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More changes in Windows 7 build 7048

While the good folks at ZDNet are still racing to catch-up, some others have been working with Windows 7 build 7048 for a while and have been posting more timely (and more accurate) accounts of the changes between it and earlier post-Beta builds. I've listed some changes myself, but David over at JCXP has sent along a bunch of additional stuff that should be of interest:

Brighter  notification glow in the taskbar. It also doesn’t fade in and out slowly, but flashes.

New “missing image” graphic in IE (same link as above)

New Remote Desktop design and icon

Confirmation when restoring items from the Recycle bin

PC Safeguard renamed to "Guest Mode"

Thanks David!

A few other notes from related articles on the Web. Ed Bott claims that "Aero Peek is now the official name" of that feature. That's been the official name since before PDC, and I wrote a Feature Focus article about Aero Peek back in early December 2008, over three months ago. (That said, Microsoft has changed the names of Scenes back to Themes and has changed PC Safeguard to Guest Mode, as noted above. These things do fluxuate.) Ed tells me that this build marks the first time the words Aero Peek have actually appeared in the UI, however. That could be, though I'm pretty sure "Peek at desktop" has been there a while.

ZD's Adrian Kingsley-Hughes, who apparently blogs 24/7 ("Thoughts?") also points out a number of changes that actually occurred well before build 7048 (the Notepad and Control Panel icons, many others). No biggie, but if you've been reading along here you know about most of that already.

I should also mention that Windows 7 build 7048 is incredibly unstable. While it doesn't suffer from the weird file permission bugs of the past few builds I'd used, apps do seem to crash rather easily, especially Word. And when Word does crash, it takes the document you're editing with it. Yes, it literally deletes the document from your hard drive. Fortunately, each time it's happened--and it happens 2-3 times a day--the Word recovery feature brings back most if not all of the edited document. Still, it's a bit scary, and a heads-up that you use these ill-gotten builds at your own risk.

Update: I've seen similar instability with Windows Live Writer as well. It sometimes just hangs when you try to publish the post. You can recover the lost post in the C:\Users\[your user name]\Documents\My Weblog Posts\Drafts folder, thankfully, because it, too, disappears when the app crashes.

Update: I've reworded parts of this post so its not so snippy. That wasn't my intention. It's just that I'm very often asked about whatever Windows 7 feature, and when it's something I have in fact already covered--sometimes a long time ago--I'm curious why people think to ask me about it but don't know I already did it. The RSS feed's working, right? :)

Comments

 

Ozric said:

Regarding the stability of 7048, I did notice that it was particularly unstable (especially Word) after doing an upgrade from 7022. A clean install of 7048 did not have that issue.

After uninstalling and reinstalling Office on the upgraded machine, Word has had no further issues (so far!)

March 10, 2009 12:16 PM
 

kenmcnamee said:

I've been using build 7048 for almost a week and I've had just the opposite experience with its stability - not a single crash of any application (fingers crossed). Although, to be fair, I haven't tried using Word on it yet. Besides Word, what other applications have been crashing on 7048?

I had been using the beta (build 7000) for almost a month and experienced so many stability issues that I actually went back to Vista for a short while before 7022 got leaked.

As Ozric said, maybe the issue is due to installing Win7 as an upgrade instead of doing a clean install. All of my experiences with Win7 thus far have been with a clean install.

March 10, 2009 12:35 PM
 

Ozric said:

I did get a BSOD with Virtual CloneDrive today. I'm using their "for 7" beta 5.4.2.3

Here's what I had to reinstall to get everything working after the upgrade:

- Office 2007

- Virtual PC 2007

- Virtual CloneDrive

The latter two make some kind of sense as there's obviously some driver associated with a front end app. Office was just weird. Scrolling through a document would make it freeze.

March 10, 2009 12:57 PM
 

kenmcnamee said:

Ok, just opened up an existing, long Word doc in build 7048 and tried messing with it as much as possible for about 5 minutes to get Word to crash but no luck. Not exactly an exhaustive test but I did mess up the document a lot - inserting, deleting, reformatting text, images, tables, etc. Everything worked flawlessly, including scrolling quickly through the 58 page document and rapidly changing views.

March 10, 2009 1:12 PM
 

subzerohitman721 said:

This is pretty typical of any OS construction process where eventually you'll get a version that's a little shaky. Microsoft will simply have to analyse the build versus previous ones, figure where the instabilities lie and correct them. I'm not at all surprised because I've read that this has happened before. Besides, 7048 is still part of the WinMain branch and has not been forked off to make an RC escrow build yet. So I'm sure this is just the latest in refining and code clean up. Until we have one that has been made an RC escrow build, I wouldn't be too worried about instabilities yet.

Now if we get one that's an RC escrow build, then and only then would we have some cause for concern. Until then, these builds are a snapshot of what's coming and going. We'll have a better idea in a few weeks when the next latest build get leaked.

March 10, 2009 1:49 PM
 

kadarzsolt said:

I understand why Paul, as a journalist, is compelled to try a non-official build.

for a regular user the Beta seems stable and good enough to use until the official RC arrives in April. I use three PCs with the beta with no issues at all.

...and I am a heavy user. some of my Excel and Access works manage to "keep busy" a Pentium D 2.66 for several seconds with large data set operations.

NO instabilities so far. I am confident that the public RC will be a solid build.

March 10, 2009 2:39 PM
 

Waethorn said:

"I did notice that it was particularly unstable (especially Word) after doing an upgrade from 7022"

Upgrading a beta to another beta is a bad idea.  Stick to clean installs, or upgrading from production-level OS's.

*sigh*

....and people wonder why some of these don't make it to the general public.

Anyway, just leave CEIP turned on and keep submitting feedback on any issues whenever possible.  At least Microsoft can prioritize critical issues when they receive a lot of feedback.

I'll wait until the RC before I run any of this on my production network, thanks.  I do want to check out the new deployment tools.  The current commandline tools are mostly all getting replaced by a single tool called DISM (don't ask me what it stands for....).  That's great.  If I can use a single tool for image manipulation (not what you think) then I can decrease production line delays and push systems out the door faster.

March 10, 2009 3:10 PM
 

More changes in Windows 7 build 7048 « Windows 7 Help - Tutorials, News, Software & More! said:

Pingback from  More changes in Windows 7 build 7048 «  Windows 7 Help - Tutorials, News, Software & More!

March 10, 2009 4:00 PM
 

weedmonk said:

If that's the less snippy version I wish I could have read the original.

I Lol'd  hard at the Hardware 2.0 reference. Thoughts???

March 10, 2009 4:11 PM
 

Ozric said:

@Waethorn: you're so right. I don't know what I was thinking. Playing with an unofficial beta and providing what I thought might have been constructive reasoning for Paul own issues with said build.

Next time I'll just shut up so that I don't cause you to sigh

P.S. I was wondering why Build 7048 didn't make it to the general public.

March 10, 2009 4:28 PM
 

Waethorn said:

"I was wondering why Build 7048 didn't make it to the general public."

....because it doesn't fit within the schedule of the RC, silly!

March 10, 2009 4:35 PM
 

Cfischer83 said:

What Ed actually said is correct, Paul.

Going on a zdnet war?

March 10, 2009 5:26 PM
 

robertsjoe said:

They'd better hurry up and release Windows 7, since Paul said it would be released in April. Times ticking.. tick tock.. tick tock.

March 10, 2009 5:37 PM
 

4sysops - Microsoft has dropped prices - Malicious Software Removal Tool 2.8 - Win7 RC changes - New VHDs said:

Pingback from  4sysops -   Microsoft has dropped prices  - Malicious Software Removal Tool 2.8 - Win7 RC changes - New VHDs

March 10, 2009 6:54 PM
 

More changes in Windows 7 build 7048 - SuperSite Blog - Windows 7 Ultimate said:

Pingback from  More changes in Windows 7 build 7048 - SuperSite Blog - Windows 7 Ultimate

March 10, 2009 7:08 PM
 

benjwah said:

Paul.... Paul....

I take no issue with the post, but "fluxuate"? Please tell me it was late at night.

I might be wrong, I might be out of my league, but I'm pretty sure the word you were after is "fluctuate".

March 10, 2009 8:24 PM
 

Cold_realms said:

I did an in place upgrade from 7000 as I did not want to re-install EVERYTHING again. I had a few issues with blue screens until I updated some drivers that were replaced with older versions during the upgrade and ran a disk check that resolved an endless loop of the indexing service crashing.

I was working on word 07 for at least 6 hours without a single hiccup.

 On a weird side note I notice with this build my network transfers are faster than ever, all other OS's I have used with all the same network settings(1GB/s, Jumbo frames of 4k) would top out at 23MB/s on very large file x-fers (assumed it was the slow HDD subsystem on my server) with the 7048 build I frequently hit a sustained of 35MB/s  to the same server. I simply cannot explain a 30% increase but I like it!

March 10, 2009 10:01 PM
 

My Internet Activity for 2009-03-10 | Jim Lunsford's Lunsford Land said:

Pingback from  My Internet Activity for 2009-03-10 | Jim Lunsford's Lunsford Land

March 11, 2009 2:15 AM
 

Waethorn said:

@Cold_realms, all:

Beware of Broadcom GBE.  Maybe they're fixed in 7, but Vista and XP have major issues with the current crop of drivers.

March 11, 2009 8:10 AM
 

Windows 7 Build 7048: Getting Closer to RC Status | WinSoftNews - Computers-Technology-Software said:

Pingback from  Windows 7 Build 7048: Getting Closer to RC Status | WinSoftNews - Computers-Technology-Software

March 12, 2009 11:32 AM
 

How reliable is Windows 7? | Ed Bott’s Microsoft Report | ZDNet.com said:

Pingback from  How reliable is Windows 7? | Ed Bott’s Microsoft Report | ZDNet.com

March 12, 2009 5:54 PM
 

Windows 7: revista de blogs II | MuyWindows said:

Pingback from  Windows 7: revista de blogs II | MuyWindows

March 23, 2009 7:27 AM
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