A Windows to Help You Forget
by Walter S. Mossberg
Thursday, October 8,
2009
provided by
Microsoft's New Operating System Is Good Enough to
Erase Bad Memory of Vista
In just two weeks, on Oct. 22, Microsoft's
long operating-system nightmare will be over. The company will release Windows
7, a faster and much better operating system than the little-loved Windows
Vista, which did a lot to harm both the company's reputation, and the
productivity and blood pressure of its users. PC makers will rush to flood
physical and online stores with new computers pre-loaded with Windows 7, and to
offer the software to Vista owners who wish to upgrade.
With
Windows 7, PC users will at last have a strong, modern successor to the sturdy
and familiar, but aged, Windows XP, which is still the most popular version of
Windows, despite having come out in 2001. In the high-tech world, an
eight-year-old operating system is the equivalent of a 20-year-old car. While XP
works well for many people, it is relatively weak in areas such as security,
networking and other features more important today than when XP was designed
around 1999.
After using pre-release versions of Windows 7 for nine months,
and intensively testing the final version for the past month on many different
machines, I believe it is the best version of Windows Microsoft has produced.
It's a boost to productivity and a pleasure to use. Despite a few drawbacks, I
can heartily recommend Windows 7 to mainstream consumers.
Like the new Snow
Leopard operating system released in August by Microsoft's archrival, Apple,
Windows 7 is much more of an evolutionary than a revolutionary product. Its main
goal was to fix the flaws in Vista and to finally give Microsoft customers a
reason to move up from XP. But Windows 7 is packed with features and tweaks that
make using your computer an easier and more satisfying experience.
Windows
7 introduces real advances in organizing your programs and files, arranging your
taskbar and desktop, and quickly viewing and launching the page or document you
want, when you want it. It also has cool built-in touch-screen features.
It
removes a lot of clutter. And it mostly banishes Vista's main flaws --
sluggishness; incompatibility with third-party software and hardware; heavy
hardware requirements; and constant, annoying security warnings.
I tested
Windows 7 on 11 different computers, ranging from tiny netbooks to standard
laptops to a couple of big desktops. These included machines from Lenovo,
Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Acer, Asus, Toshiba and Sony. I even successfully ran it
on an Apple Macintosh laptop. On some of these machines, Windows 7 was
pre-loaded. On others, I had to upgrade from an earlier version of
Windows.
In most cases, the installation took 45 minutes or less, and the new
operating system worked snappily and well. But, I did encounter some drawbacks
and problems. On a couple of these machines, glacial start-up and reboot times
reminded me of Vista. And, on a couple of others, after upgrading, key features
like the display or touchpad didn't work properly. Also, Windows 7 still
requires add-on security software that has to be frequently updated. It's
tedious and painful to upgrade an existing computer from XP to 7, and the
variety of editions in which Windows 7 is offered is confusing.
Finally,
Microsoft has stripped Windows 7 of familiar built-in applications, such as
email, photo organizing, address book, calendar and video-editing programs.
These can be downloaded free of charge, but they no longer come with the
operating system, though some PC makers may choose to pre-load them.
In
recent years, I, like many other reviewers, have argued that Apple's Mac OS X
operating system is much better than Windows. That's no longer true. I still
give the Mac OS a slight edge because it has a much easier and cheaper upgrade
path; more built-in software programs; and far less vulnerability to viruses and
other malicious software, which are overwhelmingly built to run on
Windows.
Now, however, it's much more of a toss-up between the two rivals.
Windows 7 beats the Mac OS in some areas, such as better previews and navigation
right from the taskbar, easier organization of open windows on the desktop and
touch-screen capabilities. So Apple will have to scramble now that the gift of a
flawed Vista has been replaced with a reliable, elegant version of
Windows.
Here are some of the key features of Windows 7.
New
Taskbar: In Windows 7, the familiar taskbar has been reinvented and
made taller. Instead of mainly being a place where icons of open windows
temporarily appear, it now is a place where you can permanently "pin" the icons
of frequently used programs anywhere along its length, and in any arrangement
you choose. This is a concept borrowed from Apple's similar feature, the Dock.
But Windows 7 takes the concept further.
For each running program, hovering
over its taskbar icon pops up a small preview screen showing a mini-view of that
program. This preview idea was in Vista. But, in Windows 7, it has been expanded
in several ways. Now, every open window in that program is included separately
in the preview. If you mouse over a window in the preview screen, it appears at
full size on your desktop and all other windows on the desktop become
transparent -- part of a feature called Aero Peek. Click on the window and it
comes up, ready for use. You can even close windows from these previews, or play
media in them.
I found this feature more natural and versatile than a similar
feature in Snow Leopard called Dock Expose.
You can also use Aero Peek at any
time to see your empty desktop, with open windows reduced to virtual panes of
glass. To do this, you just hover over a small rectangle at the right edge of
the taskbar.
Taskbar icons also provide Jump Lists -- pop-up menus listing
frequent actions or recent files used.
Desktop Organization:
A feature called Snap allows you to expand windows to full-screen size
by just dragging them to the top of the screen, or to half-screen size by
dragging them to the left or right edges of the screen. Another called Shake
allows you to make all other windows but the one you're working on disappear by
simply grabbing its title bar with the mouse and shaking it several
times.
File Organization: In Windows Explorer, the left-hand
column now includes a feature called Libraries. Each library -- Documents,
Music, Pictures and Videos -- consolidates all files of those types regardless
of which folder, or even which hard disk, they live in.
Networking:
Windows 7 still isn't quite as natural at networking as I find the Mac
to be, but it's better than Vista. For instance, now you can see all available
wireless networks by just clicking on an icon in the taskbar. A new feature
called HomeGroups is supposed to let you share files more easily among Windows 7
PCs on your home network. In my tests, it worked, but not consistently, and it
required typing in long, arcane passwords.
Touch: Some of
the same kinds of multitouch gestures made popular on the iPhone are now built
into Windows 7. But these features won't likely become popular for a while
because to get the most out of them, a computer needs a special type of touch
screen that goes beyond most of the ones existing now. I tested this on one such
laptop, a Lenovo, and was able to move windows around, to resize and flip
through photos, and more.
Speed: In my tests, on every
machine, Windows 7 ran swiftly and with far fewer of the delays typical in
running Vista. All the laptops I tested resumed from sleep quickly and properly,
unlike in Vista. Start-up and restart times were also improved. I chose six
Windows 7 laptops from different makers to compare with a new MacBook Pro
laptop. The Mac still started and restarted faster than most of the Windows 7
PCs. But the speed gap has narrowed considerably, and one of the Lenovos beat
the Mac in restart time.
Nagging: In the name of security,
Vista put up nagging warnings about a wide variety of tasks, driving people
crazy. In Windows 7, you can now set this system so it nags you only when things
are happening that you consider really worth the nag. Also, Microsoft has
consolidated most of the alerts from the lower-right system tray into one icon,
and they seemed less frequent.
Compatibility: I tried a wide
variety of third-party software and all worked fine on every Windows 7 machine.
These included Mozilla Firefox; Adobe Reader; Google's Picasa and Chrome; and
Apple's iTunes and Safari.
I also tested several hardware devices, and,
unlike Vista, Windows 7 handled all but one smoothly. These included a networked
H-P printer, a Canon camera, an iPod nano, and at least five external flash
drives and hard disks. The one failure was a Verizon USB cellular modem.
Microsoft says you don't need external software to run these, but I found it was
necessary, and even then had to use a trick I found on the Web to get it to
work.
System Requirements: Nearly all Vista PCs, and newer
or beefier XP machines, should be able to run Windows 7 fine. Even the netbooks
I tested ran it speedily, especially with the Starter Edition, which lacks some
of the powerful graphics effects in the operating system. (Other netbooks will
be able to run other editions.)
If you have a standard PC, called a 32-bit
PC, you'll need at least one gigabyte of memory, 16 gigabytes of free hard-disk
space and a graphics system that can support Microsoft technologies called
"DirectX 9 with WDDM 1.0." You'll also need a processor with a speed of at least
one gigahertz. If you have a newer-style 64-bit PC, which can use more memory,
you'll need at least two gigabytes of memory and 20 gigabytes of free hard disk
space. In either case, you should double the minimum memory
specification.
Installation, Editions and Price: There are
four editions of Windows 7 of interest to consumers. One, a limited version
called Starter, comes pre-loaded on netbooks. A second, called Business, is
mainly for people who need to tap remotely into company networks (check with
your company to see if you need this). A third, called Ultimate, is mainly for
techies who want every feature of all other editions. Most average consumers
will want Home Premium, which costs $120 for upgrades.
The system for
upgrading is complicated, but Vista owners can upgrade to the exactly comparable
edition of Windows 7 while keeping all files, settings and programs in
place.
Unfortunately, XP owners, the biggest body of Windows users, won't be
able to do that. They'll have to wipe out their hard disks after backing up
their files elsewhere, then install Windows 7, then restore their personal
files, then re-install all their programs from the original CDs or downloaded
installer files. Then, they have to install all the patches and upgrades to
those programs from over the years.
Microsoft includes an Easy Transfer
wizard to help with this, but it moves only personal files, not programs. This
painful XP upgrade process is one of the worst things about Windows 7 and will
likely drive many XP owners to either stick with what they've got or wait and
buy a new one.
In my tests, both types of installations went OK, though the
latter could take a long time.
Bottom line: Windows 7 is a very good,
versatile operating system that should help Microsoft bury the memory of Vista
and make PC users happy.







