Showing posts with label Windows 7. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows 7. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Geek Tip of Day: sharing iTunes metadata

So one of the big issues with trying new OS's is invariably that you have some things set the way you like them and sometimes it's a royal pain setting that up again. Well, for me iTunes is one of the biggies. It might have to do with enjoying structure, organization, and useless information, but over the last 2 years iTunes has kept track of my vast library of music, recording ratings, play counts, lyrics, ablum artwork, and all kinds of other fun information. One of my worries has been what will happen the next time I need to reload windows or, as it more presently applicable, try out Windows 7? So my situation is that I am now dual booting between Vista and 7, and I want to be able to play music via iTunes and have the metadata library kept up-to-date and synchronized between the two systems. Today I have learned the solution. My music and the metadata for iTunes is stored on my D: drive, which is accessible by both systems. The trick that I learned is when starting iTunes, if you hold down the shift key it asks you to either start a new iTunes library or to direct it to an existing one. Doing this while in Windows 7, I was able to get iTunes to work with the same library file that it uses while in Vista. Now I can happily go between Vista and 7 without the stress of having to keep everything up-to-date manually or the horror of unsaved and unorganized music :) Which, considering I have about 25GB of music, would be annoying, to say the least.

For the computer geeks out there: Windows 7

Earlier this week, I downloaded and installed the beta for Windows 7. Having previously read a number of posts from fairly respected websites concerning Windows 7, I wanted to see for myself just how Microsoft's new OS was shaping up. I was hesitant at first because I thought it only worked as an upgrade (overwriting my Vista install), but then found out it could be dual booted, so I was good to go. Install was pretty fast, maybe 30 minutes, and painless. Upon first boot, Windows didn't have some drivers, but almost immediately found, downloaded, and installed them (it did ask me first). Then after one last reboot, I was good to go. My first impression was, "This is what Vista should have been like". It didn't feel clunky like Vista. The interface, while not an enormous change from Vista, just feels better and works smoother. The first image here shows what you see when you first load up a explorer window. I think this is a vast improvement over Vista. Much cleaner and more useful, giving immediate access to harddrives, important folders, and the usual other stuff. Also note the "Libraries". This is an interesting new pseudo-file structure. I haven't used it much yet, but it seems to be a good way of organizing and accessing files in a way that you want to, without actually moving them around. Essentially, you can put files and folders into a library, and then by going to that library, you can easily browse through them all. Next, notice the taskbar has changed. It's a bit fatter than before, so you loose a little desktop space to it, but otherwise I think it's another improvement. No more text labels, just icons. Also, multiple windows of the same kind are stacked by default. Which leads to one of my favourite new things, the previewing features. Take the example in the screenshot below, I have three Chrome windows open. By mousing over the icon, I get previews of all three windows. Then if I move over one of the previews, all of the windows on the desktop go transparent, except the one being "moused". That's a lot of writing and describing, but using it felt very intuitive to me and was actually a great feature. For certain applications, it gets even better. With Internet Explorer, it is also aware of tabs within a window and shows a preview for each tab just as if it was it's own window. I'm sure this will come to the other web browsers in time. I think I mentioned this already, but Windows 7 just feels faster than Vista. Granted this is not necessarily a hard task to accomplish, but it's a step in the right direction for Windows. I wasn't able to install FireFox initially, but it ended up not being a Windows 7 problem, I just needed to clear the cache from a botched previous attempt. So while I am interested in playing with the new version of IE (which, btw people using older versions of windows are free to try, as it is out in Beta form), I prefer other browsers. Anyways, just thought I'd give my two cents on this topic and highlight a few of my favourite new things. If there are any requests for programs or features to test, ask away. *After post edit* I forgot to mention another cool feature. Maximized windows can now be dragged away (and automagically unmaximized) by the title bar. Unmaximized windows can be maximized by dragging them to the top of the screen and made to fill half of the screen by dragging them to either side of the screen. Another nice usability feature. Oh and Paint has been snazzed up a bit. Check it all out in the following screenshots.