New Features in Windows 7
Windows 7, in all of its various
flavors, won't be available in stores until October 22. But,
Microsoft announced the availability of a 90-day free trial
of Windows 7 Enterprise. That gives you an almost 2 month
jumpstart to either start taking advantage of new features
of Windows 7, or to test out Windows 7 to decide if you want
to make the switch when it becomes available.
Here are a few of the top new features that I think make it
worth your time to take advantage of the Windows 7 90-day
trial.
Action Center. Microsoft introduced the Windows Security
Center feature in Windows XP. Windows 7 renames it as the
Action Center and expands the scope of information provided.
The Windows 7 Action Center notifies you about
security-related issues, but also provides a
one-stop-shopping view of system status and maintenance
concerns.
Blu-Ray support. In case you haven't gotten the memo, the
hi-def DVD war is over and Blu-Ray won. Blu-Ray drives
aren't ubiquitous just yet, but more and more PC and laptop
manufacturer are including Blu-Ray players and recorders in
systems. Windows 7 provides native support for reading and
writing to Blu-ray discs.
Device stage. Adding new hardware is often a frustrating and
confusing exercise with Windows. Windows 7 includes a
feature called Device Stage to simplify the process. Device
Stage provides a single console for managing devices such as
printers, webcams, and mobile phones. Device Stage can be
customized by the device vendor, so the information and
functionality available for a given device will vary from
one vendor to another.
BitLocker-to-Go. Microsoft introduced BitLocker Disk
Encryption in Windows Vista .The initial version could only
encrypt the drive volume that housed the Windows operating
system, but with Service Pack 1 Microsoft extended BitLocker
so that other drives and volumes on the system could be
protected as well. With Windows 7 BitLocker goes one step
farther by adding BitLocker-to-Go for encrypting data on USB
thumb drives and other removable media.
Aero Peek. At first I thought this was just silly eye candy.
After using Windows 7 for awhile I have discovered just how
useful Aero Peek can be. Rather than fishing through all of
the tabs on the Taskbar trying to find the program or
instance you need, you can view thumbnails of open instances
by simply hovering over the item on the Taskbar. Moving the
mouse to hover over a thumbnail image brings that instance
up to full screen view for closer inspection. It may be a
little thing, but it's a little thing that helps me work
more efficiently.
Aero Snap. The same thing goes for Aero Snap. My initial
response was ‘cool gee-whiz factor, but who cares?' Now I
find it invaluable for working with programs. I can quickly
maximize and minimize windows just by dragging them. The
part that really helps me is the ability to automatically
resize a window to occupy only the left or right half of the
screen by dragging it to one side or the other. I frequently
work with two windows side by side and used to have to
manually resize the windows to accomplish the same thing.
Jump Lists. Windows users are probably familiar with the
concept of Recent Items. The Recent Items link is in the
Start Menu and provides quick access to the last 10 or so
files that had been accessed. I relied on Recent Items so I
could easily re-open documents I was actively working on
without having to navigate to them the long way. Recent
Items only displayed certain programs or file types though
and files would quickly cycle off of the Recent Items list.
Jump Lists takes the Recent Items concept and applies it on
a program by program basis. Now I have an easily accessible
list of recently opened files for Word, Excel, Quicken,
Windows Media Player, etc. Definite timesaver.
DirectAccess. I haven't had a chance to play with this one
personally, but I think it is a huge feature and arguably
the most compelling reason for businesses to look at Windows
7. DirectAccess provides a bi-directional connection between
the internal network and roaming Windows 7 clients as long
as they have a live Internet connection. That means the user
can access system resources, and IT admins can manage remote
systems as if the Windows 7 system was on the internal
network and without the need for a VPN connection.
DirectAccess requires Windows Server 2008 R2 as well, but
organizations that might be interested should take advantage
of the 90-day trial to see what DirectAccess can do for
them.
Tony Bradley is an information security and unified
communications expert with more than a decade of enterprise
IT experience. He tweets as @PCSecurityNews and provides
tips, advice and reviews on information security and unified
communications technologies on his site at tonybradley.com.
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