Here's my short list of tall orders for any major new version of Windows.

3. Internet intelligence. An updated version of Internet Explorer? That's nice, I guess, but frankly I'd be hard-pressed to tell the difference from the old version. Today's Web browsers either open my pages correctly or they don't, and the rest is eye or ear candy. I'd like something a little more substantial, like an Internet intermediary that actually tries to help me get to the information or services I'm after. If my browser sees that I'm booking a flight from New York to Chicago on American, for example, why doesn't it use all that untapped bandwidth to automatically find similar data from several other sites and list it conveniently for me?



4. Mac compatibility. I have virtually no choice but to use Windows. My company deals with dozens of other companies, nearly all of which use Windows. So choosing a Mac would be an act of self-punishment. Heck, we often have trouble simply sharing Word or PhotoShop files between PCs and Macs, despite their alleged file compatibility. At this stage of the game, with Microsoft having won the holy war, why not simply have Microsoft and Apple collaborate on a true Mac mode that's fully compatible and even gives you the Mac interface if you prefer? (Apple could delude itself into thinking this is good advertising for the Mac.) This would make life easier for both parties, and have the side benefit of riling up the Mac zealots who treat their computers as religious artifacts rather than mere hardware.



5. Open Windows. Microsoft plans Home and Professional versions of Windows XP, with an increasingly harsh enforcement policy about installing either on more than one computer. How about a free and open version of Windows instead? The "free" part might mean libraries, nonprofits, and struggling families could have a bare-bones version of Windows. The "open" part might mean a community of programmers connected via the Internet could customize Windows for their (or our) very particular needs and wants, much like the way they do with versions of Linux. Windows XP costs, and it's largely closed.



So is Windows XP bad? Certainly not. In fact, it's better than any consumer version of Windows to date, mainly because it incorporates so much of the professional versions that preceded it (for a full review, see the new Firsthand department in this issue). But Microsoft is thinking small with Windows, and giving us far less than the technical tour de force it's capable of producing.
Even so, I'm steadfastly against the idea of prohibiting Microsoft from selling Windows XP, as the attorney general of New York State is pondering at this writing. Antitrust violations or not, I don't want any more New Yorkers moving to Florida, my state.



You can contact Chris O'Malley at chris@popsci.com. He'll respond after he restarts his PC.

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July 2013: The Future Of Flight

The incredible innovations, like drone swarms and perpetual flight, bringing aviation into the world of tomorrow. Plus: today's greatest sci-fi writers predict the future, the science behind the summer's biggest blockbusters, a Doctor Who-themed DIY 'bot, the organs you can do without, and much more.


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