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October 30th, 2008

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software written on October 30th, 2008.

Windows Azure Services

Windows® Azure is a cloud services operating system that serves as the development, service hosting and service management environment for the Azure Services Platform. Windows Azure provides developers with on-demand compute and storage to host, scale, and manage Web applications on the Internet through Microsoft® data centers.

To build these applications and services, developers can use their existing Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2008 expertise. In addition, Windows Azure supports popular standards and protocols including SOAP, REST, and XML. Windows Azure is an open platform that will support both Microsoft and non-Microsoft languages and environments.

 What is the Azure Services Platform?

Written by kenlin@HK [MVP] on October 30th, 2008 with no comments.
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Tidbits about the new “superbar” taskbar

Ever since the Windows 7 demo with Steven Sinofsky and Julie-Larson Green at PDC 2008 where they showed off the new “superbar” taskbar, there’s been a lot of questions about how the new taskbar will work, customized or tweaked.

Unfortunately because the pre-beta build did not contain the new taskbar, it’s been hard to answer those questions. Fortunately I met up with Chaitanya Sareen today who took me through a better tour of the new taskbar on one of the demo machines with the new build. Here’s a few facts about the new taskbar.

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If you like text in your taskbar, labels can be enabled for taskbar items in the “taskbar properties” panel. Text however will only appear for active applications.

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The way the taskbar handles overflow (in this build) is still the same way it is in Windows Vista - with a scroll. They did say however this is one feature they are looking into addressing which may or may not change.

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The size of the new “superbar” is actually not much larger than the Vista taskbar, 10 pixels to be exact. Enabling smaller icons will reduce this to the traditional taskbar size.

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Ungrouping the button which separates the individual windows will still retain its “groupness” by applications. Thus by dragging one window will actually move the entire group of windows, for example, Office Word.

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This is how the progress bar looks on the new taskbar which comes with the new API that developers can tap into for display progress right in the taskbar.

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This is how the taskbar looks on top of the screen.

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With Aero Classic.

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If you open the jump list with a lot of instances of the same application, it will display just one row of thumbnails before switching to a text-only list.

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Here it is with only one row of thumbnails. Aero Peek is also featured where the selected instance is shown where the other windows are all transparent.

Written by Long Zheng on October 30th, 2008 with no comments.
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Optimizing Fonts in Google Chrome for Vista


Last night I posted about using the “C*” font “Consolas” for your Command Prompt and PowerShell in Windows Vista.

There are several fonts in this family including a nice Serif and Sans-Serif font as well, so if you’d like to take advantage of those in Google Chrome, simply click the little wrench icon and select “Options”. On the “Minor Tweaks” tab you’ll find a button labeled “Change font and language settings”. Click on that button and set “Constantia” for your Serif, “Calibri” for your Sans-Serif and “Consolas” for your Fixed-width fonts.

Fonts

You could choose similar settings in any other browser you use as well. I would give you directions and a screenshot for Firefox as well, but hey, I’m not opening Firefox, remember? :-)

      

Written by jaysonrowe on October 30th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on otherSoftware and Computing.

Firefox Sabbatical Part 2: Exploring Google Chrome.


For those who remember, Tuesday I stated that after being so impressed with Safari on MacOS X that I was going to try going without my long-time browser of choice, Firefox for two weeks.

I’m now in the third day, and I still am Firefox free, but so far, I’m not nearly as pleased with Internet Explorer as I was with Safari on the Mac. Sure, it gets me where I want to go online, however it is using gobs of memory once I get a few tabs open, and it does seem to slow down quite a bit under a heavy load. I’m really not sure how well IE and I are going to get along long-term.

As a side note, I’m also using this “time off” from Firefox to get to know Google Chrome a little better. I feel bad now for knocking Google Chrome in my User Interface post. I still feel that it is hideous looking under Windows XP, however I think it looks and feels quite elegant under Vista. Every element that was the hideous “plastic” looking blue under XP is now “glass” under Aero, and it looks very nice, especially with Aero’s glass color setting on “Graphite” (my usual setting).

I’ve only started messing with Chrome a little today (after getting annoyed with IE), so I’m not ready to do a full-fledged review just yet, but there are a couple of things I have noticed so far I would like to mention.

First, I love the “break-away” tabs. I can’t tell you how many times I have had a single page embedded in a bunch of tabs, and then wanted to get one out into it’s own window. Great feature! It taking me a little while to the tabs being above the address bar and toolbar, but I’ll adjust.

Secondly, I absolutely love the Multi-Process architecture that Chrome uses, and I think this is the “killer feature” that is going to win me over. Here is a great blog-post by Charlie Reis explaining more about it and how it works to your advantage. I love the scalability that this will provide, and it’s great for “multi-tabbers” like myself! This technology will also be present in Internet Explorer 8, and here is a post from Scott Hanselman which has more info on the technology and how it is being implemented in IE 8.

      

Written by jaysonrowe on October 30th, 2008 with no comments.
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Windows Vista & Server SP2 Beta Released to Testers

Microsoft have made available build v6002-16497 of Service Pack 2 for both Windows Vista and Server 2008 to testers late last night. The bits show a compile date of October 17th and weigh in on average around the 3 Gigabyte 
So far, x86 & x64 versions of English, German, Japanese, Spanish and French language have been made available for testing. If you were lucky enough to be selected, head on over to Microsoft Connect to pick up your flavor of the test build.

 Link: Microsoft Connect (Registration required)

For people without a Connect account, you can register here with your Windows Live ID (required) for consideration to test current and future products on offer from Microsoft.

Source: Link

Written by Madhukar on October 30th, 2008 with 1 comment.
Read more articles on Windows Vista SP2 and otherSoftware and vista.

VistaGlazz 1.1

VistaGlazz lets you easily modify your Windows Vista installation to use custom styles and modify your Aero style to use the Glass effect on maximized windows.




This is app is extremely simple, but performs an essential and possibly complicated task for Windows Vista customizers. It patches several DLLs that control Vista's appearance so that users can alter Vista to their liking. It's also freeware, making it a viable workaround for those who want to tweak Vista but don't want to pay for it. It also changes Aero so that it stays in effect on maximized screens. 

There's not much else to the program. It absolutely will not work with Vista Service Pack 1 Release Candidates. If you install Vista Glazz before removing the SP1 RC, simply uninstall the app and then SP1, and then reinstall the program. The interface is basic, there are no skins provided, and the EULA gives off the vague stench of unfounded fear. 

Nevertheless, if you're looking for a simple solution to a potential nightmare, Vista Glazz may be the first step you'll need to take to pretty up Vista just the way you want. 

Download:
VistaGlazz 1.1 (link 1) 
VistaGlazz 1.1 (link 2)

Written by Madhukar on October 30th, 2008 with no comments.
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