What’s still missing, and other changes

Windows 10 has come a long way in a short amount of time, but there is always room for improvement. In no particular order, here are several items that it would be great to see addressed in coming updates.

OneDrive Placeholders

Windows 8.1 integrated with OneDrive with an excellent system where all of the files in OneDrive could be seen in the file system, but they had a different icon if they were downloaded to the system or not. With small SSDs on many new systems, and up to 1 TB of OneDrive space available for relatively little money, this was a great way to be able to store files into any folder in OneDrive, and quickly access files that were needed. It wasn’t perfect, but it worked well enough. When Windows 10 was announced, this was dropped due to confusion by end-users who would try to access a file they thought they had on their system, but they had no network connection, and they couldn’t download the file.

What it used to look like in Windows 8.1

Luckily at Microsoft’s Ignite conference, they made mention that OneDrive placeholders would be available in Redstone 3 (Anniversary Update was Redstone 1, Creators Update is Redstone 2, and the next update will be Redstone 3). This can’t come soon enough. Other cloud providers now offer this support with their applications, but Windows no longer supports it for Microsoft’s own cloud storage, even though they had it at one point.

Wide Gamut Color Management

Windows has never had system-wide color management. Like DPI, it has been left to the developers to implement color management. DPI was assumed to be 96 DPI, and the color gamut for Windows is assumed to be sRGB. In the professional space, applications have their own color management system, so if you are running Adobe Photoshop, it can handle wider gamut displays when working with images, but the majority of applications just ignore color gamut altogether, which can lead to blown out images on wider than sRGB gamut displays.

To be fair, this hasn’t been a huge issue for the average person. Most displays struggled to even cover the entire sRGB gamut. This has been changing though, with displays offering Adobe RGB gamut coverage, and DCI D65 coverage, and these devices tend to be expensive.

The issue is that without wide-gamut support in Windows, these high-end displays end up causing colors that are completely incorrect to be displayed. A great example of this is the Photos app, which is the latest and greatest UWP photo viewer. Unlike Windows Photo Viewer that came before it, there is no color management in the Photos app, so viewing photos on a wide-gamut display blows out the colors.

Incorrect color on the Left (Photos) vs correct color on the Right (Adobe Photoshop Elements)

The image on the left is Photos, and the image on the right is Adobe Photoshop Elements. Adobe is correctly showing the color of this car, but Photos is not. macOS, and even iOS, have full color management built-in, so Microsoft has some work to do here. Even Google is stepping up here, with at least a mention of color in Android, although at the moment Android is also missing this.

Cloud Backup

Microsoft seemed to make it clear they weren’t interested in OneDrive being used as a backup location when they cut the unlimited storage offering, but it would still be great to have Windows 10 offer to use OneDrive for File History, or more, especially if you subscribe to Office 365.

Start Menu Sync

Windows 8 and 8.1 both allowed the Start Screen layout to be synced across devices. It was very useful if you use several computers, since you would never have to go hunting around on the Start Screen to find the right app. This was removed with Windows 10, and it is sorely missed.

People Bar

Microsoft showed off a new sharing hub called the People Bar when they first announced the Creators Update in October, however this feature never made it in.

Other small changes

The Creators Update also brings about some other interesting features, even if they aren’t that exciting to discuss.

Night Light

Cutting blue light output is the new thing to do, and Microsoft has not been immune to this request. With the Creators Update, there is now a Night Light feature built in to automatically reduce the blue light output at night. It can be configured to come on automatically at dusk until dawn, or based on time, and the intensity can be adjusted as well.

Dynamic Lock

You can now set Windows to automatically lock the computer when a Bluetooth devices gets out of range, so if you had your phone set up for this, when you took it away from your desk, the system can lock. Amusingly this is under Sign-In options, even though it’s not used to sign in, but if you pair a phone, you can set Windows to use Dynamic Lock. At the moment, it’s not configurable at all though, so this is going to be a very hit or miss feature. It certainly is not something you could trust in a corporate setting without any ability to configure it.

Restart Options

Windows Update in Windows 10 has been a pain point with many people. In the last update, they added the ability to add "Active Hours" to your computer so you can tell it explicitly when you will be working, so it won't restart then, but that was limited to only 12 hours. With this update, that's been pushed out to 18 hours. Also, there are more options for notifications before restarts. The Windows 10 restart process is too agressive, and no one likes to lose work. We'll see how these updates change things, but it's likely more improvements will be needed.

Paint 3D

As part of the Creators Update branding, Microsoft spent quite a bit of time going over Paint 3D when they announced this update in October. It was interesting, and it’s here. Luckily they didn’t replace the original Paint program, which they had tried during the Preview Program.

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  • leexgx - Wednesday, April 26, 2017 - link

    ""Consumers want more features, and sooner, but business needs to test everything before rolling it out.""

    interesting most people don't give a damn what new version of windows 10 offers, all they are interested in is that what ever browser works so they can do email and other stuff

    for most a feature upgrade, this list is a follows
    1 application PC settings are reset (browser and associations like PDF and pictures)
    2 it uninstalls software without permission that was perfectly working fine (and still works perfectly fine when you reinstall it)
    3 can't use there PC for about 2-8 hours when it does the upgrade (slow CPU/RAM/HDD vs SSD)
    4 or better a non booting PC (or black screen as some may encounter as they broke the Video WDDM for some old video drivers and it sets the output to 0x0 resolution)

    the Fix is use LTSB version if MS wount offer a legitimate LTSB single user licence then how are people supposed to buy it
  • jabber - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    Just be aware that if you have a mix of Office products say 2010 and 13/16 it will still delete off the latest versions if you do an upgrade. Well done MS, still not fixed that one.
  • Gich - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    it didn't happen to me...
    I got Office 2007 and 16.
  • jabber - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    The disappointment for me is that MS is concentrating on adding fluff, bling and bloat I have zero use for but not concentrating on making it more secure, robust and faster. I'd also like a return of the custom install option so I can choose to install that fluff or not.
  • Dave Null - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    Indeed. I finally bit the bullet and installed the LTSB version. This is the lightweight version of Windows I've been looking for.
  • lord_anselhelm - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    Agreed. I also wish they'd focus on fixing bugs they've introduced as a result of updates. For example, Anniversary Update broke centre-alignment of folder/filenames in certain folder views and caused Libraries to start ignoring custom folder views. Both issues still exist in the Creators Update!
  • Gasaraki88 - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    "secure, robust and faster"

    What does that even mean? How do you even quantify that enough to be worth an update. Do you want them to list that inthe change logs?
  • herbc - Wednesday, April 26, 2017 - link

    Yup , a grossly overbloated OS from the start continues to get worse , my God the idiocy of MS is mind boggling.
  • MutualCore - Sunday, April 30, 2017 - link

    Your comment has no substance.
  • fm13 - Tuesday, April 25, 2017 - link

    I still can't install this thing - Windows Update seems busted and standalone installer stays stuck on 99% for days.

    Although Win10 is a nice OS, some things in it seem broken - things that worked flawlessly for years. For example, virus definitions on my system can't update themselves anymore - I have to download and install them manually.

    How the hell do you break something like that?

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