The publicity machine doesn’t stop: TechNet podcast interview

Date:February 2, 2007 / year-entry #39
Tags:non-computer
Orig Link:https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20070202-20/?p=28163
Comments:    14
Summary:The TechNet Magazine Podcast page has just posted their February 2007 entry, which includes an interview with little old me in the second half. I haven't listened to the whole interview yet, but what struck me immediately is that I was pretty darned punchy and goofy, whereas I think the host was trying to take...

The TechNet Magazine Podcast page has just posted their February 2007 entry, which includes an interview with little old me in the second half. I haven't listened to the whole interview yet, but what struck me immediately is that I was pretty darned punchy and goofy, whereas I think the host was trying to take a more serious tone. Oops.


Comments (14)
  1. Michael says:

    Hey Raymond,

    I just loved your interview. I think you actually come over pretty cool ;)

    But then again, you probably have the most amazing job, being able to proud yourself about REMOVING features.

    I especially like how the interviewer (slightly unsettled) asks:

    "Well…… what was your favorite feature that you removed?"

    Anyway, I love your blog and I’ve already ordered the book!

    Bye,

    Michael

  2. Note that the interview with Raymond starts 10 minutes into the podcast.

  3. JP says:

    Okay, I’m going to be very naughty here.  I’m going to post something that’s not actually related to this interview.  But I’m a desparate man and at the end of my rope.  After reading it, maybe you can understand my frustration and forgive me for intruding.  This just seems like my last hope of finding someone who can actually help.

    I just recently noticed that one of my XP machines i acting in a very frustrating manner. Normally, if you minimize an application and then press alt-tab, that application is the last one on the list. This has been the behavior forever and still is on my laptop. However, on my desktop it now puts the minimized app in SECOND position. This means if I minimize an app and hit alt-tab, I’m back at the minimized app. Turns out to be a very useless way of doing things. I’ve found several other unanswered reports in usenet and on blogs from other people with the same problem. I also have another person at my office so afflicted. Does anyone know if there’s setting I obliviously tweaked that screwed me over? Any idea how to fix this problem?

    Thank you for your patience.

  4. JP, does the app you’re talking about happen to be a "topmost" app?  That is, does it stay on top of, say, Notepad, even when Notepad has focus?

  5. Cheong says:

    I see he had a hard time choosing words when talking with you… poor him… :P

  6. silkio says:

    Normally, if you minimize an

    application and then press alt-tab,

    that application is the last one on

    the list.

    JP, it doesn’t exactly work like this on my 2k3 machine.

    Take firefox; I have two windows open. If I minimize one, it alt-tab takes me to the OTHER one first, i.e. it alternates.

    It DOES behave as you describe for other applications though, so maybe it’s a per-process thing.

    Anyway, for a definitive answer, your best way to get a response from Raymond is to post your question here: http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/articles/407234.aspx.

  7. JP says:

    Right, I’m only referring to WELL-BEHAVED applications.  This happens even if the test windows are just notepad and calc windows.  These aren’t special topmost ones or anything else.

    Like I said, I’ve found a couple of XP machines that behave this way.  Nothing is different service pack wise or anything else.

    Thanks for the suggestion box suggestion.  Somehow I managed to totally miss that.  I will post there and only post here if someone asks a questions.  Apologies to Raymond.

  8. SS says:

    This interview was more fun to listen to than the previous one. The interviewer asked comparitively better questions except for the one on bluetooth. Thanks for the link.

  9. Nick says:

    Congrats on 15 years and The Tome!

    By the way, please come to my campus and sign my book. You can even give a colloquium presentation on UI design while you’re here.

    (Really, that would be very cool, though I’m sure you’re too busy giving all these interviews to take the 800 mile jaunt down here :)

  10. Ehud says:

    I actually had to go into Help and Support and look-up ‘scraps’ (I was certain I misheard). I can’t believe this feature ever existed. In fact it seems pretty useful, although I doubt any average-to-power Windows user was ever aware of its existence. Well, farewell, Scraps.(i.e., not the dog)

  11. Dewi Morgan says:

    Yes, this interviewer definitely was better than the last two – he’d done his research. He was able to back up his assertions, and fill in where Raymond didn’t know.

    He wasn’t terribly forceful, though: he tried to direct the conversation, but Raymond didn’t take the hints and steamrollered him :P Raymond talked a lot and fast and didn’t give the interviewer much chance to ask questions.

    Great to hear about what has been removed. While it’s a good solid OS, I’ve already decided that Vista won’t be for me, personally… but Raymond does make it sound almost tempting.

    It’s like I was overjoyed to hear that PHP6 development seemed to be focussing mostly on what features to remove: http://dewimorgan.livejournal.com/17659.html

    Marketing people should latch onto that, I feel. I thought they’d figured it with Office: people hate bloat, and so loved (I believe) the "death of clippy" advertising.

  12. JenK says:

    Raymond,

    Love your comment "We took out Active Desktop because, mmmm, it’s like … what’s all this about?"  

    That was what I felt most of the time when it was being built. I know it was to highlight internet integration, it just never seemed all that compelling to me. But then I came to the web after years on usenet and thought, god, it’s a presentation mechanism. How boring. So maybe it’s more about the execution than anything else…

  13. silkio says:

    re: active desktop, i like it actually. specifically because it shows even when you do windows-d, or minimize all. no other ‘desktop’ widgets do this.

    one program that works very well with active desktop is ‘wallnote.com’. it’ll be a shame to see this killed by vista.

  14. Nick says:

    I think I’ve used Active Desktop about three times in my time as a Windows user.  Each time was simply for the kicks and giggles associated with using a webpage as your desktop.  Sometimes it was useful, like a javascript doohickey or an embedded Flash file, but usually it was a joke, such as making Seizure Robots (http://underachievement.org/sr/) a coworker’s desktop :)

    I think Active Desktop was a cool idea, but from what I can tell, most of it’s "productive" functionality will probably be replaced with gadgets in Vista.

Comments are closed.


*DISCLAIMER: I DO NOT OWN THIS CONTENT. If you are the owner and would like it removed, please contact me. The content herein is an archived reproduction of entries from Raymond Chen's "Old New Thing" Blog (most recent link is here). It may have slight formatting modifications for consistency and to improve readability.

WHY DID I DUPLICATE THIS CONTENT HERE? Let me first say this site has never had anything to sell and has never shown ads of any kind. I have nothing monetarily to gain by duplicating content here. Because I had made my own local copy of this content throughout the years, for ease of using tools like grep, I decided to put it online after I discovered some of the original content previously and publicly available, had disappeared approximately early to mid 2019. At the same time, I present the content in an easily accessible theme-agnostic way.

The information provided by Raymond's blog is, for all practical purposes, more authoritative on Windows Development than Microsoft's own MSDN documentation and should be considered supplemental reading to that documentation. The wealth of missing details provided by this blog that Microsoft could not or did not document about Windows over the years is vital enough, many would agree an online "backup" of these details is a necessary endeavor. Specifics include:

<-- Back to Old New Thing Archive Index