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Windows PowerShell 1.0 for XP SP3

has updated 1.0 for XP and Server 2003 and made new English-language installation packages available for as of June 23, 2008. Designed to integrate with Server 2003 , SP2 and R2 (x86, x64 and Itanium-based) along with XP SP2 (both the 32-bit and 64-bit editions) and SP3 (only 32-bit), the updated release of 1.0 does not target ’s latest client. Vista is ignored with the latest variant of Shell available since January 30, 2007, the day that also made available Vista .

is a new -line shell and scripting language designed for administration and automation. Built on the .NET Framework, enables IT professionals and developers control and automate the administration of and applications,” informed in the product’s description. “ includes more than 130 -line tools (called ‘cmdlets’) for performing common administration tasks, such as managing services, processes, event logs, certificates, the , and using Instrumentation ().”

Users should bear in mind that the downloads contain just the English-language installation packages for XP and Server 2003, and not any localized versions or the multilingual packs. is currently hard at work on the successor of 1.0, namely version 2.0 which has only reached the stage of the second Preview so far. At the bottom of this article, you will also find an embedded video containing and of , courtesy of Ben Pearce, a Premiere Field Engineer.

1.0 English-Language Installation Packages and 2.0 are available for here.

and Powershell tips and tricks from microsoft

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Written by Jason on June 26th, 2008 with no comments.
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14 Things that Microsoft Needs to Do with Windows 7

made no secret out of having, for some time now, been cooking the next iteration of , a translucent development with very little transparent areas including details such as multi-touch, support for and 64-bit architectures, and the evolution of the Vista kernel, graphics and audio subsystems. Pieces of the 7 puzzle are indeed starting to come together, and a more consistent perspective will be delivered at the company’s 2008 Professional Developers Conference, that will take place between October 27 and 30 in Los Angeles.

Chairman Bill Gates and with Steven Sinofsky, Senior Vice President, and Live Engineering Group, have made it clear that 7 will be the evolution of Vista. With the current operating system acting as the foundation for the next, there have already been mentions of Vista SP2 or even Vista R2, but since actual details are gagged, all speculations about 7 are fair game. In this context, Gates has also mentioned that 7 will be a of ’s philosophy that states “do things better.” The Redmond company’s Co-Founder indicated that Vista has given ample opportunity for improvements with 7.

The intimate connection between 7 and Vista manages to raise questions as to just how much of the current client is going to survive into the next version, and just what sins it will pass along. Hopefully, has learned relevant lessons from Vista, and will not repeat the Wow mistakes. There are of course a few things that the Redmond company can do to ensure this.

1. ! ! !

commissioned Principled Technologies to compare Vista RTM and to XP SP2. Here is what they found:

Vista RTM vs. XP SP2 - “ Vista was noticeably more responsive after rebooting than XP on several common business operations. Overall, Vista and XP were roughly equally responsive on most test operations. Vista was more responsive on some operations, and on those operations on which it was more responsive, XP typically responded only a half a second or so faster.”

Vista vs. Vista RTM vs. XP SP2 - “Overall, Vista and XP performed comparably on most test operations. Differences were typically less than a half second. Vista was noticeably more responsive after rebooting than XP on several common home operations. Overall, Vista and Vista performed comparably on most test operations, with differences typically less than a half second.”

No! This won’t do with 7! It simply won’t! Let me make this clear, 7 has to fly in comparison with Vista and XP. Fly! And the difference cannot be described with such qualifiers as “noticeably,” “roughly equally responsive,” and “differences typically less than a half second.” In case that users have failed to be clear on this one, the they want with 7 compared to Vista is that of a Ferrari compared to a bicycle. That’s it! It’s simple, now get it done! Just look at what Apple is doing with Snow Leopard to get a proper idea of what needs to be done.

2. Requirements – Less Is… Well… Less

has already confirmed through the voice of Christopher Flores, Director Communications that, at the end of 2009, 7 will sport the same system requirements as Vista does now, or did at the end of 2006 – beginning of 2007, when it was launched. This would be nothing short of excellent for . They will need to make 7 fly (see #1) and they will have to do it on the same systems that Vista is sluggish (to use an euphemism).

The benefits of such a move would be tremendous for 7, and related specifically to in-place-upgrades. Users are bound to think twice if they also have to upgrade their in order to move to a new operating system. But just taking the and slapping it on any “old” system configuration and get more will do half the marketing campaign for .

3. 7 vs. Vista vs. XP vs. X vs. vs. Lawn Mowers

One of the things that killed Vista was the constant comparison with XP, and not with X or . What needs to do is set up a comprehensive set of tests and guidelines for comparing operating systems, and to provide general to online benchmarking tools that will give an accurate and realistic perspective on scenarios involving 7 vs. Vista vs. XP vs. X vs. .

And I don’t care if users are able to the benchmarking tests via browsers from embedded platforms installed on their lawn mowers, or from a high operating system running on a supercomputer, 7 will have to outperform everything that’s thrown against it. Everything! So, what if it’s ’s tests? So what?! The company just needs to give end users, OEMs, corporations, developers, IT professionals and even X and users a palpable proof that 7 is better. Palpable!

4. The One True Love for the Applications Environment

7 will be stretched between the need to evolve to 64-bit programs and the necessity to provide support for legacy applications. Virtualization is the best solution for the operating system to support 7-specific solutions, but also products designed to integrate with Vista, XP and even older Platforms. By building virtualization into 7, and ensuring that legacy applications will run in emulated environments replicating the OS they were tailored to, will scrap one of the biggest worries that have plagued Vista.

5. Put the Whip on the Evangelism Division

Really now! The biggest failure of Vista is not and driver incompatibility, it’s the work done by the Evangelism division for the operating system. I don’t care if it’s NVIDIA, ATI, Intel, AMD, HP or some obscure manufacturer building lawn mowers (see #3) in Alaska or in Siberia… if it has to run 7, a evangelist should provide everything from support to Pina Coladas, walks on the beach and in the rain, and massages. Don’t wait for the manufacturers to come to you, go to them, go early, and woo them with the trademark geek charm…

6. No More Kill Switches, in Translation “Vista No Más”

All users are created equal! Even those running pirated . needs to work this to its advantage and ensure that the jump from pirated to copies of the client is as easy and as cheap as it can be. One example is the 2007 gambit made on the Chinese market with the slashed Vista prices. Sure enough, the company would still be losing money, but it will be losing a lot less than with the free pirated copies of .

But, at the same time, it is important to ensure that users of are not made to suffer from malfunctioning Reduced Mode kill switches, like they did with Vista. In , killed , and it was the right thing to do by its users. The Redmond company, the only one who has to the statistics with the false positives of the Advantage antipiracy mechanism for Vista, and all the operating systems thrown into reduced mode despite being , knows this better than any of us.

7. Infinite 7 Flavors for All

Vista came in six flavors… Starter, Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, and Ultimate. If 7 will come in 100, 24, 12, or also 6, has learned nothing from Vista. Nothing! Yes, six editions do offer consumers the right choices, at the right price… but they also manage to create confusion. needs to understand that it will not be able to satisfy all the needs of its customers by delivering infinite 7 flavors, or by releasing a single one-size-fits-all edition as Apple does with X.

With 7, needs to simplify its SKU offerings. Melt Home Basic into Home Premium, or drop Home Basic altogether. Make a single SKU out of Business and and figure out provide different architectures to small businesses and corporate customers. Ultimate is a good idea however you look at it, and it should survive. Starter does not! In fact, the entire concept of Starter edition should be dropped altogether! I’ll explain later on.

8. Next

will have to do with 7 what it did with the graphical user interface of 2007, in comparison to 2003. 7 needs its own Ribbon/Fluent UI, with plenty of eye candy and with multi-touch, gesture, object recognition, advanced tablet PC support, and so on and so forth. But what it doesn’t need is that Next to be the resource hog that it is in Vista. This should keep from advising customers with inferior configurations to turn off altogether because it makes their systems virtually unusable. Let me make this clear: if just the user interface of a platform makes it unusable, might as well go back to the line…

9. but No

In case the negative response to the User Account Control in Vista failed to reach , let me spell this out… Users want but they don’t want . CEO Steve Ballmer admitted that the company had sacrificed for . Please stop!

First off, users should be and feel secure without having to compromise on any other aspect, and certainly not on flexibility or . needs to get UAC right in 7 from the get-go, because the feature doesn’t look like it’s going away. But it should be made to run in the background, and to be as non-intrusive and as less chatty as possible.

But, most importantly, should be a given, not the focus of the marketing campaign. doesn’t need to sell 7 because it’s secure, or even to stress . It should be a default association and nothing more. But certainly not the top selling pitch!

10. Think Ultra!

This is where scraping Starter comes in. One of the largest opportunities of growth for is on the market of Ultra-Low-Cost and computers. This means that 7 will need to run on the same that XP does in order to become tailored for ULC machines. If makes play well with low system configurations, the trademark of all Ultra-Low-Cost computers, than Starter will be redundant. And there goes one extra and useless SKU.

For the time being, the Redmond company cannot offer the resource-hog that is Vista for ULC machines and is still delivering XP. This situation cannot perpetuate itself with Vista’s successor. has to make 7 available for all machines, and not praise the much needed evolution of the operating system while still shamelessly providing users with the “blast from the past” that is XP, eight years after it was launched.

11. DirectX Next – 10 + 1 – Make It for Vista Too

needs to start acting like is their number one gaming platform, and fast. One of the mistakes made with Vista was to not to backport DirectX 10 to XP. This has to change with 7. Namely, the Redmond company needs to offer DirectX 11 not only with 7, but also for Vista. No more excuses this time!

12. 7 Ultimate Extras

I don’t have to tell Vista Ultimate users what a disappointment (yes, I managed do dodge the term “monumental failure”) the Ultimate Extras were and still are. Still, the Ultimate Extras is just the last aspect where Vista disappointed its users next to and incompatibilities, poor , the UAC, … But, as far as Vista users go, Ultimate Extras really failed because of ’s evident mismanagement and defiant lack of interest. The Ultimate Extras in 7 have to wash away the shame of what has not been delivered in Vista.

13. Start Your Marketing Engines, but Please No More Wows!

doesn’t have to wait until 7 hits the shelves in order to start marketing the operating system, as it did with Vista. This time around, however, the company does need to ensure that no more Wows will accompany the operating system on the market. If 7 is only evolutionary compared to Vista, then at least has to make sure that the 7 marketing campaign is revolutionary.

14. It’s an OS X Eat Win, Eat Win, Win Eat Win World

has to play dirty! It needs to jump at the jugular of X, , XP and Vista. It needs to sacrifice all operating systems on the altar of 7, and it needs to bury its competitors. No more extended support, no more feature-rich Service Packs, no more availability, no more lifecycle extensions… just 7!

And, as for X and , needs to bury them both. I don’t care if half of the 7 team starts building malicious code for OS X and and then release it in the wild, and shuts down very Mac and all the machines powered by that are connected to a (except lawn mowers, of course; see #3). With 7, has to be at least as cutthroat as Apple or the open source community.

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Written by Jason on June 14th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on 1354 and 1426 and 1429 and 1673 and 169 and 2065 and 2157 and 401 and 544 and Contributors and Enterprise and Hardware and Office and Performance and Software and Windows 7 and Windows Vista and aero and computer and functionality and microsoft and rfm and windows and windows client and windows xp sp2.

Top 5 Reasons to Upgrade to Windows Vista SP1

Ever had the feeling that is scrambling to salvage what little it still can out of Vista? While continuously claiming that its latest client is not a failure, and pointing to the 140 million licenses sold as of March 2008, the Redmond company seems keen on demonstrating that it can pull the operating out of the sinking sands of public opinion. In this regard, 1 is indeed used as a floating device, but a tad of marketing on the side can’t possibly hurt, can it? The focus for the time being, as far as is concerned, is business users. Traditionally slow to upgrade to a new release, corporate clients are now looking at XP and 7 as alternatives to Vista upgrades. The giant is working to push Vista SP1 down their throats even if XP continues to work, and despite the proximity of 7.

“This one is for all you IT professionals out there. A lot of you are probably having discussions inside your company about when to deploy Vista, or you’ve deployed it and want to know which of the new capabilities can have the biggest impact on your business. To help in your evaluations we’ve released a new white paper, The Business Value of Vista: Five Reasons to Deploy Now. This document summarizes the enterprise features, latest customer case studies, and research on the capabilities of Vista all in one place,” revealed Christopher Flores, Director Communications.

Still, in order to catalyze upgrades to Vista, now with 1, employs the same set of arguments currently associated with a failed Wow. The company places the focus on increased , mobility, productivity, reduced TCO, and streamlined . The only new addition to this equation is 1. The fact of the matter is that all these arguments are just as valid for . And yet, business users have failed to crowd to the latest operating , choosing to stick with XP and, in some cases, even with 2000. If SP1 doesn’t do it for them, certainly a list of five upgrade reasons, however elaborate or true, will not spark Vista upgrade fiestas across enterprises.

Here is the complete list provided by Flores, for Vista SP1:

“1. Improves the of PCs and Confidential Data. Vista Enterprise had 20% fewer vulnerabilities than XP SP2 did in 2007-and it includes BitLocker Drive Encryption to help protect your confidential data.

2. Unlocks the Potential of Today’s PCs. Mobility Center helps users quickly access key mobility settings all in one place and research shows that Vista can help customers save as much as $251 per PC, per year.

3. Makes You and Your People More Productive. Find the information you need on your and reduce time spent searching for information by up to 42%.

4. Speeds ROI with Rapid and Migration. New imaging technologies and tools make the process of deploying Vista easier than with any previous version.

5. Reduces Support and Management Costs. The costs saving can come from multiple places including reduced help desk calls, less time spent on image , or a lower energy bill.”

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Written by Jason on June 5th, 2008 with no comments.
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Vista SP1 RTM Unexpected Shutdowns

Vista has had quite a rough ride throughout 2007, with Chief Executive Officer Stave Ballmer acknowledging and hardware . And while is essentially designed to soften all the rough edges of the latest client, is not without problems of its own. In this regard, informed of a glitch in the Data store on and Vista which when the user attempts to resume a copy of the operating from is instead informed that the platform was shutdown.

“When you wake a that is running Vista (SP1) from , you may receive the following message: ‘ was shutdown unexpectedly’,” explained. “This issue occurs when the Boot Data (BCD) store contains incorrect information for the Resume from entry.”

In order to resolve the issue all you have to do is edit the BCD, which features all the boot parameters and has complete control over how an operating starts. Just enter cmd in the Search box under the Start menu and right click the highlighted result, choosing the as administrator option from the contextual menu that pops up. Type “bcdedit -enum all” (without inverted comas) at the prompt and hit Enter. You now have to identify “Resume from ” segments and take note of the adjacent identifier.

Next you have to type the following “bcdedit /deletevalue,” and make sure that you associate the Resume from identifier, also adding inherit at the end, just as in the following example: “bcdedit /deletevalue {xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx} inherit.” Just press Enter and you are done. will no longer shut down unexpectedly instead of resuming from .

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Written by Jason on April 16th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Contributors and Windows Vista and command and configuration and error and hibernate and hibernation and microsoft and service pack 1 and windows and windows client and windows vista service pack.

Download Vista User Interface Language Packs

One of the aspects correlated with the ubiquity of the is the fact that the platform is tailored to specific markets around the world. In this context, Vista features no less than 36 different languages, designed to produce an intimate experience for end users. All the editions of Vista can be set to a specific language, with the Ultimate SKU being able to switch between linguistic configurations. But in addition to the resources integrated by default in the latest client as well as those served through Update, is now making available the Vista Pack for the English version of the .

Vista Pack (LIP) [integrates with the] English versions of Vista Home Basic, Home Premium, Ultimate, Business and Enterprise. Many Vista LIP languages are also available for Vista Starter,” informed. “ Vista Pack (LIP) for Vista provides a partially translated version of the most widely used areas of . After installing the LIP, portions of the text in wizards, dialog boxes, menus, Help and topics, and other items in the user interface will be displayed in the LIP language. The text that is not translated will be in English. You can install more than one LIP, so each user of the can display the user interface in their desired language.”

The package made available by the Redmond company delivers for the following languages: Albanian, Bosnian – Cyrillic, Bosnian – Latin, Gujarati, Hindi, Indonesian, Kazakh, Macedonian, Serbian – Cyrillic, Tamil, Uzbek – Latin, Vietnamese and Welsh. According to , only the 32-bit English versions of Vista can integrate the Pack. Users have to bear in mind that the package is not synonymous with the feature. MUI continues to be offered exclusively to Vista Ultimate users via Update.

Vista Pack 1.0 can be downloaded from here.

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Written by Jason on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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Download Free Vista SP1 Windows NT Backup

has updated and re-released NT Backup on March 27, 2008, making it available as a free . The move comes as the utility needs to keep up the pace with the evolution of the latest client and server . released both Vista and Server 2008 /SP1 to manufacturing on February 4, 2008. Server 2008 was launched officially at the end of the past month, while Vista SP1 was released to the general public on March 18.

Version 1.0 of NT Backup dropped on March 27 is tailored to both Vista SP1 and Server 2008. The utility is designed to enable users of Vista SP1 and Server 2008 to restore backups that were created on the previous versions of the , namely XP and Server 2003. In the move from XP and Server 2003, has evolved the backup infrastructure of the two platforms. (more…)

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Written by Jason on March 29th, 2008 with no comments.
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