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1. Shake 'em away Ever had 10 Notepad, two
Powerpoint and 50 Outlook windows open? Want to minimise all of them
except the most important one? In Windows 7, you can grab the top of the
window and shake it about to scare away all of the other open windows.
Simple. 2. Jumplists
Jumplists are a new
feature that give you the option to view a list of recently accessed
files by application, even when the application isn't open, by
right-clicking on the application's icon in the taskbar. It also allows
you to quickly access a favourite playlist without opening your media
player. Jumplists can also be found integrated into the Start Menu.
TIME-SAVER: The Jumplist for Windows Explorer – pretty useful START HERE:A Jumplist integrated into the Start Menu 3. A step forward in previewing
In
Vista, hovering over a minimised window on the taskbar would provide a
preview of the window. In Windows 7, a similar preview pops up which
also gives the option to close a window (within the preview), along with
a full-size 'peek'. You can also press Win + T to scroll along previews
in the taskbar. PREVIEW PLUS:A smaller preview, along with a full-size 'peek' with the ability to close the window 4. Snap into place
Simply
drag your window to the left or right edge of the desktop to snap and
resize the window to one half of the screen. Drag the window to the top
to maximise it. A pretty neat idea made neater by the use of the
keyboard shortcuts (Win + respective arrow keys). No longer do you have
to frustratingly position the mouse at the edge of the window to resize
it. 5. XP Mode
This time, you do not have
to slap your head that same way when Vista would not run an XP
application. For those XP applications that do not work under Windows 7,
you can download XP Mode
free from the Microsoft website and run XP applications in an emulated
XP environment in Windows 7. Imagine Parallels on Mac OS X without the
need to fish out money on an extra OS. 6. An easier and quicker way to adjust multiple displays
Do
you constantly connect your computer to different external monitors or
projectors, especially at work? Try Win + P, and duplicating or
extending your display to the other monitor takes just a second. Win + P
presents you with an Alt + Tab style menu, which is ideal if you give a
lot of presentations at work on your laptop. 7. A personalised Stage for your device
With
the new 'Device and Printers' button on the Start Menu, devices which
are connected to your computer can have their own Stage. This Device
Stage presents supported devices with a photo-realistic render and a
link to the vendor's website, along with other updates and useful
information (such as firmware updates and manuals). 8. (Almost) eliminate the notification area!
What,
I can even get rid of the clock and volume icons? Yes. Click the arrow
that gives access to the overflow icons in the notification area and
click 'customise'. Select each icon and click 'hide icon and
notifications' to remove it. Clean. QUIETER: Stop all those notifications – but you might want to keep the clock there 9. Problem Steps Recorder
The
'Problem Steps Recorder' lets you record a particular problem you are
having with your PC so you can send it to someone who may be able to
help. Click 'Record', and a screenshot is taken with every mouse click,
allowing comments to be added in between if required. These screenshots
(and comments, if any) are placed in a well-formatted HTML document that
is placed inside a zipped folder on your desktop - ideal to be attached
to an email. A PROBLEM HALVED: Simple, yet so effective. Send this to tech savvy friends or even manufacturers
10. A brand new Magnifier tool
If you are, or
someone you know, is visually impaired, then the Windows 7 Magnifier
provides two options for providing a bigger display. One of which is
using the traditional dock (which took up a lot of the screen) and the
other being a rectangular lens that is stuck to the cursor (meaning
there is no loss of workspace). UP CLOSE:A sleek new magnifier that follows your cursor, without decreasing your workspace 11. A new way to preview your music files
Opening
and listening to an MP3 is a lot more snappier with Windows 7 due to
its new smaller preview player, presenting you with album art, basic
music functionality and a link to the full-blown Windows Media Player.
This is an obvious attempt to mimic the preview feature of Mac OS X, but
it is very well executed. MUSIC PREVIEW:The new preview is simple – and loads up very quickly 12. Homegroup Networking
In
Vista (or, frankly, any Windows OS), creating a shared folder over a
network at home could be a bit of a pain. In Windows 7, using the
'Homegroup' wizard, check the default folders you would like to share.
This will give you a passcode that will have to be entered in another
computer on the same network to share the files. Sounds too good to be
true? There is a catch: only a Windows 7 computer can join a Homegroup. 13. Stream Music directly to another computer
If
you do create a Homegroup, Windows Media Player allows you to stream
music directly to another computer. So, instead of listening to music
through your measly laptop speakers, you can wirelessly stream to the
7.1 Surround Sound Speakers of your PC in your living room, without
stepping away from your laptop. Sweet. 14. Action Center
The
Action Center is the new Security Center for Windows 7, along with
other notifications such as updates and access to the improved
troubleshooting and recovery using restore point facilities. Basically,
it is everything windows usually annoys you with, rolled into one place
with one icon in the notification bar. If you find the alerts
irritating, you can check out this tip to make the Windows 7 Action Center less annoying. 15. Pin just about anything to the new Windows Taskbar
Imagine
a blank Mac OS X Dock with the start menu, the notifications bar and
the improved 'Show Desktop' button added to it. Drag just about anything
on to it and the associated application will place itself on the
translucent taskbar, with an option to open the file in the Jumplist. 16. Improved Touch Navigation
Windows
7 has much improved touch navigation. The larger taskbar with squarer
icons makes it a lot easier to navigate with your fingers, and
Macbook-like multi-touch gestures on various applications could change
the way you interact with windows. Subtle enhancements such as a larger
Start Menu appearing when Touchscreen hardware is detected also help. 17. Native ISO Burner
There
are those times when you inevitably have to burn an ISO file (such as
when you have to copy a downloaded Windows 7 beta or RC) to a DVD. With
Windows 7 you do not need to download third-party software (some of
which are pretty confusing to use). Double-clicking on an ISO file will
take you to a window that allows you to change the disc burner drive.
Click 'Burn'. After a while, your disc is ready. Simple. FINALLY: Burning an ISO file has never been so easy 18. Native calibration tools
If
you tend to hook up your computer to an HDTV or care about getting the
highest quality from your monitor, then the in-built basic and
easy-to-use calibration tools built into Windows 7 will please you.
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