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March 09, 2009

It's Not Just IE: Microsoft Allows Users to Remove Many Apps from Windows 7

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Last week's revelation that Microsoft would allow users and IT environments to remove Internet Explorer (IE) 8 from Windows 7 was just the tip of the iceberg: Later in the week, Microsoft confirmed the move and provided a list of other end user applications that will be removable in Windows 7, making this release of the OS far more customizable than its predecessors.

"We've received feedback that some users might prefer to run Windows without certain features," Microsoft senior vice president Steven Sinofsky wrote in a blog post. (Sinofsky is apparently contractually obligated to use the word "feedback" as often as possible now thank to recent criticisms that the company has developed Windows 7 in a vacuum.)

Microsoft has identified a number of applications and features that it will allow users to remove (or, really, "disable") in Windows 7 over and above what was available in Windows Vista. These include Windows Media Player, Windows Media Center, Windows DVD Maker, Internet Explorer 8, Windows Search, Handwriting Recognition, Windows Gadget Platform, Fax and Scan, and the XPS Viewer and related services.

While removing any of these features would make Windows 7 less functional, doing so also presumably removes the need to service those components. So if you were to remove, say, Windows Media Player, you would no longer need to apply fixes to that component in the future.

At a low level, of course, most of these components are not truly deleted from the system. Microsoft "stages" Windows 7 applications and features within the system so that if the user later decides to reinstall them they will not need the installation DVD. And from a developer's perspective, many of these applications and features expose programmable APIs that they can use to create their own software solutions. APIs that are needed in Windows and can be accessed by developers are still available in the OS even when the end user features have been removed.

In keeping with Microsoft's decision to favor simplicity over ease of use, these components will not be removable during Setup. That would make Setup less simple, because it would require an extra step for the user to interact with, while adding it would make Windows 7 easier to use, since the Windows Features applet required to make these changes after the fact is somewhat hidden inside of the OS.

These changes first appeared in Windows 7 build 7048, an interim pre-release version of the OS. Please refer to my SuperSite article, Windows 7 Build 7048 Notes, for more information about changes to Windows 7.

End of Article



Reader Comments
The Windows platform is still a hugh mess if you need to have applications lie around just to use some APIs.
I really don't see a difference between the former IE removal (that simply deleted the icon from the desktop) to the new implementation.
Of course no critics from shill Thurrott.

Seems as if Windows is still not a proper componentized architecture..

(Hardly surprising if they still need a special version for netbooks. Who promised with Vista a brand new, clean architecture? Their not even able to adopt memory management on the fly for low memory situations ..)

MysterMask March 09, 2009 (Article Rating: )


Hugh would take exception to this logic...

sx4sport@hotmail.com March 09, 2009 (Article Rating: )


@MysterMask: quick dose of facts.

This featrure doesn't simply remove IE's icon anymore. Paul explains it thus (emphasis mine): "When you remove a feature like IE 8, what you're removing is the **end user application**".
http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/choice.asp

So yes, the APIs are intact, but this no longer requires the actual program to exist normally.

jvd897 March 10, 2009 (Article Rating: )


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