Windows 7 RC First Impressions: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Windows 7 Release Candidate: The Good Adrian Kingsley-Hughes
With the Windows 7 Release Candidate (Windows 7 Build 7100) leaked to torrents late last month and now officially available to the public for download, it's finally possible for us to get a look at what Microsoft's new OS will be like when it's finally released to what appears to be an eagerly awaiting tech community.
With the ISO downloads in hand, I've been busy installing and using the Release Candidate code on a number of systems and can bring you my "no holds barred" list of Windows 7's "the good, the bad, and the ugly" features.
Let's begin by looking at the good side of Windows 7, and let's kick off our analysis of the "good" by looking at what I think is the best feature of Windows 7: performance.
One of the biggest complaints leveled at Windows Vista at the time it launched was that the performance it delivered was abysmal. In fact, in almost every benchmark test carried out, XP easily beat Vista.
Not only was the OS a drag on performance, but the first wave of graphics card and chipset drivers from the major OEMs delivered abysmal performance, which dragged down benchmark scores for games. This meant that the OS seriously burned the earlier adopters who made the leap to Vista.
Bad reviews of Vista on blogs and forums quickly followed and the operating system was permanently tarnished. From that point onward, nothing that Microsoft could do to the OS could change how many saw the OS.
Testing shows that a post SP1 installation of Vista is usually faster than XP SP3 on a similarly specced machine, but there's an entrenched code of Windows users who totally refuse to believe this.
To make sure that history didn't repeat itself, Microsoft made performance top priority in the development of Windows 7. And it worked.
Even the earliest code to leak out of Microsoft showed that Windows 7 could outpace Vista, and with each subsequent build that was leaked we saw an improvement in performance.
When it comes to the final release of Windows 7 (and don't ask me when this will be, I don't yet have a clue), I won't have any performance-related worries when I upgrade systems.
Now I don't want to leave you with the impression that there's nothing more to Windows 7 than a performance boost. There's a lot more to like in Windows 7. For example, the new user interface. When Microsoft released Vista, the feeling that I and many others had was that the UI changes represented a change for the sake of change, and that they did nothing to improve the user experience or make the OS easier to navigate.
I don't feel that way about the Windows 7 UI, and while I do have a few gripes about the new UI, overall I think that it's a marked improvement over both the Vista UI and that of XP.
Then there's backward compatibility. When users moved from XP to vista, there was a very good chance that the move would necessitate the purchase of some new bit of software of hardware (or both).
Since Windows 7 is built on core technologies introduced in Vista, the compatibility speed bump is much smaller and most users will be able to upgrade without having to spend money on new hardware or software.
And finally, there's the new "XP Mode" feature that was unveiled last week. This feature will allow users of Windows 7 Ultimate and Enterprise to have access to a Windows XP SP3 virtual machine to run any software that's not compatible with the new OS. While I'm sure this feature won't end all compatibility issues, it could be quite interesting.