| `Feedback` Drives Vista improvement |
| Written by nwhite | |||
| Saturday, 29 July 2006 15:28 | |||
'Feedback' Drives Vista improvement
ReadAs we come into the home stretch in the Windows Vista development cycle, we’ve got a lot of stuff left to do to make this the best Windows release ever. As we do this, we wanted to take a moment to thank you for your feedback and give you an idea of the ways you’re helping. We’ve gotten feedback from all types of people – general consumers, IT Professionals, enthusiasts – you name it -- from all around the world. Some of the development teams came to me and asked that we share a sampling of the changes that we’ve made based on your feedback. While some of these changes may seem small, when you realize that they will affect hundreds of millions of people -- and in some cases, those people will notice the benefit every time they use the operating system -- well, in all it’s really pretty awesome. Here are just a few of the changes we’ve implemented as a direct result of your feedback from Beta 2. Many of these changes are in recent post-Beta 2 builds, and all will definitely be included in our RC-1 release. From the shell team, changes to Explorer include:
wannabegeek.org 'Feedback' Drives Vista improvementAccording to a posting on Windows Vista Team Blog the feed back received from all walk of Vista testers has seen the workload on changes increase but should lead to better than expected first release of the long awaited and much publically slated OS. from a personal point of view any improvement the general using public can influence in development is testament to Microsoft and shows they are not the cumbersome inflexible globalisation everybody believes. ReadAs we come into the home stretch in the Windows Vista development cycle, we’ve got a lot of stuff left to do to make this the best Windows release ever. As we do this, we wanted to take a moment to thank you for your feedback and give you an idea of the ways you’re helping. We’ve gotten feedback from all types of people – general consumers, IT Professionals, enthusiasts – you name it -- from all around the world. Some of the development teams came to me and asked that we share a sampling of the changes that we’ve made based on your feedback. While some of these changes may seem small, when you realize that they will affect hundreds of millions of people -- and in some cases, those people will notice the benefit every time they use the operating system -- well, in all it’s really pretty awesome. Here are just a few of the changes we’ve implemented as a direct result of your feedback from Beta 2. Many of these changes are in recent post-Beta 2 builds, and all will definitely be included in our RC-1 release. From the shell team, changes to Explorer include:
Next, while we continue to work on overall system search performance, we’ve made some pretty cool changes to it for this cycle:
Sharing and networking has changed for the better in the following ways:
Global control for enabling/disabling file sharing · Added a drop-down of user accounts to the sharing wizard. This will now link to your Active Directory listings or else show other accounts on the same PC · Improved dialog box that helps you determine what type of network (public/private) you are on · Text updates for links in left pane · Improved usability for "not connected" state · When connecting to a network, you should see: · Improved detection of existing connection · No UAC elevation when connecting to a wireless connection · Access to Properties for networks with saved settings now available via the right-click menu · The Network Explorer has a number of changes that will help with device discovery. It also features default icons for a number of network device classes such as media players, Xbox, projectors, etc. · The Network System Tray is now easier to see and has been changed to give more “clickable area” around the icon itself Finally, for those folks with multiple users on the same PC, we’ve added support for per-user MIME types The Windows Media Center team has been hard at work too. They have:
One thing to check out: When using an Xbox 360 as a Media Center Extender, the remote experience is now full-fidelity. It looks and performs exactly like you’re using the PC. Our security teams have also been listening to you. The System Integrity team has simplified the “out-of-the-box” Windows BitLocker user interface. Its new UI now makes it much, much easier for a Windows Vista Ultimate user to be able to setup BitLocker on TPM 1.2-enabled hardware. The administrator of an Enterprise edition system still has access to all of the features and functionality that BitLocker supports through scripting and command line tools. Finally, we’ve gotten lots of great feedback on User Account Control. This is definitely a big feature for this release as far as security goes, and here’s how we’re making it better post-Beta 2:
Task Manager launches right away and allows the user to elevate later
Whew, that's quite a list! Like I said, we’re all hard at work delivering the best version of Windows yet, so please don’t stop sending us feedback. Your suggestions could end up affecting hundreds of millions of people! Whew, that's quite a list! Like I said, we’re all hard at work delivering the best version of Windows yet, so please don’t stop sending us feedback. Your suggestions could end up affecting hundreds of millions of people!
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