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These animations are visually attractive, but they're not just eye candy. For example, Tiger includes a "genie" effect when you minimize windows and a "poof of smoke" when you delete an icon from the Dock. This would offer even better quality and would be better-suited to the high-DPI displays of the future.īoth Tiger and Vista Beta 1 offer various animations in the shell. But we'll have to wait and see whether the icons in the final Vista version are true resolution-independent vector graphics as promised. ( Figure), offering four times the resolution of the icons in Tiger. That said, Windows Vista Beta 1 utilizes some 256 x 256 pixel icons Icons in Windows XP are generally rendered at 32 x 32 pixels or 64 x 64 pixels in some cases, but the 128 x 128 pixel icons in OS X Tiger are much nicer In Vista Beta 1, underlying windows can often cause a muddy-looking display that is distracting and sometimes even ugly ( Figure), Microsoft is clearly suffering from some growing pains.
For example, while Apple has subtly fixed problems with the display from underlying windows bleeding through to the windows above them
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In Vista Beta 1, Microsoft has added a number of visual effects that Mac users have enjoyed for four years, including translucencies, high-resolution icons, and animation effects that are both attractive and functional.īecause Apple has had four "major" OS X revisions to fine tune the UI, the OS X Finder is cleaner looking and better implemented than is Aero in Vista Beta 1. Windows Vista Beta 1 closes the gap, though I don't think the beta Aero UI we're seeing now is quite as nice looking as Tiger's Aqua. OS X, by comparison, is clean, nicely rendered, and features many interesting transitions and other eye candy. Indeed, Mac fans have often sneered at the "Fisher Price" look of the XP UI, which is a bit unfair (I find it highly usable and attractive enough) but understandable. Though Windows XP features a much nicer and more colorful user interface than Windows 2000 and previous Windows versions, it's still a far cry aesthetically (depending on your taste) and technologically from the Aqua UI in OS X
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OK, let's see how Mac OS X Tiger and Windows Vista Beta 1 stack up. Beta 1 is a minor subset of the overall functionality we're going to see in the final Windows Vista product. A year later, when the product actually shipped, little had changed and nothing major was added. If you go back and look at the WWDC 2004 keynote video, you'll see Steve Jobs demo virtually every single major new feature in Tiger. This stands in sharp contrast to Apple's approach with Tiger.
Lots of things are going to change, and many, many features will be added by Beta 2 and beyond. Too, I'd like to remind you that Windows Vista is only in Beta 1. And today, that only happens with Windows and its user base of several hundred million active users. Features like instant desktop search are great for any operating system, but they only truly "matter" when the mainstream market is using them. However, you should also realize that, for Microsoft, size of market is a competitive advantage. For Apple, time to market is a competitive advantage and no one should begrudge them that. What I am claiming, however, is that Microsoft legitimatized certain technologies at PDC 2003 by announcing that they will be included in Windows, and that Apple seized on the opportunity to add those features-whether they were previously planned or not-in Tiger, which it knew would ship well before Windows Vista. I'm not claiming that Microsoft "invented" anything.
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After all, Apple was clearly influenced by some of the technology Microsoft showed off back then and knew that it could come to market much more quickly than the software giant.Īnd before you fire up your email client to tell me about Apple patents, ideas from Copland, or other nonsense, relax.
Show report), at which the company publicly revealed its plans for its next-generation Windows version.
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For accuracy, I think it's important to compare Windows Vista Beta 1 to both Mac OS X Tiger and the promises that Microsoft made at the Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2003 ( see my Isn't a lot of this stuff already in Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger" ( see my review)?
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For Mac OS X users, however, Windows Vista Beta 1 engenders a sense of d?j? vu. For Windows enthusiasts, Windows Vista Beta 1 is a much-needed demonstration that Microsoft can still churn out valuable Windows releases, after years of doubt. Windows Vista Beta 1 ( see my review) doesn't feature many end user features per se, but it does include a nearly complete next-generation Windows shell, instant desktop search, a preliminary version of the new Aero user interface, and other useful functionality. After years and years of waiting, we finally have a reasonably stable Windows Vista beta build to work with.