In: Technology
1 Oct 2009
Last night it was time to upgrade my personal laptop to Windows 7 RTM. My wife and I were finishing a silly horror flick that we had started a night previously, and I decided to just knock it out. By having started the movie the night before, I was already against a tight timeline. I had probably an hour and a half tops to be ready to close it and go to bed.
I stuck in the Windows 7 DVD, restarted the machine and started the install. The basic install itself took about 18 minutes start to finish, when I rebooted on my desktop, I had some updates to hardware drivers to install, so that took another ten minutes or so. When finished, the relatively new HP laptop was ready to go with not one single device left undetected and installed.
My next goal was to see how far I could get it installing only free Microsoft software. I thought this would make an interesting blog, so I decided to get it as far as I could, and compare it to an out of the box Mac machine with iLife. I am thrilled to say that with the exception of Garageband, it’s just as capable, and this particular laptop cost nearly $450 less than the cheapest of Apple’s laptops. So this is the question I pose to you before I start: If you could buy a laptop, with the same or better specs, a graceful stable operating system, secure software and a wealth of home productivity applications for $550 instead of $999, why wouldn’t you?
Before I go off the deep end about why Live Essentials is a separate download (one finger salute to the EU) let’s talk about what is in the box. So we start with Internet Explorer 8. IE8 is a very fast, stable and feature rich browser. I recently made a concerted effort to use it more than Firefox when I am using Windows PCs (I spend quite a bit of time on Macs) and found it to be a solid browser with some very nice features. For those of you with very basic word processing needs, WordPad for Windows 7 has adopted the ribbon and has all the features you need if you are just writing letters or have a child writing papers for school. You’ll probably want to upgrade to Microsoft Office at some point, and 2007 does and 2010 should provide very affordable “Home and Student” versions.
While it’s no Adobe Photoshop, Windows does provide a painting application out of the box and it has been given some new mojo for Windows 7. It’s still a basic application, but my 12 year old son loves it. He draws and prints all of the time.
While we are talking about doodling and wasting time, what about games? While OS X does ship with a very capable Chess game, Windows 7 ships with 11 games. You get Chess Titans, FreeCell, Hearts, Internet Backgammon, Internet Checkers, Internet Spades, Mahjong Titans, Minesweeper, Purble Place, Solitaire and Spider Solitaire. Not only fun casual games, but some connected games as well so you can play with real people online, that’s a nice built in perk.
For those multi-computer geeks, Windows 7 ships with Remote Desktop software, you can connect to your machine from another machine on the network and work with it, very useful. (Be sure to read ahead to “Free to add at any time” to learn all about using Live Mesh to do this over the internet)
Beyond that there are tons of accessory applications. You get backup software, disc burning software, audio and video playing software, calculator, notepad, sticky notes, screen clips, etc. You also get Windows Fax and Scan and Windows DVD Maker, both handy if you need them.
Oh yea, one more thing (sorry to steal your line Steve) you get Windows Media Center. Windows Media Center allows to do so many things, especially when this cheap laptop we are discussing came with built in HDMI. I am one cable from having sound and video in HD on my TV. With a tuner, I can record standard and high definition TV. I can view my photos, videos and listen to music on my computer. It’s totally integrated and a fantastic experience. If you haven’t checked out Media Center yet, you are missing out. As if that wasn’t enough, Media Center also has built in Netflix support.
Now that we have covered what’s in the box, let’s take a look at what is not in the box, but only a free download away. <rant>Just to be clear, the reason you have to download this stuff separately, is that the US Government and European Union have decided at different times that making Microsoft leave functionality out of it’s software, so you can purchase it separately from other companies was “In the consumer’s best interest.” I am obviously biased, but the next time you walk down the software isle at Best Buy, and see three to four dozen different PC security software suites that cost from $50-150, and suck the life out of your computer performance wise, be sure to write your congressmen and thank him or her for looking out for your best interest. </rant>
The first free download I made was “Microsoft Security Essentials.” Security threats are real, so it’s nice to make sure you are covered from the start. It’s also nice to get the software free and not have to pay a subscription to maintain it’s usefulness. It’s a simple and unobtrusive application and as far as I can tell makes no hit to your system performance *ahem Norton*.
Once I had that installed, it’s time to add some fun stuff. Windows Live Essentials is your fun power pack. The key applications here are:
Windows Live Messenger: This is your communications app. Set it up and you can talk to all of your MSN, Live and Yahoo contacts all over the world, with audio and video chat as well.
Windows Live Mail: If you use Hotmail, Yahoo Mail, POP3 or IMAP mail, here’s your mail client. It handles all of your mail needs including integration to mail photos with Live Gallery.
Windows Live Writer: If you blog, this is hands down the BEST BLOG TOOL ON THE PLANET. I love this application.
Windows Live Photo Gallery: This is your photo management app, printing app, sharing online app and also crop, adjust and fix app.
Windows Live Movie Maker: Make your next home movie. It allows you to download your clips, sequence them, add music and photos and publish or burn to DVD.
Family Safety: If you share your computer with kiddos, this is your parental management.
Windows Live Toolbar: Integrate all of the Live Services into your browsing experience.
These apps are great, I personally use Live Writer and Live Mail all the time, and I have friends who regularly use Windows Live Movie Maker and Photo Gallery with great results.
Now that you have your beautiful PC singing and your software is loaded, how do you manage all of the cool stuff you create? Apple has this little tool called Mobile Me that gives you some sync features, they charge you $100 a year for it. Microsoft has this fancy little tool called Windows Live Mesh that is absolutely free.
What if I told you, that by installing a little program on your computer, you could not only have remote access to your machine to take full control of it from anywhere in the world, but you can also synchronize folders across multiple PCs and access the contents of those folders from a web browser on any computer.
This isn’t science fiction folks, and it won’t cost you a penny. I maintain three Mesh synced folders on most of my PCs. I have a folder called “Personal” on my desktop of every computer I use, I also have one called “Work” on all the machines I use for work. I also have one called “Drafts” buried in the documents folder of all my PCs that keeps my blogs in progress synced. With this setup, anytime I save a file, I save it to a mesh folder, and when I move to another machine, the file is already there waiting for me to continue work.
If I forget to save something there, I remote desktop into that machine via Mesh and copy the file to that folder so it syncs across for me to use. Beat that!
If you need more convincing, Live Mesh works on Macs and Windows Mobile Phones also.
The last free bit of software I had to download, is Zune. Zune is Microsoft’s digital music and video marketplace. Totally integrated with Media Center and Media Player, you can use it to listen to your music, buy new music, subscribe to it’s all you can eat music service, rent TV shows, watch music videos….a ton of stuff.
With Quick play, Smart DJ, and Mix View, Zune is not only a fantastic music player, but it’s also the best music discovery experience anywhere. With my $14.99 subscription I download probably 8-10 albums a week regularly. Throw in a Zune device and the experience gets even better.
The point should be simple now. Those snarky Apple commercials that tell you that you’ll never need to buy software because all Macs come with iLife, forget to inform you that Microsoft’s array of free software covers all of your bases also. It actually covers quite a bit more of them if you ask me. If you do the simple math, it really becomes about "which OS do you prefer.”
I won’t go into specs here, because you literally cannot find a new HP laptop with specs equivalent to a white Macbook, they just don’t sell laptops without more ram or more disk space, honestly. We are just going to compare cheapest to cheapest and forget the fact that the HP has double the ram, double the disk space and a bigger, higher resolution display
(and HDMI, faster CPU, faster video card, more memory card options….who’s counting right?)
| Macbook | HP Pavilion | |
| Computer with OS | $999 | $549 |
| Microsoft Office | $149 | $149 |
| Total | $1,148 | $698 |
That’s exactly $450 folks. $450 for the functional equivalent of GarageBand. But since we are comparing, for $99, you can get ProTools with a high quality audio recording interface. So we’ll make it $350 and see if you can call it even with a straight face. I can’t.
Disclaimer: I am not a Mac hater, I carry a Macbook Pro every day, and have two iMacs and a Mac Pro at home. I actually love them. I just don’t love them with blinders on, I realize the shortcomings, I understand the significant price premium, and I don’t use them exclusively. I still use Windows PCs for development, managing email and chat, playing games, managing music and my Zune, Media Center, Office and more. Computers are simply tools, use the right one for the job you are doing. When the job is general computer use, don’t let someone tell you one is definitively better, they are just different.

Jason Burns is a technology enthusiast, Microsoft guy, photographer, musician and all around geek. This blog is the general rambling one, check out the links for the specific ones!
3 Responses to The Windows 7 Experience – Look What You Get
philoking
October 1st, 2009 at 9:44 am
New blog post: The Windows 7 Experience Look What You Get http://www.philoking.com/2009/10/01/the-...
crumpy
October 1st, 2009 at 9:51 am
@philoking what are you using for an iPhoto replacement? I use the events/places feature a lot in iPhoto.
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