You’re asking for the wrong thing.
Just stumbled upon this article by John Dvorak titled “My Windows 7 Wish List”, and I see the same pattern as many of the other fruitless wish list articles. Maybe IHBT…
As a user, the user experience (UX) is the only thing that ever matters to you – the implementation is never the issue.
Take for example item (1) on the list:
“Build a new file system based on database technologies” . Why do you care about how the file system works internally? Do you actually want a file system with a DB in the backend, or do you just want to be able to run fast, useful searches? My guess is that it’s the latter.
Another one:
“Get rid of the miserable registry” . Is it the registry you care about, or the fact that it’s difficult to upgrade/migrate?
Another:
“Get off the cloud” . You’re worried that “suddenly the machine wants to contact the Internet for some reason or other”. This has nothing to do with the “cloud strategy”; you just want a machine that doesn’t use the network. Or something. I don’t really know based on that rant :)
Alternatively just read this:
https://shippingseven.blogspot.com/2008/07/20-features-windows-7-should-include.html
Basically (and I’m talking about customers in general – not just MS/Windows) people often request implementation changes, but what they really want are UX changes. Do you want a powerful engine, or just a fast car? Do you want high carbon steel, or just a knife that’s very sharp and stays that way? Do you really care how the sausage is made? ;)
As a customer, it’s important to understand what you actually want since it makes it much easier to ask for it (and hence get it).
Avi