Yes, once again, I’m coming to this very late. But just in case anyone hasn’t tried it…
Short review: It looks like Vista, but it doesn’t hurt like Vista.
Shorter review: Awesome.
Longer review: I downloaded a copy of Windows 7 Release Candidate version 7600 off of Bittorrent (which is perfectly legal; while Microsoft is no longer providing downloads, they do still want people trying the software and are still handing out free activation keys). I burned the ISO to a DVD with no problems, then restarted and booted from the DVD.
It’s nice that you no longer have to deal with a text screen at all when installing Windows now, but you’re still doing the same thing – waiting for Windows to scan your computer’s hardware and copy the compressed files it’s going to need to install from the DVD to your hard drive. A couple times I thought the install had wedged but it hadn’t; a particular step was just taking a while. When installing Windows, patience is still your watchword.
I figured this was going to be a better experience when Windows 7 detected and installed appropriate drivers for my network card, my sound card and my video card automatically – my computer was fully capable as soon as the setup was finished. This was especially impressive since my network and sound hardware are built into my ABIT motherboard.
So I immediately started installing the most critical programs: Visual C++ Express, TortoiseSVN, Paint.Net, Google Chrome and Google Talk…and World of Warcraft and Left 4 Dead. I also had to get my SVN server linked to a folder on my local computer so I could do an initial pull-down of my repository. All of this went great, I had no problems downloading, installing, updating, etc (though of course it took forever; World of Warcraft is now about a seven gig download).
If you’ve looked at any screenshots of my XP desktop, you may have noticed that I like to keep my taskbar on the left side of the screen. I like lots of vertical space both to view web pages and to view source code. You’ll also notice that I’ve got lots of quicklaunch icons – basically everything I actually use on the computer on a regular basis. Also notice below the quicklaunch toolbar that there are icons for every program I’ve currently got open.
As I mentioned in my Mac post, the Mac doesn’t do this – all the programs on the dock simply get dots next to them when they are running. Microsoft has implemented their own version of this: there’s only one taskbar. You “pin” programs to it that you want quick access to. And when you run one, it gets a box around it. Hovering over the box shows you a small preview of what that program is doing and clicking the box (of course) switches to that program. Because of this I haven’t felt the need to move my taskbar from its default position.
One other thing is that the default ZIP extractor works well…and automatically opens an Explorer window showing you the extracted files when its done (this is another thing the Mac was already doing). This is going to make it much easier for people who sell software over the internet to support it (see the “Behind the Dumb” videos on this channel for an instructive example).
And this may sound stupid, but I like the name. Windows 7. Why? Because it’s the seventh major version of Windows. I’m getting kind of sick of companies naming their software in such a way that you can’t tell which version is more recent than which (and Apple is quite guilty of this). And don’t try to tell me what I’m supposed to think (or worse, feel) when I use the software, just tell me what goddamn version it is.
Things I don’t like? The Search function is too much like Vista’s for my liking, but I can live with it. Um…let’s see…anything else…uh…I can’t think of anything else right now. That’s how good it is – I’ve got exactly one minor gripe so far.
So (sigh) I guess I’ll be upgrading when it comes out.
Do you still need to babysit the install, i.e. does it ask, smack in the middle, to select keyboard preferences and type in some reg code etc? Or have they checked what most linux installs do and move all that junk to the beginning or the end?
You know, I don’t recall if the settings were at the end or not. It didn’t seem that different from previous installs (except for the pretty) so they probably didn’t change it that much.
IIRC, it asked some basic things at the beginning and at the end – the key at the end.
I tried Windows 7 for a couple of weeks, and I installed the x64 version. In the end I got a lot of little problems, some of which didn’t have any workarounds, and I’m not sure what was the main reason – the x64 thing or the Windows 7 thing.
I ended up returning to XP, and – oh boy, what a great feeling I got after installing everything I need without any problems, without any need to worship the gods of binary realms and sacrificing time on the altar of workarounds.
But yeah, Windows 7 is a major step ahead of Vista. If I get 98% compatibility (x64 or x86, doesn’t matter) I will totally upgrade.
By the way, Viridian, did you install the x64 or x86 version?