Mar
22
2009
Arnie87 writes “One Microsoft Way has an interesting article suggesting that the reason Microsoft is focusing so much on speed with Windows 7 is the whopping sales of netbooks. The article concludes by saying: ‘If you plan on adopting Windows 7, you have the netbook to be thankful for, because Vista’s successor would be a very different beast if Microsoft had less motivation to pursue performance.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Did the Netbook Improve Windows 7’s Performance? | tags: google, microsoft, Netbooks, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Nvidia and ATI duke it out to see who offers better performance in Vista and in Windows 7.
Comments Off on Windows 7 vs. Vista Graphics Smackdown | tags: Mac, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
11
2009
For the past several months, Microsoft has engaged in an extended public mea culpa about Vista, and in the past two weeks alone has given a series of press interviews to explain how it changed the development process of Windows 7, the forthcoming client release, to learn from the mistakes it made in the past.
Comments Off on How Vista Mistakes Changed Windows 7 Development | tags: microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
Windows 7 may still be in beta, but it’s good enough on a Mac. Whether you prefer a separate partition or a virtual machine, Ars can help you through installing Microsoft’s latest OS on Apple’s latest machines, and point out some pitfalls along the way.
Comments Off on Running the Windows 7 beta on a MacBook | tags: Apple, Mac, microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
snydeq writes “For the past several months, Microsoft has engaged in an extended public mea culpa about Vista, holding a series of press interviews to explain how the company’s Vista mistakes changed the development process of Windows 7. Chief among these changes was the determination to ‘define a feature set early on’ and only share that feature set with partners and customers when the company is confident they will be incorporated into the final OS. And to solve PC-compatibility issues, Microsoft has said all versions of Windows 7 will run even on low-cost netbooks. Moreover, Microsoft reiterated that the beta of Windows 7 that is now available is already feature-complete, although its final release to business customers isn’t expected until November.” As a data point for how well this has all worked out in practice, reader The other A.N.Other recommends a ZDNet article describing rough benchmarks for three versions of Windows 7 against Vista and XP. In particular, Win-7 build 7048 (64-bit) vs. Win-7 build 7000 (32-bit and 64-bit) vs. Vista SP1 vs. XP SP3 were tested on both high-end and low-end hardware. The conclusions: Windows 7 is, overall, faster than both Vista and XP. As Windows 7 progresses, it’s getting faster (or at least the 64-bit editions are). On a higher-spec system, 64-bit is best. On a lower-spec system, 32-bit is best.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on How Vista Mistakes Changed Windows 7 Development | tags: google, microsoft, Netbooks, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
First, it was the unveiling of the concept that individuals utilizing Windows 7 would have the ability to turn Internet Explorer either on or off, however now other features included in Microsoft’s OS are being revealed — each of which will be able to be turned on or off under user control.
Comments Off on Windows 7 has the ability to disable more than just IE8 | tags: microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
David Gerard writes “Microsoft tried to make Vista secure with User Access Control (UAC). They relaxed it a bit in Windows 7 because it was such a pain in the backside. Unfortunately, one way they did this (the third way so far found around UAC in Windows 7) was to give certain Microsoft files the power to just … bypass UAC. Even more unfortunately, one of the DLLs they whitelisted was RUNDLL32.EXE. The exploit is simply to copy (or inject) part of its own code into the memory of another running process and then telling that target process to run the code, using standard, non-privileged APIs such as WriteProcessMemory and CreateRemoteThread. Ars Technica writes up the issue, proclaiming Windows 7 UAC ‘a broken mess; mend it or end it.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on UAC Whitelist Hole In Windows 7 | tags: google, microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
CWmike writes “Microsoft has confirmed that users will be able to remove its IE8 browser, as well as several other integrated applications, from Windows 7. Jack Mayo, a group program manager on the Windows team, listed in a blog post the applications that can be switched off. They include Internet Explorer 8, Fax and Scan, handwriting recognition, Windows DVD Maker, Windows Gadget Platform, Windows Media Player, Windows Media Center, Windows Search, and XPS Viewer and Services. He explained that the files associated with those applications and features are not actually deleted from the hard drive. The public beta of Windows 7 does not include the ability to ‘kill’ said apps. But a pirated copy of Windows 7 Build 7048 includes the new removal options, and has been leaked on the Internet.” (We mentioned the reported ability to turn off IE8 yesterday as well.)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Windows 7 Kill Switch For IE Confirmed — For More Apps, Too | tags: google, microsoft, program, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
Microsoft’s latest test build of Windows 7 comes loaded with an option to delete Internet Explorer 8’s executable file – making it unusable on the OS.
Comments Off on Windows 7 test build ‘turns off’ Internet Explorer 8 | tags: microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Mar
5
2009
The changes Microsoft has made to Windows 7’s UAC render it little more than a pesky annoyance. If this is the path the company wishes to go down, it should stop doing things by halves and kill it off altogether.
Comments Off on Opinion: Windows 7’s UAC is a broken mess; mend it or end it | tags: microsoft, windows 7 | posted in technical news