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Thank you for being at the Microsoft Windows Community Site. You may have to register before posting in forums. It's absolutely free. After registering, you can get all the benefits available to our registered members, you can access our Downloads section, you can participate in contests, etc. You can post in forums in English as well as in Hindi, in fact we encourage you to use Hindi in your posts. If you have any problem with registration or login, please contact us.

     
  
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Microsoft Windows ForumsMicrosoft Windows ForumsWindows 7Windows 7GeneralGeneralSoumyaSoumya's official Windows 7 thread!
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New Post
 7/3/2009 10:55 AM
 

A hot official copy of Windows 7 RC1 is on our desktop and we're poking around. But here are the three best new new things in Windows 7 Build 7100. This crazy background? Baked in.

Stream Your Library Over the Internet With Windows Media Player

This is hot—it'd be hotter if it was easier to set up. Windows Media Player's Remote Media Sharing will let you access your media library from anywhere over the internet. You need a Windows Live ID that you associate with your Windows 7 user account using a tool you have to download. (This could grow to include other "online identities," like Facebook I'm guessing, but I wouldn't hold your breath for your Gmail account.) You also need the same version of Windows Media Player running on both computers. After everything's all associamated, then your home library you wanna stream from should show up just like a local library under the "Other Libraries" section in the side navigation pane. Can't do this in iTunes, buddy.

Windows XP Mode
To encourage enterprise people to let loose and rock Windows 7, it runs a full-fledged Windows XP virtual environment using Microsoft's Virtual PC. It requires an additional download (booo), but you won't have to worry about your applications breaking like with Vista. Update: Paul Thurrott has more info and a huge walkthrough on XP Mode, including the crushing revelation it's gonna be free for Windows 7 Pro, Enterprise and Ultimate, not Home Premium, which is the version regular people are going to be running.

The Most Insane Default Backgrounds Ever
Look at these. Yes, these are just a handful of the ridiculously awesome backgrounds packed inside Windows 7. Some are the products of acid trips through a nightmare land of anime hell that I would never wish on anybody, and some are simply stunning. Just wow. Click to make bigger, obvs. Update: Okay, the backgrounds were in some of the builds between the Public Beta and the upcoming RC, but they weren't, you know, public.


New Post
 7/3/2009 11:02 AM
 

Yeah, I said it. The Windows 7 taskbar is the most important Windows UI change since Windows 95, and it will dramatically change the way you use Windows. And it's better than the Mac's Dock.

That's because the "superbar"—as the taskbar is known by developers—jerks taskbar functionality in a new direction. It's no longer merely a window manager—just a place to manage open windows and by proxy, open applications. It's now a bona fide application launcher. More than that, it blends the two in ways that will remind many of the OS X Dock—apps that are running and those that aren't can live together. True, you've been able to launch apps from the Windows taskbar's Quick Launch ghetto for ages, but that's been demolished so that Microsoft could completely and seamlessly integrate the launching of new apps and the managing of running ones.

Managing Apps and Open Windows

The OS X Dock operates from a similar standpoint, but Windows 7 takes this (not to mention the translucency gambit) a step further: The visual signification of a running application (versus one that's not and merely "pinned" to the taskbar) is exceptionally subtle—a kind of "glare" appears on the top left corner of the icon and it's faintly outlined. It borders on actively encouraging you to forget the distinction, which as computers become more powerful and applications launch more quickly, matters less and less anyhow.

The flashing colored glass effect when an app is trying to get your attention, however, is nice, and though way less ostentatious than the old blinking button, definitely obvious. Unless you have the taskbar set to auto-hide, then the notification is barely visible as a flashing line of color on the bottom of your screen. The Mac Dock's bouncing icons definitely works better there.

These aesthetic similarities aside, what actually makes the superbar superior to the Dock is window management—including, by extension, application management. I can easily find, access or close any window I want from the taskbar nearly instantly, thanks to the combination of live thumbnails and Aero Peek. Rolling over an icon in the taskbar pops up live thumbnails of every open window of that app. If that's not enough to tell which one you want, rolling over a thumbnail brings that window to the front, full-sized, and makes every other window translucent. And it's easy to move from app to app in one motion to bring up the window you want, or close it. This is not just a neat visual trick, like Flip 3D. It's genuinely useful.

The benefit breaks down if you have more open windows of an application than the number of previews that will fit across your screen horizontally: In that case, you get a much less useful list of open windows, like old school Windows or control-clicking a Dock icon on the Mac.

The Power of the Pop-Up Menu

Right-clicking—or clicking the icon then quickly swiping upwards—brings up a pop-up menu (aka a jump list). Control-clicking on the OS X Dock does something similar, giving you a list of open windows. Some apps (like Adium) are coded for additional Dock functions, but it's not the same as the powerful visual metaphor that the superbar and Aero Peek give you. Applications still need to be coded specially to take advantage of the superbar's pop-up menu, but it's more powerful. If an app is coded to use Windows 7 jump lists—when you right-click on an icon or click and swipe upward, you have instant access to frequently used or other functions—it will erase the slight advantage the Dock currently has.

The superbar does share one of the Dock's major shortcomings as an application launcher—it's not immediately apparent how to launch a new window of an app from the taskbar. The secret as Windows evangelist Paul Thurrot points out is that you right-click the app icon, then click the app name itself appearing in the pop-up menu. Granted, from the Mac Dock, unless opening a new window is coded into the app as a Dock function, like Safari, you can't do it at all.

The superbar's biggest shortcoming—at least when you first use it—relates to the way it handles folders and document shortcuts, which is exceptionally confusing. You can only pin one folder to the bar. After that, every subsequent folder you want to pin to the taskbar is pinned to Windows Explorer. Say you have the Libraries folder pinned for quick access to Documents, Downloads, Pictures, etc. But I also want another folder (in this example, Games and Computer) pinned to the taskbar, so I drag it to the bar. There, it shares the same icon as my first pinned folder. When I click the icon, up pops Libraries. Where's the Games folder? I have to right-click on the folder icon (or click and swipe up). This gives me a jump list of pinned folders and other frequent programs. You pin documents the same way, only they're hidden in the jump menu of the application that opens them. It takes some learning before you can use it fluidly.

The View From Above

The challenge of learning a totally new Windows behavior is the cost of getting this huge step forward in UI. The superbar makes Windows way more conducive to running tons of applications, since it's actually possible to find apps and precisely the window you want in a second, no matter how bad the shitstorm on your desktop is. In this sense, it's a better application manager than the Dock, from which, generally speaking, you can't do much more than jump to open applications or close them.

It's true that it's actually less necessary for the Dock to be a superpowered wunderkind—Spaces gives you multiple desktops to work on, and Expose is pretty fantastic. It's faster, though if you've got too many windows, the thumbnails are too small to be useful. Aero Peek solves this issue nicely by letting you quickly cycle through full-screen windows. The superbar has a button in the bottom right corner that works sort of like an OS X Expose hot corner, instantly making every window transparent so you can see the desktop—clicking will actually clear everything away.

There are definitely arguments to be made against the density of the superbar, packing so many function into a single UI element—many criticisms of the Dock apply to the superbar, like the total lack of text labels, and though it sidesteps some of the Dock's issues, like the poof, it presents new flubs. It could definitely improve in some ways (especially the notification area, which I didn't even go into).

But it shows the most thought of any Windows UI element in a long time, and manages to handle the complexity and multiplicity of functions about as well as one could expect. It does more than the Dock, and for the most part, works beautifully to enable—encourage, even—serious multitasking that the default Windows UI never has before.

i.gizmodo.com/5131933/giz-explains-why-the-windows-7-taskbar-beats-mac-os-xs-dock


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:21 PM
 
What are the real hardware requirements of Windows 7?
Logout.hu made a test and started Windows 7 with a 256 MiByte RAM AMD K6 III underclocked to 133 MHz.
 
300 MHz, 384 MiByte RAM
 

300 MHz, 384 MiByte RAM [Source: view picture gallery]

 

As is generally known, Microsoft specifies the following minimum hardware requirements for running Windows 7:

• 1 GHz processor (32 or 64 Bit)
• 1 GiByte RAM (32 Bit) and 2 GiByte (64 Bit)
• 16 GiByte hard disk storage (32 Bit) and 20 GiByte (64 Bit)
• DirectX 9 graphics card with WDDM 1.0 or higher

Our colleagues of logout.hu wanted to put the rule to the test and run Windows 7 on the following system:

• EPOX motherboard MVP3G5
• AMD K6-III+ 500 MHz CPU
• 512 MB SD RAM 512 MB SD RAM
• Asus V7700 Deluxe (Geforce 2 GTS) VGA
• 20GB Quantum HDD Quantum 20GB HDD

They chose this system in order to test the absolute minimum requirements for Windows 7. So logout.hu did not only use the standard settings but even underclocked the system.

The first test was done with 384 MiByte RAM only and a CPU clock rate of 600 MHz. The installer could not cope with that and the system recommended to use 512 MiByte RAM. With 512 MiByte the successful installation took one hour.
Boot time with different configurations
 
Boot time with different configurations [Source: view picture gallery]

After the installation the RAM was reduced to 384 MiByte again and unnecessary applications were turned off: sidebar, Windows Defender and the firewall were deactivated.

After the installation different clock speeds and RAM amounts were tested. The absolute minimum requirements were the AMD K6 III with 256 MiByte RAM - everything lower caused a bluescreen. Needless to say that such a configuration is not recommended but logout.hu only wanted to test the minimum system requirements.

www.pcgameshardware.com/aid,689002/Windows-7-with-133-MHz-What-are-the-minimum-hardware-requirements/News/


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:23 PM
 

Mark your calenders everyone, July 13th 2009 will be the day that Microsoft will officially announce the Windows 7 RTM. This also happens to be the same day as the Worldwide Partner Conference 09 in New Orleans.

We are likely to see many more leaked builds before the July 13th date, as Microsoft engineers continue to smash bugs and other problematic showstopper issues. On July 13th, all manufactures will be able to get their hands on the RTM to begin testing with their software and hardware.

The Windows 7 GA or General Availability build will come on October 22nd, which is the version that's released to the entire world. The build may or may not change from the RTM stage to the GA stage, it's dependent on whether or not any showstopper bugs are found by the manufactures.

techfragments.com/news/936/Software/Microsoft_Windows_7_RTM_Coming_July_13th.html


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:35 PM
 

Interested in building networking filtering applications tailored to the next iteration of the Windows client? Then you need to get up to date with the new features that have been added to Windows Filtering Platform for Windows 7. In this regard, the Redmond company is offering for download documentation designed to provide an insight into what exactly the Windows 7 Filtering Platform brings to the table. The What is new in Windows 7 WFP (Windows Filtering Platform) version 1.1 is a resource that went live on the Microsoft Download Center in June 2009, and which is currently offered to developers.

The WPF architecture was initially introduced with the precursors of Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. Vista and Windows Server 2008 allowed independent software vendors to build programs enjoying a high level of networking control, and Windows 7 will take it to the next level for C/C++ developers.

news.softpedia.com/news/Windows-7-Filtering-Platform-Documentation-115774.shtml


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:36 PM
 

Windows 7 does not provide its users a way to change the start menu to the classic start menu. This is probably a feature that not many users want but there are surely some users who prefer to work with the classic start menu than the new one. The only way to work with a classic start menu is to use a third party software program since there is no built in way to activate a classic start menu.

The application Windows 7 Classic Start Menu has been created just for that purpose. It can be pinned to the Windows 7 from where it can be executed. Please note that this does not replace the existing start menu in Windows 7.

The installation could be a bit tricky as it requires UAC confirmations. After downloading the software run the installer. The installer will place icons on the computer desktop including a CS Menu First Run icon which needs to be executed after the installation. The current user needs to logout afterwards.

All that’s left to do is to move the pin the program icon into the Windows 7 Taskbar. A click on that icon will display a classic start menu which can be configured further to suite the needs of the user.

windows 7 classic start menu

windows7news.com/2009/07/03/use-a-classic-start-menu-in-windows-7/


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:43 PM
 
 Modified By soumya  on 7/3/2009 7:50:33 PM
Downloads of the Windows 7 release candidate (RC) will end on August 15, Microsoft said in a Tuesday blog post.

"Want to download the RC? The RC download program closes August 15. After that, you won't be able to get the download, but you can still install the RC and get a key if you need one," wrote Microsoft's Stephen Rose.

The Windows 7 beta, meanwhile, is only available for another week. "Starting July 1, the Beta will start to reboot every 2 hrs and expire Aug 1," Rose wrote.

Rose requested that those using the beta or the RC submit their comments and suggestions via http://input.microsoft.com.

www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2349229,00.asp


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:55 PM
 

http://news.softpedia.com/images/news2/Windows-7-Build-7264-Leaked-and-Available-for-Download-2.jpg

Just when you think that all went quiet on the Windows 7 front in preparation for the RTM, a new leaked development milestone of the operating system makes its way into the wild. Windows 7 Build 7264 from the RTM branch is now available for download through various illegal third-party sources including torrent trackers and warez websites. With the start of July, Microsoft has entered the final month of Windows' development process. In the second half of July 2009 the Redmond company will release the successor of Windows Vista to manufacturing, aiming to meet the global October 22, 2009 availability deadline.

The full build string of the latest leaked release is 6.1.7264.0.win7_rtm.090622-1900, according to Wzor, citing Vinylzine. According to the full build version, the release was compiled on June 22, 2009. This is not the final RTM build of Windows 7, as Microsoft has already moved past the 7264 mark, and wrapped up Windows 7 Build 6.1.7265.0.win7_rtm.090624-1905 on June 24, 2009. But although it is not the gold build of Windows 7, 7264 is as close to RTM as possible.

news.softpedia.com/news/Windows-7-Build-7264-Leaked-and-Available-for-Download-115499.shtml

 


New Post
 7/3/2009 7:58 PM
 

After reporting that Microsoft will be charging up to twice as much for the full version of Windows 7E in Europe compared to Windows 7 in the United States, Microsoft was not charging more because of the anti-trust regulators in Europe.

Consumers can purchase an upgrade for as little as $199 in the U.S. whilst Europeans will pay €309 or $433.99 (US) for the full version.

Microsoft states the reason for the missing upgrade of Windows 7 is that Vista came with Internet Explorer 8 pre-installed, while Windows 7E will not. Due to complications, and a short notice to fix the IE8 problem, the upgrade versions are delayed. The European Union antitrust regulators have pressured Microsoft to ship a customized edition of Windows 7 in Europe without IE8. This will cause problems upgrading previous systems who have IE7 installed already, as for now, Microsoft does not have an upgrade edition of Windows 7E.

Microsoft released a limited time offer price on their full version of Windows 7E up until December 31, 2009, where consumers can purchase a copy of Windows 7E for the same price as U.S. consumers upgrade edition.

Now Europe will pay less for their version of Windows 7E full edition than people in the United States Windows 7 full edition.

Update: A change was made to the article about Microsoft responding to adjust prices, while there was no responses to the matter.

www.neowin.net/news/main/09/07/01/microsoft-adjusts-windows7e-pricing-for-limited-time


New Post
 7/4/2009 10:14 PM
 

With the second half of July approaching the feeling that Windows 7 RTM is so close it can be tasted is getting stronger and stronger. The confirmation that Microsoft will be releasing the next iteration of the Windows client to manufacturing by the end of this month came in early June 2009, but without a specific deadline delivered. While closing in on producing the gold build for Windows Vista's successor, the Redmond company is keeping the final backing stages of the Windows 7 development process under a tight lid. But this is only valid for its own cooking ovens; once development milestones are out of Redmond Windows 7 builds manage to find their way into the wild. It is of course the case of Windows 7 Build 7264 leaked earlier this week.

Quite a lot has happened between Build 7264 hitting the download pipes from torrent trackers and warez websites and the previous leaked release, Build 7260. Sure enough, there are changes in the operating system itself; nothing at a large architectural stage of course, but more in respect to the details that Microsoft was still holding back from its users. Since mid-June the software giant has confirmed the Windows 7 box design and the pricing details for the platform.

At the same time, the company has kick-started the Windows 7 Free Upgrade Option Program, a marketing initiative in partnership with OEMs, designed to provide end users with free upgrade editions of Windows 7 for equivalents of Vista SKUs bought with qualifying new computers between June 26, 2009 and January 31, 2010. In addition, discounted upgrade copies of Windows 7 are still available for pre-ordering, Home Premium for $49.99 and Professional for $99.99, for customers in select markets, with Microsoft preparing to bring the special offerings to more countries.

And all the while the company is keeping mum on the progress of Windows 7 toward RTM. In all fairness this is by no means a new strategy for the software giant. Official details on the evolution of Windows 7 between milestones were never shared with the public. This doesn't make Build 7264 any less valid or relevant - a relevance drawn from the proximity to RTM. In this sense, while being a release from the RTM-branch, Build 7264 is not, and will not qualify as the gold build of Windows 7.

Windows 7 Build 7264 Installation

Below you will be able to see screenshots from the installation of Windows 7 Build 7264. It has been over two weeks since I performed a deployment of Windows 7, and some details otherwise familiar faded a tad. But I installed every milestone of Windows 7 I could ever get my hands on, and the sheer speed of the process continues to deliver quite an impression. Even on a virtual machine with just 1.5 GB of RAM the deployment is fast, and will undoubtedly surprise end users in a pleasant manner. It's just a different league compared with previous releases of Windows.

With the exception of a few details associated with the End User License Agreement, installing Build 7264 is the same as the Release Candidate bits. But in the EULA, Windows 7 is no longer accompanied by any moniker highlighting a development phase. The operating system is referenced as plain vanilla Windows 7, an indication of the proximity to RTM.

 

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news.softpedia.com/news/Windows-7-Build-7264-RTM-Branch-100-Screenshot-Gallery-115823.shtml


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