And the Number One Reason to Upgrade to Windows 7 is...

With Windows 7 barreling toward an October 22 worldwide launch, pundits, reviewers, and others are weighing in with their opinions, all of which, tellingly, are quite positive. One interesting recent trend is proclaiming why it is that Windows 7 is so great. And in keeping with the simplicity mantra in Windows 7, some are actually trying to push the notion that there is just one reason why you want to upgrade to Windows 7.

For example, Brier Dudley over at The Seattle Times says that that reason is quality.

The software debuting Oct. 22 practically sells itself.

Quality is, thankfully, the biggest selling point for the software that will soon run most of the world's PCs.

Window expert Ed Bott, meanwhile, argues that drivers is the reason.

You want to know why Windows 7 isn’t going to be another Vista? Here’s one big reason: drivers. This time, hardware makers seem to be keeping pace with the operating system and the hardware.

They're both right. And that's the thing with Windows 7. There is no single reason why Windows 7 is awesome, just like there's no single huge feature that will draw in users. Instead, Microsoft has engineered hundreds, perhaps thousands, of meaningful changes and updates into Windows 7. Many are big deals, most are not. But in one of those "seeing the forest for the trees" moments, the sum of all these improvements far outweighs any single change. Windows 7 is a perfect storm of improvements and timing. It is the right product for the right time.

More important, perhaps, Windows 7 is, quite obviously, the most well-conceived version of Windows ever created. I carefully worded that phrase because one might expect that any given version of Windows is "the best version of Windows" ever created. That's absolutely been true of every single previous Windows version, at the time. (Yes, even Windows Me. Really.) But what makes Windows 7 so special isn't any one improvement. It's not that it erases the perceptions (right and wrong) about Vista. It's not just that's it's shipping when it's shipping. It's a combination of things.

I'll elaborate on this in the conclusion to my Windows 7 review later this week. But the long story short is that Windows 7 is the real deal. And as a long-time Windows watcher, it's nice to finally see Microsoft firing on all cylinders in a way they haven't since Windows 95. This is a company full of very smart people that often makes some incredibly bone-headed mistakes. That's not happening with Windows 7. Not at all.

Windows 7 is the perfect storm.

Discuss this Article 87

sjaak327
on Oct 13, 2009
"What is the % of people around you (non MS Fanbois) do you know who said: " Wow I'm really happy I made the switch to Vista, what a change in my life it has made for daily use !! " ?????????? " Zero, as far as I know no-one I know actually upgraded from XP to Vista. Normal users don't do such a thing, only geeks do. Having said that, currently most of my friends have new hardware, with Vista installed, and several have said they like it much more then XP. No complaints or horror stories from them. But then again, I speak of personal experience, on a multitude of systems when I say that Vista was rock solid, and that from RTM onwards. As mentioned by someone above, the few performance issues were solved during patch tuesday, and not by SP1. Of course you needed to actually use Vista to know this little tidbit. Enough said.
Waethorn
on Oct 13, 2009
"Sleep and hibernation are still difficult to use." "Really, what's difficult about it I wonder." Driver support for old hardware is what I would bet it would be. Look for "BIOS/Firmware Extension" drivers from your computer manufacturer or motherboard maker. If they don't have any for Windows 7, try the Windows Vista drivers. Don't use XP drivers, because they probably won't work on Windows 7 (32-bit XP drivers on a 32-bit version of Windows 7 are the only ones that have even a chance of working, but I wouldn't recommend it). Remember, that for power management to work, you usually have to have ALL drivers properly loaded (and working) for all hardware.
redunion1940
on Oct 13, 2009
Balthazar9 said: "Alright, allow me. Windows control panel is an absolute disaster. Few things are logically categorized." Honestly I'm looking at it right now and it looks fine to me, though I might not follow your logic, which for the life of me I can't seem to figure out. "Win-Explorer is a disaster. It takes 77 clicks to do the most basic of chores. i.e. cut, copy, paste or delete. I’m forced to hack the hell out of Win7 registry to make explorer behave." What in God's name are you trying to do that requires 77 clicks to preform, maybe it is the hacking of the registry that is screwing your system up, ya know it takes me at the most two clicks to delete something so. "Win-IE8 is freakishly bad. Have to disable ‘DEP’ so that non Micro$haft software works properly." This one is your fault then for using outdated software that can't recognize IE8 over IE6, I mean you like to hack stuff why don't you hack that outdated software to get it to work, or use XP mode. "Ejecting Devices Requires far too many clicks." ??? I don't know how to reply to this, I mean you put something on a flash drive, wait for it to transfer then you pull the flash drive out, not that hard. "Sleep and hibernation are still difficult to use." Really, really, What was your last Operating system MS-DOS, Linux with out a GUI, honestly, it takes two clicks on desktops for sleep, and on laptops hibernate is the default button not shutdown. You sir need to avoid using computers I would venture to say, having these many problems is ridiculous, heck Windows 95 didn't have these problems, did you skip the 80's 90's and most of the 2000's and on your first computer.
daveinla
on Oct 13, 2009
Well i thought we had a specimen with MSN Galos but it seems that the Pinnacle is reached with Erico here !!! :))) Watch out Erico MSN Galos is Fan of Lotus ! And yeah you're right they always are "Broke" as are BMWs !!! LOL ! Well I'm off to work caus' I have a life other than foaming to the mouth and insulting everyone who thinks MS is not the summum in Technology (Even if I said good thing about MS in my comment !!!!!!!) on that website ! Good luck guys. And long live Win 7!
Waethorn
on Oct 13, 2009
Completely O/T: Does anybody have any recommendations on DVD burning software where you can use multiple target DVD burners? (ie. burn to many discs at a time) I used to use NeroNET server ages ago, but that products life has come and gone, as has the Nero 5 client that is required for it.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
Hmmm. Lotus is an engineering consulting company that sells cars to demonstrate their technical expertise. Apple is a consumer electronics marketing company that produces computers because dropping out of that market would hurt their image. Of course, maybe you just meant that you expect Apple to have a smaller market share in computer than Lotus does in autos. That's possible. (And said as a big fan of Lotus Cars and Lotus Engineering)
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
Windows is like a Cadillac, big and bloated with Aero bling, kind of like the gold trim on a Cadillac.
daveinla
on Oct 13, 2009
"Apple is a consumer electronics marketing company" Ahhhh no guys soooooorryyy !!!! Galos can actually do better than Erico today !!!
techfan
on Oct 13, 2009
Mind you, I haven't read Brier Dudley's (I guess I should comment before reading), but on what Paul says that Brier Dudley's says it quality that's the reason to upgrade to Windows 7, I agree. Almost all reviews of the beta and RC have been about the quality of the OS. It's stability. I'm going to relate quality to features, and coming from XP, I can see how the quality of the feature is the reason for me to upgrade. I won't "upgrade" the OS though, but buy a new computer. @JamesNT: THIS WILL BE THE YEAR OF LINUX ON THE DESKTOP!!! Don't people say that every year but it's never the case? @@de Silentio: The blog link always opens in a new tab for me, which I hate.
redunion1940
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de74@live.com I've read the article most of his problems stem from driver problems because he doesn't know how to get Vista drivers haha, look at most of the comments a super majority disagree with him, heck I've installed Win 7 on a Singe Core Athlon 64 2.4 GHZ 2GB machine, which is about 5 or 6 years old, upgraded from 1 GB to 2 and from a Sempron to the Athlon, when it was still on XP, in 2007 or 08. Second System: Pentium IV single core 3 GHZ Hyper-threading 1 GB system with just really old and really crappy Intel integrated graphics, Win 7 runs fine on it, though it ran on Aero basic but eh. Third System: Built in December of 08 right before Win 7 beta which I would get Athlon X2 5200+ 2.7 GHZ proc, 4GB of ram, a 9600 GSO GPU, and Win 7 ran like butter on this thing, Fourth System: $379 Laptop Athlon x2 2.0GHZ proc, 3 GB of ram, and a built in HD 3200 GPU, which is decent for integrated, runs aero fine and improved my battery life over Vista. So I don't know what that guy was doing but I wouldn't trust his opinion.
EricoF3
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de74@live.com said: "Windows is like a Cadillac, big and bloated with Aero bling, kind of like the gold trim on a Cadillac." Ok! but OSX is not better with its skin!!! OSX Watery round button are atroce... OSX scrollbar too!! Why is it correct for MacOS but not for Windows?? I just have to put Windows 7 GUI in front of OSX GUI and they are both bloated and shiny... Do you really want a drab and ugly GUI on you computer?? Not me!!
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
@redunion I agree with him in that if your machine runs XP or Vista just fine there is not reason to upgrade. If you buying a new PC and you choose Windows, Windows 7 is the way to go. I hope MS finally stops the XP roll back crap even through big vendors like Dell.
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
@EricoF3 type your posts into this page in your native language. http://babelfish.yahoo.com/ Then copy and paste here. It hurts to read your posts.
redunion1940
on Oct 13, 2009
For full disclosure rr0de74@live.com I never used the upgrade function, because A. 3 out of the 4 systems couldn't do it because of XP and B. I know it is a terrible idea to upgrade from one OS to another, in all cases, Mac OSX, Windows, Linux to a certain extent. For average user, do not upgrade unless you have your tech guy doing it, just buy a new computer. As for my OS of choice, Windows 98, 98 SE. XP is good but 98 just offered more in customization than XP and 7 has brought that back. Off to boot win 98 from one of my many Virtual Machines.
Backup77
on Oct 13, 2009
@waethorn O\T Check out http://www.padus.com/products/discjuggler.php or Nero 9. Are you multiple target DVD-Burners running at the same speed??
FalKirk
on Oct 13, 2009
"Win 7 is THE best OS ever released... Period. Even the Apple zealots and they're problem riddled Snow Leopard agree." -Crankenstein If you're going criticize others, it would be best if you spelled the word "their" correctly before deriding "they're" problems.
Backup77
on Oct 13, 2009
Windows 7 is solid across the board and the reasons for upgrade should sell itself.
Backup77
on Oct 13, 2009
@waethorn Check this out also. http://www.swiftdisc.com/
gadfly10
on Oct 13, 2009
Are you kidding me Ed Bott? - DRIVERS? Really? He says: "hardware maker are keeping pace with the operating system and hardware." Well gee now, I'd hope they're keeping pace. I mean they've had quite a head start seeing as Windows 7 is basically just Vista repackaged! Come on.
robertsjoe
on Oct 13, 2009
These are all the same things that were said at the time about Vista. Look how that ended up.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de "@EricoF3 type your posts into this page in your native language. http://babelfish.yahoo.com/ Then copy and paste here. It hurts to read your posts." I was going to suggest the same for your posts with two exceptions: 1) I suspect your posts are painful a rational person to read for reasons that don't come from you posting in a non-native language 2) I'd advise http://www.microsofttranslator.com/Default.aspx for its better translation algorithms.
cesjr
on Oct 13, 2009
We use Vista at work - one thing I can't stand is that it won't reliably run two monitors. Every 3 days or so, the video driver fails and the thing crashes to a total blue screen. IT can't fix it - and I work for a large US gov't agency. Their solution? run only one monitor. Does Windows 7 fix this? Probably not, because the heart of the problem with windows is the myriad hardware is has to run on. And of course Windows 7 does nothing about that.
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
LOL Mike. I guess you like my posts because you are the furthest thing from "a rational person" on this site. I would wager that more than 50% of the people that post hear would agree with me. Easily. To bad we cant setup a poll here. Then again if we are asking for new features, I would put the "ignore" feature before the "poll" feature on my list. I guess my Yahoo link is probably the same thing as the Bing link since Microsoft owns them both? I think MS bought Yahoo, or gave them money to survive for a while, so they could say their search market share went up. When really its MS taking over search for Yahoo.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de You probably don't realize it but rationality and logic aren't based on taking a vote among people who have the same biases you do. They're based on being able to provide a path to a conclusion based on facts. I think you confuse having friends who tell you loudly and often that they agree with you with being accurate. Which does explain a lot.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de "I think MS bought Yahoo, or gave them money to survive for a while" You mean the same way Microsoft gave money to Apple to help Apple survive for a while back when their computer market share dropped below their traditional 4%?
chuckb84
on Oct 13, 2009
"It's always puzzling when otherwise sane journalists, who warn about using version 1.0, proclaim their love of a new OS and recommend BUY, BUY, BUY!" If you note the prominent link to Paul's Windows 7 book, you might find his enthusiasms for Windows 7 less mysterious. OF COURSE, it's the best Windows ever, just like all the previous versions that he's made money from! @Mike, "Apple is a consumer electronics marketing company that produces computers because dropping out of that market would hurt their image." No, Apple produces computers because they make about $13B/year selling them, roughly half their total revenue. But, sure, they just do it for image....
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
rr0de "I hope MS finally stops the XP roll back crap even through big vendors like Dell." Just to bring some facts to the equation, Microsoft has offered downgrade rights for many, many years - long before XP was even released. When a corporation or government agency wants to upgrade 10,000 desktops they spend some time evaluating what needs to be updated and how to train users and lots of other things that make the move as painless as possible. If they want to buy 10 new computers after a new operating system is bundled they have a few choices: They can immediately upgrade all 10,000 existing desktops so that all their users are on the same platform - an awful choice as discussed above. They can have 10,000 users on one system and 10 on another - also an awful choice since now they've significantly upgraded their need for support and user training. They can use their normal desktop image with the old version of the OS on it to downgrade the new computers until they're ready to migrate all 10,010 desktops. Microsoft's downgrade license lets them do this. You see, it's called taking care of your customers rather than just telling them what they must do. A novel concept, perhaps, but a lot of how Microsoft got so successful.
gadfly10
on Oct 13, 2009
Paul says: "It's nice to finally see Microsoft firing on all cylinders..." Right. And I bet all those hapless T-Mobile/Danger customers are right now singing the praises of that well-oiled machine! MICROSOFT CAN NOW CLAIM FAME FOR THE BIGGEST INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY FAILURE EVER. Woot!
SPiotr
on Oct 13, 2009
@galos "You probably don't realize it but rationality and logic aren't based on taking a vote among people who have the same biases you do. They're based on being able to provide a path to a conclusion based on facts." "Apple is a consumer electronics marketing company that produces computers because dropping out of that market would hurt their image."
rr0de74@live.com
on Oct 13, 2009
@Mike Microsoft really lets corporations use downgrade licenses???? Wow never knew. Corporations take time to evaluate the true cost of migrating, including user training and training the IT people in charge of it? Wow amazing. You mean corporations take the time verify all of their applications and factor in the cost of having to either upgrade some apps, rewrite in house apps or move to a compatible app when migrating large numbers of computers from say XP to Windows 7??? Amazing stuff there and I have been there done that many times. That is why I laugh at those on this board that promote rolling out Windows 7 the day it ships company wide. They either work in a small company 1000 PC's or less or they dont work in IT at all. However none of that stuff was what I was referring too. In the past MS (or the hardware companies since MS does not sell PC's) sold both the new and old OS on PC's to consumers for a short time then stopped it and only went with the new OS. Never had they allowed what we saw with Vista. Time and time again they changed their minds because the consumer did not want Vista, and the hardware makers wanted to sell PC's with out it or have the ability to roll back.....for the consumer. IMHO XP should have been cut off to consumers at the end of 2007 or summer 2008 at the latest, like they said they would the 2nd or 3rd time. Keep the downgrade rights for SA\corporate customers because its just too hard to move 60,000 + PC over to a new OS and really support it in a short time frame.
Logjamming
on Oct 13, 2009
@mikegalos@msn.com And OSX usage increases largely in the weekends, whereas Windows falls off. Why? Because when people have a choice at home, rather than the stuff they got shoved down their throat at their weekday offices, where Microsoft has made vendor lock-in deals to have them use want they don't want to use. It's plain and simple. Windows sucks and you know it.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 13, 2009
Logjamming "OSX usage increases largely in the weekends," Yes, their parents let them stay up an hour later on the weekend.
Logjamming
on Oct 13, 2009
@ Mike You mean Steve Ballmer's kids, who request iPods and iMacs at home? Are you mean your parents?
WazNeeni
on Oct 13, 2009
What's with Louderback's crazy-a$$ review? He couldn't be more wrong. http://louderback.com/2009/windows-7-its-vista-all-over-again/
tayme
on Oct 14, 2009
Regardless of some people's vast experience in the development world, it is obvious who is and is not a real world IT administrator working in a real world production environment. Some people are just like the previous US President, in that they just keep making the same mistakes over and over again; while at the same time they are just like the current US President and let their arrogance and single-sightedness blind them from the fact that they really don't know what they are doing. --tayme
RobertC
on Oct 14, 2009
Logjamming, the best thing to do with an iMac - apart from throwing it in the bin lest it die from overheating because Apple decided you don't need a fan - is to install Windows on it.

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