Windows 12 will likely be the end of the road for WordPad.

11 points

I’m amazed to hear people actually used word pad. It’s such a horrible editor with extremely poor file type support.

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1 point

It is good for distribution of readme files with software. WordPad files let you do rich text unlike Notepad.

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1 point

It’s pretty out of the way for quick notes, while Word has so much going on, while Notepad doesn’t have some important features

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1 point
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1 point

Right? I never quite understood who it was actually for, either. I mean, notepad makes sense, but wordpad just seemed like a worse version of MS Word.

I guess it could have been for those who needed something more sophisticated than notepad but didn’t want to spend money to get Word?

Idk, that’s the only reason I can think of right now lol.

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1 point

Is that not enough of a reason for you?

Seems like a big one to me

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6 points

Once MSOffice / MSWord etc. are fully cloud based, they can say “oh it’s too big to fit on your computer, so a local copy is infeasible” and Wordpad would be the complete antithesis of all of that. It’s clearly small enough to fit and always will be. Can’t be having an easy disproof like that.

Then will begin the FUD, “accidental” breaking and disallowing of foreign programs that would fit on local storage that would also compete with MSWord until there’s a walled garden not unlike Apple’s.

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2 points

Did this have a use beyond rtf support out of the box? I feel like there’s either “I have to have Word” or “I don’t need to pay for office, Libre office for me!"

Libre office does 98% of what I need the online version of office for the other one offs.

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6 points

@confusedwiseman It’s still a builtin, very low on resource and small application everyone can work with. Kinda like what the basic editor for txt files are (forgot the name). And there was no dependency on external application to manage like Libre Office. That is basically the only things I can see being an advantage.

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1 point
*

The thing is that being a “builtin” is so unfair of an advantage that I wish Windows came with no programs at all. No Microsoft Edge, no Teams, no Media Player. Nothing other than the simplest of file browsers and some system tools. Either let it be up to the OEM to decide what programs to use or have people install their own preferred programs right after they install Windows.

But of course having control of that advantage is too juicy of a power. So they’ll keep integrating things into Windows.

Them removing a builtin would be a good thing if it wasn’t because they probably did it so they can push (or focus in) some other product instead.

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1 point
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0 points
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Imagine things work like you suggest: Windows comes with no programs, and OEMs ship their devices with additional apps as value-adds.

Microsoft is also an OEM. What should they ship on a Surface?

How big would the lawsuit be if Microsoft stripped all those value-adds out of Windows and then only shipped them on their own devices?

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1 point

The only reason I ever used it was when I needed something quick that could read unix line breaks and I didn’t have time or a connection to install notepad++. I think they fixed the line break issue in notepad, so there hasn’t been a reason that I’ve used it.

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