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View Full Version : Windows 7 Beta 1 - Almost there... almost...


Joe Average
12-19-2008, 11:12 AM
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/default.aspx

Seems as if Microsoft is really shifting gears, they got this page up and even dared to place a download link (inactive as of 8AM Pacific time), but who knows. Maybe they'll get it operational before Christmas... I've seen stranger things. :eek:

They sent out invites the other day, but as this page is publicly accessible, it does provoke some thought about whether they intend to really open up the beta this time and make it totally public whereas in the past, traditionally the first betas are private and invite only, whereas the last betas and first release candidates become publicly available.

Remains to be seen, but if they do open it up completely, that should definitely move things along a lot faster. More bug reports from more people using more different configurations is a good thing - for everyone except the people in the beta labs that have to go over the reports, that is. :D

Jon55
12-19-2008, 11:25 AM
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/default.aspx

Seems as if Microsoft is really shifting gears, they got this page up and even dared to place a download link (inactive as of 8AM Pacific time), but who knows. Maybe they'll get it operational before Christmas... I've seen stranger things. :eek:

They sent out invites the other day, but as this page is publicly accessible, it does provoke some thought about whether they intend to really open up the beta this time and make it totally public whereas in the past, traditionally the first betas are private and invite only, whereas the last betas and first release candidates become publicly available.

Remains to be seen, but if they do open it up completely, that should definitely move things along a lot faster. More bug reports from more people using more different configurations is a good thing - for everyone except the people in the beta labs that have to go over the reports, that is. :D


The "download the beta" link is apparently dead. Which sucks, because I would totally use the beta and be a "guinea pig" as far as testing goes.

Joe Average
12-19-2008, 11:59 AM
I did cover that, yanno. :p

The link hasn't been active YET - the point is Microsoft is either planning to activate it soon... or someone in charge of coding that page is about to get their ass served to 'em on a platter for even putting the link on the page in the first place. Capice? :cool:

DeaconFrost
12-19-2008, 12:09 PM
I'm hoping this does go live for the general public. I have some spare PCs that would be great tests beds for this.

Vermillion
12-19-2008, 12:16 PM
I'm hoping this does go live for the general public. I have some spare PCs that would be great tests beds for this.

Same here. Bring on the open beta. Please? ;)

techie81
12-19-2008, 12:26 PM
Can't wait to try it!

alex2792
12-19-2008, 01:51 PM
Same here. Bring on the open beta. Please? ;)

Just torrent it, Windows 7 has been available on torrent sites for months already.

Mav451
12-19-2008, 01:55 PM
I'd probably use a spare HD to play with W7. My question is should I be d/ling Vista drivers in preparation?

Or is the W7 driver library going to be sufficient for me to get started?

xOKxTrunks
12-19-2008, 02:04 PM
Just torrent it, Windows 7 has been available on torrent sites for months already.

6801 is beta 1?

alex2792
12-19-2008, 02:18 PM
6801 is beta 1?

I'm not sure what beta 1 build is but if it's out on MSDN or DVD you can definately find it on a torrent site.

Vermillion
12-19-2008, 02:20 PM
Just torrent it, Windows 7 has been available on torrent sites for months already.

I don't want the hacked early alpha that some people have been using. I want a real Beta. ;)

techie81
12-19-2008, 02:34 PM
No more download button lol

sdotbrucato
12-19-2008, 05:10 PM
Just torrent it, Windows 7 has been available on torrent sites for months already.

Beta is not available, the alpha is still hardly near Beta quality. Build 6956 is close, but not really.

On a side note, Vista beta licenses work with the Alpha builds.

Joe Average
12-19-2008, 10:16 PM
6956 is the most solid, stable, reliable "pre-beta" OS I've ever had the pleasure to use, and that's over the past 20+ years too. Whereas I just don't like Vista, I do like Win 7, very much indeed, and 6956 kicks ass for what it is. It'll only get better, snappier, and even more responsive as time goes by...

General Crespin
12-19-2008, 11:21 PM
Paul Thurrott mentioned how MS has only mentioned "the beta" "the RC" so far, now "the first beta", etc. He thinks it means there's one beta... one RC... then release.

Just thought I'd throw that out there.

Mav451
12-19-2008, 11:25 PM
Yeah I listened to that podcast. Ugh, I wish he wasn't such a tool for his sponsors though - made it pretty hard to listen through some sections.

crazycaveman
12-19-2008, 11:58 PM
it'll be interesting to see how many people get this if it's open to the public. i've played around with the leaked "alpha" (if you can call it that) version a little and can't wait to get my hands on the beta. should be some interesting stuff to play around with... maybe they'll put something up on their connect (https://connect.microsoft.com/) site

Joe Average
12-20-2008, 12:29 AM
So someone did get their ass handed to 'em... the download link has now been removed... oh well. :)

Hope that person responsible for putting it there got to call his broker to cash out before being shitcanned... :D

the lone gunman
12-20-2008, 05:57 AM
6956 is the most solid, stable, reliable "pre-beta" OS I've ever had the pleasure to use, and that's over the past 20+ years too. Whereas I just don't like Vista, I do like Win 7, very much indeed, and 6956 kicks ass for what it is. It'll only get better, snappier, and even more responsive as time goes by...

Agreed. i got the pre-beta from a torrent site too and i have to say it looks very promising. i think the "shake" feature is very cool:D

JC634
12-20-2008, 10:07 PM
From my Beta invite:

While beta will not be available until early 2009 we, know you are excited to get started so we have opened the microsoft.beta.win7.lobby so you may begin renewing acquaintances with previous participants as well as meeting new testing peers. After accepting the invitation, you will be able to sign into Microsoft Connect and click on the "Windows 7 Beta Program" link for more information on accessing the newsgroups

It is my understanding that a beta release to the general public will occur later in January. I was really hoping to have the latest before Christmas, so that I do some serious playing with the OS during my down-time from work. Oh, well...

silent-circuit
12-20-2008, 10:13 PM
6956 is the most solid, stable, reliable "pre-beta" OS I've ever had the pleasure to use, and that's over the past 20+ years too. Whereas I just don't like Vista, I do like Win 7, very much indeed, and 6956 kicks ass for what it is. It'll only get better, snappier, and even more responsive as time goes by...

7 is a rehash of Vista with some fairly minor UI tweaks. Nothing a third party couldn't have done with Vista itself, from what I've seen. I've messed around with it, and yes, it's nice that it starts a little faster on my laptop than Vista did, but other than that? Nothing new here. Nothing awe-inspiring. Setting wallpaper to a slide-show? Oooo, wow. Some new "official" media folders? Where did I keep my videos before?! Oh thank you wise and powerful Microsoft. The "pin to start menu" thing is both neat and mildly annoying, and I hate Explorer (not IE, but the file manager) just as much as I have in Vista, if not moreso. Not sure what you love about this.

criccio
12-20-2008, 10:15 PM
I must say, I played with 6801 x64 in VMware Workstation in my main rig, and was very impressed. Simple networking things that always bothered me seemed to have been magically worked out. I honestly can't wait.

Has anyone fooled around with any of the build on a laptop? How is WiFi support been improved? Battery life? My Acer Aspire One loves Vista much more then XP, and It can't wait for W7 either.

silent-circuit
12-20-2008, 10:30 PM
I must say, I played with 6801 x64 in VMware Workstation in my main rig, and was very impressed. Simple networking things that always bothered me seemed to have been magically worked out. I honestly can't wait.

Has anyone fooled around with any of the build on a laptop? How is WiFi support been improved? Battery life? My Acer Aspire One loves Vista much more then XP, and It can't wait for W7 either.

I'm running Windows 7 build 6956 on a HP Compaq 2510p (1.2Ghz ULV C2D, Intel X3100 GPU, 2GB RAM, 80GB 4200RPM HDD).

Thus far... feels a lot like Vista, as evidenced by my post in reply to Joe Average above. Too early to know anything about battery life here, but I'm really not all that impressed.

There are little "hiccups" when opening and closing windows that did not occur in Vista (sure the X3100 is weak, but it handled Aero just fine at 1280x800 before). I doubt the Intel GPU drivers included are any older than the ones I was using previously, so I don't think that's it.

Startup times are better, but really, aside from that... Vista with a new, bigger, uglier taskbar. First thing I did was figure how to get it smaller again.

I also keep finding things moved that didn't need to be. Perfect example of this would be all the Start Menu configuration options. XP to Vista they were in about the same place... in 7 they moved everything around. Same options pretty much, but some with new names, most in new places. This does nothing but slow down those that already know where things are -- it's not really more intuitive for those that're just starting out (I had to guess where things were once I realized they weren't where I expected, it's not like there was a good bread-crumb trail in many places).

dreamer3kx
12-20-2008, 10:33 PM
I'm running Windows 7 build 6956 on a HP Compaq 2510p (1.2Ghz ULV C2D, Intel X3100 GPU, 2GB RAM, 80GB 4200RPM HDD). Thus far... feels a lot like Vista, as evidenced by my post in reply to Joe Average above. Too early to know anything about battery life here, but I'm really not all that impressed. There are little "hiccups" when opening and closing windows that did not occur in Vista (sure the X3100 is weak, but it handled Aero just fine at 1280x800 before). I doubt the Intel GPU drivers included are any older than the ones I was using previously, so I don't think that's it. Startup times are better, but really, aside from that... Vista with a new, bigger, uglier taskbar.

you're complaining about "hiccups" in a pre beta os, come on man.

silent-circuit
12-20-2008, 10:37 PM
you're complaining about "hiccups" in a pre beta os, come on man.

They didn't change Aero visibly. Reusing the same code that's been running reliably / smoothly for over a year now, you shouldn't get little bits of lag like I'm seeing.

Ryan711
12-20-2008, 10:38 PM
7 is a rehash of Vista with some fairly minor UI tweaks. Nothing a third party couldn't have done with Vista itself, from what I've seen. I've messed around with it, and yes, it's nice that it starts a little faster on my laptop than Vista did, but other than that? Nothing new here. Nothing awe-inspiring. Setting wallpaper to a slide-show? Oooo, wow. Some new "official" media folders? Where did I keep my videos before?! Oh thank you wise and powerful Microsoft. The "pin to start menu" thing is both neat and mildly annoying, and I hate Explorer (not IE, but the file manager) just as much as I have in Vista, if not moreso. Not sure what you love about this.

What would you have microsoft do, with sp1 vista is pretty damned good. Windows 7 will release already "polished" and they will only improve on it from there since it's basically a tweaked version of vista.

silent-circuit
12-20-2008, 10:39 PM
What would you have microsoft do, with sp1 vista is pretty damned good. Windows 7 will release already "polished" and they will only improve on it from there since it's basically a tweaked version of vista.

My point with this was that I don't see how Joe Average can like 7 and not Vista. Vista with SP1 is 7, it just takes another 15 seconds to start.

bigdogchris
12-20-2008, 10:49 PM
I love Vista already as it is, but 7 is just going to be bad ass. I'm really excited.

Joe Average
12-21-2008, 01:49 AM
My point with this was that I don't see how Joe Average can like 7 and not Vista. Vista with SP1 is 7, it just takes another 15 seconds to start.

Coke vs Pepsi.

Chocolate vs Vanilla.

Chevy vs Ford.

You're looking to get someone (namely me) to say why I/we would prefer one thing over another, and it's not something that can be adequately explained in quantifiable terms, sorry. :D Your own comments like "Vista with a new, bigger, uglier taskbar" basically are personal perspectives: you apparently just don't like Win 7, as you apparently don't like Vista, soooo...

silent-circuit
12-21-2008, 02:20 AM
I don't really not "like" 7, I'm just in no way impressed by it. It's the same interface they gave us with XP, with the same "shinies" they added with Vista, starting just a little faster than before, with some options moved around for no apparent reason. It's not bad... it's just not better.

Arainach
12-21-2008, 02:37 AM
I don't really not "like" 7, I'm just in no way impressed by it. It's the same interface they gave us with XP, with the same "shinies" they added with Vista, starting just a little faster than before, with some options moved around for no apparent reason. It's not bad... it's just not better.Not having used it, you can't say that at all. It's not a bunch of "shinies". The new taskbar is actually a huge improvement with a variety of productivity-enhancing tweaks and a unified launching platform for applications.

silent-circuit
12-21-2008, 02:52 AM
Not having used it, you can't say that at all. It's not a bunch of "shinies". The new taskbar is actually a huge improvement with a variety of productivity-enhancing tweaks and a unified launching platform for applications.

...I'm posting from it. It works a lot like OS X's dock, which is huge, intrusive, and does not enhance my productivity one bit. Yes, I'm aware they've replaced the quicklaunch toolbar with the ability to "pin" applications to the taskbar, and that you can "pin" folders and things like the recycle bin and "my computer" to explorer's taskbar button to get them in a right-click menu. How exactly is this any better, faster, or easier than the quicklaunch buttons and custom folder based toolbar I've been using for years?

General Crespin
12-21-2008, 03:47 AM
some options moved around for no apparent reason.

Just because you don't know why something is doesn't mean there isn't a reason (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/11/20/happy-anniversary-windows-on-the-evolution-of-the-taskbar.aspx).

Mithent
12-21-2008, 10:30 AM
I'm concerned that the new taskbar will make it harder to switch programs quickly - I already dislike grouping on the taskbar and always turn it off, and I guess it's probably required in Windows 7's default setup, as multiple icons wouldn't work well with pinning and the icons would be indistinguishable without labels. Switching to any program that has multiple windows immediately becomes a two-step process, no matter how many pretty thumbnails it offers. I also don't like the Dock much, with its combination of running and not-running programs. I know it can be made more 'classic', and I'll probably have to do that.

It does puzzle me that so many people say they dislike Vista but very much like the look of Windows 7, as they seem pretty similar to me. Although it's not going to be true in every case, I do wonder if many people (not necessarily those here) are still being influenced heavily by Vista's bad reputation, and can then see Windows 7 in a new light because it doesn't have the cursed name.

TechieSooner
12-21-2008, 10:41 AM
7 is a rehash of Vista with some fairly minor UI tweaks. Nothing a third party couldn't have done with Vista itself, from what I've seen. I've messed around with it, and yes, it's nice that it starts a little faster on my laptop than Vista did, but other than that? Nothing new here. Nothing awe-inspiring. Setting wallpaper to a slide-show? Oooo, wow. Some new "official" media folders? Where did I keep my videos before?! Oh thank you wise and powerful Microsoft. The "pin to start menu" thing is both neat and mildly annoying, and I hate Explorer (not IE, but the file manager) just as much as I have in Vista, if not moreso. Not sure what you love about this.

Doesn't matter. All that matters is it doesn't have the name "Vista".
Windows Mojave shown this to be true.


To your other question of why folks like Windows 7 better... All round, it's just EVEN BETTER than what Vista did. Taskbar is great. Albeit I dislike grouped windows like that, it seems like this implementation is doing it in such a way that I may actually find it an improvement.
Performance increases.
Bootup times.
All the little quirks of Vista fixed.

Heck, it's akin to Snow Leopard for OS X. That's not changing hardly a darn thing, yet all the Mac fanboys are foaming at the mouths over it. Just a performance and tweak release, that's it. Microsoft never promised anything more.

bigdogchris
12-21-2008, 01:17 PM
My point with this was that I don't see how Joe Average can like 7 and not Vista. Vista with SP1 is 7, it just takes another 15 seconds to start.I've stopped wondering why people are like this myself.

I like 7, and it's going to be bad ass, I also think Vista is bad ass. But I just don't see how anyone can like 7, but not Vista, it's incredibly similar, and performs almost identical. It's slighly less aggressive with SuperFetch, but I can't see that as the 'end all, be all' as to why people like it more than Vista.

The driver support will be the same,
Application support will be the same,
Performance will be the same, except a minor improvement to boot times.
The UI is virtually identical except for a slightly larger task menu

^ whats different than Vista here? Nothing.

I've bench marked it, and read dozens online, it's the same as Vista.

Also, your older programs that won't run on Vista, or don't have support, are not going to magically start working on 7. Just by the time 7 takes roots, more Vista apps would of been developed, so newer stuff should work OK.

The only logical conclusion I can come to, is if someone likes 7, but not Vista, it's because they pay to much attention to the Mac ads or have given 7 a longer test or are more willing to look away from it's flaws, than Vista, simply because of it's name.

And for you people who like 7, honestly, if you want that now, just install Vista.

TechieSooner
12-21-2008, 01:19 PM
Here's a question I've got... Will Windows 7 ship with IE8 or IE7?

bigdogchris
12-21-2008, 01:20 PM
Here's a question I've got... Will Windows 7 ship with IE8 or IE7?It's going to ship with 8 and DX11.

Arainach
12-21-2008, 01:21 PM
...I'm posting from it. It works a lot like OS X's dock, which is huge, intrusive, and does not enhance my productivity one bit. Yes, I'm aware they've replaced the quicklaunch toolbar with the ability to "pin" applications to the taskbar, and that you can "pin" folders and things like the recycle bin and "my computer" to explorer's taskbar button to get them in a right-click menu. How exactly is this any better, faster, or easier than the quicklaunch buttons and custom folder based toolbar I've been using for years?Quicklaunch took up constant space on the toolbar; the new taskbar unifies the quicklaunch and the application status thumbnail into one. WIth the ability to pin programs, it gives one constant location from which to always access an application, whether it's the running copy or starting the program. And if you had ever used the dock, you would realize that other than minor superficial similarities, the taskbar works fundamentally different from it.

TechieSooner
12-21-2008, 01:25 PM
It's going to ship with 8 and DX11.
Sweet... Good to know. I was hoping they wouldn't try to ship either with it.

Quicklaunch took up constant space on the toolbar;

That's a QFT. Language Bar was terrible too. I've ALWAYS disabled both.

Desktop is history, folks. When you can launch an app with a few keystrokes, or straight from the taskbar, there's little need for the desktop anymore other than to "look" pretty.

silent-circuit
12-21-2008, 01:41 PM
Quicklaunch took up constant space on the toolbar; the new taskbar unifies the quicklaunch and the application status thumbnail into one. WIth the ability to pin programs, it gives one constant location from which to always access an application, whether it's the running copy or starting the program. And if you had ever used the dock, you would realize that other than minor superficial similarities, the taskbar works fundamentally different from it.

I've used it, thanks. Have a Powermac G4 and an Intel based MacBook Pro in the house; I've had my share of face time with the OS X dock.

I was fine with consistent space, because you know what? It never /moved/. I always knew where to find what I was looking for. I never had to pull the taskbar buttons around in to the order I wanted only to later discover, "oops, when the apps are closed those become the launch buttons, and Firefox is where Explorer used to be." It's a minor annoyance, sure, but it's compounded along with many others, and it's unnecessary. I have 6 icons in my Quicklaunch toolbar on this machine -- My Computer, recycle bin, show desktop, Firefox, Winamp, Pidgin. They take up, in total, about the same amount of space as a single open instance of Firefox -- one taskbar "button". With the new, larger taskbar in 7 and pinned programs that's maybe 4 programs, if that. By my estimation we've /lost/ space, not gained it. Perhaps you'd gain a bit if you're running everything you've pinned all the time, but only then. If that's the case, you might as well have the starting with the OS and have no launch buttons outside of the start menu.

That's a QFT. Language Bar was terrible too. I've ALWAYS disabled both.

Desktop is history, folks. When you can launch an app with a few keystrokes, or straight from the taskbar, there's little need for the desktop anymore other than to "look" pretty.

I haven't had desktop icons in years. At the kind of resolutions my displays run (1600x1200, 1880x1440, 1920x1200, 1680x1050) I've got enough room across the bottom of the screen to have 5 or 6 quicklaunch buttons without sacrificing space or usability, and I can always go in to the start menu for rarely used applications. I also don't run grouped windows, because I've often got a number of instances of Firefox open (yes, I hate tabs, it's more unnecessary mouse movement, going from the bottom of the screen to the top to change windows) and I shouldn't have to click twice to choose the one I want at any given time.

GreNME
12-21-2008, 03:37 PM
I use the Dock in OS X (I have a G4 iBook and a 2.4 MacBook Pro), and from what I can tell looking at the the new UI for Win 7 [linky (http://video.golem.de/desktop-applikationen/1689/windows-7-live-demo-pdc-2008.html)] it looks like some of the concepts will be similar to those in Leopard's dock (like the stacks), but overall in terms of how programs or windows are accessed will be different. The nice part is that the very basic functionality will be similar enough to an average end user that there won't be as much functional difference, even though the two operating systems are getting to the same place two different ways. I wouldn't be surprised if the convergence of basic end-user functionality isn't at least part of the goals in the development in both OS X and windows at this point.

As for the statements made in previous posts about liking Win 7 and Vista, though, I largely agree. I use Vista on my desktop and I love it. I have a few (five) Vista machines in my work's network, and they play nicely, work just as well as the XP machines on the whole (the three in our CAD dept. actually work better), and keeping them maintained and safe is actually easier for me than their XP counterparts where they've been put into active use in the departments. I pretty much expect the same when Windows 7 comes out, though my hope is that the 64-bit aspects will be much improved (three of the five Vista machines are 64-bit). For the systems at work, it doesn't look like Windows 7 is going to be appreciably different from the Vista machines we have there already, which is going to make the eventual migration easier for me as well as easier for those who are on Vista machines there already. That leap is going to be greater for people in the office still using XP, and the changes will be more stark.

What I'm getting at is that I find the interest in Windows 7 versus the animosity toward Vista in general to be dissonant at best, and contradictory at worst. They really are, on the surface and in many ways under the hood, basically going to be the same OS. It's going to be very similar to the difference between Win 2000 and XP, where the codebase is the same but some of the things on a basic UI level will be in slightly different locations. This sill likely change as the Win 7 codebase goes through some additions in service packs, but the same happened with XP as it continued to grow past Windows 2000, so it's no real surprise. At the time of launch and during the first year or so of operation, Windows 7 is going to be indistinguishable from Vista in many ways outside of the taskbar tweaks and some customization settings added to the new operating system. Vista will have been a greater leap away from XP than Windows 7 will be from Vista, as far as I can tell.

If you've tried Windows 7 and you like it, I urge you to give Vista a try if you aren't using it. With the exception of the new Taskbar the functionality and interface is going to be very much the same. Windows 7 will have some improvements on the Vista functionality, but I think a lot of people would be surprised at how much of what's in Vista already has a lot of it.

rndmize
12-21-2008, 05:27 PM
I like 7, and it's going to be bad ass, I also think Vista is bad ass. But I just don't see how anyone can like 7, but not Vista, it's incredibly similar, and performs almost identical. It's slighly less aggressive with SuperFetch, but I can't see that as the 'end all, be all' as to why people like it more than Vista.

The driver support will be the same,
Application support will be the same,
Performance will be the same, except a minor improvement to boot times.
The UI is virtually identical except for a slightly larger task menu

^ whats different than Vista here? Nothing.

Um... no. From what I've heard, the UI will have a variety of differences beyond the changes to the taskbar; the whole thing with peaking, side-by-side windows, action center, etc (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/11/20/happy-anniversary-windows-on-the-evolution-of-the-taskbar.aspx). Computers have a wider range of screen sizes than ever, from netbooks to 30" ones, and the UI should take this into account. Performance should be improved quite a bit; it seems the dev team has some much better tools and telemetry info discussed here (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/12/15/continuing-our-discussion-on-performance.aspx). Footprint should be smaller and installation control should be greater (more on that here (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/11/19/disk-space.aspx)). I would consider all of these to be pretty significant changes, and from what I hear much of it has yet to show up in the pre-beta builds; the taskbar wasn't even enabled for the build handed out at winHEC.

bigdogchris
12-21-2008, 06:41 PM
Um... no. From what I've heard, the UI will have a variety of differences beyond the changes to the taskbar; the whole thing with peaking, side-by-side windows, action center, etc (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/11/20/happy-anniversary-windows-on-the-evolution-of-the-taskbar.aspx). Computers have a wider range of screen sizes than ever, from netbooks to 30" ones, and the UI should take this into account. Performance should be improved quite a bit; it seems the dev team has some much better tools and telemetry info discussed here (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/12/15/continuing-our-discussion-on-performance.aspx). Footprint should be smaller and installation control should be greater (more on that here (http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/archive/2008/11/19/disk-space.aspx)). I would consider all of these to be pretty significant changes, and from what I hear much of it has yet to show up in the pre-beta builds; the taskbar wasn't even enabled for the build handed out at winHEC.See, from what you've ''heard'' and from what I've ''experienced first hand'' with 7, with the new task bar, say 2 different things.

On my machine, the performance was almost identical. Boot time was similar and game performance, testing both with 7 and Vista drivers, was almost identical to Vista. The GUI changes are minimal. There is nothing significant enough to justify why "7 is far superior to Vista", that it's now actually worth using. You also can't say that the new features being added to 7 GUI make it worth using now over Vista, because those features that they are adding were not in XP, so that doesn't justify it as the reason for not liking Vista. As for drivers effecting performance, the 7 Kernel has been set for a long time now, it's all fluff, service and GUI tweaks now. Drivers are not going to significantly bring better performance.

The point I'm making here is, the main complaints about Vista are not addressed with 7.

Application compatibility - Same
Performance - Same
Driver Support - Same
UI - Same

I'm not going to list boot time as "performance" because if you choose what OS you use based on boot time, I'm sorry for you, plus it was virtually the same on my machine anyways. On top of that, performance on older hardware is a null issue because by the time 7 launches, that's 1 more year worth of true Vista capable hardware to get on the market. PC's are shipping with 2-4GB of ram now. They are shipping with 7200 RPM, higher density HDD's now. Those 2 factors alone make Vista a new experience. And I don't see many post here talking about how 7 is so much faster on their machines than Vista is, except for one person but that's a whole new argument I don't feel like getting into again.

rndmize
12-21-2008, 09:11 PM
See, from what you've ''heard'' and from what I've ''experienced first hand'' with 7, with the new task bar, say 2 different things.
You've experienced a pre-beta intended for devs that was deliberately chose for stability, not showing off UI elements; how does that "first hand experience" make you a better authority?

On my machine, the performance was almost identical. Boot time was similar and game performance, testing both with 7 and Vista drivers, was almost identical to Vista. The GUI changes are minimal.
As above.

There is nothing significant enough to justify why "7 is far superior to Vista", that it's now actually worth using. You also can't say that the new features being added to 7 GUI make it worth using now over Vista, because those features that they are adding were not in XP, so that doesn't justify it as the reason for not liking Vista. As for drivers effecting performance, the 7 Kernel has been set for a long time now, it's all fluff, service and GUI tweaks now. Drivers are not going to significantly bring better performance.
Eh, not what I was arguing anyway.

The point I'm making here is, the main complaints about Vista are not addressed with 7.

Application compatibility - Same
Performance - Same
Driver Support - Same
UI - Same
That's my point - UI and performance will not be the same. I'm not arguing with you're overall point, just this specifically.

I'm not going to list boot time as "performance" because if you choose what OS you use based on boot time, I'm sorry for you, plus it was virtually the same on my machine anyways. On top of that, performance on older hardware is a null issue because by the time 7 launches, that's 1 more year worth of true Vista capable hardware to get on the market. PC's are shipping with 2-4GB of ram now. They are shipping with 7200 RPM, higher density HDD's now. Those 2 factors alone make Vista a new experience. And I don't see many post here talking about how 7 is so much faster on their machines than Vista is, except for one person but that's a whole new argument I don't feel like getting into again.
I never even mentioned boot time in my post. And older hardware is not a null issue; one of the key demonstrations at winHEC was running 7 in a netbook that didn't meet Vista hardware requirements. As for what people who have experienced it are saying, give me a break. Do you really thing people on a forum like this are going to have hardware that runs Vista/7 anything less than awesome? Never mind that its a pre-beta, and optimization tends to be left to the last releases...

Jon55
12-22-2008, 01:43 AM
7 is a rehash of Vista with some fairly minor UI tweaks. Nothing a third party couldn't have done with Vista itself, from what I've seen. I've messed around with it, and yes, it's nice that it starts a little faster on my laptop than Vista did, but other than that? Nothing new here. Nothing awe-inspiring. Setting wallpaper to a slide-show? Oooo, wow. Some new "official" media folders? Where did I keep my videos before?! Oh thank you wise and powerful Microsoft. The "pin to start menu" thing is both neat and mildly annoying, and I hate Explorer (not IE, but the file manager) just as much as I have in Vista, if not moreso. Not sure what you love about this.


You XP fanboys can never be pleased.

silent-circuit
12-22-2008, 02:05 AM
You XP fanboys can never be pleased.

Proof you didn't read my posts or pay any attention to the points I'm making, and instead jumped to unwarranted conclusions. Also proof you've not read much of anything I've posted on these forums (which is extensive) regarding the XP vs. Vista debate.

I use Vista every day and much prefer it over XP. I regularly tout its stability and performance in comparison with XP. I'm a huge DX10 adoption advocate. I don't like a couple of things about Vista, sure, mostly pertaining to changes to Explorer, but it's not enough to keep me from using the OS and I certainly don't go around bashing it like so many here.

Read, consider, and contribute.... or get out of the thread.

Bigbacon
12-22-2008, 10:20 AM
I keep hoping to see it pop up as a download in my MSDN account or get some beta DVDs sent to me.

tronmaster
12-22-2008, 04:49 PM
it'll be interesting to see how many people get this if it's open to the public. i've played around with the leaked "alpha" (if you can call it that) version a little and can't wait to get my hands on the beta. should be some interesting stuff to play around with... maybe they'll put something up on their connect (https://connect.microsoft.com/) site

I am planning to get it, tried Windows XP RC1 and RC2, Windows Vista Beta and RC1. I am eagerly waiting to try Windows 7 Beta. Some say Windows 7 will be released as early as April!

Some features I am looking for are the built-in Virtual system, can I install XP on it for older legacy games? If not, I probably dual boot between Windows 7 and Windows XP. Majority of videos working without downloading codecs through the magic of Windows Media Player 12. Taskbar being streamline and better memory usage with programs. Wallpaper changing itself, no need a 3rd party app yah!

I am hoping some fixes either by third party or Microsoft.

1. The Wireless Zero thing needs to be radically fix, I hate playing online and have disconnects or lag due to it. Ugh. Makes me want to go back to a wired connection. To bad I can't do that...:(
2. Sound, this is partially to Creative fix your damn drivers to work with Windows 7! Which I am basing on the previous nightmare which was Vista and Creative sound cards. To this day my sound is not as great through Vista as it is through XP.
3. When opening windows the OS remembers the size and location of how the window was set. Come on, XP had it and Vista required a registry hack to get this to work.

That's pretty much it for me.