This is part 3 of a 5 part series offering a look into
some of the new features of Windows Vista, slated for release to
consumers on January 30th, 2007. These articles will be posted
once per week starting at the end of December and leading up to
the commercial launch of Vista. This week's article
was delayed from Tuesday to avoid being lost in the flood of CES
news and posts.
The series so far:
Part
1 - Introduction
Part
2 - UI Changes & Additions |
This marks the half-way point in the Touring Windows Vista article
series. The process of writing these articles forced me to dig
deeper and look closer at Vista than I would have otherwise.
Today's installment is going to look at the new tools given to you in
the Control Panel area, as well as the applications and games Microsoft
has bundled with the OS this time around. So today's article will
be most interesting to those of you who are wondering what immediate
improvements/changes there are to the OS that will impact your
day-to-day use.
The Control Panel
The
command center of any version of Windows has been the Control Panel.
It's here that any misc setting you typically could want is to be
found and tweaked. This is one of the few cases where Vista is
consistent with previous versions. However, this time around
you'll find a lot more crammed into the window.
First things first, you have to switch to the Classic View, just
like you did in XP to actually see all the options available to you.
In Vista Ultimate, you're presented with a whopping 48 different
control panels to choose from, and this is ignoring items like
Administrative Tools which is really a folder leading to additional
tools.
At first glance, I spotted several new Control Panels:
-
AutoPlay
Where you can set exactly how what sorts of CDs and
other media autoplay when inserted. Previously
you'd have to dig around to find where these settings
were. Good addition to the control panel
- Backup and Restore Center
A fairly basic and easy to use backup utility. It
will allow you to either back up specific files (with
some common presets for your My Documents folder) or the
entire PC. You can back things up to another
drive, a DVD, or even the network.
- BitLocker Drive Encryption
Welcome to the world of whole-disk encryption.
This is mainly targeted at laptop users in business
environments who require every bit of data on their
system to be encrypted. It requires specially
setup partitions and some TPM tech enabled on your BIOS.
This will not be relevant to most people who get Vista.
This is the next step up from Windows Encrypting File
System.
- Color Management
This feature is beyond me. From what I can tell is
it allows you to set your system to display color sets
based on the type of content you're trying to display.
This is far more important to graphic designers and
others who find themselves needing perfect color
reproduction.
- Indexing Options
You know how the new search built into Windows seems so
fast and responsive? It's because Windows is
starting to index the content of your drive to make
searches go faster. This panel lets you specify
what sorts of files to index, lets you manually rebuild
the index if you want etc.
- Offline Files
Like in Windows XP, offline files are temporary copies
of any items you pulled from the Internet or a network
drive. Here you set how much space you want to
allow them to take up, whether to encrypt them, as well
as other management options
- Parental Controls
This new feature squarely places Vista on the "worth
considering" list of any parent with a household PC.
You can set content restrictions, usage time limits,
enforce game ratings, and section off certain
applications as being unusable. Additionally,
parent users can view account activity logs covering
websites visited, files downloaded etc.
- Pen and Input Devices
Since Vista comes bundled with all the Tablet PC
features, this is where you mess with pen behavior
settings
- People Near Me
This is an interesting little feature for users on a
LAN. It will allow you to spot other Vista users
nearby so you can initiate Windows Meeting Space
sessions with them. One of the many online
collaboration tools MS is working on
- Performance Information
This is where the power user will spend a LOT of time
while tweaking Vista, or trying to track down problems.
This single control panel deserves its own section to
describe.
- Personalization
This is what used to be "Display Properties" Now,
instead of getting a single window with a number of tabs
full of settings, you get a window with a number of
links that open their own windows. Each tab from
XP is essentially a link on this new window. This
is the interface you get when you right click on the
desktop and look for Properties.... which is now called
Personalize. Yes, that's right, another UI
inconsistency.
- Programs & Features
Gone is Add/Remove Programs. Now it's Programs and
Features.
- Speech Recognition Options
Turns out Vista has the beginnings of speech recognition
built into it. You can train your PC to your
voice, and dictate documents provided you talk slowly
and enunciate enough. Whether or not this works
well remains to be seen. I'll test it some other
day and give you a report.
- Sync Center
Allows you to setup file synchronization between network
locations, portable devices etc.
- Tablet PC Settings
Like the Pen input panel, this is more config options
for Tablet PC users.
- Windows CardSpace
This is a very strange one, it looks like it's an
information service where you create an identity card of
sorts for yourself and you use those cards when you need
to provide sites with personal information. You
can select what cards of yours a site can see. So
some sites, like your bank, you may want to let them
have a little more info than some Cheese of the Month
Club page. This one deserves a separate article
later on.
- Windows Sidebar
Basic options for the Sidebar. Load on startup?
Which side of the screen? Which monitor should it
display on?
- Windows SideShow
Use your PDA or cell phone as a secondary monitor...
sort of. Plug your PDA in and it could just
display email, or a news feed, or play a video or
something. This will work even while your PC is
off provided the device maintains an Internet connection
(or so MS says).
|
There are actually several other new icons in this window, but
they were present in XP as well, just located in different places.
Built-In Games
It just wouldn't be Windows without some cheesy built-in games
packaged along with the OS. Vista in this way doesn't
disappoint. Sure you've got the standards like Solitaire,
FreeCell, Minesweeper and Spider Solitaire (an addition from XP),
but you also have a new 3D Chess game, InkBall and a kids game
called Purble Place.
Chess Titans
It's chess, in 3D. Computer has several difficulty levels.
It's a nice addition to the standard windows games, which are often
less than mentally challenging. Can also be played against a
human in hot-seat mode. Game also tracks various play
statistics.
InkBall
Basic concept: Two (or more) colored balls, with corresponding
colored holes on a grid with blocks placed to act as obstacles as
the balls bounce around. Your cursor is a "Pen" and you draw
links (ink) on the board. These act as temporary walls which
the balls bounce off of. You draw them at various angles to
attempt to guide the right colored ball into the proper hole.
Points awarded for speed.
Purble Place
A kids game made up of three basic matching sorts of games.
Very cartoony, should keep young tykes amused for at least a little
while.
Updated Bundled Applications
On top of the expected bundling of Internet Explorer 7, Vista
comes with a number of other utility applications that seems to aim
at competing with Mac OS X with its suite of pretty useful, default
applications such as iDVD, Mail.app and iCal. Microsoft
answers point-for-point with its rival applications:
- Windows Mail
This is just Outlook Express all Vista-ified. Mail comes
with some much needed improvements such as junk filters, better
search and integration of newsgroups and other community sites.
I can't help but think of Mail.app though when I look at the
program, just because it seems Microsoft actually tried to mimic
the UI element layout. It's a solid free mail application
that will do the trick for most users
- Windows Calendar
It's iCal... but for Windows. It basically feels like the
calendar element of Microsoft Outlook was stripped and made into
its own application. It has some loose integration with
Windows Mail, but it feels klunky and half-baked. If you
need a calendaring tool that integrates with your email, just go
out and get Outlook.
- Windows Contacts
Umm... Address Book? It is starting to seem to me that
Microsoft just took Outlook and broke apart each major feature
area and spun it as its own application to make themselves look
competitive to the Apple application offerings.
- Windows DVD Maker
Do you have a bunch of photographs or home videos on your PC
that you would love to hand to friends and relatives to play on
their TVs at home? Then Windows DVD Maker may be the tool
for you. It is a pretty straight-forward tool that most
people should be able to figure out. Seems to be just
about as feature-rich as iMovie is for the Mac. Not a very
powerful app though, but what can you expect for free?
- Windows Meeting Space
This
is one of the new collaboration tools Microsoft is trying to
deploy, working to take market share from companies like WebEx
who do online shared desktop tools. Meeting Space is more
designed around users on a local network as opposed to over the
Internet, so in reality this is more like the successor to the
ancient and feeble Net Meeting application. You can share
individual applications, your entire desktop, distribute virtual
handouts, and invite individuals near you to the meeting.
This is perhaps the most polished and potentially useful (in a
business environment at least) tool that comes bundled in Vista.
- Windows Movie Maker
Ok, this one isn't new, but it has been updated and it looks
like it's considerably easier now for home users to make basic
video compilations from their favorite media clips. Basic
effects, transitions, titles and credits features are available
to spice things up.
There are a few other bundled apps such as Photo Gallery and
Defender, but nothing exceptionally special to write home about.
It's been covered before.
That's it for this week. Check back next Tuesday for Part 4 of
the series where we dive into some of the real power user tools hidden
beneath the surface of Vista in the Performance & Information Tools.