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Microsoft Operating Systems Windows Build

Microsoft Is Making File Explorer More Powerful With Version Control and 7z Compression (theverge.com) 44

Sean Hollister reports via The Verge: At Build, Microsoft now says it's adding native version control to File Explorer by integrating systems like Git, letting you see new changes and comments directly from the app. Here's a cropped and zoomed version of the provided screenshot so you can get a better look. [...] Microsoft says it's also letting File Explorer natively compress files to 7-zip and TAR; currently, the right-click context menu has a "Compress to ZIP file" option, but ZIP is thought to be a bit antiquated in terms of how much compression you get.

Microsoft Is Making File Explorer More Powerful With Version Control and 7z Compression

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  • If I have to use a Windows machine for file management I reach for the Norton Commander clone I prefer which is Total Commander [ghisler.com] which is better than Norton Commander ever was. I bought a license about 12-14 years back but it still works for modern versions, so it was a great deal, in my opinion. I don't even use the file explorer in Windows if I have TC anywhere close to hand. I especially hate how the defaults in Explorer hide so much from the user.
    • by Mirddes ( 798147 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @07:25PM (#64488993)

      ive been using double commander. https://doublecmd.sourceforge.... [sourceforge.io]

      directory opus looked nice until the pricetag https://www.gpsoft.com.au/#dow... [gpsoft.com.au]

      • Thanks that one looks nice, also. I'll have fun comparing it to TC, which I think is better than Krusader for *nix, unfortunately. I typically use Midnight Commander for *nix platforms.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I'm sticking with DOpus now, but I'm not happy with their new subscription model for updates. I will keep an eye on it and see how it pans out, because they have not announced pricing yet and everyone currently has two years of "free" updates, but if it's bad enough I may have to move.

        Double Command looks interesting but doesn't seem to support DOpus' multi window system, which is how I always use it. I may just stick with the last free update of DOpus, since it rarely seems to have any security issues. Get

    • by znrt ( 2424692 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @07:31PM (#64489015)

      on the checklist of things to do in any windows install is fixing explorer's asinine defaults, switch everything to details and unhide everything, set up proper directory structure and links for my stuff (all windows default "places" are just bins where some programs store crap by default i wont ever bother with anyway). then it's quite usable for moderate use. if i find myself needing to move around or otherwise process lots of files then i probably should have better things to do anyway.

      i don't really see the point of managing revisions through file explorer, though. tortoise did that and it works in a pinch but is just clunky. a command line is really all you need, or an ide if you want it fancy. anyway, whatever "native version control ... by integrating git" is supposed to mean ... yaaay! what's not to like?

      • That's a great checklist if you don't own your system and aren't an administrator on it. For those systems where you are I can only wholeheartedly recommend replacing the explorer entirely.

        Not one to normally slashvertise a product here, but I've been using Directory Opus for 2 decades now and really every time I touch a default Windows install (like my work PC) I feel like I'm going back in time rubbing sticks together to try and make fire.

        That said revision management may be the one thing dopus doesn't ha

  • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @07:29PM (#64489005) Journal

    Who's idea was it to put AI into a simple file search, to put spell check into notepad, and to put version management into the file browser?

    We need to find them and kill them. They need to be stopped.
    =Smidge=

    • by Perfycat321 ( 7256962 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @07:38PM (#64489029)
      Speaking from somebody who works at Microsoft...nobody asked for it. I like notepad because it doesn't have all that. It's original implementation was a very basic C program without bells and whistles which slowed it down. I switched to notepad++ awhile ago and never looked back. Why do we have it? Because program managers get promotions by making new features, not by keeping old stuff working.
      • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @08:04PM (#64489071)

        "Because program managers get promotions by making new features, not by keeping old stuff working."

        Then why isn't notepad notepad++ by this point and why is mspaint still a thing? Why are the sysinternals functions not incorporated yet? Where is winscp/putty integration? For instance, when an operation fails because something is in use... why not indicate WHAT IS USING IT?

        These all seem like very basic, obvious, and intuitive improvements. These are tiny utilities that Microsoft could either have bought out or are already open source that virtually every power user/developer installs. Let's not forget partitionmagic/disk cloning functionality and benchmarking. Added together they are bloat like emacs is bloat vs vi... pretty much every feature MS does integrate sucks out 100x more performance than all this standard stuff combined.

        As for adding 7z... that seems a rather obvious improvement that they should have incorporated a couple decades ago along with RAR support, tar and bz2. Competing platforms essentially have all this out of the box.

        • This is all a Catch-22. See, I'm kind of an old fart, and I prefer the Operating System to not do anything but give me an interface to my hardware and let me decide how I want to define everything by using Programs. You spend your money on Programs and they in turn keep the Program functional. Independently of whoever may have made the Operating System. Proprietary obsessed Operating Systems try to incorporate other folks Programs' functionality to make things 'more convenient' or have 'free features' which

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            "I'm kind of an old fart, and I prefer the Operating System to not do anything but give me an interface to my hardware"

            Yes and there is an operating system for that, it's called *nix. But the windows model is supposed to go the other direction, instead of small purpose built tools/blocks combined for highly flexible custom behavior it takes full advantage of seamless macro integration.

            "which in turns kills off the folks who invented or perfected the task"

            Maybe but being bought out by Microsoft isn't so much

            • by unrtst ( 777550 )

              "I'm kind of an old fart, and I prefer the Operating System to not do anything but give me an interface to my hardware"

              Yes and there is an operating system for that, it's called *nix. But the windows model is supposed to go the other direction, instead of small purpose built tools/blocks combined for highly flexible custom behavior it takes full advantage of seamless macro integration.

              While I know what you're going for, that's not really accurate. Linux, itself, is just a kernel. GNU/Linux, the system, DOES include utilities that do (nearly) all of the things listed, and they (mostly) follow the Unix philosophy of small, purpose built tools that work well together. For example, my distro includes multiple console based text editors, and multiple GUI text editors, and all of them are more feature rich than MS Notepad. I have also have sed, awk, perl, php, python, ruby, etc etc etc.. all i

        • 100%, 100%, 100%!
        • "Because program managers get promotions by making new features, not by keeping old stuff working."

          Then why isn't notepad notepad++ by this point

          It's not Notepad++, but Notepad in Windows 11 is a much heavier and more complicated beast than notepad in Windows 10, which is almost perfect. (Lack of triple click or multi level undo support aside.) Careful what you ask for, we're getting it, and it sucks. I use notepad on Windows 10 at work every day and I dread the day that my machine gets selected to "upgrade" to 11 as much for that reason as any.

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            "It's not Notepad++, but Notepad in Windows 11 is a much heavier and more complicated beast than notepad in Windows 10, which is almost perfect."

            Notepad++ is perfect or nearly so, it is fast, light weight, and has every feature you'd want in a text editor without giving up any of the simplicity of notepad. It completely and totally obsoletes notepad except for the singular 'already there' feature. Yes it has more buttons but you don't have to use any of them, you can use it just like notepad if you want. I

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        So perverted incentives? That figures. There must be a reason MS stuff always is crap.

      • by rjmx ( 233228 )

        "Because program managers get promotions by making new features, not by keeping old stuff working."

        Well, that explains the rampant feature bloat in Outlook.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Spell checking is a Windows API so it is trivial to add support for it. It won't add much bloat to the code, the actual spell checking stuff is all in Windows.

      Version management in the file browser is also popular, e.g. TortoiseCVS and TortoiseGIT. Some people just like managing versions that way.

      AI in file search is the really stupid one. PowerToys Run is a decent implementation, with control over what is included. Windows Search has always been terrible and AI will only make it worse.

    • One of those is not like the others. Version management is actually useful: the 'restore previous versions' function has saved my bacon on several occasions.

  • Ok, great Previous Files on steroids. Will it finally after all these years handle encryption and password protection? Or will file Explorer still silently fail when you try to open an encrypted archive?

  • Don't worry, Micro$oft will screw up the implementation so that it is more trouble to use than it is worth. Also it will give the wrong answer sometimes, and you will never be able to find out why.

    Also, Bill Gates should burn in Hell.

  • Microsoft continuously is 20 years behind or more and then usually gets it wrong. Why is anybody using their stuff?

    • When I hear about Microsoft integrating something, like Zip or now 7z, I think about the Amiga and how we had pluggable this and that ages and ages ago. Or DOS file managers where you could add new archiver formats by just putting in the command line switches for each new program. Microsoft made a lot of that same stuff possible through the registry, but what a PITA by comparison.

      Also, if Microsoft's support for 7z encryption is as poor as their support for Zip, you will want to use 7zFM anyway...

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Indeed. Well, MS needs to distract people from two major security disasters in the last 12 months, so they are offering "features" now. On the level of a semi-competent hobbyist coder, no less.

        • Blasphemer! The FILEMANAGER shall smite thee, compreth thee and cut thee into tiny RAR archives. Dies Irae Tenatoris Datorum cometh!
  • The "compress to zip" feature is abyssmally slow. So is the unzip. The 7zip context menu makes all of that obsolete and useless.

  • Zip is antiquated? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2024 @11:30PM (#64489357) Homepage

    Yeah, it's been around a while, but it's literally *everywhere.*

    That Word document you just opened, is a zip file with a bunch of XML files inside. Go ahead, use 7-zip to open one, take a look around.
    Same for Excel and PPT files.
    Docker images are basically just...zip files containing what you want in your virtual "drive."
    Android APK files are zip files.

    Zip may be old, but it's optimized for speed and compression well enough to serve a whole lot of purposes. It's not going away any time soon.

  • Just wish there was (native) Linux version..
  • by Pf0tzenpfritz ( 1402005 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2024 @04:21AM (#64489723) Journal
    I am baffled, stunned, overwhelmed. Microsoft Filemanager, this legendary powerhouse of an application, the holy grail of copy, paste and hide known extensions will become even more powerful! Inceredible. I could shed tears of joy. Lucky me who may live the day when the FILEMANAGER will unfold it's mighty abilities such as 7zip compression and -dare I say it- RAR archives. Long live file explorer! Long live Microsoft who are it's prophets!
  • So trying to play catch up with Directory Opus and other better file managers.

    File Explorer has and always will be an inferior file manager.

    I've been using Directory Opus since my Amiga days and it's still the most superior file manager ever written.
    • So trying to play catch up with Directory Opus and other better file managers.

      File Explorer has and always will be an inferior file manager.

      I've been using Directory Opus since my Amiga days and it's still the most superior file manager ever written.

      Pathminder Plus from 1989 or GTFO!

  • The actual 7z interface will likely still be better though.

  • That gives 1 cool point to Windows, I could actually see that being useful.
  • I just want it to perform better :( If you have a network resource, expect explorer to go cross-eyed with its tongue hanging out while it figures out if the network responds or not.

    Want to look at files on a slow drive like a sd card or your phone? Go get coffee while it prefetches metadata.

    Sort files by date? Settle down there cowboy! Your 24-core CPU will need a while to finish this task.

    • by Dadoo ( 899435 )

      I just want it to perform better

      Agreed. Is File Explorer ever going to take less than 3 hours to find a file by name on a 1TB filesystem?

  • Given the price of storage and speed of networks, zip is good enough 110% of the time. You wanna use 7zip, fine, I can deal with it, but don't shove it down people's throats who never heard of it before.

"To take a significant step forward, you must make a series of finite improvements." -- Donald J. Atwood, General Motors

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