Windows Vista & IE7 Beta 1 Released 727
gdsotirov writes "Today on the IE blog the availability of two new beta tests - Windows Vista Beta 1 and Internet Explorer 7 Beta 1 - was announced. These tests are mainly targeted to developers and IT professionals. Thus the betas are only available to MSDN subscribers. Tom's Hardware has details as well." From the article: "While the code also includes an early look at the new user-interface design, the majority of end-user features in Windows Vista will not be included until Beta 2. In addition to these fundamentals, Windows Vista Beta 1 also includes the Internet Explorer 7 Beta 1 built into the platform. The technical Beta of Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP SP2 also is available today." Any early thoughts, MSDN subscribers?
First Post? (Score:3, Informative)
Anyways, both these betas are already available everywhere.
The Vista Beta comes with a WPA bypasser.
IE7 beta requires online activation.
Still installing.. (Score:2, Informative)
The iso for workstation is about 2.5 GB. I had a couple of failed installs due to a faulty dvd-rom drive and am now almost finished installing it. It looks pretty good so far, from the installer anyways.
A torrent is available (Score:1, Informative)
Use the magnet links in Azureus (Ctrl+L) to save mininova bandwidth.
Re:Majority of end-user features not included... (Score:5, Informative)
Also includes some kind of "phishing site checker", RSS support (picks them out from page and can display from a single button), pop-up blocking, easy history deletion.
Seems pretty stable and not too memory hungry... so far
Cool. IE7 has priveledge seperation (Score:5, Informative)
Woops (Score:3, Informative)
wrong link, parent. Here: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Anyone see any bit torrents yet? (Score:5, Informative)
The Pirate Bay (Score:0, Informative)
It is ideal for people like me that don't have the money to afford thousands of dollars on software from price gouging companys, but want to stay up-to-date on the latest software and know whats out there, so I can deal with it in the future if I have to.
Re:Early Thoughts (Score:3, Informative)
IE uses less RAM than firefox because it's already running when windows loads, and also they use a few patented coding methods to further reduce memory footprint.
Also, beta 7.0 is 'faster' than normal IE because it has so many features turned off (haven't been coded into it yet)
TPB (Score:1, Informative)
Paul Thurrott Review (Score:5, Informative)
It goes through the vast majority of new features, although doesn't go into a great deal of depth at this early stage. Seems there are no great surprises here - Vista is still very much watered down from initial promises - but apparently things are at least moving along noticably now.
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www.markwheeler.net [markwheeler.net]
So far so good (Score:5, Informative)
If I feel brave enough (and our webmasters think they can survive a potential Slashdotting ;-) ) I'll put up some blog entries about my experiences over the next few days.
More info (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Seriously... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Early Thoughts (Score:3, Informative)
However, the reason Firefox is slower is because it has the XPCOM-platform-abstraction-layer and uses the Javascript-bindings for core-functionality (browser.js is the actual browser; I'm not joking), which eases cross-platform development, but causes performance-penalties.
Paul Thurrott has a pretty good review (Score:4, Informative)
It clarified a lot I didn't know about Vista, and it's *gasp* even a critical review, but still not one written by an anti-Microsoft zealot, but trying to keep a pretty open mind about it.
Re:Majority of end-user features not included... (Score:2, Informative)
Yay!
IE7 stuff (Score:5, Informative)
I'm writing this post in IE7.
To tell the truth, the only "improvement" I've noticed is the tabs, but tabs have been available as extensions for quite some time.
I was hoping for some CSS improvements. When I first installed it, I immediately went to a few of the more difficult CSS sites, to see if they'd render correctly. Nope - no such luck. See http://meyerweb.com/eric/css/edge/ [meyerweb.com] for example.
The toolbar has been moved around. In my copy of it, at least, the URL bar is just below the titlebar, then there are the tabs, then another bar with text buttons on the left, and some icons on the right for home, favourites, history, rss, and print.
A search bar has been integrated into the same bar as the URL entry box. I expected it to use MSN by default, but it's set to Google. Or maybe that's just on mine?
As a web developer, I was hoping for better CSS support and better debugging tools.
According to their documentation, they've addressed at least two CSS bugs. I haven't seen any improvements at all yet. I will be using Dean Edwards' script for some time yet, it seems...
On the JavaScript end, there does not seem to have been any work done on the debug tools there at all - still the old crappy "error on line X" (of what file? a bit more detail please?).
The RSS doesn't seem as good as Firefox's.
In Firefox, an icon appears on the bottom of the page you're on. You click the icon, then add the feed with another click. Immediately, you have Live Feeds, where you can open your bookmarks, scroll to the feed you want, and a list of the article headlines is immediately available.
In IE7, however, an icon highlights on the top of the page. You click the icon, which opens up the RSS and renders it (nyeh - whatever). Then you click add to favourites. Then you click to confirm that. Now, when you want to view the feeds, you open your favourites from the text toolbar, scroll down and click on the feed.
The main difference is that in IE7, you must click each feed that you want to view, whereas in Firefox, you get a preview of the new items.
Overall, I am not impressed in the slightest. Nothing innovative at all, and their CSS is still nowhere near as good as Firefox, Opera, KDE or Safari's (I know the latter two are basically the same engine...).
Re:Money (Score:2, Informative)
The cheapest version that does that is $700.
$700 per year is nothing to sneeze at. Even a corporation would not take such a subscription lightly.
Re:OS redundancy? (Score:5, Informative)
If they were to release the OS as-is, it would not create any particular buzz among consumers, since for the most part it still feels and drives like XP/win2k3. But it would be huge in the corporate market. Remote management capabilities have been expanded significantly (and they are pretty good already in xp/win2k3), but more importantly are the security revamp of the core OS. While you currently can have your employees on XP workstations run as non-admin, it is very difficult to give them freedoms to modify the system without giving them full admin access (aka - install a new printer). Now, there is a more robust priviledge system, where (1) even if you are full admin most applications start in lower priviledges, and (2) you can give more granular admin perms on a user-to-user basis. So, employees will have more freedom to customize/configure their system, while the admins can still protect the core OS image from rootkits or the machine in general from spyware.
Additionally, governments are interested in the platform as well. Apart from the security features above, there are content protection schemes on the platform, and features like secure boot (sounds ridiculous for a consumer, but appealing to, say, someone like the CIA).
Will Vista RTM be compelling enough that consumers will fly it off the shelves? I can't really say, to be honest my experience is with the core (which I am impressed with). But lets be honest, MS doesn't make its income through selling software boxes of XP. Vista will follow the same adoption of XP -- corporate/government contracts and OEM bundles will make the first surge of adoptions. But, with things like Avalon and Indigo (actually implemented, believe it or not
Re:So far so good (Score:2, Informative)
On XP, you don't need to wipe your machine. Granted, the Vista beta seems to have "fixed" itself into a non-fixable state... this is what I've done to get SAV10 working on XP SP2:
Reboot in "last known good configuration", uninstall it, then do a clean reboot. Install it, cancel the liveupdate and reboot it wants to do, open the SAV console, and look in the "configure" menu for the tamper protection settings. Turn it off. Then reboot.
You can try turning it on again later if you want, after the install completes, but I haven't tried.
Re:MSDN subscribers? (Score:1, Informative)
Next time around, when you're typing out your response, take note of that loud WOOOOOOOOOSH sound. It's a clue...
Re:Windows Vista is visually intuitive! (Score:2, Informative)
"Apparently the best way to develop a "visually intuitive" user interface is glass and more animation!"
One would have hoped that MS had at least have learned from Apple's early faux pas with transparency in OS X (overuse, basically), and figured that it needs to be very carefully thought through.
The transparency is 10.4 is still there, but it's much more subtle than it was in 10.0, and in some cases (window title bars, for example) it's been eliminated, while in others, such as menus, it's been dramatically reduced. In terms of the basic interface, it seems to me that it's primarily used for icons and denoting the edges of windows, sheets and menus now.
Any other views on overuse of transparency?
Re:OMG (Score:2, Informative)
People really aren't lying/exaggerating when they say that they "love" their iPods or their TiVos or that they "hate" their Gateway or Windows or whatever.
Don Norman's book, Emotional Design [amazon.com], has good information about this.
Re:THis again (Score:4, Informative)
How often do we have to go through this?
Obviously a few more times.
IE is integral to the platform in the same way Konqueror/KHTML is to KDE. It is part of the standard libraries/components and applications can expect it to be available to view richly formatted data.
This is not true. Applications don't give a damn if Internet Explorer is installed. Applications depend on Trident. Trident is the rendering engine that transforms web pages into something you can see and interact with.
Internet Explorer is nothing but a (pretty poor) shell around Trident. Internet Explorer is simply not necessary for the correct operation of Windows or Windows applications. Trident is. Internet Explorer is an application bundled with Windows.
Re:some FFT [food for thought] (Score:3, Informative)
Automator can do those jobs faster with four mouse clicks, which is much faster than I could ground up a piece of script and test it to make sure it doesn't walk all over my files.
So meanwhile you can type to your heart's content. I'll click a few buttons and be done.
Re:Acid2? (Score:3, Informative)
IE 7 rendering Acid2 [lysergic.org.nz]
IE 6 rendering Acid2 [student.uu.se]
Can anyone tell if IE 7 does any better than IE 6 at all? Then renderings look nearly identical to me. So much for improved standards support in IE 7, as if anyone thought that would actually happen
Re:some FFT [food for thought] (Score:3, Informative)
Dismayed! (Score:5, Informative)
Improved CSS support? Yeah. Right.
This is IE6 with tabs and a "phishing filter". Nothing new here. The RSS reader is abysmal, not even comparing to that of Safari 2.0.. not to mention I couldn't find a visible button to access the feeds on a website and had to dig in the tools menu for it.
CSS support has some minor improvements, but nothing groundbreaking. IE7 fails the Acid2 test miserably, which is tough luck because we're probably not going to see IE8 for 5 years now.
Microsoft have the future of SVG and CSS3 in the palms of their hands and they are content to toss it aside so they can implement a couple of silly superficial features to keep the monkey-brained masses happy and try to pass us developers off with "immproved CSS support" and a PNG transparent support which is nice, but frankly I'm having none of it. Microsoft have officially torn the final straw from my clutches and chewed it into a pulp before my very eyes.
As for Windows Vista.. whoopety-fucking-doo
And to think... how long has IE7 been in the works before it took them to come out with this shitty beta? In 10 minutes they could have handed the Mozilla group seven figures to use Gecko in their commercial crap-pile which would have made everyone happy. But nooooo, they can't even do the sensible thing.
Money grubbing idiots.
Re:So far so good (Score:3, Informative)
Clarification on "Installation took about an hour and 10 minutes":
I spent less than five minutes interacting with the computer and from there it was totally hands-off.
I needed to provide only two pieces of outside information: The key code and the name I wanted to give the computer.
Other than that there was just a license agreement screen and a couple of very simple screens relating to which disk partition I wanted it on... a total of 6 screens, each of which only asked one question.
Regardless of the bluster from some folks about how fast their favorite OS installs, it was still extremely smooth and far easier than any other version of Windows I've ever used... and I've used them all.
Offers to turn on (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Microsoft continues to make Windows worse... (Score:2, Informative)
A few CSS tests (Score:5, Informative)
All are still just as broken as in IE6. It looks like VERY little effort has been put into the rendering engine so far. Absolutely pathetic.
http://www.lysergic.org.nz/testcss/divhover.html [lysergic.org.nz]
http://www.lysergic.org.nz/testcss/selectheight.h
http://www.lysergic.org.nz/testcss/selectzindex.h
Re:Early Thoughts (Score:4, Informative)
For reference, on my PII-400 I'd say firefox takes about 2-3x as long to start up, and frequently suffers long delays in various actions. Particularly grievous is the long (~200ms) pause that frequently occurs after typing the second letter of a URL in the address box while it looks up history items starting with those two letters. This pause is also noticeable on a Celeron 1.3GHz laptop, although nothing like as annoying.
Firefox also seems to use about 50% more memory on average for the same operation. It is also noticeable that it only uses single threads for many things where IE uses multiple: if one window starts a plugin, for example, all the others freeze until after the plugin has finished initialising.
Thunderbird is worst -- my entire machine grinds to a halt while it displays the new message notification window.
Even if you do notice a difference, any semi-intelligent human being knows that a 10% increase in speed isn't everything. Firefox has so much more to offer.
True, and that's why I continue to use it, despite the inconvenience. I wouldn't give up tabbed browsing for anything, for instance.
I'll be giving IE7 a try once it comes out of beta.
Re:Early Thoughts (Score:3, Informative)
Being head of IT, I made sure I have the best of the bunch, which is an 833MHz P3 with 768MB of RAM and a 20GB Quantum Fireball which our now-deceased graphic design department managed to *buy* on thier own budget a few years ago. It runs Windows 2000.
Firefox takes a painful 12 seconds to load. IE takes 2 seconds max. I suspect it's something to do with IE being part loaded at startup of course, but then Opera only takes a couple of seconds to load too.
Other machines are more around the P2-300 mark. They have 64MB of RAM if lucky (32 in some cases). Firefox can take a good 30-40 seconds or so to load, and then it takes up *all* of the RAM. If you try to so much as press the start button without closing FF first then you're looking at a 30 second thrashing session.
IE, in contrast, takes 5 seconds to load on those... still faster on an antique than FF is on my semi-respectable machine. Opera manages something like 10 seconds and Windows is still usable.
Now, the obvious argument is that Firefox isn't designed for older machines. But is that really such an excuse to be sloppy and use over-bloated code? Perhaps if developers would *aim* for better performance on older machines, they (and their users) would be deligted by the results on the newer ones.
IE7s CSS Support Still Utterly Dismal (Score:2, Informative)
This is the result of the acid2 test [webstandards.org], a test designed to rate the CSS compliance of a browser. At the moment, afaik Safari is the only fully compliant browser, with Firefox and Opera following closely behind.
This a great shame - I had naively hoped that Microsoft would fix their broken browser, and surprise us all by conforming to the standards. They had a great opportunity to really put IE back on the right track, and it looks like they've blown it.
Good job Microsoft - you're completely out of touch with what the web development community actualy wants.