Microsoft PC Advisor
Will Microsoft PCAdvisor be included in Windows 7? In myopinionit should. Windows needs to be fully automatically self maintaining.
February 16th, 2009 5:37am

Probably not it will more than likely be a separate application. The reason I say this is that, really, Microsoft PC Advisor is for the absolute beginner. I've tested it and, personally, I don't rank it very highly. I certainly would like to see it in Windows 7, it would bea waste of space. While it will, no doubt, give some comfort to the novice windows user, it won't be much use to anyone who knows there way around windows.John Barnett - Windows XP Associate Expert; Windows Desktop Experience. - Web: http://www.winuser.co.uk; Web: http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org; Web: http://vistasupport.mvps.org
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February 16th, 2009 11:12pm

This means it won't hit the target users.The people who would benefit most from this are the large majority of PC owners. People who know how to use their computer quite well but don't know about software updates, maintainance or just can't be bothered looking after their PC.A lot of useres don't want to touch anything like this on their computer.I do agree, MPA isn't perfect but it is still a Beta and could be improved.Window's big problem is that it's not self maintaining and struggles to "fix itself" when something goes wrong. I think Win7 could set itself appart from other OS's and be self maintaining. I think a lot of advanced PC users lack understanding of the average blue collar PC users which is a problem. I don't see what harm MPA would have if included in the OS. Let's not wait for Apple to make something similar for OS X, lets beat them to it.
February 18th, 2009 3:11am

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