I like the idea of focusing on the functionality, not specific software, that 
could go into a 5th edition. It seems that stepping back and rethinking popular 
industry trends led to some of the unique and interesting decisions that gave 
us plan9 in the first place.

Here is what I'd like to see
-3D graphics (something akin to /dev/draw except for graphics pipelines)
-Location capabilities (gps, map drawing, routing)
-Mobile interface (clean, simple, optimized for small and touch screens)
-2D graphics editing (edit photographs or make raster art from scratch, layers, 
antialiasing, filesystem for scripting)
-3D printing (manipulate 3D model data, output one of the standard formats for 
printers)
-Knowledge/AI system (plug in statements, make inferences)
-Notifications (deliver events, alerts and reminders to my attention in a 
consistent manner)
-Search quickly for files based on content (indices, also accessible via 9P, 
there's a paper floating around about this)
-Easily find disk space statistics (free disk space for each file system)
-Single Instruction Multiple Data (language and compiler for writing programs 
that can use these special instructions)
-Video playback and recording (support for most popular 3 codecs, including one 
of the free ones, syncing of audio stream, record from camera and/or screen)
-Clean HTML (not fully featured web browser, instead render existing HTML in a 
clean, readable way, not unlike the various reader modes in popular web 
browsers, convert to PDF/PS)

I think that each of these can be done in the plan9 way with simple, consistent 
and elegant implementations that integrate well with the rest of the system. 
The focus is to enable capability and not necessarily to just port existing 
software, repeating existing complexity and bloat.

Chris

> On Nov 19, 2016, at 3:37 PM, Charlie Lin <charlieli...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Any features that should be incorporated into Plan 9?
> 
> 
>> On Nov 16, 2016 17:27, "Charlie Lin" <charlieli...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Any plans for Plan 9 5th edition?
>> 
>> My desires:
>> ISO-compliant C compiler and preprocessor
>> Port other programming languages (especially Go) to here
>> Start a source code repository
>> Port Git, SVN, Mercurial, et cetera to here

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