They said
Windows 7 was just a cosmetic upgrade, a more polished version of Vista with
little to offer beyond the new wallpaper.
They couldn't
have been more wrong.
Look beyond
the headlines about interface tweaks and you'll find Windows 7 is crammed with
lesser known, but still important, new and enhanced features, which taken
together deliver improved performance and productivity, better troubleshooting,
stronger security and a whole lot more.
Over the next few weeks, I'll be sharing 50 tips, tricks and
secrets in which Windows 7 will make a REAL difference in your
PC.
1. Problem
Steps Recorder
As the local PC guru you're probably very used to friends and family asking for
help with their computer problems, yet having no idea how to clearly describe
what's going on. It's frustrating, but Microsoft feels your pain, and Windows 7
will include an excellent new solution in the Problem Steps Recorder.
When any app starts misbehaving under Windows 7 then all your friends need do is
click Start, type PSR and press Enter, then click Start Record. If they then
work through whatever they're doing then the Problem Steps Recorder will record
every click and keypress, take screen grabs, and package everything up into a
single zipped MHTML file when they're finished, ready for emailing to you. It's
quick, easy and effective, and will save you hours of troubleshooting time.
2. Burn
images
Windows 7 finally introduces a feature that other operating systems have had for
years - the ability to burn ISO images to CDs or DVDs. And it couldn't be much
easier to use. Just double-click the ISO image, choose the drive with the blank
disc, click Burn and watch as your disc is created.
3. Create and
mount VHD files
Microsoft's Virtual PC creates its virtual machine hard drives in VHD files, and
Windows 7 can now mount these directly so you can access them in the host
system. Click Start, type diskmgmt.msc and press Enter, then click Action >
Attach VHD and choose the file you'd like to mount. It will then appear as a
virtual drive in Explorer and can be accessed, copied or written just like any
other drive.
Click Action > Create VHD and you can now create a new virtual drive of your own
(right-click it, select Initialise Disk, and after it's set up right-click the
unallocated space and select New Simple Volume to set this up). Again, you'll be
left with a virtual drive that behaves just like any other, where you can drag
and drop files, install programs, test partitioning software or do whatever you
like. But it's actually just this VHD file on your real hard drive which you can
easily back up or share with others. Right-click the disk (that's the left-hand
label that says "Disk 2" or whatever) and select Detach VHD to remove it.
The command line DISKPART utility has also been upgraded with tools to detach a
VHD file, and an EXPAND command to increase a virtual disk's maximum size. Don't
play around with this unless you know what you're doing, though - it's all too
easy to trash your system.
More next time!