Posted in Microsoft, Vista, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP on March 12th, 2009
Those of us who use Windows Vista and who have few complaints beyond the usual trivial grumbles, may wonder why we should upgrade again to the soon-to-be upon us Windows 7.
Enticingly, Windows 7 is built on the Vista codebase, which means that, at its heart, is Windows Vista. This should not be a traumatic move, even though many users, especially in business, are still using XP.
Microsoft has though moved the deckchairs around and added a lot of extra features. It also runs well on Vista hardware, namely PCs that have been designed and optimised for Vista. Windows 7 is designed to boot faster, run smoother and is said to outperform Vista on the same machine.
Windows 7’s kernel is around a tenth the size of the kernels in XP and Vista. This promises an improvement in reliability and also means that the company now has a self-contained building block that makes it simpler and quicker to test and add new features, without having to worry about the rest of the operating system.
Overall, this operating system promises to do many of the things Windows Vista failed to do when it launched.
Posted in Media Center, Microsoft, Vista, Windows Vista on January 15th, 2009
If you have Windows Vista Ultimate or Home Premium you have some great tools for recording various media.
You may already know that you can record movies from television with Windows Media Center. It’s probably one of the easiest things you can do with the program. But there are a couple of things to remember when you record a favorite movie from TV.
You need to set some general recording options to make sure you catch the entire movie. And second, there are two separate ways to record a movie: as it plays on live television or by setting up a request in the guide.
Microsoft has a web page which shows you how to do this, plus a load of other tips for getting more out of Windows Vista.
Take a look.
Posted in Microsoft, Steve Ballmer, Windows 7, Windows Vista on October 18th, 2008
Windows 7 will be will be a major release, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer claimed on Thursday. It will be like Windows Vista, but more so.
“[I]t’s Windows Vista, a lot better,” said Ballmer during a Q&A session hosted by Gartner analysts at the research firm’s annual Symposium ITxpo in Orlando, Florida.
Gartner’s Neil MacDonald asked how Microsoft would walk the line between doing too much with Windows 7, risking the kind of compatibility problems that haunted Vista early on, and too little, which might give potential buyers an excuse to avoid the upgrade.
“Windows Vista is good, Windows 7 is Windows Vista with clean-up in user interface and improvements in performance,” Ballmer said. “Look, I’m not encouraging anybody to wait, I’d go ahead and deploy it right away. We didn’t have to go in an incompatible direction to make big strides forward. It’s a real release, because it’s a lot more work than a minor release. It turns out you can do more than just a minor release in what is essentially a two-and-a-half year period of time. There’s no reason to do just, quote, a minor release, in two-and-a-half years.”
On Tuesday, Mike Nash, Vice-President of Windows product management, said Windows 7 was the product’s official name. He called the operating system “evolutionary” but still a “significant” advancement. “It is in every way a major effort in design, engineering and innovation.”
Ballmer defended Vista’s first two years in the market, claiming that it has 80 million users. He understood that companies might decide to skip Vista and move straight from Windows XP to Windows 7. “If people want to wait, they certainly can,” he said.
Posted in Bill Gates, Jerry Seinfeld, Vista, Windows Vista, Windows XP on September 10th, 2008
Americans may have seen the new Microsoft TV ad in which Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld strut their stuff in aid of the ailing Windows Vista brand.
The ad started airing in the U.S. last week and is the first in a $300 million campaign to reinvigorate Windows, long considered one of the strongest brands in technology.
The expensive advertising highlights a number of concerns:
* Widespread lack of enthusiasm for Windows Vista, especially among corporate IT groups, which regard it as a step backwards from XP. They hope to hang on without upgrading until Microsoft’s next-generation operating system arrives.
* Apple’s constant attacks on Windows via its witty and successful PC versus Mac marketing campaign.
* Microsoft’s inept confusion of the Windows brand with its Windows Live attempt at web services, from security and anti-virus to email and IM.
The real challenge, of course, is to generate excitement about a box of software that most users take for granted, and to develop more distinct, compelling messages around what Windows offers to consumers, enterprises and software developers.
Otherwise, Vista could be the new Windows ME.