What's new in Windows 7?

It's all about feedback

NEWS

In a posting to its Engineering Windows 7 blog on Thursday, Microsoft outlined some of the changes that will be made for the next public version, which will be a near-final "release candidate" build.

Microsoft is making more than 30 changes, including expanding its Aero Peek touch interface, adding broader support for older FAT32-formatted hard drives, and making it more apparent when a window in the background wants a user's attention.

In addition and as it had already committed to, Microsoft is making some changes to the User Account Control feature, following concern that efforts to make the feature less annoying had also made it less secure.

Windows engineering head, Steven Sinofsky, said in the blog posting: "We change a lot of things in the beta based on feedback and we try to do so in a systematic manner with the focus on the goals for the release.

"The goal of having a fully functional beta was to make sure we received reliable feedback and not a lot of 'hey this doesn't work at all' sorts of reports. This has allowed us to really focus on delivering a refined [release candidate] where the changes we made are all the reflection of feedback we have received."

Comments

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  1. 1. Nick Cole

    What does it do that people really want and cannot be done under XP?

    Does it mean we have to take lots of unwanted changes just to get the one or two (if that!) features that we cannot live without?

    Or is it just another way of keeping programmers in jobs, introducing change for changes sake - again?

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