More to come,
Mitch
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More to come,
Mitch
Subscribe to the TechNet Flash newsletter
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By now, you’re probably aware of key improvements to the user interface in Windows 7 which optimize for touch. And you realize that it will be an ongoing effort among hardware suppliers and application developers to build touch support into their technologies. But how much do you know about the Windows team’s approach with Windows Touch and what was done with Windows to make the interaction truly remarkable? The team has just added on its Engineering Windows 7 blog a very in-depth piece on what went into making Windows touchable. Read the Touching Windows 7 entry.
More to come,
Mitch
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Want to understand Virtualization’s Impact on Your Business? Download the Virtualization Self-Assessment Kit. It brings together some of our best resources to help you understand the specific impact virtualization will have on your business. You will be able to clearly see the cost savings you’ll be able to achieve, as well as the impact virtualization will have on your infrastructure.
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Mitch
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With so many talked about new features in Windows 7, I have to point out a feature for enterprises that is near and dear to my heart: Direct Access. Anyone who has spent much time accessing their corporate network via a VPN will appreciate this. Direct Access maintains constant direct access between a Windows 7 client and the Internet by using IPv6-over-IPsec to encrypt communications. The new IP-HTTPS protocol for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 allows hosts behind a proxy server or firewall to establish connectivity by tunneling IPv6 packets inside an IPv4-based HTTPS session.
For more on DirectAccess and many of the other benefits for enterprises, check out the new “Learning Snack” video Introducing Windows 7.
More to come,
Mitch
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The good folks at Windows Sysinternals recently updated several of their invaluable utilities for managing, troubleshooting and diagnosing your Windows systems and applications, including:
· Process Monitor v2.04
This update shows file mapping operations in basic mode, adds more translations of error numbers to text, fixes a bug that limited support for more boot log files larger than 4GB, and displays version numbers using the same formatting as Windows.
· TCPView v2.54
Version 2.54 fixes bugs that prevented the display of IPv6 TCP endpoints and the correct display of IPv6 UDP endpoints
· VMMap v1.02
VMMap now shows all image subsections, even if they reside within the same allocation region. It also fixes a bug in image name sorting and makes the UAC elevation smoother on 64-bit Windows.
More to come,
Mitch
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