Category Archives: Windows Vista

Making the case for Windows Vista

J. Peter Bruzzese over at InfoWorld brings up the topic of back lash against Microsoft’s latest desktop operating system. He points out some interesting facts that adhere to some of my own plans concerning deployment of Vista on a large scale especially where evaluation is concerned.

Quote:

“Here were some of their key findings:

* 48 percent of respondents indicate that their organization is evaluating, testing, or implementing Vista. That doesn’t sound dead to me.
* 30 percent of respondents have organizations that are currently implementing or have already implemented Vista.
*50 percent of the respondents said Vista is performing "above expectation" on key features.”

I have been rolling out some new Dell Optiplex 755 systems for the past 4 weeks at a Government Agency and the procurement includes both Windows Vista Business and XP Professional media. The systems are preloaded with XP because they are just not ready for Vista, some of the custom applications need to be updated. But Vista is definitely on their agenda, but it will take some time before they start rolling it out and it will most likely be incremental.

Quote:

“…there are enhancements to Group Policy settings (over 800 new settings in Vista) that allow for a greater level of administrative control over such items as power use. These days, we are all about going green, and here Vista is an OS that can help us thanks to the added ability to adjust the amount of power your system uses. Other enhancements allow for greater security control within the enterprise, preventing users from plugging in USB devices and other removable media, User Account Control, and more.

Vista also introduces BitLocker protection which is great for encrypting your entire system. Hundreds of thousands of laptops with confidential company data on them are lost or stolen each year. Without encryption of the drive, it is just a matter of time before a thief can access the contents. With BitLocker, that worry is removed. As a business person — perhaps one who has had their laptop stolen — would you mock that level of protection? Most likely not.”

Waiting on Windows 7 to skip Vista does not make sense especially for businesses, since the same kernel will be used which means, any incompatibilities today moving from XP to Vista will also be there when trying to move from XP to 7. The strategy for most enterprise roll outs is to use a proven and tested product, which Vista will further be by 2010, by then the second Service Pack should also be out. I don’t see a mass deployment of Windows 7, its the same case for most versions of Windows in the past.

We need to also understand how businesses procure licenses and software from Microsoft. That’s through Software Assurance and Enterprise Agreement. Which means Vista is on their schedule, not Microsoft. We are talking about an OS that Microsoft plans to support until 2016.

I don’t know what users find so drastically different about Aero that they use it as a deterrent to not move to Vista. Yes, the interface has made improved changes. For instance the unwieldy cascading All Programs menu has been tamed by the new searchable interface and a more friendly hierarchical structure. Yes, shutting down your computer is different because of the single menu, but Microsoft is recommending users hibernate their computers instead of shutting them down. So, that’s the only hurdle I see to overcome. Users moving from 2000 can still enable the Windows Classic theme if they need the time to get acquainted with the changes to Explorer.

Then again, I am not forcing anyone to move to Vista based on XP’s ability to stay secure in the foreseeable future. Since Microsoft obviously must believe that XP is secure enough to be around even in 2010 on netbooks.

Read the entire post here 

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Where are my Ultimate Extras and DreamScene Content Pack 4?

A couple days ago I saw post over at NeoWin.net informing users that new Ultimate Extras updates for Windows Vista Ultimate customers were released ‘silently’ through Windows Update. Unfortunately I was at work, and I wouldn’t be back home until the weekend. But here I am, checking Windows Update and the only thing I see is a few optional updates for Windows. I am not sure if its only showing for US customers since my local is set to English (Jamaica).

Tinker, new in Ultimate Extras

One of the the highlights of the new update is the inclusion of a new game called Tinker, the game revolves around a robot who has somehow lost his way in a confusing world and needs to find his way back home with the help of you of course. The last time a new game was included in Ultimate Extras was back in early 2007 when Microsoft released ‘Texas Hold’Em Poker’.

New Ultimate Extras, hello where are you?

Resources:

Microsoft releases new Ultimate Extras – Microsoft Tinker
Windows Vista Ultimate Extras
Ultimate PC
New Ultimate Extras: Microsoft Tinker and Dreamscene Content Pack 4

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PC World: Microsoft Sends Up Trial Balloons for Windows 7

From PC World

Quote:

"Windows Vista hasn’t fared so well since its debut. Its generally low reputation among customers has led one Forrester analyst to dub Microsoft‘s latest OS "the New Coke of tech," while some studies have suggested that nearly a third of customers who buy a PC with Vista pre-installed may actually be downgrading those machines to XP.
Still
other customers seem to wish the whole thing will just go away. They
don’t want to hear about Vista at all — they’d rather hear about
Windows 7, the upcoming OS from Microsoft that will be Vista’s
successor. And given the dismal consumer reaction to its latest attempts to market Vista, Microsoft seems willing to oblige."

Read the entire article here

This conclusion that Vista is not
great or better comes from a lack in understanding and not using the OS
enough to really see the obvious benefits out of the box. My brother
upgraded to Windows XP in summer of 2002, loved it, you could say he is
an earlier adopter and continued using the OS on various machines,
including a Dell Inspiron he purchased in June of 2006 (XP Home).

My brother jumped on the early Windows Vista adopter bandwagon in
January of 2007. He loved it! Yes, the things that ‘wowed’ him was
Vista’s visual appeal, it looks darn great. And PC World would be surprised, a lot of people love the richness, the transparency and realness
of the OS. AERO is a bold, serious yet inviting look and many people I
ask, new to Vista, previous XP or 2000 users, novices, lab techs, love
Vista.

A lot of negativity about Vista has been intensified by a number of
things. Things that we have been acquainted with from previous versions
of Windows or any other platform…device drivers and application
compatibility. It just was not there for many in early 2007, but it has improved tremendously and has reached the same level as XP or better.
You would be hard pressed to find most modern hardware released in the
last 2 to 3 years incompatible with the OS, not to mention applications
that are probably in their second to third generation of full
compatibility with Vista.

XP’s reception faced many compatibility and hardware issues, I
remember some clearly, like Roxio and printer and scanner hardware not
being supported. But they eventually were, Roxio did update version 5
to support XP and the problems died. But because XP was released in a
time where the Internet, blogging and the spotlight was not on
Microsoft and Windows in a scrutinizing way like it is today. In
addition to Microsoft’s transparency and openness during the Longhorn
project, it set a tone and perception in addition to things that
happened during the project like reset and drop of features. Those are
the irrelevant things that are still etched in the minds of many who
covered the OS during its development.

Vista in its current form is well accepted, but some lingerings
still remained and being revived and utilized by people who have never
used Vista, don’t use Windows and is being articulated in a way to make
Windows out into a platform that is not desirable, these include the
voice of Open Source, small resurgence of Apple, Justin Long vs PC and
many other insignificant events in the past few years.

But it still does not hide the fact that people are accepting of
Vista’s improvements, whether its developer wise, business or consumer
wise. Search, collaboration, ease of setup, security, Backup,
organization, true hardware and application support, clean interface
and just the plain likability of the OS, people see it and are proving
it everyday with the millions of licenses that come pre-installed on
new PC’s or deployed.

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Rewrite Windows – Yes or No?

From CNET
 
An interesting article posted by News.com from New York Times, suggest that best way to resolve all of Microsoft Windows ‘problems’, is to rewrite the software from scratch.
 
Quote:

"The best solution to the multiple woes of Windows is starting over. Completely. Now.

Vista is the equivalent, at a minimum, of Windows version 12–preceded by 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 3.1, NT, 95, NT 4.0, 98, 2000, ME, and XP. After 6 years of development, the longest interval between versions in the previous 22-year history of Windows, and long enough to permit Apple to bring out three new versions of Mac OS X, Vista was introduced to consumers in January 2007."

Read the entire article here

My Take:

I am sorry, but there is a lot of misinformation and bias in this article. Mac OS X’s heritage upon which it is built is even older than NT itself. Development on NT started in late ’89 when Microsoft hired Dave Cutler, so NT is probably one of the youngest Microkernels next to Linux which was developed around ’91 by Torvald. There is also confusion between the code bases, Windows NT is completely different from Windows 9x/3x/1x. The only similarities they shared were version names and API’s for those legacy applications you speak of. Microsoft does not need to rewrite Windows, they can clean it up, just like they did for example with the release of Windows XP Professional x64 where they removed things like AppleTalk, POSIX compliance and NetBEUI. You must remember just like Linux or Unix, NT was designed in mind to be a portable OS, in fact during its development it was specifically targeted at different platforms such as PowerPC, Alpha, MIPs, the Intel processor it targeted had to be emulated. So I would revise your analysis before dooming Windows. A lot of the work over years has been targeted at componentising much of Windows where vital components like the Network Stack, graphics don’t create lots of dependencies. Rumors are much of the built apps for instance will be optional in Windows 7. Vista’s only regret is, it made necessary architectural changes for the sake of security and took a long time to reach market, but out of it all, there were great benefits that developers still haven’t managed to dig deep into like the new graphics and communication capabilities. As for supporting legacy applications, Microsoft could even move compatibility to a virtualized stack where old apps work normally on newer versions of Windows without a hitch. Nothing is wrong with the NT kernel and its age is not a problem either.

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Remaining Ultimate Extra Language Packs Released!

From Windows Ultimate via ActiveWin

"We are pleased to announce the release of the remaining 19 languages packs for Windows Vista Ultimate. This Ultimate Extras release brings the total number of language packs for use with Windows Vista Multilingual User Interface Pack (MUI) to 35. Windows Vista Ultimate enables users install multiple languages on their system and quickly switch between them by associating a system language with their login name."

Learn more here

The additional supported languages are:

  • Arabic
  • Bulgarian
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Estonian
  • Greek
  • Hebrew
  • Hungarian
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Polish
  • Portuguese (Portugal)
  • Romanian
  • Serbian
  • Slovak
  • Slovenian
  • Thai
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian

Also, this release includes an update to the lpksetup.exe installation component, correcting issues that affected some customers at installation. We recommend you download and install this component before installing any language packs; the updated component can be found here.

NeoWin.net

 

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Safer browsing with Internet Explorer 7

From Microsoft

The Internet is a vast place–and not every site is friendly. How do you help protect yourself online? With Windows Internet Explorer 7. Already, the Internet Explorer 7 Phishing Filter prevents nearly one million visits per week to known dangerous websites. In just a few clicks, see how the latest version of the world’s most popular web browser can help you be safer online.

Download it now (it’s free!)

Take a tour of Internet Explorer 7

Why should you upgrade from earlier versions?

Already have Internet Explorer 7?

See how to navigate the web more safely

Learn easy keyboard shortcuts

Personalize it with add-ons

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Vista SP1 Recovery disc feature

Long Zheng over at istartedsomething.com takes a look at the new Recovery Disc tool coming in Vista’s first Service Pack due sometime in early 2008.

"One of the new administrative tools Windows Vista Service Pack 1 provides is the ability to create a recovery disc. At first, the name might fool you into thinking the type of discs system manufacturers provide to you when you purchase a new computer to restore your computer to a factory state, but this is not that. A more appropriate name would be “Windows repair disc”.

Kinda disappointed, I was hoping the Vista Team would resolve the issue of OEMs only giving users a Recovery Disc instead of a separate Operating System disk. Yes, a recovery environment is nice, but, the ability to create a backup OS disk would have been nicer so you can reinstall your drivers and just the OS without all the OEM Junk.

Check out the tutorial here

 

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Windows DreamScene finally released!

Part of Windows Vista Ultimate’s much anticipated feature/service Ultimate Extras finally went RTW today, well partially. But it looks like things are finally coming together, months after the Ultimate Extras team announced that they would delay the release because of stability and performance issues associated with installing the add-ons. Here is what the team had to say:

In early July, I wrote about The Ultimate Team’s intention to ship the remaining promised Ultimate Extras (DreamScene and the remaining Language Packs) by the end of the summer. Unfortunately summer never really came to Seattle this year—so we missed our cue. That being said, we are pleased to announce that Windows DreamScene is now available.

As most of you already know, Windows DreamScene transforms your desktop from a static wallpaper image into a full-motion video. In conjunction with Stardock, we’re pleased to also offer a number of cool, new animated DreamScene desktops, including “Aurora”. Additionally, you can use your own videos as DreamScene desktops or visit Stardock’s Dream.WinCustomize.com website to download Stardock’s DeskScapes (an add-on to DreamScene) as well as a collection of fabulous content created by Stardock and members of the Ultimate community.

The Ultimate Extras team also explained the changes to the Ultimate Extras page in Windows Vista SP1 which was released to a broad group of testers yesterday:

On a different topic, as the broad beta for Windows Vista SP1 nears, people have noticed that the screen which welcomes customers to Windows Ultimate Extras has changed. Our intent in making this change was simply to broaden the definition in anticipation of a broader range of Ultimate Extras being available in the future—that do  not necessarily map to the original, narrow definition.

Read the entire announcement here

I am happy to at least happy to know that development is still on going and the team is committed to delivering the value Vista Ultimate customers were promised. Windows DreamScene was announced in late 2006 just before Windows Vista was RTMed, it was originally code named Motion Desktop.

Related:

How to enable Windows DreamScene

Oh my Goodness – the new DreamScenes are HOT!

Resources:

Has Ultimate Extras failed?

The Windows Ultimate Extras Drought

DreamScene – The Issues So Far
Forza 2 DreamScene for Windows Vista

 

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Introducing Vista4Begginers.com

Today we take a look at another popular Windows Vista resource managed by  Ciprian Rusen (Co-Editor).

Windows Vista 4 Beginngers is a unique site that focuses on the end user using Windows Vista for the first time or upgrading from Windows XP. This is a wonderful website that carefully guides the user through helpful, well written, detailed articles and tutorials.

Mission Statement

Microsoft’s new operating system – Windows Vista™ brings lots of new features and changes compared to Windows XP. Some of them are significant and some are not. The transition from Windows XP to Windows Vista is a big step for everybody. Even so, IT professionals will learn and adopt Windows Vista faster than most people. But what about the other people, who are not working in the IT business? After years of working with Windows XP, Windows Vista might be much too different and difficult to use.

Windows Vista for Beginners is here to help you. The team behind this site will try to provide simple and easy to understand tutorials about Windows Vista. We will try to cover as many topics as possible, starting with the most simple things like playing music on your Vista PC. You will see the site expand continuously as we will try to include as much content as possible.

Check it out here: http://www.vista4beginners.com

Previously:

Introducing Vistabase

 

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Windows Vista: 60 million licenses sold – 1 billion install base for Windows by ’08

From All About Microsoft

Quote:

"The Windows installed base will hit the 1 billion mark by the end of Microsoft’s fiscal 2008 (which ends on June 30), according to Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO.

“There will be more PCs running Windows than automobiles at that point,” Ballmer told attendees of the company’s annual Financial Analyst Meeting (FAM) in Redmond on July 26. (I’m here in person, up in the media rafters.)"

Read the rest here

From Reuters.uk

Quote:

"Microsoft Corp. (MSFT.O: QuoteProfile , Research) had sold 60 million Windows Vista licenses as of the end of June, including 20 million copies sold since mid-May, the company said on Thursday.

The world’s largest software maker disclosed the new sales figures on Vista, the latest version of its dominant Windows operating system released on Jan. 30, at its annual meeting with financial analysts."

Read the rest here

 

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