What to look for in Windows 7
Summary: In this gallery and the accompanying blog post, Ed Bott walks you through the main features in Windows 7 and explains the best ways for you to evaluate the changes.
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If you have a TV tuner in one Windows 7 PC, you can watch the programs it records using Windows Media Center on another PC over the network. The three shows in this library are from a different PC and were recorded in HD using a digital ATSC tuner. You can also push the More Info button (or right-click) and make a local copy using the shortcut menu. That option is handy if your goal is to fill a notebook hard drive with movies and TV to watch on a plane or in a hotel room.
This gallery is a companion piece for my in-depth review of Windows 7 based on the final release candidate. Be sure to read "What to expect from Windows 7" to get the full story.
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Talkback
contents view
Hmmm...
Interface needs more perceptual ergonomics less data base presentation -NT
What are you talking about?
Looks very much like the Mac app bar to me!!
Coattail riding
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
How do I get rid of XP from off my computer, so that I can take full advan?
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
Install it and play around
Thats perfectly fine
Windows 7
As far as I'm concerned, Windows 7 is just an upgrade from Windows XP.
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
tripm69
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
What I really like...
OS-X is now ring fenced by patents, there is less than it would have
been.
Kudos to MS for being such slavish thieves.
Then again, they have decades of experience!
RE: Contents view is new (What to look for in Windows 7)
Thank you MS for not including the bouncing icons on PC's.