Location: GUIs >
Windows >
Windows 7 (NT 6.1)
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Whoops, Windows 7 fall down and go boom.
Oh, and Windows 7 adds sticky notes. Just like MacOS X has had for
ages.
Also, in case anyone is wondering, here is the default desktop from
Windows 7e. Note that there is no IE logo on the task bar.
Also a side-by side comparison of some of the current apps and their
Windows 1.01 counterparts. 16-bit apps will run on the 32-bit version of
Windows 7 but not on the increasingly popular 64 bit version.
Bringing a tiny bit of sanity to Windows 7. Unfortunately the classic
start menu has been brutally murdered, and I don't think there is any hope
of ever again getting a simple explorer window containing just files without
a sidebar, navigation bar, or context menus. At least the classic theme
is still in there.
The only way to get rid of those stupid ribbons in Wordpad and Paint
is to run the old versions from XP or Vista. Fortunately those seem to
run nicely.
Firefox, of course runs nicely. Although after installing it, it does
not get as prominent placement as it used to. Without the Quick Launch
area or the default "Internet" start menu item, the only immediately visible
way to launch Firefox is from the desktop icon. The user must "pin" Firefox
to the Start Menu and Task Bar themselves.
Shutting down Windows 7. Really there is nothing to see, the instant
you click the "shut down" button it immediately starts shutting down without
even asking if you are sure.
And as the new tradition goes: Windows 7 shutting YOU down.
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