[scribus] Windows 7
jwminer at accessvt.com
jwminer at accessvt.com
Mon Nov 16 18:26:05 CET 2009
Rolf wrote with regard to Windows 7:
> What I still do not understand, however, is why they push a Home
> Premium
> version without XP emulation (almost all new machines sold come with
> it). End users will have a great bunch of older software they depend
> on
> which they will want to continue using. As far as I can see, they
> would
> have to upgrade to Professional to be able to use XP emulation. Or
> did I
> get this wrong, too? :-)
Sort of. XP Mode, which is available for Win 7 Professional and
Ultimate (Enterprise, too) is a virtual machine containing a
licensed copy of XP that is seamlessly integrated into Windows 7. It
does not come with Win 7 Professional or Ultimate and is a free
download from Microsoft, which the user has to install.
Note: MOST applications users ran under XP will also work with
Windows 7 and the user doesn't need XP Mode at all. XP Mode is
intended for mission-critical XP applications that won't run under
Win 7; mostly those would be customized applications used by
businesses.
If someone has Win 7 Home Premium and a desired application won't
run, he or she can install a software virtual machine like VMware or
VirtualBox, install a licensed copy of Windows in the vm, and
install the software. This is exactly what you could do in XP or
Vista. You DON'T need Win 7 Professional if you want to install
VMware, VirtualBox, or another virtual machine like Microsoft
Virtual PC. However, you'll need a legal copy of XP, Vista, or
whatever version of Windows you want in your virtual machine and
integration with Win 7 won't be as seamless as it is with XP Mode.
As anyone who has run another version of Windows or Linux in a vm
knows, this is no big deal.
Windows 7 includes compatibility mode, which has been available
through a right-click on a program's executable file since Windows
XP came out. This is not a virtual machine and simply "fools" some
software that is looking for a specific version of Windows in order
to run. I have never found compatibility mode to do much of anything
when I've tried to install a program in XP or Vista that wouldn't
allow this. It may help with some games as long as they don't try to
access the hardware directly, which is forbidden in all versions of
Windows NT (XP, Vista, and Win 7 are all versions of NT). I guess
the right-click compatibility mode must do something for someone or
it wouldn't be there, but it can't make a truly incompatible program
compatible.
So really, the vast majority of buyers for personal use don't need
XP Mode and certainly shouldn't spend the considerably increased
price for Win 7 Professional solely for XP Mode. And of course, the
processor has to support hardware virtualization. Processor support
is not needed for a virtual machine installed in Win 7 Home.
I have Windows 7 Home Premium installed in a dual boot with XP and I
like Win 7 very much. However, I am primarily a Linux user and Linux
will continue to be my main OS. (I actually have a quadruple boot on
that computer, as I have VectorLinux 6 Standard and VectorLinux 6
Light in their own partitions.) I run Windows occasionally when I
need to use a program without an acceptable, or any, Linux
equivalent. I'm also the tech support person for a number of
relatives and friends and I need to be on top of the Windows
versions they use. So when Win 7 Home Premium was offered for $50 US
last summer, I preordered a copy and I installed it as soon as it
came in the mail right after Windows 7 was released for retail
sales. I haven't yet installed Scribus or Inkscape in Win 7, though
I have installed the Gimp and it is working fine in my limited use.
I don't have any 64-bit programs except for what are part of Win 7.
Much of my software is not recent at all. For example, Photoshop
Elements 4 is installed and working fine, though the Organizer has
some compatibility issues that are not killers. Even my Win 95-era
Bitstream Font Navigator is working for installing and uninstalling
font groups. Font Navigator doesn't understand OpenType or Unicode,
but as long as it works with my font groups, that's enough for me.
A retail full or upgrade copy of Windows 7 comes with two DVDs, one
for 32-bit and one for 64-bit. You have to choose one or the other
as the license is for one computer only. I installed 64-bit Win 7
because 64-bit is the future of computing. It also allows for much
more RAM to be utilized than the 3.5 gigs and under that a 32-bit
Windows can use.
32-bit programs run fine in Win 7 64. 16-bit programs do not run at
all. Some 32-bit programs have 16-bit installers. The installer will
not run, so those programs can't be installed. If you really need
16-bit programs, you can install a virtual machine and put a copy of
an earlier Windows in it and then install and run your 16-bit
programs.
Although most 32-bit programs will run in Win 7 64 WITHOUT a virtual
machine, another point to consider is whether there are 64-bit
drivers for your hardware. You must have those. They're not scarce,
however. Many manufacturers have 64-bit drivers available for
download and Win 7 64 itself includes drivers for lots of hardware,
with more to come, supposedly. I have four printers, two of which
are inkjet all-in-ones. Only one printer, a 9-year-old Epson Stylus
Color 760, does not have a 64-bit driver. The one piece of hardware
without a 64-bit driver I'll really miss is my Sony Clie PDA. I can
install Palm Desktop but cannot sync the PDA with the desktop
because Palm does not and will not offer a driver. I do have a
kludge, though. I sync the Clie through XP on the same computer and
simply copy the files to Palm Desktop in Win 7.
Win 7 64 is performing very well on my computer, an Athlon 64 X2
4200+ with 3 gigs of RAM and onboard Radeon Xpress 200 video. This
is definitely not state-of-the-art hardware but with Win 7 64 it
feels like a new computer.
If you need to join a domain or really need Group Policies, you
should get Win 7 Professional. Apart from that, you can save your
money and go with Home Premium.
--Judy M.
USA
Registered Linux User #397786
Being productive with VectorLinux 6.0 Standard, Deluxe Edition
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