Windows 7 to get 2,000 bug fixes pointed out by testers

Microsoft has been a bit lax in communicating with beta testers of its Windows 7 operating system who have reported problems or bugs to the company — according to some of the testers, anyway. Well, apparently they’ve been really busy! Steven Sinofsky, senior vice president for the Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group at Microsoft, has just directly addressed the issue of bugs in a blog post, noting some pretty astounding figures. First, he says that over 2,000 bugs will be fixed in the release version of Win 7 because of feedback from the over 10 million downloaders of the beta OS, which ended on February 10th. Sinofsky says that at peak times in January, Microsoft was receiving one feedback report every fifteen seconds for a week straight, and has, to date, gotten over 500,000 of them. He assures testers that the company reads and considers every email and comment received. Hit the read links to find his entire post, as well as an update detailing of some of the fixes that are on the way!

[Via Daily Tech]

Read – Some changes since beta for the RC
Read – Feedback and engineering Windows 7

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Windows 7 to get 2,000 bug fixes pointed out by testers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 17:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Vista, Server 2008 SP2 officially Release Candidate status, coming Q2 2009

Well that didn’t take long. Just last week, we heard about the Release Candidate (RC) builds of Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 Service Pack 2 making the rounds, and now the official Windows blog has confirmed the updates should soon be available to TechNet and MSDN subscribers, with a public test to follow sometimes before its final release. And when might that be? Sometime in second quarter of this year apparently, which fits well with some rumblings we caught wind of last month.

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Windows Vista, Server 2008 SP2 officially Release Candidate status, coming Q2 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 07:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows 7 shipping this Fall… according to Compal, anyway

While Steve Ballmer himself declared that Windows Mobile 7 would be coming out next year, we’ve got a somewhat less reliable source suggesting that the desktop version of Win7 will be landing this fall. Ray Chen, president of Taipei-based Compal Electronics, was quoted as saying that “according to current planning,” Windows 7 should be on its machines by “late September or early October.” For those unaware, Compal is responsible for crafting HP and Acer laptops, and honestly, we’re not exactly sure how this bigwig secured these dates. Of course, it stands to reason that everyone else in the industry is either 1) clueless or 2) just better at keeping secrets. For what it’s worth, we’re taking this with a huge spoon of salt, and just between us, you should probably do the same.

[Via Electronista]

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Windows 7 shipping this Fall… according to Compal, anyway originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Feb 2009 00:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Ballmer pounds chest, decrees Windows Mobile 7 coming next year

Sure, we’re still anticipating — but not necessarily merrily — the release of Windows Mobile 6.5, but for those who wish to look even farther into the future, Microsoft head honcho Steve Ballmer said in a conference call this week that WinMo 7 will be out sometime next year. That jibes pretty well with what we’ve heard from Motorola and ZDNet before, although there’s probably a dozen or so known unknowns that could push it well into 2011 or beyond. For now, however, we’re willing to take Steve at his word. Hey, at least they’re not gearing up for a Windows Mobile 6.75 in the interim… right?

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Steve Ballmer pounds chest, decrees Windows Mobile 7 coming next year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 18:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Safari 4 First Impressions

We’ve spent a little bit of time checking out Safari 4 Beta on both Windows and Mac, and here’s what we like (and don’t like) so far:

Windows
On Windows, if you’ve never used Safari but used Chrome or Opera, it’ll actually feel a lot like that, with the overhead tabs, Speed Dial, and even a few Chrome icons. After years of shunning standard Windows UI elements—which seemed especially dicky in a way, given how anal Apple can be about standardized UI themselves—Apple is actually playing nice. It’s got the usual minimize, maximize and exit buttons, standard fonts and even real Windows shortcuts like Ctrl+Tab to cycle through tabs, so it actually mostly feels like it belongs on Windows now. Well, except for placing the X to kill tabs on the left side, which is annoying ’cause on Windows it should be on the right.

I’m still not quite sure how I feel about the pitch black look of the top tabs in Windows when the window is maximized if your default window color is one of the darker shades—yeah, it matches, but I think Chrome’s approach, with blue tabs set down a little bit that are easy to distinguish, works a little better. Overall, I think I prefer the tabs on top, at least in Windows. What I love for sure is that there’s an actual arrow on the right side which you grab to tear off the tab into a new window—which results in a cool little pop-out animation, like it was a squished up sponge or something—because I’m always accidentally tearing off tabs in Firefox when I just wanted to move it down the line.

Speed is actually not incredibly important in a way—loading sites like ESPN, the New York Times and Slate against Firefox 3.0.6 and Chrome 1.0.154, honestly, they’re all pretty damn quick, averaging around 3 seconds, though on super-Javascript heavy pages Safari 4 and Chrome, both based on Webkit, perceptibly edge out Firefox.

Top Sites is pretty slow to load the first time you fire up Safari 4, but then it’s instant. You can’t manually add sites—it’s automagical—and once you delete ’em they’re gone. A star pops up in the top right corner when there’s something new at that page, which is a nice touch. Cover Flow moves smoothly, at first, but can get jerky if trying to move through a ton of sites at once. I hate how it replaces what ever site you’re looking at if you just click the icon—you have to make a icon or middle-click so it does load over whatever you’re lookin’ at.

The smart search bar brings up suggestions from Google much faster than Firefox does, but the actual address bar is nowhere near as brilliant. It only pulls suggestions using the main part of the URL (before .com or .net or whatever), not from anything after a slash, or even the page’s title. For instance, if you start typing “giz” and you’ve been to Gizmodo, it’ll bring up Gizmodo. But typing Safari, even if you’ve been to Apple’s Safari pages, won’t bring up anything since it’s not safari.com. As some have noted, the blue progress is gone, which is annoying, but I didn’t notice it initially if that tells you anything.

Full search history seems like the crowning navigational jewel here. It actually searches the text of websites you’ve visited, and even with fifty or so pages in my history so far, it’s really fast and works well. I just wish it made it more clear where on the page the text was located before you click, and how many instances there were, though otherwise the use of Cover Flow is nice.

It gobbles resources in Windows: With 14 tabs open, it ate over 400MB of RAM.

Overall, I think it’s a lot more Windows-friendly than the initial Windows versions of Safari, and its excellent performance (if your system can stand up to its resource consumption) actually makes it worth taking a look at again if you didn’t like it originally (I sure as hell didn’t). It doesn’t have the Mr. Fantastic-style extendability of Firefox and it’s not quite as stripped down as Chrome, but it tries to balance between feature rich and clean, and doesn’t do a bad job.


Mac
Despite its Windows improvements, the new UI does look much better on OS X overall—the new tabs on top look works really well, I think, though its break with a more standard OS X layout might vastly annoy some people. Also History and Cover Flow look and feel more natural on Mac too.

Another Mac perk: Multitouch zooming, which lets you manipulate the new full-page zoom with iPhone pinch gestures. It’s not silky smooth, but definitely slick—it’s actually a lot like browsing a page on the iPhone, especially if you’re using two-finger scroll to pan and stuff.

Speed difference between Safari 4 and Firefox is a bit more noticeable in OS X. It doesn’t kill Firefox, but there’s definitely a difference. Cover Flow runs more smoothly, from what I’m seeing, without the jerkiness I got on Windows sometimes, though full history search isn’t any quicker—but that’s still plenty fast. It does use resources more efficiently in OS X than in Windows: Those same 14 tabs only ate about 230MB of memory.

While it’s hard to speak to stability yet and whether or not you should use it as your main browser, it seems okay so far and the new features and UI make it worth grabbing, even if you wanna hang on to a more stable build of Safari or Firefox in the meantime.

Microsoft gets big support for Mobile Broadband enhancements in Windows 7

Just in case Microsoft hadn’t locked down enough support for Windows Mobile at MWC last week, the company also managed to shake hands with a slew of PC makers in order to extend support for Mobile Broadband enhancements within Windows 7. It’s still quite unclear what all this means, but we’re guessing that the likes of Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP and Fujitsu will happily support WWAN modules from Huawei, Option, Qualcomm, Sierra Wireless and ZTE. The writeup also gives us reason to believe that WWAN connections will be more tightly integrated than before, possibly even showing up alongside potential WiFi hotspots when looking for a wireless connection. At any rate, we’re all about getting a signal regardless of location, so we’ll take this as a definite positive despite the glaring dearth of details.

[Thanks, Jacob]

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Microsoft gets big support for Mobile Broadband enhancements in Windows 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 05:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Telstra exec’s stolen WinMo 6.5-equipped HTC phone remotely wiped?

Remember that Windows Mobile 6.5-equipped HTC phone that was stolen from the Telstra exec at MWC? Well it looks like you can forget about any hands-on videos popping up — to quote the immortal words of Will Smith from Men in Black, the device has apparently been flashy thing’d, from afar. According to an anonymous Microsoft staffer speaking to APC, the company remotely wiped all traces of the operating system and user data from the mobile as soon as it was reported pickpocketed, so unless the thief was smart enough to immediately place it in a faraday cage, this phone’s probably a bit too frazzled for the limelight right now.

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Telstra exec’s stolen WinMo 6.5-equipped HTC phone remotely wiped? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Feb 2009 17:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Helpful Tip: Disable UAC Prompt for an Application

This article was written on January 03, 2008 by CyberNet.

Microsoft has obviously observed the request from users to bypass the User Account Control (UAC) prompts for specific applications. Just a few days ago they posted instructions on how to get around UAC prompts and a per application basis.

I decided to give this a whirl, and I can say first hand that it does work. There’s just one thing…it’s not quite as simple as a few clicks. The first time you go through the instructions it will probably take 3 or 4 minutes, but each program you setup after that will probably take just a minute since you’ll understand what needs to be done.

I’ve taken the liberty of modifying their directions ever so slightly to make them a bit easier, and I’ve also thrown in a few screenshots to guide you along the way:

  1. Download (10.9MB) and install the Application Compatibility Toolkit.
  2. In the Start menu find the shortcut Microsoft Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0\Compatibility Administrator. Right click it and click Run as administrator.
  3. In the left hand pane, right-click on the database under Custom Databases and select Create New, and select Application Fix.
    Vista UAC Application Fix
  4. Enter the name and other details of the application you want to alter behavior on and then browse to it to select it. Click Next.
  5. Click Next until you are in the Compatibility Fixes screen. On the Compatibility Fixes screen, find the item RunAsInvoker, and check it. Click Next and then Finish.
  6. Select File -> Save As. Save the file as a filename.SDB type file in a directory you will easily find it. Then copy the <filename>.sdb file to the Vista computer you want to alter the elevation prompt behavior on.
  7. Click Start -> All Programs -> Accessories. Right click Command Prompt and click Run as administrator.
  8. Run the command below:
    sdbinst <path>\<filename>.sdb
    For example, if you saved the .SDB file as abc.sdb in the c:\Windows folder, the command should be like this:
    sdbinst  c:\windows\abc.sdb
    It should prompt: Installation of <name> complete.
     
    Vista UAC Command Prompt

I’m *guessing* that, before saving the file in Step 6, you can go back to Step 3 and add more “Application Fixes” to the database. That way you can execute just one database in the remaining steps.

Microsoft Knowledgebase [via x(perts)64]

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Rumor mill says public Windows 7 Release Candidate coming on April 10th

Ars Technica is reporting that several sources are now pointing to a likely Release Candidate build of Windows 7 being made publicly available on April 10th. While we can’t attest to the probability of this occurrence… occurring on that date, they’re also reporting that the development team’s progress is confirmed as being on track for that date, so we’ll just have to wait with breath bated to see if the unicorn (our term for the OS) appears then or not.

[Via Ars Technica]

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Rumor mill says public Windows 7 Release Candidate coming on April 10th originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 Feb 2009 10:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mozilla Comments on Apple’s “Update” Practices

This article was written on March 24, 2008 by CyberNet.

kick safari

Last week we wrote about how Apple was trying to push the Safari “update” on any computer with the Apple Software Update installed, regardless of whether Safari had ever been installed before on the machine. I don’t believe there was really anyone in our comments who thought that it was okay for Apple to do this, and now Mozilla has stepped forward with their thoughts on the topic.

Needless to say Mozilla isn’t too fond with how Apple is using the Software Update application to distribute Safari. Maybe they’re concerned with how this could affect their market share, but in the end it seems as though they are genuinely on the side of the consumer:

That’s a problem because of the dynamic I described above — by and large, all software makers are trying to get users to trust us on updates, and so the likely behavior here is for users to just click “Install 2 items,” which means that they’ve now installed a completely new piece of software, quite possibly completely unintentionally. Apple has made it incredibly easy — the default, even — for users to install ride along software that they didn’t ask for, and maybe didn’t want. This is wrong, and borders on malware distribution practices.

It’s wrong because it undermines the trust that we’re all trying to build with users. Because it means that an update isn’t just an update, but is maybe something more. Because it ultimately undermines the safety of users on the web by eroding that relationship. It’s a bad practice and should stop.

What I’m left wondering is how many people who install Safari for the first time this way will actually use it? Is Apple just looking for a number that they can boast as to how many computers have Safari installed, or will they actually be able to see a jump in market share as a result of their slightly deceitful practices? We’ll have to keep an eye on the browser stats next month and compare them to how they have performed in the past.

[parts of the image by flatrock]

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