21 changes to look for in the Windows 7 Release Candidate
by Ed Bott | March 9, 2009 12:47pm PDT | Image 22 of 22
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21. More user data in default backup sets
For post-beta releases, the Windows 7 Backup program captures user data from locations that might otherwise be overlooked, like the hidden AppData folder.
For more details, see A sneak peek at the Windows 7 Release Candidate.
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What I do miss, though, is the classy look of
Windows Media Player 11 that I did not get with
Windows Media Player 12.
Vista had the best improvements in icons of any OS (IMHO). I can't believe they're going to abandon that great look so soon, and regress to blown-up XP-style icons. Yuck!
Try it, do you really want some fancy screen and have to make YET ANOTHER step, when you are trying to end a program? Possibly you've lost the mouse as well! Not ruddy likely! Microsoft take note! Apart from that well done!
[Edited to refer to correct shortcut. Sorry!]
Windows 7 is good in so many areas, but why are they still overlooking performance?
What use is a car with curtains, if it's top speed is 20mph?
My personal experience sure tells another story. Done a lot of copying over the network with the beta. The typical speed on my home network (100MBit) is around 12MByte/s, which is the max Speed a 100 MBit line can deliver.
And by the way, Vista SP1 doesn't perform worse...
XP SP3 wasn't the fastest in a single category.
The newest 7 build was the fastest overall. By
a lot.
Is this more of a missed "fit and finish" thing or do these guys just want to violate their own UI design specs?
BlueRay, Ogg, Flac, and MKV are still not supported natively.
They have just about all the codecs you can think of for XP, Vista, and 7.
Go here:
http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/GRAMMAR/marks/period.htm
then come back and try again.
Not being able to change the volume with the mouse wheel is THE reason I don't use it - so often into music or voice or gunshots/shooting scenes in movies are dramatically different than the average volume.
It would be so great if we could quickly lower the sound during those parts instead of scrambling to click and drag that tiny little volume button. That would be especially useful in full screen mode where you dont even see the toolbar/taskbar.
First, and worst is hiding file extensions. BAD!
Second, hiding needed folders, at least that's fixed.
There's so much more, but as long as they stop that madness, it'll get better.
Why can MS not produce a better OS than eg Linux with it's 10's of thousands of programmers than a few handfuls of dedicated idealists??? The latter is free, just in case.
Lets not forget: Updates are necessary because of shoddy programming. If the answer is that Windows has become too complex to avoid mistakes, then the concept is at fault. Some US$ 50 billion should fix that. But then, who wants to spend money when you can get away with a shoddy program?
And PLEASE use some clear screen technology (like Camtasia or something similar) and not a blurry-youtube-like-cant-read-a-damn-thing-on-screen technology.
ZDNet, your text and static screenshots are an ok start, but the 80's is calling and want their flock-of-seagulls haircut back...time to move forward and get this stuff on video.
Board meeting!!!!
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