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Office Web Apps 2010,
SharePoint Server 2010
The latest and greatest of Microsoft’s Office suite have been made available to MSDN and TechNet subscribers today. For now the following is available on TechNet;
Office Professional Plus 2010 in both x86 and x64 versions. This suite includes the following applications;
- Excel 2010, OneNote 2010, PowerPoint 2010, Word 2010, Outlook 2010, Publisher 2010, Access 2010, Communicator 2010, InfoPath 2010 and SharePoint Workspace 2010
Project Professional and Standard 2010 in both x86 and x64 versions
Visio 2010 Standard, Professional and Premium, all three in both x86 and x64 versions.
Office Web Apps 2010 – only in x64 bit version with a static key
SharePoint Server 2010 – this one also only in x64 bit version
For all suites and programs there are only 1 product key available at the moment, additional keys will be made available on 4/30
I have been running the beta version of Office 2010 for a while and are really impressed with the quality and reliability of it. I will post my review of Office Professional 2010 as well as Office Web Apps 2010 as soon as they have been installed and tested for a couple of days. Stay tuned for more…
If you are a MSDN and TechNet subscriber I assume you are already downloading the bits…
Popularity: 8% [?]
Want to see what Windows 7 may look like in your native language, and you have been frustrated by the lack of available language versions of Windows 7 RC? Be frustrated no more. Microsoft today released 31 Language Packs for Windows 7 RC through Windows Update;
As it is stated in the information on the Language Packs;
After you install this language pack, you can change the display language of Windows 7 to be (your chosen language), Go to the Clock, Language, and Region category in the Control Panel to change the display language.
I will try out the Norwegian Language Pack in the hope that this will not degrade my system significantly, bearing in mind my decision to revert to the English version after trying out the Norwegian x86 version of Windows 7 RC the other day.
Popularity: 14% [?]
The common advice out there is that unless you have more than 4 GB RAM there really is no need to go for a 64bit version of Windows. Well, I think otherwise. Yesterday, I figured it was time to reformat and install Windows 7 RC on my recently returned laptop. It is a HP dv9074ea from 2006. It has a AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-56 processor, I have upgraded it to 2 GB RAM and it has two internal hard drives, initially both 80 GB drives, but one has been exchanged to a 500 GB one. I have been accepted into the Beta testing program for Windows 7 Norwegian Language Edition (x86) and heading the first advice I mentioned above, thus decided to install the 32 bit Norwegian Language RC on the laptop.
The install went fine, but I was greeted by something far from a clean device manager afterwards, and had to install Vista drivers in order to have the system running. I then went through the hoops detailed in my install guide. But things did not continue smoothly. Far from it. Norton Internet Security 2009 were not allowed to run its heuristic drivers (incompatible according to the OS), I experienced several systemwide hangs, and had to force a log out to have the OS respond to keystrokes on several occasions. After having installed several of my applications I ran a Windows Update and were met with the Office 2007 SP 2 download – a huge one. For me that was a decision point. I was not happy with they way my system was running. It seemed at times slow, non-responsive and flat out buggy. That coupled with the fact that I am now so used to the English version of the OS that I did not feel at ease with a Norwegian version, made me decide to reformat again.
This time I installed the English x64 version from a USB memory stick (check here for instructions on how to do it) and it took a total of 15 minutes from I restarted my machine, reformatted the C drive, installed Windows 7 RC to be greeted by the desktop. The Device Manager was not completely clean, but a Windows Update found the missing drivers and the system was really running fine. I have now installed almost all my frequently used applications and the system works the way I want it to – smoothly with no problems.
Funny fact; I even have a slightly better Windows Experience Index on the x64 version; 4.5 as opposed to 4.4 on the 32 bit version (both due to the integrated Nvidia GeForce 7600 Go video card).

I am not completely sure whether this is due to the 32 bit OS or to inherent bugs in the Norwegian Language version of Windows 7 RC, but the user experience made it an easy choice. Yes I had to install everything again (not hard – just time consuming), but definitely worth it.
What are your experiences on this? 32 or 64 bit and why? Let me know…
Popularity: 18% [?]
Downloaded Win 7 Build 7068 last night, and upgraded from 7057 this morning. The process took a little more than 2 hrs this time around too. Have just started to use this build so I will post later about my experiences with it, but here are some screenshots;

As you can see from the About Windows information it is Build 7068 which was built on March 21.
I am not sure whether this is the final IE8 or not, its build # is 8.0.7068.0

The Games Explorer has gotten a new icon

One change for me on WMC is that the option to watch internet TV is gone… Anyone else?

Nothing new here…

Must admit that I am not sure whether there are any new pictures here…

This is how Paint looks in this build…

Windows DVD Maker

Well, that’s it for now. I will post more on my experience with this build later…
Popularity: 6% [?]
Thanks to a twitter friend I got my hands on a x64 copy of build 7057. This time around I decided on upgrading instead of performing a clean install. It took approximately 2 hrs 10 minutes from I hit enter the last time until the new welcome screen greeted me.
There are a lot of comments out there about the look of the new welcome screen. I have to admit that I like it, but as Rafael Rivera has pointed out in this article this is probably a feature set up for OEMs so that they can change their welcome screen to their liking. In the same article he shows how you can change the background yourself.

This is the desktop that greeted me after the 2 hrs long wait (well worth it!)
Back to the upgrade process. I have to admit that I was a little anxious to see how it all had gone. I started up application after application and everything worked as it should. Actually; It worked better than before. Bugs I had encountered numerous times in build 7000 are gone; iTunes runs smoothly (which implies that I have to extend an apology to Apple for some of my previous rants… it seems to have been due to Win 7 Beta!), IE8 the same – its now faster and it hasn’t crashed any tabs yet and Adobe Photoshop Elements 6 works fine, which it didn’t before.

iTunes finally runs smoothly. The previous problems seems to be due to Win 7 beta…

Running IE8 with multiple tabs without any tab crashes. And pages load faster too.
As for the OS itself it looks pretty much the same as before – very well. There are some new icons and some different wording in some dialogue boxes (well covered by Ed Bott and Paul Thurrott) and there seems to be a lot of minor bug fixes.
I thought Win 7 Beta was impressive for a beta. Build 7057 is even better and I think that the Release Candidate (RC) is going to impress people big time. Highly recommended!
Looking forward to the final product later this year!
Popularity: 7% [?]