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Scot Finnie's picture
Scot Finnie

Digging on Operating Systems and Platforms

Windows 7 Pre-Beta Early Reactions

I was on vacation last week and finally got a chance to install Microsoft's Windows 7 pre-beta and play with it a bit. Like Preston Gralla, my first reactions were positive.

Installation went off without a hitch. I cloned the drive of a Dell Core Duo notebook circa 2006 and then allowed the Windows installation process to do a clean install on the drive. The installation process was very fast -- much faster than Windows Vista. It also did its job with a minimum of fuss and questions. On first start, Windows 7 did an online update and installed multiple items. The screen resolution, which wasn't correct righted itself to the native resolution on its own when I restarted.

The first thing I noticed about Windows 7 is that it's fast. I would caution that I had the same reaction to some of the earlier beta versions of Vista, too. Vista definitely slowed down at the end of its development cycle. The same thing could happen to Windows 7. But there's an effortlessness about the Windows 7 UI performance that is pleasant and very welcome.

There's not a lot new in this build of Windows 7. It's not feature complete. But I love the new smarter window-sizing features. Pushing windows around and dragging their edges is one of the most tiresome aspects of working on your computer. Microsoft's smart idea works this way: If your browser, for example, isn't maximized, you can drag the top edge of the browser window to the top edge of the screen. Not only with the top of the browser now reach the top of the screen, but Windows 7 automatically pops the bottom of the browser to the bottom edge of the screen too. Similarly, you can grab the title bar and drag the whole window to the top edge of the screen and Windows 7 automatically maximizes the application.

The feature also works on the side of the screen. I frequently set up two applications side by side on higher-resolution monitors. Windows 7 makes this a breeze. Drag any window by its title bar off the screen to one side or another (you have to drag it until the mouse pointer itself is to the edge of the screen). Windows 7 will then open the program window so that it takes up exactly half of the available screen to the side you dragged it. Open another program window and do the same thing on the other side, and the result is two programs opened up side by side, perfectly positioned in only a few seconds. It's a very useful, even ingenious feature that power users are going to love.

My reaction to the changes in the networking area -- a weak point of Vista -- are much less positive. I'm still frustrated by Microsoft's attempt to wizardize everything. They've dumbed things down so far that I ran into three networking problems in 15 minutes. The first was that my Windows 7 machine somehow got the IP address of another device. This happens a lot with Windows machines on simple networks. I don't know why that's the case. In this instance, the IP address the Win 7 machine glommed onto is a permanently assigned address for a printer on my network. Windows 7's network UI doesn't offer a way to release and renew the IP address. While, yes, I can do that from the command line -- the UI should offer this feature, as it did in Windows XP. What are they thinking?

While I was looking for a way to release and renew the IP, I realized that the Network and Sharing Center was showing that I wasn't connected to the Internet -- even though I was having no problems getting out to the Internet. After about an hour of operation and a couple of restarts, Windows 7 eventually realized that it was connected to the Internet and righted itself. But what's up with that?

Finally, Windows 7 introduces the new "homegroup" feature, which is supposed to simplify the process of setting up file sharing and device sharing in home environments. But this is really nothing more than yet another wizard that wants to assign its own passwords (you can't change them!) and take over for you. And there's no transparency about what it's doing. But the colossally arrogant aspect of this tool is that it appears to be only designed to work with other Windows machines. It's not even clear from the UI that it works with non-Windows 7 machines, although I'm sure you can make it work with them.

I've saved the best of my reactions for last. One of my top three criticisms of Windows Vista was that UAC (User Account Control) was way too over zealous. To the point, I felt, that it effectively disabled its security by literally numbing the user to its warnings. Even worse, as far as I was concerned, was that UAC was annoying as hell. It made Vista very hard to warm up to.

User Account Control has changed in Windows 7. For one thing, it has four behavior settings which range from Windows Vista drive-you-crazy mode down to "never notify." And the default setting is "Only notify me when programs try to makes changes to my computer." During the first hour of use I opened almost every Control Panel item and was never confronted with a UAC prompt. At some point, I'm going to make a concerted effort to see a UAC prompt with the default setting, but I can call this now: Microsoft has solved my problem with UAC. This may not offer supreme protection, but I believe that the balance will offer better overall security. If I see a UAC prompt in Windows 7, you can bet I'm going to take it seriously.

It's great to see the Windows Sidebar gone and the ability to place Gadgets (Windows' widgets) directly on the desktop. This is the way it should work. Apple: Take notice.

All in all, the Windows 7 pre-beta is a surprisingly good start to the next version of Windows. I will continue to work with this build and report anything I find of note. I look forward to testing the later pre-releases of Windows 7 too.

For more information and coverage of Windows 7, please take a look at Computerworld's Windows 7 special report.

This story was republished from Scot's Newsletter Blog and was used by permission.

Related News & Opinion:

What People Are Saying

Free tips NOT

Microsoft your not getting any free tips. Your product still stinks, $200 lol. Linux is like a rocket passing you all the way.

Bugs in Beta 1

The first bugs arrive as well.

If you turn off UAC (full notch down) then desktop-gadgets don't work. Also uninstalling/installing windows features won't work with UAC control off.

Ich danke ihnen gute

Ich danke ihnen gute schreiben Porno izle seyret porno izle Youtube izle youtube izle porno izle porno izle sikiş seks sikiş izle

Apple took notice long ago.

"This is the way it should work. Apple: Take notice."

Apple already has this feature.
SEE: http://img352.imageshack.us/my.php?image=screenpw7.png

Only possible through a

Only possible through a hack/tweak. This is NOT standard behavior of Expose.

You were right in your intro, it is too early

"We probably shouldn't get ahead of ourselves, but Microsoft has hit a home run with the pre-beta of Windows 7."

If it debuts in 2010 then their was with less time than their was before Vista's launch that Microsoft had the great idea of making all the hardware companies change the way they made drivers.

"the colossally arrogant aspect of this tool is that it appears to be only designed to work with other Windows machines."

Come now, you don't expect them to really design their home network tools to support other operating systems, I would not be surprised if it advertised windows home server somewhere in it. They hate loosing market share anywhere, right now I am only cautiously optimistic they will make IE8 support web standards. Anything else I think is too high to expect for this year in the standards arena.

"It's great to see the Windows Sidebar gone and the ability to place Gadgets (Windows' widgets) directly on the desktop. This is the way it should work. Apple: Take notice."

Ironic statement. My hotkey to expose the dashboard widgets is the middle mouse button (cant remember if it was the default), in many cases it is just as easy or easier to expose with that than making the desktop visible. Plus it leaves my desktop with no clutter, so I disagree on how it should work.

You were right in your intro, it is too early

"We probably shouldn't get ahead of ourselves, but Microsoft has hit a home run with the pre-beta of Windows 7."

If it debuts in 2010 then their was with less time than their was before Vista's launch that Microsoft had the great idea of making all the hardware companies change the way they made drivers.

"the colossally arrogant aspect of this tool is that it appears to be only designed to work with other Windows machines."

Come now, you don't expect them to really design their home network tools to support other operating systems, I would not be surprised if it advertised windows home server somewhere in it. They hate loosing market share anywhere, right now I am only cautiously optimistic they will make IE8 support web standards. Anything else I think is too high to expect for this year in the standards arena.

"It's great to see the Windows Sidebar gone and the ability to place Gadgets (Windows' widgets) directly on the desktop. This is the way it should work. Apple: Take notice."

Ironic statement. My hotkey to expose the dashboard widgets is the middle mouse button (cant remember if it was the default), in many cases it is just as easy or easier to expose with that than making the desktop visible. Plus it leaves my desktop with no clutter, so I disagree on how it should work.

Wow!

Not the wow experience Microsoft was looking for, but that's what I said when I read your networking experiences. I thought that DHCP was one of those things that, if properly set up, just worked. I'm assuming that the printer was in a range of addresses not being assigned by your DHCP server (router?).

Not having an IP address renew and release button in the UI may be a pre-beta issue. I certainly hope so. Same thing can be said for the invalid status of your Internet connection. Please tell me that you could see your IP address with a minimal number of clicks. I shouldn't have to talk my father through command line interrogation over the phone.

UAC sounds like it is where it should have been all along. I should be able to look for free. Warn me only when I'm about to make changes. I see no value in the full on setting.

The positive I've seen in Windows 7 is the speed, real and perceived. The boot process is quicker as Microsoft begins to parallelize independent processes. That's real. Getting the UI to respond instantly to clicks is huge to me. Did I click that? Did that work? My perception is my reality.

Please keep us informed. File copy over the network and Aero performance would be interesting topics for future articles.

You CAN put gadgets on your

You CAN put gadgets on your desktop on windows vista. i have it set up that way now... so in that arena there really is no difference... at least from the way it was decribed in the article.

Sidebar gadgets

Sidebar has always allowed you to put gadgets on the desktop. Just drag them. It's a common misconception that you can't.