Archive for the ‘Windows 7’ Category

Windows 7 vs. Fedora 11 — Part 1

I’m leav­ing this morn­ing for a three day trip to Ottawa for a CIRA board meet­ing. I depend on my Black­berry and my lap­top to run my busi­ness while I’m on the road. I’m going to do an exper­i­ment this trip. I’m going to run Fedora 11 exclu­sively on my lap­top. I’ve always had a multi-boot setup on the lap­top of Win­dows Desk­top, Win­dows Server, and Linux. The cur­rent setup is Win­dows 7 Ulti­mate, Server 2008 R2, and Fedora 11. I’ve set the default boot to Fedora 11 and hope to keep it that way for the next three days. I’ve tried this in the past with var­i­ous dis­tros of Ubuntu and Open­Suse. Nei­ther worked out. For some rea­son I always had to boot into Win­dows some­time dur­ing the road trip. It was usu­ally some­thing to do with Exchange or my Black­berry. I rely on my Black­berry and Exchange to man­age my time, email, and basi­cally my busi­ness. I’ll try to keep this blog up to date with my expe­ri­ences and at the end I’ll post the results.

Windows 7, Vista, and the Blogoshpere

Win­dows 7 is about to hit the RTM mile­stone any day now. I’ve been play­ing with it since the pub­lic beta release last fall. I like it. As soon as it hits RTM I plan to install it in on both my lap­top and desk­top. I’ll only run Vista in vir­tual machines for test­ing. That said I can’t believe all the hyper­bole about Win­dows 7. Yes, it has some nice new fea­tures but come on peo­ple it’s really not that dif­fer­ent from Vista. The vast echo cham­ber of the blo­gos­phere which dissed Vista is prais­ing Win­dows 7 like it’s the sec­ond com­ing. I’ve been try­ing to analyse why.

Resis­tance to change and resis­tance to admit­ting you may be wrong is my best guess. Vista was a huge change from XP. I was in on the beta test­ing of Vista quite early. It was still called Long­horn. I knew imme­di­ately there was going to be a lot of resis­tance. It was actu­ally rea­son­ably secure and forced users and pro­gram­mers into a bet­ter secu­rity model. Any­one remotely inter­ested in secu­rity knows that increased secu­rity always means increased incon­ve­nience. How often did we hear new Vista users say­ing things like “I’m the admin­is­tra­tor dammit. I can look after my secu­rity myself.” Well you know what? 99.9% of us can’t. If you’re run­ning XP it’s prob­a­bly impos­si­ble. Amongst other things I enjoy fig­ur­ing out how mal­ware works. I don’t make much money at it but I remove mal­ware for cus­tomers when I have time. I do this so I can see real world infec­tions and fig­ure out how the mal­ware works. I see mal­ware all the time on the com­put­ers of net­work admin­is­tra­tors and highly sophis­ti­cated users. You want to know why this is? It’s because they run an inse­cure OS as admin­is­tra­tor all the time. The pro­grams they use expect to have admin­is­tra­tor rights. The ser­vices and dri­vers run­ning in the back­ground have carte blanche to do what­ever they want. XP is a secu­rity night­mare peo­ple became used to. There was no way to fix it thus Vista came into being. Vista while mit­i­gat­ing a lot of the prob­lems forced every­one to change their habits in a way that wasn’t con­ve­nient. More impor­tantly it took a while to fig­ure out these changes. It took even longer for a mod­er­ately com­pe­tent geek to fig­ure out new ways to bend the OS to their will. Cou­ple this with the fact that Vista required sig­nif­i­cantly more hard­ware than XP and it was a recipe for dis­as­ter. This caused much angst and bad press in the blo­gos­phere. This angst was end­lessly echoed until it was the “truth” that Vista was flawed. Once this “truth” was out there it was impos­si­ble for any blog­ger to argue against it. There is still no bet­ter way to get click throughs than by writ­ing a blog that disses Vista and links to other blogs as proof. Many of the blog­gers and experts over time learned that this “truth” wasn’t really true. They were afraid to say any­thing for fear of admit­ting they’d been wrong. Along comes Win­dows 7. It has a few cool new fea­tures. The UI has been tweaked a bit. It’s been highly opti­mized to appear faster to the user. Most peo­ple now have hard­ware capa­ble of run­ning Vista. Win­dows 7 runs great on this hard­ware. More impor­tantly all the blog­gers and mod­er­ately com­pe­tent geeks can get up to speed very quickly as they already climbed the learn­ing curve with Vista and it’s not Vista. They don’t have to admit they were wrong in order to say they like it. It’s a recipe for good press in the blogosphere.

Don’t get me wrong. I really like Win­dows 7. Some of the new fea­tures are really cool. The new taskbar is a huge improve­ment. Aero peek has become indis­pen­si­ble. The UI really is more intu­itive most of the time. There are a few things I don’t like. The libraries fea­ture is a great idea that isn’t fully imple­mented. It has tremen­dous poten­tial but as it is imple­mented in Win­dows 7 it doesn’t work for me. The Home­group net­work­ing fea­ture is a secu­rity prob­lem. It makes it very hard to share one folder in your pro­file. If you share a folder in your pro­file the whole \USERS tree is auto­mat­i­cally shared. I had a good dis­cus­sion about this with some­one from Microsoft and in the end we agreed to dis­agree. He said the default ACLs and Access Based Enu­mer­a­tion locked down the fold­ers well enough for home use. I felt they didn’t, espe­cially for a very small busi­ness many of which run the Home ver­sion of Windows.

So what’s my con­clu­sion? I’m some­what grumpy about the fact that Vista will go down in his­tory as Win­dows Me the sec­ond. The blo­gos­phere is prais­ing Win­dows 7 which will cause a lot of peo­ple to finally move away from XP. That’s a very good thing. The Inter­net will be a bet­ter place.