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Opinion: Standing at the Threshold of Windows productivity enhancements


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Opinion: Standing at the Threshold of Windows productivity enhancements

For my first TechRadar Pro article, I thought it would be appropriate to look forward, towards the future and a piece of tech that's soon to be coming down the line. Over the years I've spent a lot of time focusing on helping people with productivity. Whether it's at talks and events, in videos or through other mediums, such as this article, productivity is at the core of what we all need to get out of our PCs, and it's for this reason that the next version of Windows (codenamed Threshold) is getting me very excited.

I've written a lot about Windows over the last few years: how to get started with it, how to customise it and exploit its hidden functionality, and how to repair problems if everything goes horribly wrong. I'm in contact almost every day with people who have used Windows for work, study or play for years now, but still I encounter many who struggle to make the most productive use of their time.

Part of the problem is the complexity of an operating system the size of Windows, and more problems arise because of Windows' need to be something for everyone. Windows 8 was an interesting step in a new direction (though it didn't go without a few hiccups) and Windows 8.1 has refined the idea further.

Focusing on productivity

However, with Threshold – bearing in mind we don't know the full story concerning this OS yet, by any means – it looks like Microsoft has put the entire focus on productivity, and Redmond's engineering teams are working on nothing but.

There also looks to be something for everybody, from programmers able to save valuable time by having a unified code base for Windows Phone, Modern apps, Xbox and, perhaps, even the desktop, with apps that can scale and change dynamically to fit the device you're using, to talk of major productivity enhancements for desktop Windows users (who felt a little left out last time around).

When I give talks I regularly extol the virtues of features such as Workplace Join, Work Folders and Windows To Go, just a few of the plethora of productivity features that Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8 introduced. Not to mention enhanced multi-screen desktop support, Miracast, mobile tethering, Powershell 4, Wi-Fi direct and NFC pairing, InstantGo, gesture control and everything else that makes up the productivity enhancement package.

Much awaited OS

With a renewed focus on the desktop, and how we use it day to day, it's looking like Threshold will be the Windows release that I personally have been expecting for many years now.

So what do I know that's got me all excited? In truth, not a huge amount, but there are nuggets in all the right places. It's long frustrated me that so many aspects of the Windows UI date back to early versions of NT, especially the Control and Management functions. The introduction of Windows Server 2012 with its "live tile" interface shows the way forward, and what can be done with the expected overhaul of all these systems.

Without a doubt, I am very excited about the features that Threshold can deliver in terms of helping everybody from developers, through system administrators, to end users get done what they need to do in less time than it's taken before. After all, this is what progress is all about, right?

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:blink: Windows Threshold sounds mighty interesting since you brought the idea of productivity and time managment.  There are many things on Windows that a lot of people don't use.  There's also a steep learning curve associated with Windows and some of the software like Office.  I have to admit with Windows 8 I have had few crashes.  Of course they seem to have to come with new operating systems every few years.  Windows 7 and 8 are still fine for the most everyoneThey don;t need or even want to have to buy a new OS.  Seems like Microsoft is taking everone for a ride by pushing more stuff on us.  They claim to be making all these vast improvements on the software.  I don 't see any.  All I see are dollar signs in their eyes.  Smells like greed to me.  Write once and charge and arm and a leg for a copy.  Why all the high prices for a duplication of written software?  The system is messed up.  So software developers can save up, drive luxury cars and rake in millions a year while other hardworking people are making less than chump change.  The software industry has become bogus.  Overcharging for 50 years now, and they claim to be doing really hard work.  All work is hard.  It doesn't matter if you did ditches or write code.  Software Industry is responsible for jacking up prices everywhere.  The only way, we as a planet will progress is if we abolish money.  We don;t need more code or secret projects.  We need more common sense. :lol: I'm not saying we shouldn't build better machines.  We should but the prices are way to high to be afforded by everyone..........There seems to be a lot of inequalities in this world of computers, and I see all these developers, coders and software industrialists as being the big culprits. They like to claim their big IQs allow them to build such applications, and that their "mind" (or intellectual) work deserves huge paychecks.  Think again. Evolution is at hand, and Man will leave his sitting_and_crouch_down_over_the_PC_method for walking again. :rolleyes:

Edited by chetrs
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