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January 15, 2007 12:00 AM

With Vista, Microsoft Seeks to Limit PC Bundleware

Windows IT Pro
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According to a recent report by CBS News, Microsoft believes that PC makers are undermining the quality of Windows by bundling so many horrible add-on applications with their systems. With the upcoming Windows Vista OS, especially, Microsoft would like new PCs to provide customers with a better user experience than was possible in the past. There's just one problem: Thanks to years of regulatory oversight, Microsoft has no legal way to prevent PC makers from bundling third-party applications with Vista.

The CBS report arose out of a confidential chat with Microsoft representatives at last 'week's 2007 Consumer Electronics Show (CES). But Microsoft has been striving for years, with little success, to streamline the number of default third-party applications that are bundled on PCs with Windows client OSs. "We can't do anything about it because it would be illegal," an unnamed Microsoft representative reportedly told CBS News.

Microsoft refers to these bundled applications as "craplets," a word that combines "crap" and "applet" (and certainly, most are both). Windows PCs are notorious for the wide range of bundled software that's typically included with the OS, and despite Microsoft's best efforts, PC makers will almost certainly continue the practice with Vista. The reason is monetary: PC makers are typically paid a per-PC fee by application makers eager to place their wares in front of as many potential customers as possible. Most bundled software is operationally limited in some way in order to create a potential upsell.

For its part, Microsoft has streamlined Vista in various ways that will benefit consumers and, the company hopes, inspire its partners to behave similarly. For example, Microsoft has removed the Vista boot logo to speed PC boot times and has removed virtually all icons from the default Vista desktop.

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Comments
  • Joe
    5 years ago
    Jan 20, 2007

    actually i had better luck with Windows ME than with Windows 98[SE], but then i knew how to properly set it up. the biggest problem people faced with Windows ME are caused by either a) when they upgraded from 98, or b) they didn't get WDM drivers for hardware and used Windows 95/98 VxD drivers. Windows ME was a very fast switch from the 9x line into the driver world that Windows 2000 introduced at the time, and for many users with hardware vendors slow to adopt the new driver model, they ended up being left in the dumpster. no, real OEM's were picking up Windows ME as soon as it was released, to replace Windows 98SE. it was the not the OEM's that were crying foul, but upgraders and self-installers that found troubles because, although they didn't know it at the time, their hardware components just didn't get the support for the new OS that they deserved. many consumer hardware vendors didn't write drivers for Windows 2000 because they felt that support wasn't warranted for a business OS, so that translated into MIA WDM's drivers, and some hardware that never even saw compatibility from 9x to XP for the consumer. when i was building computers at the time, the Windows Hardware Compatibility List became a wealth of information for getting incompatibilities sorted out.

    blame hardware vendors for not supporting the first 32-bit drivers on the consumer side of Windows.

    XP

  • R2
    5 years ago
    Jan 17, 2007

    yep, buy the hardware just so you can find your "ultimate backward pace"....

    it's a no brainer.... Vista is a dud.....I'd fell better if they'd have just called it XP SP3.....even then it is a clunker.....the worst offering from Microsoft since Window ME...

    ugh....

  • Joe
    5 years ago
    Jan 17, 2007

    "Software is decelerating"

    as is the average IQ of Mackie's

    XP

  • MysterMask
    5 years ago
    Jan 17, 2007

    Wirth's law:
    Software is decelerating faster than hardware is accelerating.

    And Vista is the OS which proofs that just fine...

  • Joe
    5 years ago
    Jan 17, 2007

    um...."reployment" = redeployment

    typing with "Thumbs of Fury" on a Pocket PC sometimes has its disadvantages.



    XP

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