Windows 7 Pricing Starts at $200 ? Ehh…

Posted by admin | Posted in OS, Software | Posted on 07-02-2009

According to an ars technica source (who has no track record with insider knowledge), Windows 7 pricing will start at $200 and grow from there. UDPATE: ars has retracted this story.

Windows 7 Starter: $199
• Windows 7 Home Premium: $259
• Windows 7 Professional: $299
• Windows 7 Ultimate: $319

Our gut response is that $200 is just too high for both Windows 7 Starter (which, incidentally, is not supposed to be purchasable by anyone but OEMs) and Home Premium—and that the entire price range is too compressed (four versions within $120 just seems like a waste of everyone’s time).

But what do we know? How much would you pay for a Home Premium version of Windows 7?

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Why Microsoft Should Give Windows 7 Away

Posted by admin | Posted in News | Posted on 29-01-2009

Windows 7 is shaping up to be an awesome OS. It’s everything people wanted Vista to be and more. Which is exactly why Microsoft should give it away—or offer it dirt cheap—to Vista users.

Windows 7 is the solution to Microsoft’s Vista problem, which is really a nasty hydra of a problem. Let’s not pretend that this isn’t the case. There are three major heads to the beast: Consumer perception of Vista as an abysmal failure and a crappy OS (hence, Mojave); the use of XP instead of Vista in increasingly popular netbooks; and the critical lack of Vista interest from the business community.

Windows 7 neatly resolves them: Word-of-mouth sentiment for Windows 7 has been overwhelmingly positive, even from Mossberg, a dude who spent half of his Sprint Instinct review pre-reviewing the iPhone 3G. Windows 7 is slimmed down when it needs to be, running fantastically on netbooks. And the IT buyers and consumers who skipped Vista have been waiting, cash in hand, for whatever came after, so Windows 7 will have a much more enthusiastic customer base.

The stars are aligned for Windows 7. It could wash the bad aftertaste from Vista out of everybody’s mouth. But that’s only if Microsoft sells it right.

For starters, Microsoft needs to get rid of all the separate license types (OEM vs. upgrade vs. full) and trim the number of boxed configurations. Give buyers three versions, Home, Business and Ultimate, all at a reasonable price. $129 would be ideal for the first two, with $149 for Ultimate.

Second, every Vista user should get it for $49, or even less.

Apple gave away OS X 10.1 for free, and Microsoft should take a lesson there. It doesn’t matter that Vista isn’t really broken—like OS 10.0 really really was. Or that it was mostly the hardware guys’ fault for not delivering their drivers on time. Or that Mojave proves, at least to the nimwits who appear on camera, that Vista is a warm and fuzzy OS. Or that, conversely, most people who hate Vista have never really used it. All of that could be true, but regardless, people’s perception is that Vista was, is and always will be broken. And perception is reality.

Microsoft screwed up the Vista launch, and well, first impressions are the ones that matter the most. True, it’s already paying for that mistake. But taking that small hit per user wouldn’t just be the final cost of the Vista screwup, it would be “earnest money,” as they say in business. Microsoft would be buying something it hasn’t had the opportunity to get in the last few years: People’s faith.

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Win 7 Tip: Windows Explorer Preview Pane Works Much Better Than Vista’s

Posted by admin | Posted in Microsoft, News, OS | Posted on 28-01-2009

Vista had its own version of a preview pane in Windows Explorer, which didn’t work that well and didn’t work for all that many file types, but Windows 7 gets it right.

Win 7’s version activates via a button on the top right of Windows Explorer. It pops out and displays files like music, videos, HTML docs, photos, WordPad docs (but not Word’s .docx flies unless you have Word installed) directly in the pane without having to open a separate app. It’s not quite as good as OS X Leopard’s Quick Look, which does support PDF and Word and Office docs, but it’s definitely better than Vista’s preview.

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Windows 7 Tip: The Windows Key Is Actually Useful Now!

Posted by admin | Posted in Tutorials | Posted on 27-01-2009

Windows 7 has so many useful new features, it’s kinda crazy. Besides the wacky new taskbar, they’ve taken the ridiculous step of making the Windows key actually useful, commanding a smorgasbord of new keyboard shortcuts:

Brandon Paddock, a Microsoft employee working on Windows 7, conveniently lists all of Windows 7 new hotkeys for us, including ones that’ll make the new taskbar even easier to use. I’d memorize the taskbar shortcuts, like middle clicking for launching a new window of an open application, along with Win+number—which opens the program pinned to the taskbar that corresponds to it, like if your first pinned program is Firefox, Win+1 will launch it—and Win+G, which brings gadgets to the front, kind of like the Dashboard button on the Mac.

General
Win+Up Maximize
Win+Down Restore / Minimize
Win+Left Snap to left
Win+Right Snap to right
Win+Shift+Left Jump to left monitor
Win+Shift+Right Jump to right monitor
Win+Home Minimize / Restore all other windows
Win+T Focus the first taskbar entry
Pressing again will cycle through them, you can can arrow around.
Win+Shift+T cycles backwards.
Win+Space Peek at the desktop
Win+G Bring gadgets to the top of the Z-order
Win+P External display options (mirror, extend desktop, etc)
Win+X Mobility Center (same as Vista, but still handy!)
Win+#
(# = a number key)
Launches a new instance of the application in the Nth slot on the taskbar.
Example: Win+1 launches first pinned app, Win+2 launches second, etc.
Win + +
Win + - (plus or minus key)
Zoom in or out.

Explorer
Alt+P Show/hide Preview Pane

Taskbar modifiers
Shift + Click on icon Open a new instance
Middle click on icon Open a new instance
Ctrl + Shift + Click on icon Open a new instance with Admin privileges
Shift + Right-click on icon Show window menu (Restore / Minimize / Move / etc)
Note: Normally you can just right-click on the window thumbnail to get this menu
Shift + Right-click on grouped icon Menu with Restore All / Minimize All / Close All, etc.
Ctrl + Click on grouped icon Cycle between the windows (or tabs) in the group

Which ones do you think you’ll be using the most? Also, does anybody else love that it’s called the “Win” key?

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Windows 7 Is OK, But Can It Run Crysis?

Posted by admin | Posted in Microsoft, OS, Software | Posted on 26-01-2009

We’ve all heard about Windows 7’s speed gains over Vista, but how does it run Crysis?

These results from DirectX 9 testing speak well for Windows 7, topping Vista on the lower and higher spec systems while, much of the time, just about keeping pace with XP. In fact, with Intel’s i7 quad core processor, we actually see a brief moment of performance gains over XP. Blasphemy!

Crysis DirectX 10 testing did not go over as well for 7, which got pretty trounced by Vista (though 7 won a DirectX 10 round later with Far Cry 2). We chalk these inconsistencies not only to different games but to the fact that both Windows 7 and its graphics drivers are still in beta. Overall, early performance testing of Windows 7 gaming leaves us optimistic, even if there’s still plenty of room to grow.

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Microsoft Windows 7 to Have Multiple Versions

Posted by admin | Posted in OS, Software | Posted on 26-01-2009

The above screenshot, taken in Windows 7 beta 7025, shows that the operating system will have multiple versions — including Starter and Ultimate. Unfortunately, there’s no word yet on what each will contain.

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Microsoft Extends Windows 7 Beta Availability (Again) to Feb. 12

Posted by admin | Posted in Microsoft, OS, Software | Posted on 24-01-2009

Despite having “more than enough beta testers and feedback,” the Windows 7 team is extending the availability of the free preview download through Feb. 12, with two firm deadlines. Here’s the breakdown:

Both the 2.4GB downloads and the activation keys are still available, but are limited now, as today is the last day of the no-limit downloading Microsoft enacted after the first day went a little bit haywire. If you grabbed a key but not the download, or the other way around, here’s the dates you should mark down:

  • New ISO dowloads not available after Feb. 10: But those who “already started their Windows 7 Beta download and have not yet finished will still be able to finish their download and are encouraged to do so,” according to the Windows 7 team. We’re assuming that means those with registration keys can jump in and grab their file, but registration keys will stop being available after this day.
  • All downloads stop after Feb. 12: Even if you’ve got a key handy, Microsoft will not be providing the ISOs for download. You’ll have to look to BitTorrent or other file-swapping locations; from what we’ve seen, registration keys work on non-official “M1″ betas.

Inspired by the deadlines to jump on the beta bandwagon? Don’t give up your working system, which might be all you have left after the Win7 beta expires on Aug. 1. Instead, check our guides to installing the beta as a dual-boot with XP or Vista, on a Mac with Boot Camp, or alongside Linux.

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Microsoft Looks For Windows 7 Beta Testers

Posted by admin | Posted in OS | Posted on 24-01-2009

Microsoft Looks For Windows 7 Beta Testers

Apply only if you own a netbook - after all, that’s the gist of it for individuals who received e-mails from Microsoft, inviting them to test a “specialized” version of Windows 7 that will run on less than stellar hardware. According to the specification sheet, it seems as though the target market would be netbooks despite the fact that DVD drives are listed as well. Read the email and see if there is anything between the lines that we’ve missed.

“You are invited to join a beta trial for a specialized version of Windows 7. Your geographic location may make you a good candidate for this providing feedback on this specialized version of Windows 7. You will still have access to the Windows 7 Ultimate SKU, in addition you will be able to test this additional SKU.”

Do you think this step is taken since they know the netbook tide won’t stop? After all, Microsoft’s latest earnings report showed that they made less money on the Windows front with one of the factors attributed to the rise of netbooks that run on Windows XP, which obviously has a much lower profit margin compared to Vista.

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Windows 7 Beta in-depth impressions

Posted by admin | Posted in Microsoft, OS | Posted on 24-01-2009

We’ve covered a few tidbits of what the Windows 7 Beta has to offer, including the mess of machines we’ve installed it on, but we finally gathered together all our thoughts and impressions of the OS into one meaty pile of words and screencaps. Naturally, we’re working with a beta here, so things can absolutely get better (or worse), and Redmond might be hiding a feature or two in the wings — or for the inevitable SP1 — but we’d say Microsoft has really put its best foot forward here. Check out all our ramblings after the break

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Note: all testing was performed by a real live human blogger, running clean installs of Windows 7 Beta (build 7000) natively on a years old Dell Dimensions 9150 and a brand new Vaio P.

What we love

Installation

It’s fast, painless, and usually complication free — what more could we ask? More here.

Speed improvements
This seems to be the thing people most wanted out of Windows 7, and it certainly seems to deliver. We’d say the benefits are most drastic in seriously underpowered hardware, like netbooks — which is, of course, exactly where it’s most needed. Our Vaio P, for instance, booted in two thirds the time it took with Vista. Naturally, the OS is by no means delay free. We bump into slowdowns all the time, with all sorts of apps, but they seem to happen less often, and Microsoft has done the work of mitigating the traditional “hurry up and wait” aspect of booting up the computer — if you can see the desktop, you aren’t far from making something happen, instead of waiting for 100,000 start-up items to do their thing. We would like to point out that most folks installing Windows 7 might be looking at their first clean install in a while, and the OS is definitely not immune to slow downs as more stuff is installed and more things are going on — as we type this we’re trying to sync a Zune and watching the rest of the OS grind to a halt in the process. Speed gains aren’t just at the surface level, either. File transfer times have been improved, especially with SSD.

Stability
It’s a beta, so we won’t harp on this. We’ve had a few BSoDs, and a couple of failed installations that we feared would “brick” our computer, but ended up failing gracefully. Overall, a pretty tame experience for a beta, but Windows 7 definitely isn’t bug free.

New Taskbar

Ooh, this is a tricky one. We’d say it’s most likely going to boil down to a debate between power users and the casual types. It does introduce a certain amount of interface inconsistency to the OS, with non-active applications taking up the same amount of space and sitting right next to running applications, and it means you’re an extra click away from switching windows within an app in certain scenarios — extra windows are buried in a pop-up menu, though you can turn off this functionality. Also, Microsoft has made the odd move of removing any apps that you “pin” as a permanent icon to the taskbar from the frequent items section of the Start Menu — which will no doubt prove frustrating for people expecting to see their frequented apps in that familiar place.

Certain apps also have “jump lists” that can be accessed by right clicking on the icon, bringing up recent documents, frequent tasks and the like. This kills two birds with one stone, allowing for easier access to more tasks right where they’re relevant, and killing off some of the myriad of icons that tend to populate the system tray. Unfortunately, we’ll have to wait for developers to catch on — most of Microsoft’s own apps don’t even support this functionality yet.

Further cleaning up the system tray is an “Action Center” for listing various nagging warnings — instead of closing them out and forgetting about them, you just leave them in the Action Center and forget about them.

Peek

Gimmicky? Sure. But it’s not everyday that a little gimmick like Peek — activated by hovering over a button on the bottom right hand corner of the screen, turning all open windows into just their borders — gives new life to the frequent task of finding the desktop and hunting for windows.

Peek is also activated when you click on an item in the Taskbar with multiple windows open. A pop-up shows large thumbnails of each item, and when you hover over it all windows — below and above it — disappear into their borders. Perfect for finding that misplaced dialog box.

Windows Explorer

Microsoft has reworked some things here, reorganized some others, and made sure to put frequent and relevant tasks in an easy to find spot across the top. We won’t get into all of it, but overall we’d say things are more intuitive and “pretty.”

Windows Media Center
Microsoft hasn’t done a ton here, mainly a new, easier setup method and some interface enhancements — borrowing a bit from Zune in the now playing section. Engadget HD will be looking into this a bit more deeply, so stay tuned.

Window management

They really went overboard on this one, and we’re loving it. There are bunches of ways to find, sort and place windows now, some of which include:

  • Shake: grab the title bar an shake vigorously to minimize all other windows.
  • Maximize at top (pictured): drag the title bar to the top of the screen and Windows 7 will try and grab it and maximize it if you let it go in the right spot.
  • Pop to the left, pop to the right: Windows + Left or Right arrow key to maximize the window to that half of the screen.

More fun shortcuts like this can be found here.

Gadgets run free

Microsoft axed that constricting sidebar, now allowing Gadgets to litter the desktop however you choose — another good excuse for Peek. Unfortunately, some gadgets seem to chafe at this — we’ll have to wait for updates to many of them before they start to look “right” sans sidebar.

Networking

Microsoft’s done a lot of work here, and it really shows. They might not be to the point of “it just works” yet, but the HomeGroups functionality actually allows mere mortals, using no magic tricks or slight of hand, to set up their own home network, and merge existing networks — and actually find and share media, printers and documents! It’s a crazy concept, we know, and won’t get into all the technicalities — through a string of bad luck or some broken functionality, it didn’t “just work” on our first few tries — but we were able to go through Microsoft’s simple hand-holding process from enough different angles and do-overs to get our PCs talking to each other at last.

Multiple display support

Having set up many a projector in our day, we know the incredibly frustrating task that can be at times. Windows 7 makes it easy — just tap Windows + P and there’s a quick selector menu for choosing to extend, duplicate or isolate the screen to your monitor or the projector.

Microsoft has also improved the general display settings, making it easier to detect and arrange multiple monitors.

Play to device

Speaking of talking to each other, one of our favorite new features is the new “play to device” functionality in Windows Media Player. After you set up device sharing — which is vaguely but not really related to HomeGroup setup — you can right click on a song or playlist and blast it out of any device you have set up to receive such blasts. That means an Xbox 360, a Media Center Extender, a family member’s PC (they obviously have to approve this functionality at the outset), or whatever other devices support this function in the future. You can also stream music and video out of networked collections in the other direction, but that’s way less fun.

Brand new Paint

Aww, it’s so pretty!

What we’re looking forward to

Device Stage

A pretty neat feature, in theory, Microsoft brings device management straight into the OS — no longer relegated to a sub-menu of some media player or control panel. Unfortunately, it didn’t work with any of the myriad of devices we had laying around — including the Zune, Samsung’s super-basic YP-S2 mass storage player, a PowerShot SD1000 or the very D90 (pictured) that Ballmer has demoed this feature with. If Microsoft won’t even drink the Kool-Aid with the Zune, or at least build in default support for mass storage devices and generic cameras, it’s hard to see this catching on, but we’re sure there will be more happening here at launch. There’s a compatibility list here.

Multitouch

We’re working on tracking down some gear to give Windows 7 multitouch capabilities the real once over it deserves. Stay tuned! In the meantime, check out this video of multitouch Virtual Earth 3D running on Windows 7 and a HP TouchSmart.

What it still needs

Good software

Sure, this is an incredibly subjective topic, but bear with us. You know that new Peek feature? Well, guess which one single app didn’t show its border when we activated Peek: Zune. Sure, it’s one of the best looking apps on our whole computer, but it’s also incredibly at odds with the majority of our computing experience, and took us a week or so to master back in the day. If Microsoft can’t latch onto some sort of consistent usability and interface paradigms, not to mention basic software development guidelines, how can we expect anyone else to? The “sameness” of software on the Mac side might be frustrating, but we’d say the frustration of re-learning how to operate nearly every single application on the Windows side greatly exceeds that. Also, we need some better Twitter apps.

WinFS
We keep making fun little baby steps in this direction — for instance, the universal search features now built into the operating system makes it much easier and faster find that one particular file, app or function we were looking for — but we still want the incredible power and promise of WinFS. It’s clearly not happening this generation, but that doesn’t mean we can’t complain about it.

A unified vision
Overall, we get a certain vibe from Windows 7 — and most Windows releases — that there are too many cooks in the kitchen. There are too many ways to do the same or similar things, like set up a network, or play music. Sure, it’s getting easier to accomplish those tasks, there’s the new HomeGroup functionality, a myriad of setup wizards, and the ever-present and intimidating “advanced” setup modes; or the choice between Zune, Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center. Or if you’re failing to accomplish something, the OS is all-too-ready to send you to a help page, but you don’t get the idea that these groups really talk to each other. They might be “linked” together, but they’re not “unified” in purpose. There have been plenty of times when we just had no idea where to begin a task, from the seeming endless options on the left side of the control panel, or when the OS forgot about helping us do the task, and just gave us a link to a help section instead — even if a wizard would’ve been the more appropriate way to go. There’s no simple solution to all of this, but the older and bigger Windows gets, the more obfuscated certain tasks become — and that’s not a fun trend.

What we hope we never see


Image courtesy of Boing Boing Gadgets

Three hundred different overpriced versions of Windows 7. We know that Microsoft sells its operating system to a lot of different people, and we’re aware that some people only need the stuff that’s in Vista Basic, while other people Media Center and motion-filled desktop backgrounds, but please, for the love of Bill Gates, don’t hit us with Windows 7 Home / Basic / Business / Ultimate / Whatever. Build a smart installer and figure out how to put the right components on the right computers, but stick the OS in one box and sell it for one price. If you have to sell some crazy enterprise thing at an extra cost, so be it, but stop confusing consumers and stop overcharging — pick a low, flat rate and stick to it.

Wrap-up

We’re not sure we necessarily agree with folks who say that Windows 7 is the “Vista that should have been.” There are certainly plenty of improvements here that Vista could have benefitted from, and Vista very well might’ve been released undercooked, but Vista was what it was, and Microsoft has clearly moved on, with new features, a newly refined kernel and a new aim of supporting a wider swath of hardware. And yet, in many other ways, Windows 7 shows where Microsoft’s industry dominating OS has hardly changed from its Windows NT heritage — it doesn’t take very many clicks to find the ugly underpinnings of the OS, aspects like the “true” device manager that have hardly received an aesthetic upgrade, not to mention a functionality upgrade, in the past decade.

Overall, Windows 7 is a very good Windows release, and that’s going to be plenty for most folks — but we just wonder how many generations we are away from Microsoft really gutting this OS and finding newer, better paradigms than, say, “windows” and “double click” for interfacing with a desktop computer. Multitouch is certainly part of it, but we’re pining for the future, and nobody’s delivering it just yet.

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WordPad In Windows 7 Does Word 2007 Documents

Posted by admin | Posted in Software | Posted on 20-01-2009

WordPad In Windows 7 Does Word 2007 Documents
If you’re to cheap to download open source freeware like OpenOffice for your word processing needs, then fret not. Windows 7’s WordPad will support Office 2007/2008’s XML-based Word documents, although there is a snafu involved - WordPad has limited support for such documents, and it will warn you beforehand that certain additional content available only in Word will be stripped if you re-save. We say fork out a wee bit more for Office 2007/2008 or get OpenOffice instead to save yourself the accidental heartbreak of overwriting your colleague’s hard work.

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Windows 7 Beta takes another crown, besting Vista in SSD performance

Posted by admin | Posted in OS | Posted on 18-01-2009

It’s no huge surprise, since Microsoft was planning on improving performance on this front, but now we’ve got some of our first solid numbers on Windows 7 Beta SSD performance. Nothing crazy spectacular, but Windows 7 looks to have a slight edge over Vista pretty much across the board, with better speed, access time and lower CPU usage — not bad for a beta, let’s hope things continue to improve as we approach “Microsoft would like your money for this” status.

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Windows 7 Runs So Much Better Than Vista On a Netbook

Posted by admin | Posted in Microsoft, OS, Software | Posted on 16-01-2009

I’ve tested Vista on two netbooks, and it’s never been good (not counting the Vaio P). In fact, Vista has been unusable in both circumstances. Then I loaded Windows 7 onto the Mini 12.

If you look back at my original review of the Dell Inspiron Mini 12, a 12-inch Atom netbook with 1GB of RAM, I liked the hardware just fine but complained that Vista was too slow to even be considered as the OS. The system often lagged when just opening the Start menu, let alone launching real programs. It, like Vista on most netbooks, was little more than a novelty—something to be chuckled at for a few moments before formatting and installing XP. So I loaded the mini 12 with Windows 7. What did I have to lose?

The experience is night and day.

With Aero deactivated (and actually, totally inaccessible after an auto-configuration installation despite screwing with the registry), the Start menu now pops right up (like it should), Firefox takes about 3.5 seconds to open (which is reasonable) and light multitasking is smooth enough. The computer is by no means fast, but it’s reasonably functional. And I can use the system without pounding my head against the screen or loading an old OS. Keep in mind, this testing is just with 1GB of memory, not even 2GB.

The system still struggles a bit with both full screen Flash video and XviD clips. Heavily dropped frames remain a fact of life, and don’t expect to fast forward through high quality content at will. But that’s a hardware limitation that I can accept, or at least not blame on Microsoft. Intel, I’m looking in your direction now.

I loaded Windows 7 onto the Mini 12 as a Hail Mary maneuver, hoping to play with the system a little more without resorting to XP. And I have to admit, the results were pretty close to miraculous.

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The Best New Windows 7 Keyboard Shortcuts

Posted by admin | Posted in Software | Posted on 16-01-2009

No matter what OS you use, keyboard shortcuts are a one-way ticket to enhanced productivity (plus you look awesome to friends and colleagues); Windows 7 has more cool new shortcuts than you can shake a stick at.

Windows 7 boasts a lot of great new shortcuts, but I’m focusing on several of my favorites. Check out the video above for a closer look. For those of you who prefer text to video, here are all of the shortcuts I highlighted:

* Win+Home: Clear all but the active window
* Win+Space: All windows become transparent so you can see through to the desktop
* Win+Up arrow: Maximize the active window
* Win+Down arrow: Minimize the window/Restore the window if it’s maximized
* Win+Left/Right arrows: Dock the window to each side of the monitor (If you’ve got dual monitors, adding Shift to the mix (e.g., Win+Shift+Right arrow) will move the window to the adjacent monitor.)
* Win+T: Focus and scroll through items on the taskbar.
* Win+P: Adjust presentation settings for your display
* Win+(+/-): Zoom in/out
* Shift+Click a taskbar item: Open a new instance of that application

Got a favorite shortcut of your own now that you’ve installed the Windows 7 Beta? Let’s hear about it in the comments. (Apologies for the poor video quality… tried something new, but clearly it didn’t work out.)

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Add Text to the Windows 7 Taskbar Buttons

Posted by admin | Posted in OS, Software | Posted on 14-01-2009

If you love the look of Windows 7 but you’re aching to get a little helpful text back on your big taskbar buttons, weblog Tech-Recipes details how to add text to the by default icon-only Windows 7 taskbar. Just right-click the taskbar, select Properties, then change the Taskbar buttons drop-down from “Always combine, hide labels” to “Never combine.” Mission accomplished. You can also select “Combine when taskbar is full” to keep the text there when you’ve got room for it, then collapse to the icon-only view when your taskbar fills up.

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Windows 7 Aero Peek Even Better in Latest Build

Posted by admin | Posted in OS, Software | Posted on 14-01-2009

We gave you a closer look at Windows 7 Aero Peek a while ago, but the killer new feature has gotten even better in the recently released beta. Check out our screencast to see what’s changed.

First of all, Aero Peek had to be enabled in the previous builds of Windows 7, whereas it’s now enabled by default. Once you’re using it, the main change in the latest build of Windows 7 is a new fade out feature, which highlights the window you’re hovering over by fading out all other active windows on the desktop—so not only do you get a window preview in the “peek” window, but you also get a full-on preview of the window as it looks on your monitor. The video below should give you a better idea of what I’m talking about.

NOTE: Unfortunately the video ended up a little choppy, but the Aero Peek feature is actually very smooth in the Windows 7 Beta, complete with animated transitions between every aspect of your window peeking.

Now that you’ve had the chance to install Windows 7 on your PC, how do you feel about Aero Peek? Great new feature or tiresome eye candy?

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