
Windows 7 is not quite a “Vista service pack.” It does share a lot of the core tech, and was clearly designed to fix nearly every bad thing anyone said about Vista. Which ironically puts the demon that it was trying to exorcise at its heart. What that means is that Windows 7 is what Vista should have been in the public eye—a solid OS with plenty of modern eye candy that mostly succeeds in taking Windows usability into the 21st century—but it doesn’t daringly innovate or push boundaries or smash down walls or whatever verb meets solid object metaphor you want to use, because it had a specific set of obligations to meet, courtesy of its forebear.
That said, if you’re coming from Windows XP, Windows 7 will totally feel like a revelation from the glossy future. If you’re coming from Vista, you’ll definitely go “Hey, this is much better!” the first time you touch Aero Peek. If you’re coming from a Mac, you’ll—-hahahahaha. But seriously, even the Mactards will have to tone down their nasal David Spadian snide, at least a little bit.
The Long Shadow of Windows Vista
The public opinion of Windows Vista—however flawed it might have been—clearly left a deep impact on Microsoft. While we’ve got final Windows 7 code, it’s hard to look 2 1/2 months into the future to predict what the Windows 7 launch will be like. However, based on this code, and the biggest OS beta testing process in history, it sure won’t look like the beleaguered Vista launch at all.
If you installed Vista on your PC within the first month of its release, there was a solid chance your computer ran like crap, or your gadgets didn’t work, since drivers weren’t available yet. That’s not how it shakes down with Windows 7. The hardware requirements for Windows 7 are basically the same as they are for Vista, the first time ever a release of Windows hasn’t required significantly more horsepower than the previous one. And it runs better on that hardware, or at least feels like it does.
We ran real-world benchmarking on two test machines, a nearly two-year-old Dell XPS M1330 with 2.2GHz Core 2 Duo, 2GB RAM, an Nvidia 8400M GS and a 64GB SSD, and an 18-month-old desktop with 3GHz Core 2 Duo, 4GB RAM, an Nvidia 8800GT and a 10,000rpm drive. Results suggest there’s little actual difference between Vista and Windows 7 performance-wise on the same hardware.
Ambiguous benchmarking aside, our experience during the beta period was that Windows 7 actually ran beautifully, even on netbooks that made Vista cry like a spoiled child who’d had its solid gold spoon shoved up its butt sideways, so the difference isn’t based entirely on “feelings.” Even Microsoft never attempted to market a Vista for netbooks, but is gladly offering Windows 7 to that category.
Installing XP, Vista and Windows 7 on the same hardware over the space of a week also proved that point: Hardware just worked when I booted up Windows 7 for the first time, while my machines were practically catatonic with XP until I dug up the drivers, and gimped with Vista until I dutifully updated. Hitting Windows Update in Windows 7, I was offered a couple of drivers that were actually current, like ones for my graphics cards. Centralising the delivery of drivers is huge in making the whole drivers thing less over whelming. (It helps that manufacturers are actively putting out drivers for their gear this go-around, rather than waiting until the last minute, as they tended to with Vista.)
Microsoft has even corrected the pricing spike that Vista introduced, even if they didn’t fully streamline that confusing, pulsating orgy of versions. A full version of Windows 7 Home Premium is $US200, down from $US260, and if you were lucky, you could’ve pre-ordered an upgrade version for $US50. (Microsoft says that deal has sold out, but we wouldn’t be shocked to find it re-upped in the near future, possibly even as we head toward the October 22 launch.) So yes, most of the early Vista problems—performance, compatibility and price, to an extent—will likely not be early Windows 7 problems.
What’s Good
Windows 7 is the biggest step forward in usability since Windows 95. In fact, over half of what makes it better than Vista boils down to user interface improvements and enhancements, not so much actual new features.

Windows 7 brings back a sense of a tightness and control that was sometimes missing in Vista—there’s a technical reason for this relating in part to the way graphics are handled—moments where I’ve felt like I wasn’t in control of my PC have been few and far between, even during the beta and release candidate periods. The more chaste User Account Control goes to that—the frequency with which it interrupts you was grating in Vista, like standing under a dripping faucet. But it actually works as Microsoft intended now, with more security, since you’re less likely to repeatedly hammer “OK” to anything that pops up, just so it leaves you the hell alone.

In short, Windows 7 is what Windows should feel like in 2009.
What’s Not So Good
There are a few spots Microsoft rubbed polish on that still don’t quite shine. Networking is much, much better than Vista—the wireless networking interface isn’t completely stupid anymore—but the Network and Sharing centre still doesn’t quite nail it in terms of making networking or sharing easy for people who don’t really know what they’re doing. I wouldn’t turn my mum loose inside of it, anyway. The HomeGroup concept for making it easy to share files sounds good in theory, but in practice, it’s no slam dunk. I imagine regular people asking, “What’s up with crazy complicated password I have to write down? Can I share files with PCs not in my HomeGroup? What’s all this other stuff in my Network that’s not in my HomeGroup?”

Internet Explorer 8 ain’t so great, either. It’s better than IE7, sure, and actually sorta supports modern web standards. But you’ll be downloading Firefox, Opera, or Chrome as soon as you get Win 7 up and running, since IE’s not better than any of them. And while you could argue you wouldn’t be so inclined to use Microsoft’s own mail application either, you might, but you’ll have to download it first. Instead of being app-packed, Windows 7 gives you an optional update for Live Essentials, with apps like Mail, Photo Gallery and MovieMaker. Some people might like the cleaner install, but this is a fairly senseless de-coupling—not including a mail app with your own OS? I know those European regulators are ridiculous, but come on.
I suppose the biggest thing missing from Windows 7 is any sense of daring (psychedelic wallpapers aside). It’s a very safe release: Take what was good about Vista, fix what people bitched about, and voila. We get it, people want a safe operating system, not an experiment in behavioral science. But even as Windows 7 restores some of the joy in using Windows, you get the sense that it could’ve been more, if it hadn’t been saddled with the tainted legacy of Vista. I wonder what Windows 7 would have been without Vista.
The Verdict
Windows XP was a great OS in its day. Windows Vista, once it found its feet several months in, was a good OS. Windows 7 is great again. It’s what people said they wanted out of Windows: Solid, more nimble and the easiest, prettiest Windows yet. There’s always a chance this won’t be a huge hit come October, given the economy and the state of the PC industry, but it’s exactly what Microsoft needs right now. Something people can grab without fear.
For a more in-depth feature breakdown and what we thought, check out our Windows 7 Best Features and Tips guide.
In Brief:

The redesigned Aero Interface is super slick with lots of transparencies and smooth animations and it actually makes Windows easier to use

It performs great on the same hardware as Vista, even playing nice on netbooks Vista wouldn’t

Device Stage makes you want to plug gadgets into your PC

It fixes almost everything you hated about Vista (don’t look at me, I didn’t think Vista was bad)

Media Player still sucks to use, though “Play To” and internet streaming features are nifty

It’d be nice if the $US50 upgrade deal kept running

IE8, while better, still isn’t as good as Firefox, Chrome or Safari

The mess that is Control Panel—after all that UI work, what the eff, guys?

Too many versions still
StevoTheDevo
August 6, 2009 at 9:18 AM
Add another negative for Australian audiences
Report Permalink– Australian pricing is outrageously high compared Dollar for Dollar to the US pricing, even when the Aussie Dollar was at it’s lowest, the Aussie pricing was higher than US. Now that it’s getting closer to parity again, we’re being stung extra hard!
Daniel
August 6, 2009 at 3:24 PM
i was thinking about getting win 7 sent over from the USA (for this very reason). Does anyone know if there is anything to stop overseas versions being installed?
Report Permalinkmatt
August 6, 2009 at 9:27 AM
great review, Ive come from XP to the win7 RC and I aggree with everything you say.
definite pros are that it JUST WORKS out of the box. i installed win7 on my old 939 Athlon machine, then ripped the whole thing out replacing it with a new intel i7 system, just keeping the same system drive. I turned it on the first time expecting it to bluscreen on boot cause i changed the mobo. to my surprise it just worked, and automatically found and installed drivers for everything even without a net connection!
and definite cons are the networking… but i’ve pretty much given up on networking – in particular file sharing – ever working nicely in windows. On the plus side, atleast explorer is multithreaded now, so the whole thing doesn’t freeze when its finding something on the network (tho its still one process, so if one window crashes, or freezes, all the windows close!). but the worst thing is that sharing now seems MORE complicated than it was in XP, this is particularly irritating as file sharing is one component that you can’t replace with a third party solution in windows.
a neutral thing thats kind of a con canceled out by a pro, is changing system settings. the control panel, networking config and other system settings just seem to be re-arranged and in different places for no necessary reason making them hard to find. This however is canceled out by the search bar that seems quite good at finding the places you need to go to change settings, it also seems to be designed to help XP users, as searching for what it was called in XP will return the equivalent in win7.
one tiny problem i’m having is: you know how you have to hover over the icon in the task bar to bring up all the instances? I wish it would come up quicker, as in INSTANTLY, does anyone know if you can do that?
Report PermalinkMatthew
August 6, 2009 at 11:59 AM
Go to All Control Panel Items > Performance Information & Tools > Click ‘Adjust Visual effects’ top left corner > Untick ‘Animations in taskbar and Start Menu’ which will make it appear snappier by just popping up and not animating it.
You can go through the list and untick other options which might speed things up in other areas too. Or untick all of them.. but the aero glass and windows+tab button is just too pretty to turn off
Report PermalinkJB
August 6, 2009 at 11:59 AM
“I wonder what Windows 7 would have been without Vista.”
Report PermalinkThat’s a very silly statement. I would say Vista IS what Windows 7 would be without Vista!!
sam
December 27, 2009 at 11:39 PM
To be honest, the control panel isnt that bad. Its pretty simple to me.
Report Permalinkmike
January 7, 2010 at 3:01 AM
Win7 was a trainwreck for me. My xp disk broke a couple years ago so i had been using a linux distribution for a while since i heard lots of bad things about vista, so i waited till win7. just to install it though, i had to remove all extra hardware and disable my usb controller via bios. installation kept freezing!. then i get at least 2 bsod’s a day with it, and applications crash like it’s thier job, even mincrosofts own internet explorer. This is after 3 installs, same stuff. and of course microsoft tech support is a joke. So yeah, i just want to return the damned thing and use linux for now on :P
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