The "nostalgia" of looking back to our past is quite remarkable as we track how our character grew and matured over time. The "past" is who we are and what we went through to get to where we are today. Windows Live Essentials come to mind, movie maker in particular, it was a fun app, easy to learn. MS over the years has dropped support for several good apps that worked very well for the average person, only to replace with something, in their mind, bigger better. Any app can live on, only if it's creator chooses to improve and upgrade features in direct response to reviews and user requests. Any app, good or bad, has an end of life which we have no control. Reber chooses to buy back his creation from MS.who cares? The conversation has no value. It's an alluring thing to reminisce about yesteryear." "To Do or not to do" "wonderlist or no list," If Mr. What caught my attention to this article was "Kill the past" and another remark from Daniel "Nostalgia is a dangerous drug. The recent callbacks to Wunderlist design in To Do is a testament to the idea you can have your cake and eat it too. And to Wunderlist's current users – give To Do another shot. Follow the path of the one that has momentum, not the one living on fumes from yesterday. But Microsoft To Do is becoming excellent. But Wunderlist's linegage and heart lives on in To Do (it also maintains a 4.5 rating on the Google Play store, Wunderlist is at 4.7). Wunderlist would never be able to do any of that because Wunderlist was powered by Amazon's AWS, not Microsoft Azure. It'll be a hub for work and consumers to organize one's work life. Long term, To Do is going to hook into machine learning, AI, Outlook, LinkedIn, Skype, and more to work as a central tool. If all you do is think about how great things were years ago, you're missing all the fantastic stuff that is yet to come (or even here today). Microsoft fans know this all too well with Windows Phone, Zune, Windows Media Center, and Microsoft Band to name a few cult-faves. It's an alluring thing to reminisce about yesteryear. Microsoft To Do iOS (Image credit: Windows Central)
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |