To begin, I'll try to start off broad to demonstrate WHY I believe this way. Eventually I'll become more specific as to WHAT I want to see MC become:
I guess my main issue is performance of the application. I use it solely for music, and it seems that the large majority of new ffeatures that have been coming out have been geared to the video/photography enthusiast.
The difference is that the need for a library program like MC is because it makes storing, locating, manipulating, and playing files more efficient than Windows Explorer. I have 50,000 audio tracks, and MC allows me to locate an individual song I want to play, followed by another song I want to play, followed by another, so on and so forth, while providing me with a beautiful sleek, powerful interface to do this in.
On the other side of the boat, I have about 500 pictures on my hard drive. I find that MC does not offer much of an upgrade in terms of locating and viewing these files over Explorer. And then when you factor in free alternatives such as Picasa or Windows Live Photo Gallery, MC offers little more than theater mode. If I was simply a photo enthusiast, there would be no reason to purchase MC.
The same could go for video files. Explorer + VLC/MPC/WMP is equal to MC. And those alternatives are all free.
What Windows or other free alternatives do not offer is the ability to store, display, and locate AUDIO files. This is MC's niche. There are no other alternatives--unless you want to spend half a lifetime fiddling with foobar2000, which I'm fairly sure most people in here do not wish to do. Make it (or at least a base install) audio centric. Improve performance for large libraries, eliminate resources necessary for the video/image aspects of the program so it can run on older/specialized/dedicated audio machines: improve the aspects of your niche.
So where does MC14 go from here? It should focus on becoming an audio enthusiasts dream. Replace iTunes, replace WMP, become the de facto standard for college students AND audiophiles.
Improve support with cloud music services.
Reduce the complexity of some operations, add more options for others.
Add the iTunesesque automatic file sorting operations upon import or drag and drop.
Add a plethora of sample display/sorting options.
Increase performance for huge libraries (if you had not reduced the size of Noire for MC14 I may not have switched, but my old box was *just* barely keeping up).
Make theater view BETTER than WMC.
Improve Last.fm, internet radio, podcast, artist info, and lyric support.
Clean the YADB database (including duplicate cover art below 500x500px).
Improve the autotagging engine, based upon FULL albums, not just individual tracks.
Add Picard/Musicbrainz support.
Add MySpace artist links/information.
Let me, at the push of a button, find out where the artist I'm playing is going to be on tour next. Show me pictures of the band. Tell me other artists that I may like. Be Pandora. Be last.FM.
Improve music statistics. Show me graphs of what I like listening to by genre, artist, date, etc...Make autoplaylists based on this data.
This idea is REALLY out there, but it's just to give an example of what possibilities are out there if you wanted to put the time and effort in to make it work: Join forces with the Rockbox team and create custom MC branded firmwares for the iDevices, with incredibly tight MC integration. Be better then Apple! Allow me to add multiple-artist albums to my iPod without creating 16 artist entries with a single song each. Please! Sort my albums by date. Please!
I've got 50,000 tracks in my library, connected to a hi-fi system in the room I am sitting, with the monitor right in front of me. Yet, what am I listening to right now? I'm listening to 128k last.FM radio through the tinny speakers on my laptop using Rythymbox because I'm trying to find new artists that I like. Why can't MC do this but the open source Linux community has no problem with it?
MC is a great product and I've always felt compelled to upgrade. However, I'm afraid that this may solely be because MC is the program I use most frequently on the computer aside from the browser. I've always felt "newer is better," and it has been! However, these newest versions have felt like a step in the wrong direction. If I can look at the free MJ12 and say to myself, "you know, I could live with that, if MC weren't around..." something is awry. You have the opportunity to become a defining software (I believe MC is THAT good) in the audio market. However, as you add the image, video, and file integration MC is beginning to look less like a top-tier media program, and more like, well, like Windows Explorer on 'roids. And that's a fairly pointless and convoluted path to negotiate.
What I would like to know is what exactly are the developers long-term goals for MC? At this point it seems like a lot of running in different directions in the hope that something will present itself.
Thanks.
Bryanhoop