Pane items can be re-ordered. Edit the view scheme and re-order them. Split views (lol), now we're just going crazy...
Whats so crazy about it?
Being able to re-arrange panes by dragging and dropping them is hardly a ground breaking futuristic concept - the most basic windows explorer even lets you do this and no one considers it revolutionary there. We can do it in the file view and no one considers it crazy there?
And as for splitting out tabs - yes it would be a new highly powerful feature, crazy? ground breaking? confusing? I dont think so, again I know a ton of apps that I use regularly that allow this type of thing and its just considered standard in them. The ONLY difference suggested here over the other apps is that they allow me to drag any section to anywhere INSIDE the app I want, in this instance I'm suggesting being able to drag it out of the app window (as in Photoshop toolbar type setup).
Examples of apps that let you drag panes around:
JRiver Media Center
Windows Explorer
Excel
Examples of apps that let you customize the interface to how you want it by dragging and dropping various parts of the GUI to wherever you want:
Microsoft Office (can drag any toolbar to any part of the page to dock it to the sides or make it just float, can open multiple documents and place them side by side, above each other, a mix of this, etc)
Visual Studio
Topstyle Pro
Macromedia Dreamweaver
I agree that too many options all over the place just make a product seem extremely confusing and overwhelm new users but this is IF they are not thought through and done properly.
No one complains that IE has too many options, it configures the most basic ones of these with prompts that ask the user as they're going along what they want to do and gives them an option to save this as the default setting, it also hides a TON of options into 'advanced' or 'customize' under security settings.
I dont hear people complaining that IE is just too option overloaded at all.
Its not about options, but about how they are given to the user - a page with 5000 check boxes on it is overwhelming, a page with 15 check boxes on it, some of which say 'more options/advanced' and then open up a page of options specifically related to that item with another 30 very specific options on it doesn't confuse anyone. The only people seeing those other 30 options are people wanting to highly tweak that specific aspect of the program.
Perfect example of this inside of MC is ripping options - you can set these in two seconds in MC, yet if you want to customise them to exactly how you want it to behave, MC gives you the power to do this.
This type of philosophy can easily be applied for all aspects of the program and not hurt anyone - beginners dont click 'advanced options' - they wait until they're not beginners any more and suddenly want to do XY & Z more and realise that MC already lets them do that.
Datdude's point is also right - if you dislike options so much, allowing MC to be changed as much as possible without having to go into an 'options' or 'customize this view' screen makes even more sense - want to change what the pane shows? just right click it and choose from the drop down menu. Want to change the order of them - no option needed, just drag and re-order them. Want to add another tab - dont go digging around trying to find an option or customise box somewhere to add another tab, just click the blank 'new tab' icon to the right of the other tabs. Want to view the app in 'split view' - dont go through 3 menus to try and find 'split view' just click the little icons that instantly split your view.
Lots of options and ability to customise a program doesn't hurt anyone, how these are presented is what determins whether they are overwhelming or easy and also determins how frequently these features are used. Anything hidden away in menu's is used less than things presented directly in the GUI. Anything in a sub menu is then used even less and wont be used by the average user if they even discover it (which alot of new users will take a long time to do)