Redmond instala la feria más adelante este mes
El equipo del despliegue de Windows Vista SP1 quisiera que pasara a lo largo de aviso de un próximo instala la feria que era sostenida aquí en Redmond en el extremo de mes; hemos llevado a cabo acontecimientos como esto antes y se han recibido siempre bien. Usted es agradable caer cerca si usted califica y usted está en la vecindad.
Windows Vista SP1 beta instala la feria
Windows Vista SP1 beta incluye cambios para mejorar compatibilidad del funcionamiento, de la confiabilidad, de la seguridad y del uso.
- Fecha: 27 de octubre de 2007 de 9:00 a a 3:00 p
- Localización: Campus de Redmond/centro de conferencia de Microsoft (edificio 33), sitio de McKinley
- Audiencias: Empleados, amigos y familia de Microsoft
- Timeslots:
- Hay 2 timeslots con un máximo de 90 aberturas cada uno para los tableros del escritorio
- 9:00 a a 12:00 p
- 1:00 p a 3:00 p
- Hay 1 timeslot con un máximo de 20 aberturas para las computadoras portátiles
Registros internos de Microsoft: Instale la Muestra-para arriba justa (primero venido, primero servido) (el sitio es MS interno-solamente)
Los registros públicos se deben hacer vía el email: Windows Vista SP1 instala el registro justo (vsp1reg@microsoft.com). Indique por favor un timeslot preferido.
Las metas de la feria de la instalación son:
- Ponga al día 100 PC de Windows Vista RTM o computadoras portátiles con menos los usos, las configuraciones y los dispositivos comúnmente encontrados a Windows Vista SP1 beta.
- Adquiera la regeneración valiosa sobre la actualización de Windows y la experiencia independiente de la instalación de la comunidad más amplia.
- Envíe a asistentes lejos con una versión beta usable de Windows Vista SP1.
- Genere el entusiasmo sobre Windows Vista SP1 beta.
Qué a traer:
- Su PC, su cable de transmisión y a DVI--VGA al convertidor en caso de necesidad
Recursos proporcionados:
- Monitores, teclados, ratones, cables de la red y altavoces.
- Windows Vista último SP1 llaves beta de DVDs y del producto.
- Herramientas del análisis de la actualización.
- ¡Alimento, bebidas y un regalo para participar!
Lista de comprobación/criterios a atender:
- ¡Se han sostenido mis datos importantes!
- Mi sistema operativo de la PC es Windows Vista RTM.
- Mi PC tiene un procesador de Intel/AMD el funcionar en 1 gigahertz o más arriba.
- Mi PC tiene un mínimo de 512MB del ESPOLÓN.
- Mi adaptador video de las PC es AGP4x/8x o PCIe con un mínimo de 64MB del ESPOLÓN.
- Mi disco duro de las PC tiene un mínimo de 6GB del espacio libre (en la misma partición que Windows Vista) a tener en cuenta herramientas de la instalación y del análisis.
- Mi PC tiene una impulsión de DVD-ROM.
Miramos adelante a verle allí…
Windows Vista SP1 instala a equipo justo

Escrito por Nick White. Las alimentaciones mayores leídas en son fuente WEB SITE
ningunos comentarios.
Lea más artículos encendido Mantenga el paquete 1 y SP1 y Noticias ofrecidas y Windows Vista.
The right time to assess Windows Vista’s performance
Measuring the performance of an operating system is a tricky thing. At the same time, it's the right and necessary thing to do, because performance is one of many criteria important to customers. Part of the trick of measuring performance is to time testing execution with the product cycle such that the results are as meaningful as possible for customers; this helps them make a better decision by making use of the full array of available information. As one example, about a year ago we commissioned a firm called Principled Technologies to conduct a study comparing Windows XP SP2 to Windows Vista RTM. That study found the performance measures of the two operating systems were within the same range for many tasks that home and business users frequently perform under real-world conditions.
My point is that we waited to conduct these benchmarking tests until Windows Vista had reached the RTM milestone in the product cycle, as this allowed us to provide our customers the most meaningful data available at the time -- the data most likely to directly affect their decision to upgrade to Windows Vista. We do a whole range of performance tests at every stage of the OS development process, but, as a general rule, we avoid sharing benchmark tests of software that hasn't gone RTM (i.e., final code). This explains why we have not to date published any findings of benchmark tests (nor commissioned anyone to do so) on performance improvements brought about by Windows Vista SP1. Publishing benchmarks of the performance of Windows Vista SP1 now wouldn't be a worthwhile exercise for our customers, as the code is still in development and, to the degree that benchmarking tests are involved, remains a moving target.
Aside from that point, let me also emphasize that there are a variety of ways to benchmark the performance of a PC. Different techniques can yield different results. Some benchmark techniques simply test PC hardware performance by running a series of tasks at superhuman speed. Such tests tend to exaggerate small differences between test platforms and consequently are used less frequently nowadays, replaced in favor of benchmarks running tasks at human speeds with realistic waits and data entry. Benchmarks that run at superhuman speeds often deliver results that don't tell the whole story. In fact, we made deliberate choices during the development of Windows Vista to focus on real-world scenarios affecting user experience, rather than focusing on improvement of microsecond operations imperceptible to the user. In addition, in Windows many operations can require additional processing time for work that is done for reasons that benefit the customer; these can include security, reliability or application compatibility checks conducted when a program launches. These operations may add microseconds to an individual application's launch that under real usage isn't perceivable to the human eye. When thousands such operations are strung together through automation, those few microseconds can have a cumulative effect on the benchmark result, causing performance to appear much better or worse than expected.
I've included below a video we captured depicting a "benchmark test" running a window-open, window-close routine at accelerated speed. You can see that it isn't representative of real-world user behavior and hence isn't an accurate gauge of the actual end-user experience. Further, tests like these only measure a very small set of Windows capabilities and so aren't representative of the user's overall day-to-day experience of working with Windows and running applications.
Video: Windows Vista benchmark testing
Methods like those of Principled Technologies that actually approximate the experience of using the PC, taking an OS through the paces of completing actual tasks at the approximate pace a user might click through them, tend to provide results far more useful to our customers. The typical Windows customer generally wants to know how his/her actual computing experience will change (read: improve) with an upgrade. The Principled Technologies tests do that.
For what it's worth, I can personally attest that I prefer to get my work done on Windows Vista SP1 RC bits. I run Windows Vista RTM on two production machines and SP1 RC bits on two others; in fact, I'm writing this post on a machine with SP1 RC bits installed. As a part of our internal SP1 testing program, I know that we continue to develop and improve SP1 every day, in large part based on feedback and bug submissions from external an internal Beta-test program members. IMO, the perceived gains in performance between SP1 Beta and SP1 RC code are significant. As I said at the beginning, though, performance is only part of the story -- don't forget that SP1 also brings support for new types of hardware and several emerging standards, and further eases an IT administrator's deployment and management efforts.
But don't take my word alone for it. We'll broaden the testing pool of SP1 RC bits soon (very soon), so when I post that notice here on the blog, you'll be able to put Windows Vista SP1 RC through its paces yourself. I think you'll find the experience worthwhile and satisfying.

Written by Nick White. Read more great feeds at is source WEBSITE
no comments.
Read more articles on Performance and otherSoftware and Service Pack 1 and SP1 and Featured News and Windows Vista.