- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
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- 3,351
Won't be far around the corner, so I've finally taken the time to install it and take a peek for myself.
Before doing so, had a look at a couple of reputable sites to see what common opinion is:
Windows 7: Windows 7 Walkthrough, Boot Video and Impressions
First look at Windows 7's User Interface
http://www.winsupersite.com/faq/windows_7.asp
First impressions seem positive from most angles, myself included. It's important to remember that 7 is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, as the term goes - however these subtle tweaks seem to make it that little bit more responsive, and as such this could run on slightly weaker specced systems rather better.
The UI has seen multiple improvements, most of them are detailed with pictures in the above links so I won't go into detail, although I'm personally disappointed to see the horribly bulky and unintuitive Ribbon interface included in the likes of Paint and Wordpad, but for some reason other people quite like it. I think it's a step backwards, it doesn't flow, takes too much room and just not easy enough to find what you need to do quickly.
UAC is a huge improvement - it was a constant annoyance in Vista, and it was "on" or "off" - the latter only recommended to people who know what they're doing in the first place. In W7, you have a far greater degree of control as to when it warns you, and of what.
Control panel is better, far less cluttered and it's easy to find what you need now. Graphics control panel is greatly improved - the first, simple section allows you to change resolution, identify multiple monitors and switch primary/secondary. Advanced steps up to allow refresh rate, driver changes etc etc.
That horrid Sidebar is a gonner, thank christ, and the some-useful gadgets are now free-floating, which saves resource and nicking half your screen for the sake of a large clock
I won't go into too much detail as it'd just be mirroring what's already said in those other articles, they're definitely worth a read. The only concern I have is that most of the tweaks, especially performance tweaks, could easily be applied to Vista - something I doubt will happen as MS will want W7 to have a running start :/
Before doing so, had a look at a couple of reputable sites to see what common opinion is:
Windows 7: Windows 7 Walkthrough, Boot Video and Impressions
First look at Windows 7's User Interface
http://www.winsupersite.com/faq/windows_7.asp
First impressions seem positive from most angles, myself included. It's important to remember that 7 is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, as the term goes - however these subtle tweaks seem to make it that little bit more responsive, and as such this could run on slightly weaker specced systems rather better.
The UI has seen multiple improvements, most of them are detailed with pictures in the above links so I won't go into detail, although I'm personally disappointed to see the horribly bulky and unintuitive Ribbon interface included in the likes of Paint and Wordpad, but for some reason other people quite like it. I think it's a step backwards, it doesn't flow, takes too much room and just not easy enough to find what you need to do quickly.
UAC is a huge improvement - it was a constant annoyance in Vista, and it was "on" or "off" - the latter only recommended to people who know what they're doing in the first place. In W7, you have a far greater degree of control as to when it warns you, and of what.
Control panel is better, far less cluttered and it's easy to find what you need now. Graphics control panel is greatly improved - the first, simple section allows you to change resolution, identify multiple monitors and switch primary/secondary. Advanced steps up to allow refresh rate, driver changes etc etc.
That horrid Sidebar is a gonner, thank christ, and the some-useful gadgets are now free-floating, which saves resource and nicking half your screen for the sake of a large clock
I won't go into too much detail as it'd just be mirroring what's already said in those other articles, they're definitely worth a read. The only concern I have is that most of the tweaks, especially performance tweaks, could easily be applied to Vista - something I doubt will happen as MS will want W7 to have a running start :/