I have been trying out the latest release of Vista (RC1) for the past couple of days. I wanted to write about my first impressions of it. I also wanted to focus more on the usability of Vista, rather than than the super technical reviews you commonly see. This is just the first part where I will post some impressions of Vista, and will follow up when I have tested some more features.
Installation
Doing a clean install on a second hard drive on my PC, Vista installed in roughly 30 minutes. When booting from the DVD, Windows asks for the typical information such as your product key, and what drive/partition to install to. After entering this basic information I went to play a quick game on my Xbox 360 and before I knew it, the installation was done. One of things that personally annoyed me about installing Windows XP was having to sit there throughout the whole installation and entering informaton about time zones, modem connections, and what I did at work yesterday.
When installation was finished it took me to a screen where it asked for me to name the User accounts, and some other basic information. Then I was greeted with the "Welcome Windows" as I call it. This window seems to give you some basic information about Vista, along with links to download programs such as Windows Messenger and Desktop Mail.
Boot/Load Times
This is one area where I am not very impressed with. After I completed the installation and it was time for my first reboot. The boot times for Vista are the same if not longer than XP. Now I understand this will vary on different systems, but a clean install of XP for me will boot within 1 minutes, and have a usable desktop within 2 minutes. Vista took about 2 minutes to boot to the desktop screen, and about 3 minutes before the system was "usable".
Start Menu
The most notable difference to the Start Menu is how it is now organized into the single pane. When I first tried Vista this was very odd, but after a while I found it to be very usable and I now actually prefer it to the typical Windows style. For the most part the Start Menu is the same visually. It has the common shortcuts to such places as the pictures, documents, music, etc. folders.
Performance
I am running a custom box with a Pentium 4 HT, 2.8ghz, with about 768 of RAM, and an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro video card. For me performance is about equal to what it is running XP Pro. I have a browser, IRC chat, iTunes (yes iTunes works), and a few other programs running with no noticable slow downs. I haven't tried running anything like Photoshop yet, but I expect about the same results from something as power intensive as that.
Desktop Sidebar
This is something where I still haven't decided if I like it or not. I know from reading many online forums that the sidebar is loved by some, hated by others. I have been running the Sidebar with a few widgets such as weather, RSS feeds, and a picture viewer. The biggest problem I have with the Sidebar is that is has no auto-hide feature. It takes up a lot of real estate on my desktop and I would love to be able to hide it and just move my cursor over it to see it, but that's not possible right now.
Hardware compatibility
This is something that will also vary from user to user, but I did want to point out that hardware that would not run on Vista in previous builds are now working. The biggest issue I had with previous builds was it would have a major problem with my sound card. So much that I wouldn't have any sound in other builds. But RC1 detected my sound card (turtle beach) with no problems and is running without problems.
Integrated Programs
This is something I haven't gone too deep into yet, but I wanted to say a few things about it. Vista has such programs as Calendar, Windows Mail, etc. So far I am very impressed with these programs. The calendar is very useful and seems to integrate well with other Microsoft programs. Windows Mail, the obvious replacement of Outlook Express is simple, but effective. One of the programs I always replace in any version of Windows is a program to view and organize pictures. Vist includes "Windows Photo Gallery" which from my testing so far, is very effective at organizating and viewing your pictures. All of these seem to be the "iLife" of Vista. How effective they are is still yet to be seen, but I am happy to see the direction they are taking.
I am going to spend more time with Vista over the next few days trying out more of the features I mentioned above. I would like to hear your opinions on this release of Vista.
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