You have been hearing quite a bit about Windows 7 lately, and Brad has given his wishlist, so I wanted to follow him and give my early wishlist as well. Although mine is a bit different in nature, these are things I think will make Windows 7 popular, and distance itself from Vista.
- No Multiple SKU’s. Sorry, but I honestly think this was one of the worst marketing mistakes made with Windows Vista. Just off the top of my head there are about 6 SKU’s for Vista (Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, Ultimate, Enterprise, and the Starter Edition). Can anybody really tell the major differences between these versions? Most consumers have no idea, and I have never run into a salesperson who did a good upsell of Vista. Too many editions are confusing, stick to one version, and make the case on why people should use Windows, not the 10 different iterations of it.
- Family Pricing. I have about 5 Windows PC’s in my household, and only two run Vista. I run two because I received two free licenses by attending Microsoft events, if I wanted to install Vista on all my home PC’s, it would have cost a minimum of around $500 depending on what “versions” I chose. There is just no incentive for purchasing multiple licenses of Windows. Why not have a family pack of say 3 or 4 licenses for a fairly reasonable cost?
- 64-bit Only. I’m going to echo Brad’s statement on this and say now is the time to take the plunge. The memory limitations are reason enough to go this route, why be so limited when RAM is so inexpensive these days?
- Focus on the Cloud. I have seen some statements from Ballmer about cloud computing, and possibly it’s own OS….no thanks. Integrate this into Windows 7 and make Windows 7 fully integrated with Live Mesh, or whatever other service they come up with. Live Mesh is really cool so far, but it’s integration with Windows is flaky, and should be a native integration with it. I want to see seamless syncing of my contacts, calendar, e-mail, etc. to the “cloud” without having to download additional clients.
That is my quick list for today, and I’m sure once we get more details about Windows 7, I will definitely expand on these. However, I think Windows 7 can be a huge success if Microsoft rethinks some of the issues stated above.