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Windows 7 review-Part2:Modification of apps.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009 , Posted by Technoratti-Anuraag at 8:49 AM






One of the most unsettling trend, that seams to have been broken with Windows 7, is that each version of Windows was more bloated than the last. Windows 7 unbundled some of the applications that few people would be using anyway, such as Windows Photo Gallery, Windows Movie Maker, Windows Mail, Windows Calendar, Windows Contacts, Microsoft Agent, etc.






While it was nice that Windows tried to be more functional as a fresh install, their offerings are too weak and bloated to be of much use, and this reduction of bloat is highly appreciated. While the quality of having everything you need installed out of the box has been a much touted Linux advantage, it seems the same does not work for Windows.


For people who still prefer to use the Microsoft applications for their simplicity of use, don't worry, most of these applications have not been abandoned. Microsoft has made available a Windows Live Essentials package which can be downloaded and installed to bring back the familiar Windows Mail, Messenger, Photo Gallery, Movie Maker applications. However, the Windows Contacts and Windows Calendar applications are missing, though most likely they will not be missed! The calendar and contact functionality is available to a certain extent in the new Windows Live Mail application.





To allow you to reduce the bloat even further, Windows 7 now allows users to remove / disable more of the core application than it previously did. You can now easily remove Internet Explorer 8, Windows Media Player, Windows Search, Windows Media Centre, and Windows Gadgets.






You can now uninstall more of Windows applications than possible before.


Windows Vista with all its reputation as a mere glossy coat on a rotten operating system brought with it an unnecessary visual upgrade to the games included in Windows. Windows 7 instead, goes for upgrading the core applications which have long been neglected into uselessness.

The new Windows 7 versions of WordPad and Paint have something more new than just the version number, they now sport the ribbon interface similar to Office 2007. They include many new features to go with the new interface, most important of all Wordpad can read and write both the new Office 2007 .docx files, and the Open Document .odt files. The new version of the calculator application now includes some very useful features such as a history, worksheets support, date calculations, statistical calculations etc.

WordPad



The Windows 7 WordPad ribbon UI



Wordpad displaying an .odt file

Paint is heavily revamped and now includes multiple useful brushes, shapes, displaying rulers and grid-lines and more. Paint now defaults to the compressed .png file format for saving images instead of BMP. While paint is still a far cry from a good image editor, after this upgrade, it is certainly a decent one.

Paint



The Windows 7 Paint ribbon UI










Windows 7 Paint UI
New selection of brushes in Paint
New shapes in Paint.
This is an example of a star shape, with a watercolor style red border, and a crayon style yellow fill.



Calculator















 The new UI for Calculator in Windows 7
 Calculator now stores a history of calculations allows easy tracking of previous calculations and reuaing results
 The new calculator support may more UI modes, and features.
 Simple tools exist to perform calculations on dates.
 Worksheets allow you to use predefined templates to perform common calculations.
Such as the mortgage calculation shown above.


With Windows 7, the On-Screen Keyboard utility has also seen a big change. The new version is now fully scalable, and sports a new glass-enabled interface. The new OSK however does away with all the menus and configuration options, making it impossible to change the font of the keyboard. A useful feature added in this release is the support text prediction. As you type text, the application will display a row of word completions allowing you to speed up text entry significantly.



On-Screen Keyboard



The new glassy On-Screen Keyboard utility in Windows 7

The magnifier too, has seen a functional upgrade. The interface is much simplified, and now supports three usage modes, a docked mode (similar to the functionality of older versions), a magnifying glass version, where a magnifying glass follows the cursor magnifying everything underneath it, and a full screen mode which zooms in the entire screen.



Magnifier













The much more simplified and cleaner Magnifier UI
The Magnifier window collapses into this icon after some time to preserve screen space.


This new mode in the Windows 7 magnifier allows you to move around a magnifying glass.
In this mode, the entier screen is magnified.


Among completely new applications to be included with Windows 7 is PowerShell 2.0, which is now installed by default with the OS. PowerShell allows the experiences user to write powerful scripts to automate many tasks. It is a much more powerful solution than the batch script support available in previous versions of Windows. Another handy utility included in Windows 7 is the "Sticky Notes" application which was used to showcase the Jumplists and tasks feature of Windows 7. The application lets you add sticky notes to your desktop and integrates with the Windows 7 taskbar by allowing you to create new notes from the jumplist. It is of limited use however, since it very little formatting options and few color options.



PowerShell 2.0






PowerShell 2.0 CLI installed with Windows 7
PowerShell 2.0 Script editor installed with Windows 7


Sticky Notes



Sticky Notes application in Windows 7



An interesting tool which could be of great use is the new problem steps recorder. It is a handy utility which allows you to record procedures and actions which lead to problems (bugs, crashes, errors etc), or even otherwise. However this tool has not been promoted much by Microsoft in the OS, and few people might even realize it exists. For now the best way to launch it seems to be by using the Run command, and entering "psr".

Overall Windows 7 manages to provide more usability in a smaller size than its predecessor, Windows Vista, which is indeed a remarkable feat.



part 1 of the review


The further reviews by me will soon be posted...If know some more features of windows 7 please do write them in comments.



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