Posts Tagged ‘microsoft’

Here’s Microsoft Windows 7!

by cfulton | October 22nd, 2009

win7_homepremium_printToday is the day you can get Microsoft Windows 7 in stores and via download. We’ve been playing with the release candidate around here for a few months, and we really dig it. It’s still bloated compared to, say, the very svelte (but now woefully outdated) Windows 2000, but is significantly faster than Windows Vista. It plays nicely with all of the video editing applications we’ve thrown at it, but we’re not too surprised by that.

I’ve been boning up on the installation notes to see exactly how I want to do this for the laptops at my home. I have come to the conclusion that I want to do custom installations to wipe out the previous Vista installations; but I have been making backups carefully to make sure that I’m not going to lose anything major. I think if I have a good disk image for each computer, I should be golden. Hopefully.

Things I’m looking forward to:

  • Support for even more GPU features.
  • Smoother, prettier fonts.
  • Quicker than Windows Vista for pretty much everything.
  • Less-painful networking.
  • 64-bit computing on my computer (which shipped with 32-bit Vista; hence, why I’ve been reading about the custom install…)
  • New taskbar that is vaguely reminiscent of Mac OS X dock–significantly reduces clutter

Unwrap Mosiacs

by tomskowronski | January 6th, 2009

microsoftNot sure if many of you have heard about Microsoft’s new development in video editing technology, but I just ran across a couple of very impressive articles about it. The idea is to be able to edit on a 3D surface by flattening it.

This is very new to the consumer market and I found it interesting that it seemed so easy to work with, (although we don’t actually see any operation). The other goal Microsoft is working at with this new development is to eliminate specialized software for different editing scenarios. For example, instead of having to use Photoshop, Ultra and then Encore you would just use the individual program for everything.

Take a look at this video on posted on BoreMe and this blog from NewScientist for more!