Archive for the ‘Vista’ Category

A simple battery test: Mac OS X versus Vista on a MBP

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

Bob was wondering which OS would give him longer use of his battery on a MacBook Pro (MBP). So he ran a test. Starting with a fully-charged battery, he booted once into Mac OS X and once into Vista (via Bootcamp) and during each session he surfed the Internet using a WiFi connection for as long as his battery would allow him.

Which OS gave him the longer battery life? Mac OS X. The Mac OS lasted slightly longer than 2:15 minutes whereas Vista ran for 1:40. That gives OS X about a 35% edge over Vista using the same hardware.

Of course, this is a completely informal, non-scientific test. Bob wasn’t trying to duplicate his actions in each case and so there were definitely differences along the way. How much his actions influenced the time is unknown.

What was the hardware that he was using: MacBook Pro, 2.13GHz, Core 2 Duo, 2GB memory, 120GB 5400RPM harddrive, 15.4″ display, 802.11G and Firefox browser while surfing the Net.

Personally, both times don’t sound that great to me, but I can see where the large display and CPU could eat up milliwatts pretty fast.

What would Vista have been like if it had delayed until June 2007?

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

Last summer there was talk of yet another delay for Vista. The rumors were flying that Microsoft wouldn’t or couldn’t make its end of year launch date. Lots of people chimed in, siding with the rumor. At the time I blogged that a delay or not wouldn’t impact me too much one way or another. I’d still be using the Vista beta and I could wait until June 2007 or whenever if Microsoft needed the time. However, Microsoft stood firm and announced they could get Vista out the door by 2007. And so they did. By the end 2006 Microsoft had launched the enterprise version of Vista and planned a consumer launch by the end of January 2007.

As I sit here typing this blog post on my Vista-running notebook, I realize I’m a benefitiary of the many new Vista features. I’m hooked on the ability to type an app name from the Start menu to quickly launch an app when I can’t remember where it’s located, if it’s on the machine at all–or when I’m too lazy to drill down three or more levels of folders to get it. Same goes for the Search box in the Control Panel. I’ve also grown dependent on the Mobility Center and the much more refined control of the WiFi. And, then there are the enhancements to the shell which make Windows easier to navigate with the stylus, such as the checkboxes in Windows Explorer and the graphical stylus feedback in Vista itself. Other than these features, I realize I “use” the Aero shell on most of my machines, but then again I don’t really notice it all that much. And I’m still getting used to the Control Panel and the I’m still trying to improve how I navigate Windows Explorer. There are lots of these little things that take time to get used to. I remember stumbling much the same way when transitioning from Windows 2000 to XP. These don’t bother me that much. They’re the price to pay as Windows itself becomes better organized.

Like all big OS transitions, there have been some bumps along the road. I still don’t have a complete set of drivers and for the drivers I have I still run into Sleep/shutdown problems, occassional blue screens (although I haven’t encountered one in a month or two so maybe that problem is gone), about 60% battery life (guesstimate on the Toshiba M400 although the Samsung Q1 does fine), a couple of the Tablet features don’t work, and a mix of beta software (developer tools) from Microsoft that’s trying to catch up with the OS itself.

So thinking about how I use Vista today, the state of the developer tools, and the like I began to wonder, what would my Vista experience be like today if Microsoft had delayed the launch of Windows till let’s say June 1, 2007 as some had predicted last summer was necessary?

First, Microsoft would have missed out on its great quarter this year. For the stock holders this would have been a big deal. As a customer, I’m not that interested in it, although I tend to like purchasing big-commitment products from companies that have solid futures. And a strong quarter helps Microsoft continue to grow in areas that are becoming even more important to me, such as mobile searching and browser-based developement.

What else might have changed if Vista had been delayed six months?

Would there be more drivers? Top of my list of things to ponder is whether additional time would have helped the driver issue. I don’t think so. In fact, it might have made it worse. I bet more of the equipment I currently own would fall off the list of supported hardware. The manufacturers want to focus on their new equipment. I do think, though, that the driver issue is Microsoft’s biggest mistake when it comes to Vista. With the widespread adoption of laptops, Tablet PCs, and the like which have few hardware upgrade choices, the OS needs to “just work” when it’s installed. It’s a huge challenge, I can see, but that’s the new standard as I see it.

Would Vista be better tuned? This is one area where I be Microosft could have made some noticeable improvements. I imagine with extra time, the battery issue could have been resolved. Maybe not–because I don’t know what causes it anyway–but that’s my guess. Other tweaks might have been feasible to add here and there too. Could Microsoft have shaved off a few more seconds to its shutdown times? Maybe. And there are some flash-to-black screen flickers I see from time to time that look terrible. Not sure if they are driver problems or Vista problems. I’d imagine some extra time could have addressed these.

It’s all about SP1. Many in the IT industry argue that it’s not the launch date of Windows that’s the important date, it’s the launch date of SP1 that you should watch. Delaying Vista would delay SP1. No matter how good Vista would become in the extra 6 months, there would still be many that would argue to wait for SP1.

What about the Apple-Microsoft competition? I don’t see much difference. The iPhone still would have blown away everything at CES. Almost everyone I know that’s an early adopter has purchased a Mac (most run OS X and Vista though) or is about to. And Vista still would have hit the shelves before Leopard.

Which features would not have been cut? Given more time I imagine there would have been some features that would not have made the cutting block. What are they? I don’t know. Maybe multiple location support in Media Center? Maybe better ad-hoc networking?

Would it be any more secure? I’m not sure if security itself would have benefited all that much from a Vista delay, however, I’m sure the UAC, which pops up too much, could definitely have been improved.

Would the launch have been bigger or had one impact? This is one area where a Vista delay would have definitely helped. Since Vista was launched in two stages–as an enterprise event and then a consumer event–the launch itself was a bit of a fizzle. If Microsoft had waited, released the Vista versions together along with its updated developer tools (for WPF for isntance), and even a version of Silverlight, Vista would have looked much more like the advancement it is.

Back to school sales. No difference here I suspect. Some of the biggest sales come around the time students go back to school. A Januaray versus June date wouldn’t have had much impact here. There’d still be lots of happy students with their new laptops and Tablet PC come September 2007.

Office is the other hundred pound guerilla. Delaying Vista probably would have caused Office to delay, which it didn’t really need. The one area where Office could have used some extra time though, was to improve its developer support for the new Ribbon. It was an unfortunate step backwards.

So in hindsight, was it a good idea not to delay Vista till June 2007? Actually, outside of the financial side for Microsoft itself, I don’t think there would have been much difference to end users. Early adopters such as myself, would be using the Vista beta, so it’s not like I wouldn’t be running it night and day anyway. Maybe there would be a littlle more refined version of Vista, with a few more drivers, and a better developer story, but that’s about it. Looked at another way, I don’t think consumers would have minded the delay in Vista–especially if the time could have been used to address the driver issue. However, for the most part I don’t think consumers care one way or another.

Battery life with Vista

Sunday, May 6th, 2007

Gottabemobile has a great thread on the topic of battery life and Vista.

I haven’t had time to run tests to see how much battery performance I can get from my Toshiba M400, so I look forward to reading any results people come up with. My hunch is that there’s more going on here than simple Vista settings, but maybe not. I’d be satisfied if I could get back to 10-20% of what I was getting with XP.

All of this has me thinking more and more about switching to a desktop system for development and using a UMPC for mobility.

The Vista power drain

Friday, May 4th, 2007

CNet is covering user reports of decreased battery life when running Vista. I’ve noticed the same thing.

I’ve been experiencing horrendous battery life problems with my Toshiba M400. Put simply: The M400 is almost useless when I’m on the go. The battery may last a couple hours at best. I was getting close to four hours with XP. My battery is getting a bit old at one year of age, so I expect it won’t perform like it used to, but I noticed a huge drop once I switched from XP to the Vista RTM. I could buy a new battery, but I’m reluctant to put any more money into the M400 because of what I’ve been experiencing so far. It’s time to look elsewhere.

I understand others are having problems with their laptops too. It’s not just Tablets and it’s not just the M400. And Rob Bushway is right, the battery life under Vista is “certainly not…mobile friendly.”

Interstingly though, this past week I finally switched over to using a Samsung Q1 (running Vista without Aero) at MEDC because at least its battery would last through the morning and keep on ticking. I could almost get a whole day when using an extended battery. It was quite refreshing after using the M400. Although don’t get started on the Q1’s sluggish boot time…

Does Vista boot slower than XP?

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

Mary Jo Foley links to this ComputerWorld article that aggregates an online conversation people are having about whether Vista boots and shutsdown slower than XP.

My experiences are mixed in this area. I’ll get to them in a minute. However, a word of caution here–at least in terms of my equipment–many of my systems do not have final or robust drivers, so personally I’m not of a mind to take my Vista boot times that seriously right now. But that’s just my experience.

What have I seen in terms of boot times? Actually quite a variety. I have some systems that seem to boot fast and others that seem to boot a few minutes after eternity. Again, I’m suspect of the drivers. In terms of shutdown times, it does seem like it takes longer, though I haven’t tried to see if my impressions are correct.

In terms of sleep mode, I have a mixed bag here too. Sometimes it seems to work, sometimes not. The other day, for instance, I had to stuff my UMPC into my backpack before I had a chance to shut it down. I knew better, but I had no choice. Anyway, I figured I would manually turn it off in a couple minutes. Of course, I forgot. Thirty plus minutes later I pulled out the UMPC–fan blowing at full speed with everything running at full heat. Ooops. I’ve also had my full-sized Tablets stay awake without going to sleep while in the middle of development. I guess I can see why, but then again, I wonder if this isn’t a driver issue.

The Vista “hook” is the notebook

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

The more I think about Vista and its sales through this year, the more I believe that sales of Vista and notebooks (or Tablet PCs) are intimately together.

I’ve noticed that Microsoft has used notebooks and Tablets in their commercials, but for the most part the focus has been on things like the Alt-Tab Flip3D effect. I don’t quite get it. The effect would be nice if the OS had simiilar features or features that Vista-targetted apps could leverage, but neither is the case. Now if you could lay the screen down and share windows with someone on the other side of the notebook/Tablet by spinning the Windows around, then maybe that’s something new and interesting. But rotating through windows? In only one place? Eh.

Hopefully we’ll see greater graphics capabilities down the road both in the OS and in SDK access, like in “opening up” the features in the DWM.

However, there are some great notebook features I’d really like to see that I think are easily communicated, make great demos, and would really get the idea across that there’s something different and extremely useful about the next version of Windows. True, almost paper-like instant on is one such feature. Effortless, ad-hoc sharing of rich content is another. Rich apps in the browser is a third.

The current version of Vista lays the foundation for these and many other such features. Hopefully we won’t have to wait too long for them.

More drivers for Vista than XP

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

CNet: “As for hardware drivers, there were 30,000 such drivers that shipped with Vista, more than three times the number that came with Windows XP.”

Of course, it really doesn’t matter how many drivers there are if the one or two that you really need aren’t available :-).

Take my Toshiba M400, for instance. Vista updated a couple Intel chipset drivers a couple weeks back, but ever since stability has been an issue. I’ve run into several blue screens since. (My brother has encountered similar problems with his Vista system too.) I imagine it’s because of one of the several other beta drivers that I have installed on the system. When there will be a complete set of solid drivers for the M400, I don’t know. For now, I don’t rely on the system as my primary system.

What’s holding me back is not just about stability, I’m missing a key Vista driver for my printer too. I can’t live without a printer–for printing out airline passes and the like. My printer in question is an HP 3550. The HP website indicates that a driver will be available sometime between now and July 2007. This means my primary system for work is likely going to be an XP system until then.

From the HP site, here’s a list of the HP printers that are supported in Vista. As you can see there are quite a few printers with Vista drivers available already. At a quick glance it looks like there are a little under 20% of HP’s printers that are yet to be supported in Vista and under 10% that never will be. Not too bad.

My favorite part of Vista launch day

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

I missed the streamed Vista launch event yesterday so I was eager to check TechMeme and see what people were saying about it this morning.

This Live blogging post by Engadget caught my attention first. My heart sunk a little as a I read the post. It was a rather negative collection of snippets. I guess I could understand. Waiting in the cold for the event to start wouldn’t put me in the right frame of mind either.

Next up I saw this from Chris Prilillo: “Windows Vista TV Commercials — DUDE! MAKE THEM STOP! SERIOUSLY” Hmmm. (Chris: I won’t link to the Clearification.com campaign either. It’s depressing. I know that’s the idea. It’s supposed to be. That’s why it’s supposed to be funny. But I’m not in the mindset. I don’t think others want to be either with a new product.)

Oh, well.

I did regain my smile. You have to check out this interview with Bill Gates on The Daily Show. Hilarious.

A surprising bluescreen in Vista

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

Yesterday I was feverishly updating the Tablet PC Guy CES post and then poof….bluescreen. I didn’t write down the message, but if I recall correctly it was something about a response not coming back from a timer in time. I’m guessing that the system detected a lock up.

What was I doing to crash my computer? I was using IE 7 and I think I was just beginning to try to drag a window. This isn’t the first time I’ve had trouble with IE over the last couple years–usually IE just locks up (so I simply terminate it) or IE doesn’t paint correctly or something simple like this. It’s probably not IE’s fault anyway though. I’m guessing it’s a driver issue.

There is one thing that I changed yesterday. I downloaded and installed Intel’s updated chipset drivers for the Toshiba M400. Maybe this driver has a flaw in it or it now fixes a problem that reveals a bug in another driver. I’m not sure. Almost all of the other drivers I’m using are labelled as beta drivers anyway. So there’s plenty of potential here for problems.

I’ll be watching closely to see if I get another bluescreen and reporting back if I figure out what it is.

Microsoft Lifecam drivers will be available around retail launch of Vista

Saturday, January 6th, 2007

I’m not the only one disappointed that there aren’t Vista drivers available for Microsoft’s LifeCam cameras.

According to Nick White from Microsoft, the Vista drivers will be available around the retail launch of Vista, which should be near the end of January.

There’s no indication if these will be beta drivers or the real deal.

When will Vista drivers start appearing? For real.

Friday, January 5th, 2007

I have been running Vista now almost exclusively since the RTM version was posted on MSDN at the end of November. So far so good–in general. But…..I feel like I’m running beta software. Not because of Vista per se–but rather because I’m actually having to use beta drivers for most everything and for other devices there are no drivers at all.

Take my Microsoft LifeCam VX-6000 webcam, for instance. It’s useless on Vista because there isn’t a Vista driver for it. With CES and other events coming up I really want to use this webcam, but I can’t. Because I’m running Vista. I have some other webcams, but they aren’t as good. I really want to use the LifeCam. Microsoft says that Vista drivers will be available in January for the webcam. I’m guessing it’ll be after all these events are done and Vista hits the retail shelves. Oh, well. Time to look for an alternative webcam.

During any major OS transition there are always driver issues that pop up. In the past, I’ve negotiated my way around them by purchasing new equipment that’s designed to work with the latest OS. Will I need to do the same with Vista? We’ll see.

Vista marketing ramping up

Wednesday, December 27th, 2006

Microsoft marketing for Vista is gearing up–especially across the blogosphere. This past week several bloggers posted, for instance, have been receiving a puzzle in the mail that is part of a Vista contest. Robert Scoble indicates that the contest ends in front of the Bellagio on January 8th at CES.

Other bloggers are posting that they just didn’t receive a puzzle in the mail from Microsoft, but rather a fully loaded notebook with Vista–which they can either send back after evaluating, keep, or give away. (At least some of the machines are 64-bit Acer Ferrari’s. Too bad there isn’t a Ferrari Tablet :-). )

I received a package from Microsoft yesterday too. No, it wasn’t a notebook. It was a box full of Vista marketing material. The contents are contained in a translucent box with a cardboard wrapper that says “start here.” Inside is a letter that says “Congratulations on receiving 1 of 5000 Windows Vista Launch kits.” (Each box has a number on the side indicating which one in the sequence it is. My number is 1839 of 5000. I wonder who has the lowest number?) The box contains:

* A book listing various Vista partners and products. I noticed at least one product that isn’t out yet. Not sure if I should spill the beans or not–but do check out the product/partner guide if you get one of these boxes.
* A round mousepad with the Vista Start button logo on it.
* Belkin USB transfer cable
* 1GB Windows Live USB drive. Contains info on Windows Live.
* Microsoft Office Live trial card.
* 2GB SanDisk Cruzer Micro USB drive.
* Day pass for T-Mobile
* Details on Windows Marketplace
* Flight Simulator X. The letter in the box indicates that some boxes include other games.
* 2 “Vista Launch Kit” DVDs–I haven’t looked at them yet to see what they contain.

I’m not sure who the boxes are being sent to although Lora messaged me yesterday that she got one too. (I can’t remember her number. I think it was three thousand something.)

Yes, Vista marketing is well on its way. And next month, with the official consumer launch of Vista, I imagine things are only going to get more intense. January is going to be a big marketing month. First there’s CES. Then the regional launch events begin. And then the formal Vista launch at the end of the month.

David Pogue gives his impressions of Vista

Thursday, December 14th, 2006

David Pogue on Vista.

Rick Segal shares his Vista install experiences

Wednesday, December 13th, 2006

Rick Segal blogs about his experiences with installing Vista on several computers.

Yep, there need to be more drivers.

Update on Vista issues with WPF apps

Tuesday, December 12th, 2006

I have a better understanding of some of the issues I’ve been experiencing with WPF on Vista. First, it appears that the display beta drivers definitely have an influence on the repaint problem I was seeing. In fact, I’ve since discovered that most of the time I don’t see it occur and it seems OK on other Vista machines.

In terms of the menus, here’s what I’m seeing. On Vista, submenu items appear to be inheriting the parent menu item’s Foreground color. In XP, on the other hand, the Foreground color does not get inheritied. I think it’s correct on XP. Compare this to the Background color which doesn’t get inherited in either XP nor Vista.

You can create a menu with submenu items in Microsoft Expression Blend and change the parent menu item’s Foreground color to see the submenu items change in real-time. Notice, again, that changing the parent’s Background color has no affect on the background colors of the child menu items.

I wrote a simple XAML app that shows what I’m seeing in Vista (with and without Glass):

MenuTestVista.png

and now in XP:

MenuTestXP.png

In the dropdown menu the menu items should not be red (I think), but they are in Vista.

I may have something goofy in my Vista installations, so here’s the test project I created and a sample app called MenuTest. If you want to give it a try on your Vista RTM machine, let me know what you see.

Here’s the XAML I’m using for the menu:

<Menu>
<MenuItem Header=”File” Foreground=”Red” Background=”Pink”>
<MenuItem Header=”Item 1″></MenuItem>
<MenuItem Header=”Item 2″></MenuItem>
<MenuItem Header=”Item 3″></MenuItem>
<MenuItem Header=”Item 4″></MenuItem>
</MenuItem>
</Menu>