Ek-Balam
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- Sep 25, 2013
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BEST ANSWER....
Thanks
It amazes me to a great degree the vehement defense of this issue by the WPC rank and file. While the explanations of the file manager situation are accurate and well stated, this does not at all mean that the decision of the Redmond Rangers was at all good or well conceived. In fact, probably quite a poor one.
Many OS' both are plenty secure and have user accessible file systems. In the smart phone space, the most secure (arguably) is BlackBerry. BB even has a user accessible file system. This OS architecture decision by MS sends a few messages to potential users; "we can trust you mr./ms. user with a desktop file system and make it secure, but not on a smart phone" Or, it takes us so long just to get something to market, we couldn't take the time to figure out a way to make a user accessible file system on our own NT kernel.... wouldn't it be cute if made users access the cloud for these basic OS necessities because the cloud is cool, it's the future... yeh, that's it, we just tell them it's cool. Or, this is the best, "We don't want business or enterprise customers". The latter I believe is a prime reason WP8 has little, very little enterprise installations and even fewer business users clamoring to ring their must have WP8 phones into BOD IT environments.
The lack of a user accessible file system is not "Boring", it's down right ill conceived and lazy.