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Features:
- Designed for businesses of all
sizes
Manage digital pictures, music, video, DVDs, and more
- More security with the ability
to encrypt files and folders
- Built-in voice, video, and instant
messaging support
- Integration with Windows servers
and management solutions
Product Description
Windows XP is the operating system release that unifies the Microsoft
range, with all the desktop versions now built on the NT/2000
code base rather than the shakier foundation of Windows 95, 98,
and Me. That makes XP a great upgrade for users of the now-obsolete
9x and Me line, but for those already on Windows 2000 Professional
it is a closer call. Despite the similar name, there is no special
synergy between Windows XP and Office XP, which works fine on
Windows 2000.
XP certainly looks different, with
rounded window corners, larger and more detailed icons, and a
clean-look desktop that on first installation shows only the taskbar
and Recycle Bin. XP is also more customizable than earlier versions
of Windows, and includes visual themes that let you change the
whole appearance of Windows in an instant. That is the window-dressing,
but underneath are some significant improvements. One of the most
interesting is Remote Desktop. A standard XP feature, this uses
technology from Microsoft Terminal Server to enable users to access
their computer over any connection; for example, by dialing into
the office from home. This is not just file access--this technology
lets you run applications remotely as if you were sitting at your
desk at work. This is mature technology, stable and carefully
thought out. So, for example, you can print from a remote word
processor to a local printer. A variation on the theme is Remote
Assistance, where the user can allow a remote helper to view their
desktop, or optionally gain control of the keyboard and mouse,
in order to troubleshoot a problem. The feature can also be disabled
to ease security concerns.
Laptop users benefit from enhanced
power management, with options to extend battery life by reducing
CPU speed and display brightness. IrDA support has been fixed
so that, unlike Windows 2000, Windows XP can easily use modems
in mobile telephones via infrared. A new screen font, ClearType,
improves legibility for laptop or other flat screens, and there
is built-in support for wireless networking using the popular
802.11 standard. A great feature of XP, also found in Windows
2000, is the ability to synchronize network files with offline
copies. Previously, these files could not be stored securely,
but now they can be encrypted.
For Web browsing, XP comes with
Internet Explorer 6.0. The enhancements in IE 6.0 are mainly of
interest to Web developers, and in any case Microsoft makes IE
freely available to all Windows users. Although Java is not installed
by default, it is not difficult to download a Java Virtual Machine
(JVM). Windows Messenger, originally a chat client, has evolved
into a collaboration tool that allows for video conferencing and
application sharing.
The most significant new feature
for Internet users is the built-in firewall. A firewall protects
against one of the most disturbing security risks, in which other
users unknown to you might connect to your computer while it is
online, reading private files or causing other damage. XP's built-in
firewall is a simple affair, but it does prevent most types of
unauthorized connection.
Windows XP has strong multimedia
features. The new Media Player lets you copy music from CD to
hard disk, create your own playlist, and write your own music
CDs if you have a CD writer. Although there is loss of quality
as a result of compression, the process is easy and convenient.
Media Player 8.0 can play back DVD video, but only if a hardware
or software DVD decoder is already installed. You can also play
MP3 audio files and MPEG videos, but sadly, not the popular RealMedia
formats. In the end, Media Player does nothing that you cannot
also do with free alternatives, but it is slick and nicely integrated.
The XP user interface is not a
radical departure from earlier versions of Windows, but there
are a number of small changes that together add up to a significant
improvement. The Start menu now automatically features the most
frequently used programs at the top of the list, and you can add
and remove shortcuts by right-clicking the icon and selecting
Pin or Unpin from the pop-up menu. Windows online help is integrated
into a Help and Support Center that works like an internal Web
site, with searchable help, tutorials, and walk-throughs.
Windows XP Professional includes
all the features of Windows XP Home, and adds support for dual
processors, encryptable file systems, offline folders, the Remote
Desktop as described above, and extra administration features
that come into play when connected to a Windows server domain.
XP is demanding on hardware, and it would be a mistake to install
it on less than Microsoft's recommended minimum requirements.
There is also activation to consider, a mildly annoying anti-piracy
measure that requires you to obtain a code from Microsoft for
full installation, and in the future if you reinstall or make
major system changes.
Overall, it's a big step forward
for those coming from Windows 9x or Me, and attractive rather
than compelling as an upgrade from 2000. --Tim Anderson
Product Description
Designed for reliability, security and privacy, high performance,
and ease of use, the Windows XP operating system provides a host
of benefits forbusiness and home users. A clean and simple desktop,
rock-solidreliability, and easy-to-use features that take advantage
of the digitalage all contribute to the value of Windows XP.
Enhancements in real-time voice,
video, and data communications will allowthe PC to become a center
of communications and creativity beyond juste-mail and instant
messaging. Windows XP will also allow the user toconnect back
to the desktop from any location, and support for new wirelessnetworks
will be built in. Windows XP will unify the user's supportexperience
by enabling the user to provide temporary and secure control oftheir
PC over the Internet to whomever can best help them.
Windows XP takes an end-to-end
approach to how people transfer videos andpictures onto their
computer, how they use them on their PC and otherdevices, and
how they share them, whether in person or through e-mail, over
the Web, or through removable media like DVDs and CDs. It extends
this experience through applications that help users buy music
and videos, mobile devices, services for saving your music on
the Internet, and more. Windows XP will make it easier for households
to share a single PC and share pictures, music, files,printers,
and other resources.
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