Vista

The perfect Windows 7 notebook

Well, the perfect Windows 7 notebook [that I own].  I’m sitting at one of my sons wrestling matches typing this into Windows Live Writer running on Windows 7 on a Penryn Macbook Pro.  And boy is it sweet.

I’ve had either Vista or Windows Server 2008 dual booting on this Mac since the day I bought it and was never really satisfied with it. I blogged how nice it was shortly after I got it but there seemed to be some nagging issues with it.   It always seemed to get too hot.  The other main issue was that it would frequently not got to sleep properly.  It was not uncommon for m to fully charge the battery, use it for a few minutes, close the lid, and then come back the next day to a dead machine.  Very frustrating.

As soon as Windows 7 beta hit the streets I had to give it a try and I am sure glad I did.  The sleep issues seem to have been fixed.  Windows 7 picked up the built-in wireless without needing to install the Boot Camp drivers (though I did install them later to get the keyboard and iSight working).  It also doesn’t seem to get hot any longer.  I’ve used it extensively on my lap both on and off power.  Only slightly warm.   Very nice.

Oh, and the battery life.  Under Vista I really would not get any more than 2 hours.  It definitely seems better.  I would say nearly 3 hours but I don’t have specific data on that. 

What do you get when you combine the sleekness and features of a MacBook Pro with the dual boot goodness of Windows 7 and OS/X?  Get one and find out!  You won’t be disappointed.

The final Vista Ultimate extra? Windows 7

I am almost certain they won’t but Microsoft should seriously consider how they will make Windows 7 available to the public when it is released next year.  Ever since Vista came out there has been no end to the complaining that there were not enough extras available for Vista Ultimate.  They say it was not worth the cost and I agree.

So here is what Microsoft should do.  Eliminate all versions of Windows 7 but one.  No ultimate edition, or basic edition, or primary basic edition, or grandma’s pro edition.  Just one.  Very simple.  Windows 7.

Then, considering that almost all of the units sold come from new computers, give a free upgrade to Windows 7 to all who purchased Vista Ultimate sort of as a final Vista Ultimate extra.

Finally, sell the Windows 7 upgrade for $99 and the full package for $189 at retail shops.

This is so obvious that a child could figure it out.  Which is why I have no hope that Microsoft will see it.

Straight from the WTF category

So last night my family and I go to watch some scary movies that had been recorded and find out that our media center computer is not working.  So like a dutiful geekdad, I march into the office to see what is wrong.  I remote into the media center with no trouble but no matter what I try the 360 just won't connect to it.  Running the network tuner it reports poor network performance, way below the 'Acceptable for TV' line.  Hmm.  So I spend the next hour running wires from various ports around the house, switching ports on the switch in the media cabinet, everything I could think of.  Nothing.

I never really paid much attention to the activation prompt that it was giving me when I remoted into it.  Surely MS would not be that stupid.  Surely.

So this morning I tried to connect to a media center computer I had running in a virtual machine (yeah VirtualBox) and it worked without a hitch.  So I remote back into the non-working media center computer and run through the activation process.  Bingo.  360 now connects perfectly and the network tuning wizard shows the exact same network as maxed out on quality.

Lesson learned?  Instead of just disabling Media center functionality and just telling you that until you activate it won't work, MS apparently just cripples it so that it doesn't work but doesn't tell you what is wrong.  Absolutely ridiculous.

 

it’s on now!

Microsoft has been taking some pretty good body blows from Apple over the past couple of years.  These have primarily been in the form of the PC/Mac ads and are not entirely undeserved.  Vista is a pretty good product but pretty good is clearly not good enough.  Well, Microsoft just landed a right hook to the jaw of OS/X.  It’s on now!

It’s really quite incredible how much work Microsoft has done on Windows during the lifetime of Apple OS/X.  OS/X 10.0 was released in 2001, the same year Windows XP was released.  For the most part OS/X has not changed since then.  Sure, you have new features like Time Machine but the user experience has really not changed much and neither have most of the features.  The same is not true for Windows.  In that same timeframe Microsoft has put out major service packs for XP, created a new server product named Windows Server 2003, and then created the Vista line of products (Vista, Windows Server 2008, etc).  Vista was supposed to be a moon shot but instead Microsoft got so caught up in completely rebuilding the rocket that it never really got off the pad.  With the shiny new Vista rocket sitting idle on the pad it wasn’t too hard for OS/X to look good and Apple to gain some market share.

And then in comes Steven Sinofsky to lead the Windows guys.  Now I’m not going to lay all the credit on him.  I’m sure Jim Allchin deserves a lot of credit for building a solid foundation in Vista but it’s clear that the changes in development models that Sinofsky brought over from the Office team have made a huge difference not only in developer morale but in product quality.  I have yet to read any reviews of the Windows 7 pre-beta that didn’t describe it as fast, stable, and “what Vista should have been”.

So what are some of the features or enhancements in 7 that are going to make the difference?  I’m glad you asked.  Here are the features that I think will make 7 the must have OS for 2009.  This is not nearly a complete list of features however.

Speed, speed, and more speed.  The Windows team has spent a lot of time optimizing the product, reducing it’s memory footprint, and speeding up boot time.  There is evidence that 7 runs great on netbooks, unlike Vista.  Also, some early reviews have reported an install time of 15 minutes compared to Vista’s 45 minutes on the same hardware.  That same review showed 7 booting is much lower time than Vista.  Apparently resume is nearly instantaneous and,  unlike OS/X, the network is available immediately upon resume.

Device Stage.  This feature is actually not getting a lot of attention but I think it will be the killer feature of 7.  In essence it is area where device manufacturers can plug in to 7 and display a management page for their particular device.  So a user could plug in a cell phone, see it appear in device stage, and then click on it to bring up the manufacturers UI for that device.  This UI could contain links to online manuals, launchers for SMS message reading, sync settings, whatever.  This is device specific.  A printer could show ink tank levels, provide UI for maintenance, a button for ordering supplies, etc.  This is huge.  Count on it.

HomeGroups.  This is networking except easier.  This only works with Windows 7 pcs but when multiple Windows 7 computers are put on a single network they will connect to form a HomeGroup and then allow seamless sharing of the content on each computer with the others.  You get a PIN code for the home group so that when a visitor comes over with her laptop running 7 she is prompted to join the home group as soon as she gets on the network.  Enter the PIN code and she can share any of the media that you have made publicly available and print to any printers (use any device for that matter) that are publicly available without any concern or question about which computer she is connecting to.  It’s all seamless.  Just that way it should be.

New Windows Taskbar and Jumplists.  The new task bar has many new features like tab previewing, reordering, blah, blah, blah.  But the coolest new feature is called jumplists.  These are popup menus that appear when you click on the app icon.  These are customizable by the application and it will save clicks.  Want to edit the Word doc you were working on last night.  Just click on the word icon and the most recently edited files list appears in the jumplist.  Pick your doc and it opens right up.  Clicks saved!

Touch support.  It’s all about the touch these days.  From IPhones to G1s, it’s all about touch.  And Windows 7 is ready to be touched.  oh baby.  Pair Windows 7 with any of the already shipping touch screen computers like the HP TouchSmart and you have a fully touch enabled system.  You can drag, flick, and stroke your away around the desktop.  Hmm, that sounds just creepy now.  Just trust me, it’s cool.   You’ll love it. 

With the solid Vista foundation and the excellent feature work in 7, this is the Windows you have been waiting for.  Dell and other companies are starting to make laptops that really compete with Apple.  Dell and HP both have lappies that have battery lives of at least 19 hours (wow!) and Dell is starting to offer backlit keyboards on it’s computers.  OS/X is a nice operating system but with 7 coming at breakneck speed, nice is not going to be enough.  Oh yeah, it’s on now.

Perfect virtual desktops. Almost…

Like most Windows devs I really like the Sysinternals family of products.  So when I caught wind this morning of a new product called Desktops that creates a virtual workspace of up to 4 desktops I just knew it was the product I was looking for.  Well, it sort of is.

You can’t ask for an easier installation.  Unzip it and drop it on a folder and run it.  In the dialog that appears you can select whether to run it at startup.  Here’s a shot of that dialog.

 

It has a nice selection of options to select which desktop you are using but sadly it doesn’t support the most important one — the arrow keys!  Someone who is using virtual desktop software is enough of a power user that they will want to switch desktops on-the-fly without looking at the keyboard.  Sure I can whack a number key without looking but the T-shape arrow keypad just fits with the metaphor a bit better.  A simple Ctrl+Shift+Arrow would do the trick.

The other problem is the speed. It’s a bit slow and has no nice swipes or transitions but it is free software so I’m really not griping about that too much.

All in all a welcome bit of software.  Thanks Mark!

Still no trackpad love in latest Boot Camp

So Boot Camp 2.1 came out yesterday.  This release has official Vista x64 support but the trackpad issues (no two finger right click, erratic two finger scrolling) have not been fixed.  This is starting to smell bad and it has Steve Jobs’ name all over it.

Windows Server 2008 – the best Windows yet!

I ran Windows Server 2003 as my desktop from the time it came out until Vista shipped and now I’m on Windows Server 2008.  And boy does it rock!

I won’t repeat the many blog posts that are out there that go over the steps needed to get Win2k8 running just like Vista (though I will refer you to my last blog post about getting sidebar working right).  What I will tell you is that almost everything runs under Win2k8 with less RAM than under Vista.  People will tell you all day that there is no difference between the Vista SP1 and Win2k8 binaries but there is a difference somewhere.

Actually I checked the ntoskrnl.exe binary from both Vista SP1 and Win2k8 and they are truly exactly the same.  However, that doesn’t mean they run the same.  The Vista kernel could have all sorts of compatibility shims that get loaded dynamically or checked at runtime.  One piece of evidence that Win2k8 is different is the fact that a few programs don’t function correctly.  The latest version of skype and microTorrent do not function (you can use an older version of Skype though).

What I know is that it *feels* tons faster.  IE just appears instantly.  Explorer windows open immediately.  And the RAM usage just speaks for itself.  The table below shows what the memory usage typically is on my system for

 

Application Vista SP1 Windows Server 2008
Desktop Window Manager 40-50 meg 756k (yes, k!).  Part of this is the fact that I have not yet been able to enalble taskbar video thumbnails.
Sidebar 25 meg 12 meg
     

Sidebar working nicely on Windows Server 2008

I’ve been running with Windows Server 2008 as my primary desktop OS now for a few weeks and one of the things that I had not got to work was Sidebar.  I found several blog posts on the net where people claim to have it working but following their steps always resulted in failure.

More specifically running sidebar would show the icon in the system tray but the app would immediately exit.  Turns out that I needed on extra step.  So, without further delay, here are the steps I did to get sidebar working in Windows Server 2008 x64.

  1. Copy the Windows Sidebar folder from c:Program Files on a Vista x64 SP1 installation to your Win2k8 install.
  2. From an administrator console run:
    regsvr32 sbdrop.dll
    regsvr32 wlsrvc.dll
  3. From that same console run:
    sidebar /RegServer
  4. Move the Sidebar registry information from a working Vista SP1 x64 install.  You can find it at HKLM/Software/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/SideBar.
  5. Run sidebar!

Here’s a screenie showing it working on my setup.

sidebar

DisplayFusion goodness

Vista is better than XP.  Maybe.  Yes, I guess it is.  In most ways.  Except why can’t I plaster a 2560×1024 image across both my monitors?  It keeps wanting to… well.. I don’t know what it’s doing except I know it’s wrong.

Enter DisplayFusion.  A terrific little app that fixes this and adds several other nifty little features.  And, best of all, it’s free.  Good job, guys!

Vista SP1 stable (after a reinstall)

I installed SP1 RC1 the first day it was available.  Almost immediately my Vista box would hang overnight.  It would seem to work great during the day but at night simply would not come out of sleep mode.  So I uninstalled it.

This past weekend I had a few extra minutes (or was it hours?) so I paved the box and reinstalled Vista x64 deciding this time to not install any third party drivers that I didn’t absolutely have to have.  Turns out the only one I needed was for my Realtek audio chipset. 

I reapplied SP1 RC1 and after 3 days no hangs.  Everything seems rock solid.  Well, it is an RC and Microsoft has an amazingly hard job getting all the different flavors of machines out there to play nice with Vista.  All in all they do a fairly good job.  SP1 RC1 stable for me.. so far.

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