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Microsoft Windows Vista


Video Tutorial

Windows Vista Tips # 1 - Whats on the menu? This tip shows you how to to keep the "classic start menu" style in Windows Vista, follow these easy steps to enable it.

Windows Vista Tips # 2- Security Security has been stepped up along with more alerts in Windows Vista.

Windows Vista Tips # 3- Where Did It Run To? For Windows Vista Users the "Run command" menu option has been replaced with "Search" which is different. If you would like the run command option, follow these easy steps to enable it.

Windows Vista Tips # 4 - No More Sidekick Remove the Windows Vista sidebar from starting up every time you start windows.

Windows Vista Tips # 5- You Have The Right Are you getting User Account Control popups asking you always for permission to proceed to do simple tasks? Lets Disable it with these easy steps

Windows Vista Tips # 6- Take A Snapshot Windows Vista includes a screen capture tool.

Windows Vista Tips # 7- Send It Over Customize the items in The "Send To" context menu in Windows Vista to what you want with these easy steps

Windows Vista Tips # 8- Change the owner Is your Windows Vista registered under the wrong name, misspelled or has been transfered to you?

Windows Vista Tips # 9- Defend Yourself Is your Windows Vista plagued with unwanted startup applications, optimize vista to start faster by removing them easily with Windows Defender

Windows Vista Tips # 10- Push The Button Is your Windows button forcing you to sleep?

Windows Vista Tips # 11- To The Cleaners Windows Vista has its default cleanup utility, but for those who want more extensive options there is a free cleaner you can get which is much better. Lets compare them

Windows Vista Tips # 12- Features Slowing You Down? Does your Windows Vista have windows features enabled that you find useless and occupying space? Lets remove them with these simple steps

Windows Vista Tips # 13- Who's Logging In? A useful feature known as user account auditing is not turned on by default in Windows Vista.

Windows Vista Tips # 14- Speed It Up! Speed up the Windows Vista start menu search by customizing the search criteria

Windows Vista Tips # 15- Manage Your Media Easily Have you tried the built in Media Center in windows Vista?

Windows Vista Tips # 16- Manage Pictures With Media Center Have you tried the built in Media Center in windows Vista?

Windows Vista Tips # 17 -Customize your view The Windows Vista Explorer view can be customized further to your needs.

Windows Vista Tips # 18 -Remote Desktop Connection Control remotely over a network connection your Windows Vista or XP computer.

Vista Editions

The five versions of Vista are as follows:

. Windows Vista Home Basic

. Windows Vista Home Premium

. Windows Vista Business

. Windows Vista Enterprise

. Windows Vista Ultimate

 

Why 5 edition?

There is justification, unlike with Windows XP, which offered at least six versions (Home Edition, Professional Edition, Media Center Edition, Tablet PC Edition, Professional x64 Edition, and Starter Edition), with each version being targeted at a different market audience. With Vista , for technology consumers, there are the two Home editions: Home Basic and Home Premium. Home

 

Which version should I use?

Home Basic- Home Basic is the entry-level version of Vista that aimed at the home user who wants the benefits of the enhanced Vista solution (security, search, better interface, and so on) but does not require some of the Home Premium upgrades, such as Media Center and DVD Maker. It still contains 95 percent of the code base.

Home Premium- Home Premium is the upper grade of Home Basic version with a number of enhancements, such as the introduction of the Windows Aero user interface; compatibility with Tablet PCs; enhanced mobility features, such as multiple PC synchronization; and a variety of new digital media applications, such as Media Center and DVD Maker. Home Premium is aimed at power users who use their PCs as lifestyle commodities as well as productivity devices;

Business Vista- Business is the entry-level business that can join a Windows domain to attain central control using Group Policy, and it also benefits from enhanced security not available to home users in the shape of a much improved Encrypting File System (EFS).

Vista Enterprise- Vista Enterprise is the upper grade of Vista Business edition with a number of compatibility enhancements. One of the feature is Subsystem for UNIX Applications (SUA) for running a complete UNIX environment that allows UNIX applications to interoperate with Vista (originally a Windows 2003 server add-on) It has also high security requirements where capabilities such as full disk encryption are essential. The integration of Virtual PC Express also permits you to run multiple operating system environments on a single PC, which is extremely useful for developers and IT professionals

Ultimate- Vista Ultimate has all the features of all four previously discussed SKUs. In this way, businesses and home users have the choice of installing a single PC operating system that works best for the advanced home user and also integrates well into the business space. Specifically, business customers who have a high demand for consuming digital content (for example, media-oriented companies such as newspapers or television stations) can immediately see the benefit of having DVD authoring and Media Center on the desktop, even though this desktop is integrated into a policy-controlled infrastructure that maintains enterprise management and security control over its workstations.

 

Check your version if you already have vista

Start -- Control Panel -- System and Maintenance -- Welcome Center and check the top of the screen.

Upgrading Vista Versions

you can upgrade your existing version to a higher, more functionally rich version by using Windows Anytime Upgrade. The software supplied on the source disk that was installed on your system when it came will contain the SKUs for all the versions of Vista . If you are running Home Basic, for example, and decide you'd rather have the multimedia capabilities of Home Premium, the software you need is right there on your disk. All you need to do is purchase the upgrade license online and install the top up modules that turn Home Basic into Home Premium.

 

Changes in Vista over XP

Vista offers a wide variety of new and improved features compare to Windows XP.

Interface- The first feature you'll notice that's different in Vista is the interface.

Search- Search is one of the most important improvements in the Vista interface that is more pervasive and powerful than in Windows XP.

Metadata/Tag- A piece of metadata (known in Vista as a tag ) is some additional snippet of information about a file that describes something about that file. Examples of metadata are a document's date of creation and the name of the camera used to take a digital photograph. The Windows Search service indexes content on your PC based on these tags and allows the results to be displayed in a variety of ways.

Communications- The communications stack in Vista (known as the next-generation TCP/IP stack) has been reengineered from the ground up to cater to advancements in both wired and wireless networking technologies and to improve network performance while cutting down on data transfer times. Vista also provides support for both TCP/IPv4 and the next-generation 128-bit addressing model, TCP/IPv6.

Digital Media and Gaming- The ability to manipulate and consume digital content has greatly improved in Vista with a new version of Media Center (available in the Home Premium and Ultimate editions), a new application called Photo Gallery, and the ability to author your own DVDs using DVD Maker.

Mobility- To make Vista a compelling upgrade for Windows XP users, Microsoft has addressed the problems previously endemic with mobility computing, such as the problems keeping files in sync between PCs and mobile devices, problems seamlessly synchronizing files with network servers for offline working, and problems third-party application developers have when creating applications capable of synchronizing across devices. Sync Center (a new Control Panel applet) is designed to address these synchronization problems, offering a single-user interface for all mobile device synchronization needs.

Security- Vista is the first operating system released from Microsoft to benefit from security- Vista is doing everything possible to keep out the bad guys, protect your privacy, and make sure you stay up and running even when the most formidable of new viruses are circulating the globe.

Deployment- The old problem of multilingual infrastructures where a separate build was required for each language you shipped (and each patch had to be engineered individually for each version) is no longer an issue; Vista 's modular approach means you can add the language pack onto the core build, installing whatever bits are necessary for your audience. For home and small-business users, upgrading to Vista-or specifically, transferring users to a newly built Vista workstation-is easy using Windows Easy Transfer.

Performance and Stability- Vista is faster at starting than Windows XP that simply because Vista is better engineered. You still have to wait for applications to become available, but these applications' initialization routines do not effect Vista since it partitions its own start-up routines asynchronously from that of other applications and scripts, having them execute in their own time as system background tasks.



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