FruitRocks 0 Report post Posted August 19, 2009 Here's a comparison between the different OS options and what I thought of the Windows 7 RTM install (I get it early because I'm an MSDN subscriber (: ) Note: Windows 7 Home Basic and Windows 7 Starter are only available to OEM's and more developing countries(India, Iraq, etc). edit: these editions are also available to MSDN subscribers. more info can be found here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/products/windows Windows 7 Home Premium: Don't go for 7 Ultimate if all you are interest in are media features. The only thing that it doesn't include is Windows XP mode, and you need certain hardware to achieve it (although you can easily use Windows XP in VMWARE, or even Virtual PC). It also does not include Bitlocker and AppLocker, with no enhanced backup features. You can't switch between languages even if your OS has been installed. Windows 7 Professional: As it says, mostly for businesses or for people who don't want the features of Home Premium, but want the features for Professional (or for those who cant get an Enterprise copy of it). It includes Windows XP mode and Bitlocker support, with "company connect" or whatever its called. Windows 7 Ultimate: As it says, it is the "ultimate" version of Windows 7 (well, not really. read the details for the "Enterprise" edition). It includes everything that Home Premium and Professional has. THERE IS ALSO NO DREAMSCENE, OR WINDOWS ULTIMATE EXTRAS. DO NOT GET THIS UNLESS YOU ACTUALLY NEED THE FEATURES OF HOME PREMIUM AND PROFESSIONAL!! GET HOME PREMIUM IF YOU ARE THE AVERAGE HOME USER OR GAMER! Windows 7 Enterprise: Basically the "Ultimate" verision of Windows because it includes unlimited licensing and a few enterprise goodies (like enhanced remote connections, etc.) Attached is a photograph of the desktop and a few other pictures of the OS (Opens in PowerPoint; you need PowerPoint or the PowerPoint viewer). Enterprise is only available to OEM's and My thoughts: Install: I did a clean install of Windows Vista Home Premium to 7 Enterprise. I did not actually do it from a DVD, I experimented and tryed installing the OS from MagicDisc (a free virtual DVD-ROM Drive Creator). The install took about half an hour (compared to Vista's, which was about an hour). The Install went a lot like Vista's (meaning how it looked, not Blue Screen of Death P: ). First Impression: It starts up with a Windows 7 logo, and then takes about 5-10 minutes to detect the hardware. All of mine was detected and installed automictacally (excluding the Belkin F5D7050 Wireless USB stick, which is to be expected because it didn't have great Vista support in the first place). Unlike Vista which hogged a lot of my CPU resources, I couldn't even hear my CPU and graphics card spin, because on Vista I could hear them for about 10 minutes going on and off even in another room. You'll notice there is no sidebar gadget (thankfully). The desktop always stays beutiful because applications never switch back from Aero to Vista Basic. Turning off the annoyning UAC control can be easily done by going to getting started- uac settings there is also no welcome center Pre-Installed Applications: Paint has improved a lot. Instead of the old, ugly theme, it now looks identical to Office 2010's UI. It also has easier navigation. New Text Document App: Again, it looks a lot like Office 2010's UI. edit: open up your pics in the default picture editor that your computer uses (should be in .png). i may add more for requests of what each OS looks like. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
k_nitin_r 8 Report post Posted August 21, 2009 Hello there!I've tried the Paint program in Microsoft Windows 7 and it definitely is a long overdue upgrade that Microsoft has provided to the one graphics program that everyone has and talks about, but nobody uses!Paint in Microsoft Windows 7 is capable of working with most common graphic formats and gives you basic image editing, such as Crop and Rotate. Crop in the previous versions of Paint was a work-around.... you had to drag the picture so that the upper left of your image was beyond the boundaries of the canvas and then you had to drag the little dot on the lower right of the canvas to the point where you want to crop the image. I'm glad they finally gave it a face-lift, though they've got a lot more work to do on it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
eastofsorrow 0 Report post Posted September 16, 2009 Windows Seven would be the greatest OS for a while. I really support it . It is both efficient and eye-catching. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites