Theme for WinHEC is a drive toward simpler, broader device compliance

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published November 6, 2008, 11:35 AM

One of Vista's biggest faults in consumers' minds has been that so-called "supporting devices" don't truly seem to support the operating system -- turning them on the first time means fighting the OS. Microsoft wants that to change.

With much of the Windows 7 news actually having been divulged the week before at PDC, it was left for Microsoft corporate vice president and Windows chief Steven Sinofsky and his new partner, Core Operating System manager John DeVaan, to set a theme for WinHEC 2008 in Los Angeles that distinguished their efforts from Windows Vista while at the same time maintaining a respectable level of enthusiasm.

This year, the theme boils down to a pledge to meet hardware engineers halfway. Microsoft will make compliance goals simpler for devices to earn the coveted support logo for Windows 7. In turn, the company will urge engineers to pay more attention to those requirements, including the need for device drivers to stop pretending they need administrative privileges, and stop booting when the system's in Safe Mode.

In almost a direct quote from his boss Sinofsky's comments from the week before, DeVaan told attendees during yesterday's opening keynote, "When we shipped Vista, we immediately started getting quite a lot of feedback. And we took that feedback -- whether it was from reviews, or bloggers, and yes, even some TV commercials -- and as engineers we stepped back and tried to understand what it is that we should learn from that experience. We didn't have a lot of time, because we had to immediately turn around and work on finishing Server 2008 and Vista Service Pack 1." (Our thanks to Microsoft for the transcript.)

Many Microsoft executives last week -- including Vice President for Design and Development Mike Nash, to BetaNews directly -- have, in retrospect, stated they wished that the Vista support process had been handled better. Third-party engineers weren't on board, they believe.

One reason may have been the bifurcated and subdivided logo compliance language the company originally had in mind -- which was later scaled down, though which remained confusing. Most confused were consumers, who ended up seeing logos touting machines or equipment as "Vista Capable," without drawing the same distinguishing conclusions in their minds over whether that was synonymous with "Vista Ready." Some of those customers took legal action.

Though the device driver models for Windows 7 could be "tweaked" a bit for WDDM 2.1, it will not be the all-out overhaul that engineers experienced with Vista. Yesterday morning, John DeVaan emphasized that point if only to drive home the point that if the move to support Vista --and in turn, Win7 -- hasn't begun for them already, it begins today.

"In Windows Vista, we changed a lot of our device driver models and other things at low levels of the system, and it really takes a long time for that support to get created across the broad ecosystem represented by all of us here," admitted DeVaan. "For Windows 7 we have the tenet that if something works on Vista, it really should work on Windows 7. So all the work that you're doing on quality and support of Vista should transfer immediately to Windows 7, and that will make the first day of Windows 7 in the market be a lot smoother from an ecosystem readiness standpoint."

Earlier, DeVaan commented on how 95% of devices for PCs in the market today have the drivers they need to work with Vista. Somehow, some of us must have managed to have purchased precisely the 5% that don't. And frankly, even that 5% number is untenable from a consumer perspective -- a 1-in-20 chance that the device she purchases for her Vista-based PC won't work.

Sinofsky spelled out a revised goal for Win7 on Tuesday, borrowing a vision straight out of the mind of Bill Gates: the experience of seamlessly hemming the seams of the various installation experiences.

"We wanted to do a great job to enable an end-to-end device experience," Sinofsky said. "This is the idea that when you take a device from the out-of-the-box experience, unboxing, all the way through plugging it in, getting the drivers, and then using the device in a routine way, that we should help consumers complete that experience. We don't want to let them fall off a cliff, or have a difficult time figuring out how to integrate the different parts of Windows that might support that device. We want to really deliver end-to-end on the device experience."

To that end, Windows 7 will contain new on-screen features that should help direct consumers in a more encouraging manner through the initial installation process -- those features may premiere in later builds than the M3 edition distributed to engineers this week. But engineers will have to cooperate, which will mean ceasing the practice of explicitly instructing consumers to cancel the installation help features that Vista and Win7 provide -- a practice undertaken by a sizable plurality of manufacturers, if not yet a majority.

So Microsoft is widening the plank, as it were, and installing guard rails along the sides. Now it will be up to the manufacturers to finally, this time around, get on board.

Comments

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Vista's biggest problem is that Microsoft attempted to copy Apple in every way. It offers no originality. If Microsoft was going to take this approach they might as well just had Apple to do Vista for them. At least it wouldn't have been bloated, slow and buggy.

Windoze 7 isn't looking much better. Time to get a Mac people.

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You seem very emotionally attached to your OS. "copy Apple in every way"- so wait, the taskbar you see in Windows every day was originally Apple's idea? And I guess Windows Media player too. Buggy my foot. you seem so anti-vista, I doubt you have even used the OS long enough to find a bug if you wanted to. Time to accept that MS are actually fixing stuff, people.
Typing from Windows 7. Thank God MS didn't copy OS X's dock as you are implying they would, I might have cut my wrists.

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I take it you've unlocked the "superbar"?

I'm lovin' it. Wish it could be backported to XP so all those folks whining about it (without ever having used it) would shut the F up.

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Sorry man that's not what I meant. I meant to say that Apple will never be Microsoft. Apple is only famous for it's iPod around the world and nothing else. Yes man I have used Vista and I love it. It's far more superior than Mac OS XXX and can do everything in Vista that I can't do in Mac OS XXX like playing games, using applications that aren't available for Mac OS XXX though I can't buy the type of hardware that's available for Windows. Windows 7 will definitely be the best OS in the world. Apple is for losers like I am :)

Your's truly
Steve Jobs's gay partner

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superbar pwns. :) But MS bashing is the cool and hip thing to do now...
"Wanna go skydiving?"
"Naw, I'm gonna go bash Microsoft like it will get me somewhere"
"Whoa. O_O Now THAT'S cool"

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Thanks Steve Jobs gay partner for enlightening me with your "unique and highly educated" viewpoints.

It was more interesting when you brought forward valid points though as your alias internetworld7; I must admit.

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Haha! :) True that.

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Windows 7 will be the best operating system. As soon as it's released, I will put it on my Mac. Farewell Mac OS XXX, it's gonna kill Apple

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Great post dude, cool thing about Windows is, it runs on Mac and I really don't need to use that useless Mac OS XXX because I can do every thing that I can't do and can do in Windows. That's why I prefer Vista over OS XXX and will wait for Mac OS XXX killer--Windows 7

Your's truly
Steve Jobs's gay partner

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FYI:

Windows superbar:

Running/active pinned applications are easy to differentiate from non-active pinned applications. (Running application icons are framed, and the active application icon is darkened).

A glance will tell you how many instances of each you have open. (Icon is framed and tabbed if more than one instance is open, number of tabs depends on number of instances)

Example:

6801 Unlocked superbar (Imageshack)

As you can see, uTorrent is open, Firefox is active, and there are three instances of Explorer running.

To see which instances of Explorer are running, clicking on the icon(instant) or hovering over it (about a second) will bring up the preview window which is constantly updated (playing WoW, the preview image is as active as the game-window).

I know. Off topic, but the taskbar topic is buried.

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looks neat, thanks

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I had multiple Windows computers disabled by rootkits in 2008, despite full security.

They were all converted to Linux (Kubuntu) desktops.

For the average user, is there any assurance that the Windows 7 OS will not be equally susceptible to rootkits?

Vista, with its kludgy security measures, was unusable for networked applications.

Reviews have suggested that windows 7 will be little better.

Are there any reasons to believe Windows 7 will be better than current versions of Linux?

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I know what PC_Tool would say: "Multiple WINDOWS computers, eh? I notice you didn't say VISTA computers, because its security is impregnable!!" And then I would say, "Yeah, if all you wanna do is click UAC dialogs all day long instead of actually getting something done!" And then we'd both say Linux is slow, fragmented, unfriendly and has no support, and that's why Windows 7 has to be better.

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I have never once said Vista was impregnable.

UAC dialogs are history by and large. before throwing the PDC Win7 on my machine I hadn't seen one in months.

This falls into things you'd know if you actually knew what you were talking about instead of being a childish git.

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