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Vista
Forever
After
five years in development, MICROSOFT'S new operating system
is finally about to hit the street. Is it a keeper?
By Peter Lewis
February
23, 2007
[continued,
page 2]
Searching
Vista’s
Flip 3D shows all the open windows in a fanned-out, playing-card
view, sort of like the 3-D album covers view in Apple’s
iTunes. It saves time and makes navigating your desktop easier
and a bit more fun. Navigating within the hard disk is also
much improved with the new Windows Explorer, the graphical
interface for finding and organizing directories, folders
and files. Live icons are a nice improvement too: Instead
of static icons, like the W for Word files or E for Excel
spreadsheets, you’ll see little thumbnails of what’s
in documents without opening them. The new search feature
is woven throughout all Vista applications and is a huge improvement
over its counterpart in Windows XP, and sort of like Apple’s…well,
you get the idea.
Security
Microsoft
has recycled the Windows XP line “Most secure Windows
ever” for Vista, and it’s true. The core code,
or kernel, has been barricaded to prevent rogue software from
commandeering your computer. As a result, though, Vista may
drive you crazy with warnings every time you install a new
program, download a file, or otherwise mess with your system.
The new User Account Protection requires entering a password
for various actions, which, along with a feature called Windows
Defender, keeps out (in theory) viruses, Trojan horses, spyware,
phishing attacks, and other nasty programs. Even so, Microsoft’s
built-in firewalls and other protections still fall short—no
anti-malware program is perfect—and I strongly recommend
adding a third-party security program like Symantec’s
forthcoming Vista version of Norton Internet Security. The
Vista Ultimate and Vista Enterprise versions have built-in
BitLocker Drive Encryption, which keeps data safe and private
even if you leave your laptop in the taxi. Ultimate users
can store their BitLocker passwords on a secure Microsoft
server, just in case.
Memory
Another snazzy
feature, especially for laptops or desktop machines with limited
memory, is ReadyBoost. Just plug in a USB 2.0 flash memory
stick (say, a $50, one-gigabyte device), and Vista uses that
memory to speed PC performance.
Fun
Stuff
Vista has improved
versions of Windows Media Player and Windows Movie Maker,
and new applications like Windows Photo Gallery and Windows
DVD Maker. Better alternatives exist from third-party software
developers, and Vista can’t touch Apple’s creative
software apps (iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, etc.) for ease of use
and tight integration. But for built-in Windows programs,
Vista tops XP.
The good and not-so-good
news is that for all the changes in Vista—most under
the hood—it will be mostly familiar to users of earlier
versions of Widows. That means that some users will see Vista
simply as Windows XP with lipstick and Botox. The Home Basic
version, in particular, even does without the lipstick.
Vista is definitely
not the end of the line for Windows; there’s plenty
more to do to make it run better. But just as the nuclear
carrier George H.W. Bush is the end of the line for Nimitz-class
warships—which first took to sea in 1975, the same year
Bill Gates and Paul Allen started Microsoft—it may be
time for Microsoft to say hasta la vista to big, multiyear,
complex software projects. It has to move faster to keep up
with changes in today’s computing world, where more
people will link to the Internet through cellphones than through
desktop PCs. It could lose customers to a new generation of
browser-based applications that don’t rely on any particular
operating systems. Google is clearly Microsoft’s biggest
challenger in such systems. It has to move faster to keep
up with Apple, which has fewer programming resources yet cranks
out innovative annual upgrades to an operating system that,
like Windows, now runs on Intel-based PCs. And with most computer
growth coming from emerging countries, Windows has to compete
with Linux, a rapidly growing, community-built operating system
that is cheaper than Windows, but less easy to use.
On top of all that,
it has to compete against Windows XP, the current version
of Windows, which Microsoft will continue to sell for another
year. Many of the features touted in Vista are available for
XP through third-party programs. Even the forthcoming 2007
version of Microsoft Office will run on XP.
Bottom line: Microsoft’s
Windows Vista delivers better security and usability, from
the home to the road to the enterprise. But since you’ve
already waited five years for it, it won’t hurt to wait
a little bit longer, until it’s time to buy your next
PC.
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