Windows 7 RTM review

Windows 7 RTM review

Since I have a subscription to Microsoft developer network (MSDN) – I have a *legal* copy of Windows 7 Ultimate – and the other day I stuck it on my HP laptop to play with it.  Here’s my quick first review

The Good:

  • Faster – yes, it’s faster.  I even installed the 64-bit version on my laptop with 2gb ram, and it’s quite noticeably faster than Vista 32 was on the same machine for opening apps, switching apps, etc.
  • Driver updating/problem fixing – was really impressed during installation how efficiently it found, downloaded, and installed drivers for everything on my machine – and it really worked.  I didn’t have to go to 50 different websites and download custom drivers.  It did it on its own automatically.
  • UAC improved – Scalable user account control (UAC) notifications.  Finally – I ranted about how busted and stupid this was on Vista, and they’ve FINALLY fixed it – mostly.  You can tell the thing if YOU clicked something that it’s OK to run it.  It still pops up – but not nearly as much
  • Built in ISO burning tool – it’s not fancy or feature rich – but is functional.  Might get you out of a bind burning patch dvd’s or the like – but it’s sure no nero.  Why haven’t they got mount iso as drive yet? For heavens sakes every OS has this built in now but windows…
  • Windows Media Center – I like the cleaner interface and they did a great job with setting up TV stations with my tuner.  But it’s still a little clunky to use while watching a movie.  Without a remote, you have to scroll past movie info and some other menus to get to the ‘take me to root dvd menu’ selection.  Dumb – I’ll be doing that 100x more often than wondering what the name of my movie I’M CURRENTLY WATCHING is.

The bad:

  • Busted DVD playback – Whenever I watch movies with Windows Media Player, I get pink garbage all over my screen and the whole desktop flickers horribly.  If I watch it in  Windows Media Center – it’s fine.  I am updated to the latest nVidia driver for my nVidia 7200 Go.  Yes, the driver is still officially beta – so we’ll see – but man – it’s busted right now.
  • No classic start menu – you HAVE to use the Vista-style start menu.  No, no, no!  Wrong Microsoft.  I finally realized why this is wrong after using Win7 for a few days – answer: muscle memory.  With the Vista-sytle menu, you get a ‘last N programs run’ list to choose from, or if the program isn’t on the list – you have to click the Programs submenu to get the list of all your installed apps – TWO clicks just to find your app – a third to start it.  Problem is, the position of the programs on the ‘last N programs’ list move around constantly as you start various apps.  You can’t rely on muscle memory to pick your app or remember where it is.  You click start, have to LOOK through the whole list to see if your program is there, then possibly click Programs to get to the next page of apps which are laid out alphabetically and as you remember them.
    The time to start an average app is now more than doubled for me and I usually have to click twice as many times as before.  So, I created a folder on my desktop with my apps on them, and start them that way because my muscle memory automatically gets me 90% to the app I want when the folder opens – because they don’t move around.  Now how stupid is that for trying to work around this problem?  They removed the ‘Use classic menus’ option – which was in the betas.  If I’d known they were going to drop classic, I would have raised holy hell.
    Another point about the ‘last N apps used’ – I don’t know what algorithm it uses to put those apps on my start menu – but it seems like a dyslexic monkey is picking them.  I for the life of me can’t figure out why firefox never seems to get on the list (which I use daily), but the solitaire I ran one time is still on there…
  • Snap to edge/fullscreen.  If you drag your app to the edge of the screen – it often tries to make it go fullscreen or fill half-screen.  I found this really annoying.  Maybe I’ll get used to it – but more likely I’ll be searching for the way to turn it off.  I can’t wait to see how many noobies get apps stuck all over the place now.  This is as dumb as allowing folks to resize their start bars and end up with half the screen covered with grey start bar without knowing how to fix it. Really – this feature helps how?
  • Still has OS hickups – know those annoying long pauses you get for no reason?  While they seem to happen much less often than with any version of Windows yet, they didn’t entirely go away and you find yourself waiting for apps to come back to life while you twiddle your thumbs.

The Ugly:

  • Pinning items to taskbar – just admit that you’re trying to do the Mac bar and get it over with.  Unfortunately, this thing is more confusing to use and definitely doesn’t look as good as the Mac version.  I say you wouldn’t NEED pin to taskbar if your stupid start menu worked right.  It’s admitting that one or the other isn’t working right – isn’t it?  Yet your solution is to straddle the fence and continue to do both poorly – which looks terrible.  Classic Microsoft design.  Get rid of one or the other and do the remaining one right.
  • No more ‘classic’ anything – You can’t switch back to classic Control Panel, or classic folder views, or many other ‘classic’ controls.  The Action Center thing keeps track of all the security and update things that need to happen (nice), but you have to do all kinds of twiddling to get to any under-the-hood controls.  Yeah, maybe it’s easier for noobies, but I really doubt it.  You just put a smiley face and an extra layer of indirection on the same stuff.  That is different than fixing the problem.  If there is a problem – the OS should do everything in it’s power to solve it for you without asking or bothering you unless it absolutely has to.  I should never have to fight the OS to do my work – the OS should fight for me.
    This is a fundamental difference between Apple and Microsoft.  MS will hit you with dialogs that really, honestly, don’t help you solve the problem – but just tell you all about the problem and maybe enough info for the person to Google a solution.  Apple carefully removes features so that it will often pick a solution for you based on the smaller data set and do it – without asking.  Yeah, it’s a bit more draconian, but I’d rather have the OS do that – and then give you the power user tools to go change it by hand if you care – than having tons of knobs and tubes and covering it with a nice sheet so it doesn’t look so bad while still not actually solving your problems.   With Win7 you feel as if you walked through all kinds of fluffy menus that seem to take you twice as long to get to the darn thing you want.

Verdict: C+
It’s a good effort – good improvements – and a then a few steps back on usability.  It was telling when I did a bios update and it somehow nuked my RAID setup – requiring me to reinstall.  I had both a Windows Vista Ultimate x64 DVD and Windows 7 Ultimate x64 DVD sitting on my desk.  I thought for a minute, and picked up Vista Ultimate for re-install.  For all the goodness of Win7, I still prefer Vista right now.  If they fix some of these UI features, I’ll switch.  Till then – I’ll probably wait till Win7 SP1.

One thought on “Windows 7 RTM review

  1. I like the start menu and pinning just like they are! If you have lots of programs installed, hunting through a hierarchical menu is not practical. Much easier to just type a few letters and have Windows find it for you. But if you want to do it the old way, just click the “All programs” link at the bottom of the start pop-up window. And as for the pinning, I like it much better than the Mac dock (which I set to “auto hide” when I’m using a Mac). The Win7 approach nicely joins running programs and pinned programs together into a unified view that is less cluttered than the Mac approach.

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