From technology to politics to video games; these are the random thoughts of a geek with too much time on his hands
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.


Comments (Page 2)
2 Pages1 2 
on Jan 13, 2007
Explain to me how is it that a guy who seems to know a lot about Apple PCs, has the word Mac in his name, says he likes Apple computers and sounds like your typical Mac Fanboy yet he has never used one?

I don't know, I really don't. I guess I'm just a freak.

I suppose when my current XP machine is old and tired and I get a new one it will have Vista. I'm just saying there aren't enough features in Vista to compel me to upgrade straight away. There are also not enough features in Mac OSX Tiger to warrant me buying another computer right now just to have it. Maybe sometime in the future, just not now.
on Jan 13, 2007
I would just ignore him, its going no where. We all know how things work in reality, its a shame he doesn't. Not enough features? So stability, highly improved memory management, and the most secure Windows to date isn't enough?

I don't know how people can even call Apple a competitor of Microsoft. Can you even call someone that owns 2% of the market a competitor?
on Jan 14, 2007

Just a note: I don't see anything except game ratings enforcement that you can do with Vista that you can't with XP Pro (in parental controls). And you can effectively enforce game ratings by setting their access level so as not to allow them to install the games. Sure, it may be a pain in the butt for you to install them, but that's part of parenting.

Good piece, though. I'll have to explore some of the features I haven't discovered.

on Jan 14, 2007
like parental controls actually do any good.
on Jan 14, 2007
Just a note: I don't see anything except game ratings enforcement that you can do with Vista that you can't with XP Pro (in parental controls).


Uh, the DVD writing?

Thanks Oh great Zoomba! Actually most of this is "ho-hum", but then you do post a nugget here and there that makes it "Thanks ZOOMBA". AKA Program & Features.

For those on the MS PR list we have seen most, but that one escaped me (perhaps because I got bored with their PR?). But the rest is pretty much expected. And whether copying OSX or leading OSX, the differences are not going to be great. Hello! macophils and Mac haters! They are vying for the Aunt Idas!

BUT! OSX still has one thing that Microsoft has not copied yet (to MS' shame). Volume Licensing for the Home user! Hello Bill Gates!!!!!
on Jan 14, 2007
like parental controls actually do any good.


Yea! My wife still got pregnant!  
on Jan 14, 2007
Uh, the DVD writing?


What about the DVD writing ? I've backed up a couple of store bought DVDs onto dvd-r for taking on holiday using the same software tools I used in XP.
The only DRM that is in Vista is there for a reason, to allow MS to support IPTV & Cable cards,big holywood content providers demand it and finally my MCE can do what it should.
If someone can point out the rest of this horrible DRM I'm all ears cause after 9 months use I have yet to find it
on Jan 14, 2007
I've backed up a couple of store bought DVDs onto dvd-r for taking on holiday using the same software tools I used in XP.


3rd Party. XP does not do native DVD writing. That was what I am saying.
on Jan 14, 2007
3rd Party. XP does not do native DVD writing. That was what I am saying.


Yeah, but isn't it an advantage of Windows that you don't have to rely on the OS to do everything for you? Windows gives you the ability to use 3rd party apps for everything, unlike OSX where you're severely limited.

And while some people might not like or know how to download or use something like DVD burning software, most of the people who know how to, and want to, burn a DVD can probably handle it.
on Jan 15, 2007
Wile Microsoft adds these features in, their is still 3rd party applications - so don't compare it to OS X.
on Jan 15, 2007
This is at Adamness

Why would we not want to rely on our OS for everything we need? I think thats the point of additional features. A fully loaded OS with everything. Same reason people buy fully loaded cars. Sure you can get aftermarket stuff for maybe cheaper, but will it look/feel the same? of course not. Mac OS X comes with everything you need (within legalities) and without banners or ads I might include. Windows instead offers you links to download such programs instead of bundling with them, I think thats stupid, not a big issue, but dumb nonetheless, I guess the part that gets me the most is their so called default apps have ad's in them, I can't help but laugh at that. Regardless no one is going to be happy, mac fanboys will likely back me up and windows fanboys will hate, either way no one is going to be happy, although us mac users are pretty satisfied with what we got going on over here in osx.

I just wanted to add a part you said, no 3rd party apps for Mac? or not many? Please there are TONS of 3rd party mac apps and many of them are top of the line worthy to be including within osx. Mac developers are far better than the majority of windows developers, especially with attention to detail, there are many many 3rd party mac apps, visit, www.macupdate.com to get them.
on Jan 15, 2007
Yeah theirs plenty of 3rd party applications on OS X, but 99.9% of them you have to pay for. Their are tons of free applications or FREE versions of applications for Windows.

I like many others like to choose what kind of software I use to burn CDs, not have some app thrown at me by Microsoft that I have to use if I want to burn something. Yes they added many new things in like the ability to burn a CD/DVD - but I also still have the ability to choose if I want to use it or not.
2 Pages1 2