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Windows 7 Official Release Date Announced
Posted on June 2nd, 2009 No commentsYesterday, I posted a blog entry and sent out a newsletter that discussed Windows 7 and speculated that it would be released sometime this fall. Well, turns out my speculation was spot-on, as today, Microsoft has officially announced the release date to be October 22nd, 2009. This date is 3 months ahead of schedule and puts it out just in time for the holiday season. Find out more here.
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Finally, A Replacement for Vista and XP
Posted on June 1st, 2009 No commentsIt looks like Windows 7 is coming out very soon! Microsoft released the Release Candidate of Windows 7 last month and usually when they do this, the final release comes out 3-5 months later. I downloaded and installed the Release Candidate for Windows 7, which is publicly available to anyone who wishes to try it out (I do not recommend doing so on production computers).
The download should be available until at least June 2009. The software, however, is time-bomb trial-ware which will disable itself on June 1, 2010.
I installed it on my main desktop computer onto a secondary partition and configured it in such a way that it dual boots both my primary/production Vista OS and my Windows 7 Release Candidate OS. I have been playing around with it for about 2 weeks off and on. I can say that this new operating system will finally be a replacement for Windows Vista and Windows XP. I can tell the difference in performance and usability, even on the same machine, when doing similar tasks in both Vista and 7. It is stable, solid, clean, and feels very fast. It uses a lot less hardware resources than Vista or even XP and puts all the computing power at the forefront for the user’s disposal rather than using it all up for its own thing. It resembles Vista a bit, and was built on the Vista core, but feels less flashy and more modest. Applications that run on Vista should run on Windows 7, and hardware that runs Vista will run Windows 7. There are also several compatibility options for Windows XP-era applications as well.
One of the goals of Microsoft was to improve the performance from Vista, and they have addressed this by both increasing the speed of the OS and by developing features that help the user operate more efficiently.
Overall, Microsoft worked on providing a fundamentally secure platform, helping secure anywhere access, protecting users and infrastructure, and helping protect data.There are many new features to explore, but here is a quick bullet point list of some of the highlights:
- Improved desktop search
- Internet Explorer 8 for improved Internet security
- DirectAccess (automatically connect remote workstations to Windows Server 2008)
- BranchCache (used to sync files between corporate and branch offices)
- Improved BitLocker (drive encryption)
- BitLocker To Go (encrypt portable devices such as USB keys)
- Built-in Biometric support
- Improved taskbar
- Improved device management
- Better compatibility for both hardware and software
- Windows Touch (for touch screen enabled monitors)
- Tight integration with Windows Live online services
- Remote media streaming
- PlayTo
- Windows Media Center improvements
Before the Release Candidate was released, Microsoft fixed over 2,000 bugs that were reported by beta testers (including me). With the success of the Release Candidate, I have already decided that I will be upgrading to Windows 7 on both my production workstation and my laptop as soon as it comes to market. I’m not even worried about application compatibility or hardware compatibility as all of my applications already work fine in the RC and anything that runs in Vista should run in Windows 7 with no problems. My computers will feel like new computers again with the performance, reliability, stability, security enhancements that Windows 7 offers over XP or Vista.
Additional Microsoft Resources
Videos: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/videos.aspx
Windows 7 Home: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/default.aspx
New Features: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/whats-new.aspx


