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ActiveWin.com: Windows Vista Beta 1 Fact
Sheet
Posted By:
ActiveWin.com
Date:
July 20, 2005
|
Microsoft Windows Vista Beta 1 Fact Sheet
Windows Vista beta 1 is an important milestone on
Microsoft’s path to releasing the final version of Windows Vista. Beta 1 is
being delivered to more than 10,000 beta testers.
Windows Vista™ beta 1 is an important milestone on Microsoft Corp.’s path
to releasing the final version of Windows Vista. Beta 1 will provide
developers, IT professionals and Windows® enthusiasts with an
opportunity to test the operating system’s infrastructure and provide
Microsoft with valuable feedback. Beta 1 is being delivered to more than
10,000 beta testers via the Windows Vista Technical Beta Program, and
thousands more people will receive beta 1 through the MSDN®
developer program and Microsoft® TechNet.
Fundamental Improvements for Computing With More Confidence
Windows Vista beta 1 focuses on greatly improving the Windows’
fundamentals — security, deployment, manageability and performance — so
developers, IT professionals and end users can have more confidence in their
PCs. Enhancements have been made in the following areas:
• |
Security. Windows Vista will deliver many
new or improved security features that provide a usable, consistent and
manageable experience in corporate, mobile and roaming environments, as
well as in the home. Some examples of new security features in Windows
Vista beta 1 include these:
• |
User Account Protection features enable
administrators to deploy PCs set up to give end users only the
privileges they need to perform their tasks. This bridges the gap
between user and administrative privileges by running applications
with limited permissions. |
• |
Windows Service Hardening monitors
critical Windows services for abnormal activity in the file system,
registry and network that could be used to allow malware to persist
on a machine or propagate to other machines. |
• |
Anti-malware features detect and remove
worms, viruses and other types of malicious software from the
computer during an upgrade. |
• |
Advanced data protection technologies
reduce the risk that data on laptops or on other computers will be
viewed by unauthorized users, even if the computer is lost or
stolen. Windows Vista supports full-volume encryption to help
prevent disk access to files by other operating systems. It also
stores encryption keys in a Trusted Platform Model (TPM) v1.2 chip.
The entire system partition is encrypted in both the hibernation
file and the user data. |
• |
Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 in Windows
Vista Beta 1 includes many features to help protect against
malicious Web sites and malware. To help protect against phishing
and spoofing attacks, Internet Explorer also does the following:
• |
Highlights the address bar when users visit
a secure sockets layer-protected site and lets users easily
check the validity of a site’s security certificate |
• |
Allows users to clear all cached data with
a single click |
|
• |
Network Access Protection. Viruses and
worms can attack a protected internal network through mobile
computers that do not have the latest updates, security
configuration settings or virus signatures downloaded. Mobile users
may connect to unprotected networks at hotels, airports or coffee
shops, where their computers can become infected by malware or a
virus. Windows Vista has Network Access Protection to help prevent
security-compromised computers from connecting to a user’s internal
network until security criteria are met. |
• |
Firewall. Windows Vista provides
outgoing as well as incoming filtering, which can be centrally
managed via Group Policy. This lets administrators control which
applications are allowed to communicate or are blocked from
communicating on the network. Controlling network access is one of
the most important ways to mitigate security risks. |
|
• |
Deployment. Windows Vista will help make
desktop deployment dramatically faster and easier. Deployment features
included in Windows Vista Beta 1 include the following:
• |
The Windows Imaging (WIM) format
provides a single file that contains one or more complete Windows
Vista installation images. To conserve space, Windows Vista
compresses the file and stores only a single copy of files that more
than one image share. As a result, Windows Vista images help
eliminate redundancy, decrease file size, and reduce installation or
migration time. Image-based setup also is less error-prone than a
scripted installation process. |
• |
Windows Pre-installation Environment (PE)
enables administrators to configure Windows offline as well as
diagnose and troubleshoot hardware problems before launching the
setup process. |
• |
The Application Compatibility Toolkit
(ACT) helps administrators quickly identify, analyze and resolve any
issues with non-standard applications being migrated to Windows
Vista. |
|
• |
Manageability. Windows Vista will help
reduce total cost of ownership (TCO) of PCs through simplified
management, increased automation of tasks and improved diagnostics.
Improvements in Windows Vista beta 1 include these:
• |
Better diagnostics implementation, including
auto-diagnosis and auto-correction of common error conditions, fixes
for known crashes and “hangs,” and new technology to minimize
reboots when installing software, are included. |
• |
An improved Task Scheduler schedules
tasks to launch when a specific event occurs, such as when disk
space becomes insufficient. |
• |
Web Services for Management
(WS-Management) makes it easier to run scripts remotely and to
perform other management tasks. Communication can be both encrypted
and authenticated, helping limit security risks. |
• |
Microsoft Management Console 3.0 (MMC
3.0) provides a common framework for management tools, making them
easier to find and use. MMC 3.0 supports richer, more functional
graphical user interfaces for management and allows administrators
to run multiple tasks in parallel, keeping administrative tools
responsive even after launching a complex or slow management task. |
|
• |
Performance. Windows Vista will help improve
PC performance in key areas, including starting up, waking up and
responding to user actions. Performance features included in Windows
Vista beta 1 include the following:
• |
Quick startup. Login scripts and startup
applications and services process in the background while users
perform their desired tasks. |
• |
Sleep state. The new Sleep state in
Windows Vista combines the speed of Standby mode with data
protection features and low-power consumption of Hibernate. The
Sleep state also allows users to change or remove a battery with
little risk to open applications and data, since memory is safely
written to the hard disk. Startup from the Sleep state requires just
seconds, meaning fewer shutdowns and restarts are necessary, which
helps improve power management. |
• |
Superior memory management and improved
input/output (I/O) management makes Windows Vista more responsive
than previous versions of Windows, especially in the most noticeable
tasks, such as opening the Start menu or right-clicking a file in
Windows Explorer to display a shortcut menu. |
|
Clear and Connected
Many of the innovative end-user features and user-interface (UI) changes
for Windows Vista will not be included until the release of Windows Vista
beta 2. However, Windows Vista beta 1 does include an early look at the new
UI design, and showcases some of the features that will give users clear
ways to organize and use their information and seamlessly connect to people
and devices, including these:
• |
Searching and finding information.Windows
Vista will introduce a new organization concept called a Virtual Folder,
which is a saved search that is automatically and instantly run when a
user opens the folder. In addition, every new Explorer in the operating
system, including Internet Explorer, includes a new Quick Search box
that enables customers to quickly search through large amounts of
content being viewed or to initiate wider content searches across the
PC. |
• |
Glass and new Window animation. The Windows
Vista desktop experience will deliver a new visual identity —
translucent glass with more animation. Because it is visually intuitive,
the glass helps users focus on the task at hand, whether reading a
document, viewing a Web page or editing a photo. |
• |
Redesigned Start menu with application search.
The Windows Vista redesigned Start menu will make it faster and easier
for users to find specific applications and to browse through all
programs. |
• |
Sync Manager. Windows Vista will unify the
synchronization with the Sync Manager, a new interface that enables
users to initiate a manual sync, stop an in-progress sync, see the
status of current sync activities and receive notifications to resolve
conflicts across all devices and data sources with the click of a single
button. |
• |
Networked projection for mobile PCs. Windows
Vista will make it easier for users to connect a mobile PC to a
projector over a network to display a presentation, or to share a
presentation with nearby PCs. The networked projection feature allows a
Windows Vista-based computer to detect nearby PCs or projectors and
establish a connection through a network, regardless of whether the
network is wired or wireless, ad hoc or part of a corporate
infrastructure. |
Internet Explorer 7 for Windows Vista Beta 1
In addition to the security features mentioned above, Internet Explorer 7
in Windows Vista beta 1 includes new capabilities that make everyday tasks
easier, including support for tabbed browsing, a toolbar search box that
includes AOL search, Ask Jeeves, Google, MSN® Search and Yahoo!
Search, as well as shrink-to-fit printing of Web pages to automatically
resize the page to print properly. Also, with new integrated support for
emerging technologies such as Web feeds (RSS), users of Internet Explorer 7
in Windows Vista will get personalized news, sports, shopping information
and blogs delivered directly to their PCs. Internet Explorer 7 in Windows
Vista beta 2 will continue to build on the security enhancements with
support for anti-phishing, which will help warn and protect users against
fraudulent Web sites and personal data theft in the browser. It will also
add a Protected Mode to give Internet Explorer sufficient rights to browse
the Web, but not enough rights to modify user settings or data. Many of
these new browser features will also be available to users of Windows XP
through Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP Service Pack 2. Internet Explorer
7 beta 1 for Windows XP is now available to IT administrators, developers
and enthusiasts for testing and evaluation through the Technical Beta
Program and MSDN.
Windows Server, Code-Named “Longhorn”
The first beta of Windows Server™, code-named “Longhorn,” also is now
available to a limited number of participants in the Technical Beta Program,
including hardware manufacturers, original equipment manufacturers,
independent hardware vendors, system builders, independent software vendors
and developers. The next version of Windows Server, code-named “Longhorn” is
designed to provide a secure and reliable server platform, helping customers
reduce IT complexity, increase end-user productivity and deliver rich new
applications. The new server operating system is slated for final release in
2007.
“Avalon” and “Indigo”
Windows Vista beta 1 also includes the first beta of Windows Presentation
Foundation (formerly known by the code name “Avalon”) and Windows
Communication Foundation (formerly known by the code name “Indigo”), which
are part of the WinFX™ programming model. WinFX extends the Microsoft .NET
Framework with classes for building new user interface experiences and
advanced Web services. Together, they enable developers to build connected
systems that take advantage of the processing power of the smart client,
incorporate cutting-edge media and graphics, and communicate with other
applications with improved security and reliability.
System Requirements
Minimum system requirements will not be known until summer 2006 at the
earliest. However, these guidelines provide useful estimates:
• |
512 megabytes (MB) or more of RAM |
• |
A dedicated graphics card with DirectX®
9.0 support |
• |
A modern, Intel Pentium- or AMD Athlon-based PC.
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