of a
partnership between OneDrive, Bing and Microsoft research, that basically
allows you to search for photos based on the time, location or text that´s
extracted from the images. You can also
search for tags, so tags are something that Microsoft used to support a lot. In
photo clients, we haven´t seen a lot of work there, but now they´re adding it
back to One Drive and so it will create tags for you, you can create your own
tags, you can obviously change the ones that they create. And then there´s a
non-photo aspect to it where you can also search office documents and PDFs by
the text that´s included that´s inside of them. So, if you don´t, like, you
know, I have a
document, I know I wrote about this topic, search for that topic those
documents will come up as well. And
that´s going to happen on Web first and then iOS and will come to Android and
Windows phone and then , well i don´t know, presumably Windows 10 as well.
Leo: They´re
really playing catch up here though. This is, I mean
Google´s already doing most of this stuff. Even drop box is doing a better job
than one Drive.
Paul: So,
right. I think the job with One Drive was just getting the raw dump going, you
know, and getting all of your photos from everywhere. Obviously there was a big
controversy last Fall around the place holder thing,
one of the things around getting an integrated consistent sync engine across
all of their clients, is they can start adding these kinds of features. they
talked about photos right up front because this is the big one that people have
been complaining about, it´s just, it´s
gotten better over time but, I guess at 11,00 photos and I have zero way to organize them, to find
things, and you know, if I want to look at photos from like a home spot from 2
years ago, it´s like, page by page, by page, by page, and then you have to Iook at the picture, like, where am I in time? Nope, page, page, page, it´s, it´s impossible to find anything. And so I think they´re finally going to start, I´m not saying this is going to
fix all the problems, but, they´re finally making, they´re taking great steps
to fix, you know, what is a huge problem.
Leo: Good. Right now I just use it as a
backup solution. You know, I´m, organizational stuff sold them by other stuff
Paul: I keep
checking OneDrive today to see if any of the stuff has shown up.
Leo: But
there´s an opportunity here, you know I don´t know why companies want to do it,
I guess cause their users are demanding it. But
everybody now is offering you know, this kind of photo
backup.
Paul: Oh, it´s
important on OneDrive because, well first of all you get a lot of free storage,
I think it´s 30 gigs is free for everybody. If you’re an Office 365 guy, I
mean, it´s unlimited. and so the appeal of this is
strong. The problem is the actual experience isn´t great, and I think this is
going to take a step in that direction making it great. Or 3 steps I guess.
Leo: Yeah you
know they´ve, in some ways leapfrogged, yeah. Like desktop import, that´s , I don´t think anybody does that.
Paul: It´s
just kind of a crazy, unique feature you can add to a PC. That´s
a good idea. I think we´re about 50% in the show
Leo: I know,
My God! There´s a lot to talk about this week.
Mary Jo: Let´s do
earnings. Let´s do earnings. Yep, so this is weird. Microsoft announced their
earnings on Monday. Usually it’s at the end of the week, it made me feel like this whole week was Friday.
Paul: By the
way yes, absolutely.
Mary Jo: So they
announce their Q2, physical 2015 earnings on Monday. They met the estimates for
their operating earnings 71 cents a share. That was what Wall Street was
predicting. But, their stock pretty much tanked this week. the reason it did was, their forecast for what they are going to make for the rest
of the year was fairly conservative.
Paul: Was it
zero dollars?
Mary Jo: No, it
was more than zero dollars. But they also, I think we´re starting to see what
we all knew was going to happen at some point, but, now it´s very visible
what´s happening. Microsoft is making less money per copy of Windows because of
the zero dollars thing, and because they´re dropping the prices for OEMs. At the same time, they´re transitioning to
this new cloud model, so, the Windows , sorry, Windows commercial revenues ,
which is their Windows business revenues were down, Office revenues were down
for the commercial segment, because they´re selling more Office 365, not as
many people are buying copies of Office anymore, physical copies. Windows Phone
revenues were down a lot, even though they sold quite a few Windows Phones
surprisingly for the quarter. They sold 10.5 million Lumias,
but their revenues were down 61 % compared to the year ago quarter for Windows
Phone. So yeah, it was kind of a mixed, rocky quarter. Cloud looked really good
for them. Enterprise looked good except for Office and Windows. But they´re in
the middle of this transition right now to the cloud and you can really see
this happening. Also they are no longer getting benefits from people moving from
XP to other versions of Windows, That’s kind of tapering off now. And that also was something that came forth
in this month´s earnings. They also said Japan and
China were very weak, uncharacteristically weak. And they took a hit from an
ongoing case they have with the IRS over how they´re reporting some of their
revenue exchange, when they transfer revenue to offshore locals. And the IRS is
trying to get them on that. Their tax rate went up, foreign exchange rates were
bad, not working in their favor, so it was like a big, storm converging in one
place, and, so, that´s what happened with the stock this week. It wasn´t like their best quarter.
Leo: Just
sounds like a lot of excuses Microsoft.
Mary Jo: I don´t
know if they were excuses, just a lot of factors kind of all converging.
Leo: My dog
ate my revenue.
Paul: By the
way, the one thing, I mean, because I always look on the bright side of things, Windows revenues to
PC makers were down 13% year over year. Microsoft gave away Windows for free
last year basically, or charged almost next to nothing for it. And their
revenues were only down 13% so that actually tells me that they sold a lot more
Windows licenses than they did previously a lot more but that there were of
course a lot less money per license in fact sometimes it was free. That is
amazing, and I actually think that´s pretty positive. I mean as Mary Jo
said, they weren´t getting that bump from XP upgraders and business, they weren´t
getting a price bump from education as well they lowered the price there.
There´s some interesting, that counters some of the bad news in a way, I guess
that´s what I´m saying. You know the Xbox site for example, Microsoft of the past few months has been promoting how amazing the holiday
season has been for Xbox 1, number 1 selling console in the United States only
in November and December, record sales of Xbox 1, you know better and better.
Better, better, better. Xbox revenues were down 20% year over year. And again,
same basic reason, price cuts, right? But you know, for Windows to only be down
13% you´re kind of seeing an amazing volume there I think and there´s the
benefit they get. There are a lot of Windows licenses being sold and that´s,
that´s not all bad news.
Leo: You
forgive me, if I´m a little distracted, this box from Dell just arrived.
Mary Jo: Is that
the SGS?
Leo: I think
it is. It came a week early.
Paul: Well,
let´s jump ahead to the pics Leo shall we?
Leo: I want
to get out of here. Aren´t you guys done yet? Let me just show you. Look how
little the box is, that´s not the laptop, that´s the box.
Paul: I
desperately need for these people to make a 15 inch version of this, that´s in
the 13 inch case.
Leo: Yeah,
wouldn´t that be cool? Yeah, um. Very much an Appleish experience
with the box. And in fact it really does look like a MacBook Air, a
little square.
Paul: That´s
the back.
Leo: Yeah, I
figured that.
Paul: Leo, that
big part, that´s not the front.
Leo: It´s not
quite the wedge of the Air is. And you know how people were saying how light it
is, I mean it is light, but it´s not that light, it´s not like floating out of
my hand light. This is the thing that´s remarkable, is the almost bezel-less
screen, let me turn it on.
Paul: Yeah,
the screen is impressive.
Leo: And this
is a nice, uh, you said you played with it, so I´m not touching it. I like the
texture yeah. Like a rubberized thing.
Paul: Now you
just have to wait while they install extra crapware.
Leo I
don´t see any disks in this box.
Paul: By the
way, you could´ve bought this at the Microsoft store, and they would´ve given
you the signature version.
Leo: Really?
Oh Damn!
Paul: I wonder
if you could get it from them, you know, the restored
disk.
Leo: Somebody´s saying that there is a place to go, Microsoft does offer a download
restore that works with the OEM key.
Paul: I´d like
to know where that is, I know of a, you can get the for ISOs for Windows but
I´m not positive about it working for OEM keys. If that were true, I need to know about that
because I would definitely write that up.
Leo: Let me
scroll back through chat and see if I can find the link because, whoever posted
that, if you could post it again that would be great. Here it is, create,
reset, refresh media.
Paul: Yeah,
but how do they know it works with OEM? Does it say OEM keys?
Leo: Yeah,
I´ve seen this before, this creates an ISO on a DVD or whatever.
Paul: I´ll try
it.
Leo: I´ll try it right now heck!
Paul: What
could go wrong?
Leo: What
could possibly go wrong and screw up my brand new Dell?
Paul: It said
Windows could not be activated, that´s what could go wrong.
Leo: Oh, is
that beautiful! I have to say, that is, Now I
understand why everybody was raving about this. This is gorgeous. And I kind of
like the high rise screen. Um , Wow. Ok sorry. That´s
made the show even longer.
Mary Jo: There´s
too much to talk about.
Paul: Here´s
my vote, I say we skip right over power BI and go right into Xbox.
Mary Jo: No, we
can´t. We can´t skip power BI you guys. Ok , so power
BI, it´s Microsoft´s Business Intelligence service. Up until
now it´s been fairly expensive, like close to $50 dollars per user per month to
use this. This week Microsoft announced they´re going to come out with a
free version, like completely free, they call it Freemium, but it´s free. And you´re going to get many of the capabilities that are currently
part of Power BI for visualizing and interacting and managing your data for
free. There are limits, like there´s 1 gigabyte per user data capacity
limit and there´s going to be the new paid version, which is called Power BI
Pro and that´s only going to cost $9.99 per user, compared to what we were just
saying, $50 per user. Right now, it´s in test, it´s US only. They say it´s going to come to the International market sometime in the future,
we don´t know when. But if you´re in the US and you want to try it out, you can
just go to the Power BI site on the web and just sign up. All you need is an
email address, you don´t even need a Microsoft account to try this out, so go
check it out. There you go, Power BI in one minute. Boom.
Leo: Nice
job. By the way, the very first feature that I have to enter is my email, it
says to enable, enhance support and better protect you click next, to send
information to Dell and share your email address with Dell and McAfee. Already a bad sign. And there´s no, I don´t want to do that.
Paul: Is McAfee
located in Columbia now? Or is that just the
Leo: I don´t
want to do that.
Mary Jo: You know
what? I told Paul this, when I got my Acer, I bought it on Amazon, my Acer S7,
and it came as a signature edition. I didn´t even buy it through the Microsoft
store, for some reason it came as a signature edition.
Paul: Actually
some third parties are selling signature editions laptops through Amazon.com.
You got lucky, because that´s really nice.
Mary Jo: It was
fantastic.
Leo: Somebody
said you could say no, I don´t see anything but next, so. I don´t see a say no
Paul: You can
say no, but then you have to click next.
Mary Jo: Ok let´s
talk about Xbox.
Paul: No,
let´s skip Xbox this is not important.
Leo: Xbox
1control getting an update and don´t forget games with gold, I just downloaded
25 ducts, 2015 Super Bowl edition. Tip of the week, ladies and gentlemen, Mr.
Paul Thurrott.
Paul: So a
reader sent me this amazing tip, and this is amazing because so many people got
these free versions of Office 365 personal last year when they bought all these
cheap PCs, which is you can upgrade this thing to Office 365 home for just $10
dollars. And what´s particularly amazing is Office 365 personal and home
actually can be stacked and so if you buy a bunch of key cards in the store or
you get these free coupons in a PC, you apply them to your account it actually
extends the subscription out, so if you have 3 of them, you get 3 years of the
subscription. So for just $10 dollars, you can actually upgrade, which is what
I did, you have 3 years of an Office 354 personal subscription, to 3 years now
of Office home, Office 365 home. So, basically, I have an article on my
website, you should read it. So, the difference between Office 365 personal and
home is that personal is for one person, home is for 5 people, or 5 PCs right?
You can share it with up to 5 people but also, 5 PCs each. So, I mean, for $10
dollars I mean it´s kind of a crazy upgrade so you should definitely check that.
So for the software pick, I´m actually going to skip on the one I have here,
because I think this is a bigger discussion that I don´t want to have right
now, so I´ll just throw out 2 things. DropBox finally
came out with their Windows phone and Windows tablet the modern app, last year,
last week sorry. This is actually a very high quality app I compared it side by
side with the iPad version they´re identical as far as functionality and so we
did not have a DropBox app on these platforms for the
duration, now we do, they´ve been kept up to date, so far at least with the
other version. So that´s fantastic. Leave Dropbox if
you don´t want to grab one or both of those, and Mary Jo pointed out today that
there is an MPR app called MPR 1 that shipped just today also both for Windows
phone and for Windows modern app. And it is made by, it is the official MPR app
Mary Jo: Yeah, it
is.
Leo: Nice,
finally.
Mary Jo: We
should put out some bad news on apps so too, because we´re getting this on
twitter. So, I think it was a week or 2 ago Chase bank decided they were no
longer going to support their app on
Windows phone and they´re pulling it from the store. They´re citing lack of use
because there are so few Windows Phone users, I would guess. I asked Microsoft
about it and they said ask Chase and today we found out Bank of America is
dropping their Windows Phone app I would assume same reasons.
Leo: That´s a
deal breaker, ladies.
Mary Jo: So, you
know what I would to see? Rudy Huyn, Is that how you
pronounce his last name? You know Rudy Huyn?
Paul: He´s the
guy that made the DropBox app by the way.
Mary Jo: Yeah, He
made the DropBox app. Rudy, come on! Make a Chase
app. I know, make a Chase app a make us a Bank of America app or somebody at
Microsoft.
Leo: That´s
not going to happen, yeah, security wise
Paul: I
suspect, those apps require an internal key. Yeah the public API to Chase.
Mary Jo: I know,
I wish, I´m hoping Microsoft is going to be able to somehow build an app with
the banks cooperation because you can´t just be dropping these kind of apps. You just can´t.
Leo: Hey,
should I set this up as an existing PC or a new PC? By the way this screen is
gorgeous.
Mary Jo: Yeah the
screen is amazing
Leo: I mean
edge to edge is so nice. Yeah, I´ll set it as a new PC: I don´t what settings I
have.
Mary Jo: Ok,
Enterprise pick of the week.
Leo: Sorry.
Mary Jo: That´s
alright. We´re going to let you keep setting up and we´re just going to keep
going. Enterprise pick of the week is Cosmos, and I wrote about this last
August. Cosmos is an internal system that Microsoft uses to process all the
data that it collects through Bing, and Windows live
and a lot of their external facing systems. Adcenter,
MSN, Skype. They collect a lot of data that they use when they are developing apps
and kind of honing apps. They are now going to take Cosmos their internal
system and they´re going to make it available externally. It doesn´t mean
they´re going to give users outside access to Microsoft’s own data, it doesn´t
mean that. But they´re building a storage engine piece of Cosmos called Kona,
that´s the code name. And they´re building an analytics
piece. I´m sorry, the storage engine piece is code name Cabo, and the
analytics engine piece is code name Kona. So they´re building out this system
so they´re going to have this new language called sequel IP that´s going to let
users with visual studio, plug into this data and it´s going to be, a kind of
big data processing system or engine. They´re right now recruiting testers for
this, and they have not discussed any of this publicly, I just heard this from
different sources of mine. I don´t know when they´re going to turn it on, or
when they´re going to make a public preview available, but it´s all about what
they´re doing alongside their HDinsight service which
is Hadoop on Azure and they´re coming out with this as another alternative for
people who want to be able to harness the power of big data and use it to
process their own data. And run queries against it. So keep your ears open for
more about Cosmos as we go forward.
Leo And does Neil deGrasse Tyson host
that too?
Mary Jo: Ha, ha.
He does! Not really. Um, Code name pick of the week is Nebula. And yes I know,
there are other products out there from open stack and other companies that are
named Nebula, but this is an internal Microsoft code name, Nebula. So Nebula is
a cloud inside of Microsoft. It´s their infrastructure and service cloud that
they use inside the company, and it´s not available
externally. But what´s most interesting to me about Nebula is, Microsoft is
using their cloud platforms, wait a minute, cloud platform system, cps, which
is that Azure in a box thing, where they built out racks of preconfigured Dell
servers for customers. They´re using these preconfigured racks of servers inside
to power their own iAAS cloud, which is code name,
Nebula. So, it´s just kind of an interesting little fact. I was wondering what they were doing with that Azure in a box platform. They
introduced it last Fall. It was for very big customers
and hosting providers.
We haven´t heard a lot more about it since then, but it sounds like Microsoft at least is
using it pretty heavily inside to run their own private cloud.
Leo: There
you go. We´ll get to beer in a second, I just want to show, this is what the
Dell thing came with. There´s an Amazon button which I don´t
Paul: So by
the way, be prepared for 2 versions of Mcafee, which
is the modern version but also the desktop utility. That thing is an modern app. You can actually, you can tap and hold on
that and uninstall it, but that´s not going to get rid that.
Leo: And then
there´s Flipboard, the Dell shop, it does´t look like
it´s too much stuff. There´s DropBox,
So, it doesn´t look too bad. It could be worse.
Paul: That´s
just the surface.
Leo: Oh, wait
a minute, complete your software installation, Dell
digital delivery. Can I say no?
Paul: Well
depending on what that is, you´d have to read that to make sure. That might be
your ability to get your restore media.
Leo: Software
ordered with your system? I didn´t order any software.
Paul: Didn´t
you?
Leo: I beg to differ Mr. Laporte,
You ordered McAfee.
Paul: Implicitly, by clicking the Ok button.
Leo: I guess
I´m going to have to allow that, Dell to transmit, service, tag and other
hardware, configuration, provide updates. I guess I´m going to say Ok. i can always uninstall. Boy it´s a nice screen
though. Wow, it’s just beautiful. Look at that. I feel like I´m there.
Mary Jo: It is
nice. Wow.
Leo: Alright,
let´s get our beer of the week here.
Mary Jo: Beer of
the week. Yes
Leo: And it´s
from Bellevue brewing the home of your meet up.
Mary Jo: So, I´m
going to give them a shout out because they were so awesome for us, with our
Tweet update. They brew their own beers at Bellevue brewing Company in Bellevue
Washington.
Paul: By the
way, sorry to interrupt, they´re awesome but man, did
they kick us out of there.
Leo: What?
Mary Jo: They had
to.
Paul: When
closing time came, the lights came on. We were like racoons caught in the trash.
Mary Jo: No, it
was like 10 pm. You know it´s not New York where you have the 4a.m. last call. Yeah,
they flicked the lights on us. Yeah, Rattle and Hum is
open til 4, sometimes a little later.
Leo: California it´s 2, but apparently 10 p.m.in Washington state.
Mary Jo: But we
did get to drink some of their beers, and one of them was a
scotch ale, Bellevue brewing scotch ale. I gave Paul a glass of the
bourbon barrel aged scotch ale because he looked like he needed a beer that
night. So scotch ales, also known as wee heavies, are a style that we are, it’s
very, the word of the beer is caramelized so it´s very dark brown in color,
it´s really roasty, and malty, really nice. Just very
full flavored, full bodied. Really good beer for kind of like sitting by a
fire, watching the snow fall that kind of thing. yeah.
But I also have a little bonus beer pick from one of our Windows Weekly fans,
Pete LaSanty, he turned me on to this add on for
untapped that is called D3 beer, and I put a link in to my account for D3 beer.
So you hook up your untapped to this app and it runs Google analytics on the
back ends, sorry.
Leo: Oh my
God!
Paul: Finally
a use for Google analytics.
Mary Jo: It
breaks down for you, like how many beers you´ve had in each style, and which
breweries are your favorite, and which country you like drinking beers from.
Paul: People
will be shocked to discover that mary Jo´s profile and mine are very different.
Leo: Yeah,
wow, 1,133 beers checked in. A thousand unique beers, 368
badges. A thousand beer badge. Extraordinary.
Paul: I have
196 uniques.
Mary Jo: But you
don´t check in all your beers. Did you guys see the link though that I have
there? It´s to that D3beer.jo Yeah, it´s pretty cool. It shows you like all the
styles you´re drinking. And surprisingly, or maybe not, IPAs are my biggest
style, but it´s not my only style. I´m pretty well varied in my drinking.
Leo: Lot of
others.
Paul: Yeah,
but it´s a percentage.
Lao:
That´s cool. That´s really cool.
Mary Jo: It´s a
cool little visualization, just fun. So you could see what you like to drink,
what breweries you like. My number one brewery is Stone Brewery from California.
Paul: Mine is
Blue Hills Brewery, go figure.
Leo: So this
is a long URL
Paul: I got to
say, I feel really good about my brewery list. I really do, this is a great
list.
Leo: How can
I share this with people? It´s JONOST.ME
Mary Jo: Yeah,
and then when you go in there you plug in your own untapped and it´ll generate
your own thing for you.
Leo: I wonder
if I go to the root page.
Mary Jo: Yeah, I
think there is a root page.
Leo: Yeah,
there´s Jonathan Ostrander, he´s at Sony, and studying Nanoscale science and
engineering. Wow.
Paul: Well
good he´s finally doing something usable.
Leo: And then
if you click projects, Wow, computational fluid dynamics, finite element
analysis, and oh yeah we´ll look at what kind of beer you had. Netopps tracker.
Paul: Also
technically a fluid dynamic Leo.
Leo: It is. I
don´t think, unfortunately there´s a link to D3 on here. We´re
trying to send you some business.
Paul: It is a
tough URL
Leo: D3-beer.jonost.me
Mary Jo: And
we´ll have it on the show notes too for people who want to try it.
Leo: Yeah,
yeah. I don´t know where those show notes end up on. On Twitter somewhere. Good. Hey you know what? You guys did a great job of hurrying up.
Mary Jo: Sorry,
we were like, let´s go!
Leo: Hurry up
at the back end. And I slowed you down with my new Dell.
Mary Jo: No, no.
You know with the crapware our discussion is super
important, but I´m like, Oh what can we do about it?
Paul: Yeah,
just complain that´s all we ever do.
Mary Jo: Complain
I guess.
Leo: And for
some reason,. it says Windows
can´t activate right now, which means, I can´t do much else.
Paul: Wow.
Mary Jo: That´s
not good.
Leo: I´m
online, I don´t know
Paul: Not what we call a good experience.
Leo: Alright, well, it´s still a lovely machine. And since I put OS 10 on it, I´m going to love it. What´s under here? There´s a little hole.
Paul: Don´t
touch the hole!
Leo: Ahhhh!!
Paul: If you
remove that tape, your warranty is void Leo.
Leo: Yeah,
probably. Really is a gorgeous machine. Nicely done Dell. Alright ladies and gentlemen this concludes, , Oh good
I just activated Windows, I’m happy now! This concludes this edition of Windows
weekly. Paul Thurrott,
Mary Jo Foley they join us each and every wednesday at 11 a.m.pacific, 2 p.m.eastern time 1900 UTC. for great fun and games . You can watch live if you wish, but if not, we also have
on demand versions available for you each and every week at Twit.tv/ww, also youtube.com/windowsweekly,
also, wherever you get your podcasts. I think we have strayed so far from the podcasts, but, none the less,
there´s no other word for what this is, so, go to your, you know, your Xbox,
music, or whatever your podcast app on your phone or whatever you use. We do
have Twit app, a couple of nice ones, on Windows phone, as well as iOS,
Android, Roku, so get the app. and then you can uh, you can get it every
week. Paul, Mary Jo, thanks so much,
we´ll see you next time, on Windows Weekly! Bye bye