At this point, MC knows the following from the user interaction:
* - I am not a Noob
* - I only want MC to do audio (no pictures and no video)
* - I do not want MC to do Auto-Import
I agree with you generally about the automatic auto-import on the countdown timer. This was done specifically because lots of novice users had problems getting media imported. So, launching with a blank library causes MC to scan "common" (user directories) locations for media, but gives the countdown timer to give you a chance to cancel it.
I find it annoying too, though it really only ever happens once, until I restore my real library (or you actually import at least a single file).
However, while I see where you're coming from on that, I'd dispute that they really "know" the things you suggest above from the choices you made, and assuming thus, would cause an equal or greater amount of trouble for other users.
For example: I do not enable file type associations for ANY image file types, or ANY video file types either, and I enable audio file type association for all types except WAV. However, that does not mean I don't want to use MC for Image or Video playback or management! Those aren't the same questions. I don't want MC to open when I double click a MKV file in Windows Explorer (I want it to use Media Player Classic), simply because when I open a file that way, I just want a simple "quick viewer" in a window. Same goes for WAV (which is how my voicemails at work come in as email attachments), and image files. If I'm in Windows Explorer, and I double click a file, I usually just want a "quick viewer". In the past, I didn't even associate the
other audio file types with MC, for the same reason. In practice, over time, I found that I never actually wanted to "quick view" these other types of audio files (usually music), and so I do now allow it to associate those specific files, but nothing else.
But that
does not mean I don't want to use MC for video playback. MC is my primary video playback application, and I use it for all my image file management as well.
File Type Associations are just not the same thing.
Likewise, I don't think selecting custom install mode means you are an experienced user, automatically. There are many reasons you might need to use custom install mode (installing to a separate disk in a system with a small, limited SSD boot volume, for example). Even my Dad, who is no computer whiz, will often use the "Custom" modes when installing something here or there, mainly out of curiosity. He learned long ago that if you choose that choice, it gives you more information. He usually doesn't understand most of the choices presented, and just chooses the defaults, but he'll still pick that mode and look through what it says (usually reading them to me one at a time in painstaking fashion).
And, finally, it is conceivable that a user might want to cancel the auto-import on the first run in order to perform some other task, but then want it to run later. I admit, this is much more tenuous, and I'd generally agree with you. If you cancel it once, it shouldn't ever do that again.