If you read part one, you might remember that I formatted my HD and started from scratch. What I didn’t say is how I set built it in the first place. The main HD (the OS drive) is a Western Digital 150GB Raptor. I also have a Seagate 1TB that holds everything else from music to program files. This made the transition so incredibly easy. Here is the best example: Steam. I downloaded the steam installer and ran it. After I changed the install path to where it was previously, I clicked close … and it disappeared.
Well actually, it did flash the install screen for a second, but just for a second. Steam recognized that all of my files were still there! I didn’t have to re-download and install a single Steam game! That’s not due to Windows 7, but still cool. Take this as a lesson: Always separate your OS install from as many of your files as possible via separate hard drives or at least partitions.
On the other hand we have Stardock. This company is awesome in that they develop games for gamers and don’t hamper our ability to play them with DRM. Three cheers for Stardock! They have Impulse, which is analogous to Steam. Impulse installed fine, but completely fails to run. It just dies with an appcrash report. I checked around and it seems that they just don’t support it yet, but are “looking into it”. I don’t know how up-to-date that is, but the newest version doesn’t work. Oh well, I’ll have to wait a while for Demigod.
The control panel got a couple of additions/upgrades. One new one is HomeGroup which seems to be a rebranding of workgroups, but I haven’t actually tried it out yet. I will when I install Win7 on my laptop. There are a couple others, but I didn’t really bother to look too deeply into them. The “Network and Sharing Center” got a face lift which I like. It will even display a graphical “network map” which is kind of cool.
One important thing I have to point out is the ease of connecting and disconnecting to different networks. Along with an important addition to VPN connections. You now have the ability to specify a totally different set of network settings for when you are connected to VPNs! This helps immensely with more advanced networks like where I work. Thanks M$!
There is a new item into the system tray, oops sorry … “Notification Area” (That is the name of the control panel that modifies the tray). Its called the Action Center. Its just annoying. It was annoying at the start because it kept telling me to update! update! and Anti-Virus! Anti-Virus! In retrospect, once you calm it down, its nice to have system messages grouped into one place. The Action Center is divided into two sections: Security and Maintenance. Security contains updates, firewall, spyware, and anti-virus messages while Maintenence has backup, troubleshooting, and updates again.
There is not much more detail to go into other than give you a list of software that installed without any problems whatsoever:7-Zip,AC3 Filter, BitTorrent, Foobar2000, Magic Disk, Office 2007, SQL Server 2008 (needed an immediate service pack), and nVidia drivers. There is probably more, but you get the idea.
Overall, my experience has been beyond my expectations. I would recommend anyone who is knowledgeable enough to deal with pre-release software to try it out.
