As with regular printers, it’s generally a good sign when a manufacturer releases new drivers to extend the function of a device to a new operating system. Barcode printers are specialized pieces of equipment, and the availability of Windows 7 drivers is not likely to make a major splash among users who don’t have a barcode printer.
The availability of new Windows 7 drivers for a niche product, however, is a strong positive indication that more users (especially commercial users) are lining up to add Windows 7 to their list of supported operating systems. Unlike Windows Vista, which was a commercial dud, Windows users across the board are moving toward Windows 7 adoption.
With the advent of the new fiscal year, we should begin to see the many organizations that time their upgrades to budget cycles start moving toward Windows 7. The fact that Windows 7 doesn’t make major hardware demands on PCs, plus the added benefit of the Windows XP emulation mode, should make migration an easy decision.
Despite Microsoft’s best efforts, however, the question of driver availability, especially for older hardware and niche products is still open. If manufacturers and software publishers create a broad range of drivers for older and uncommon hardware, and if Microsoft can deliver on its promise of stability – so far it has – Windows 7 is likely to experience the wide adoption that Windows XP did.
For the remainder of 2010, users should expect to see additional driver rollouts for older hardware and niche hardware. Until the Great Driver Migration is complete, however, some users will be engaged in a “chicken and egg” conundrum: “I’ll upgrade if the drivers are available” will do battle with “We’ll write drivers only if we see a lot of people upgrading to Windows 7.”
Once Windows 7 has been on the shelf for a year, it’s unlikely that a large number of new drivers will enter the market. Instead, manufacturers will carry Windows 7 support forward in their product line, but won’t likely look backward, even for some of their more popular legacy products.
Photo Credit: Manuel, via Flickr
The JooJoo tablet is a touchscreen device with iPad-esque styling, size and shape. It retails for about USD$500 and has just a single accessory… a stand that enables the pad to stand on a desktop. The JooJoo site is shockingly sparse on details, and contains only the barest information about the company, the product and the product’s capabilities.
Nonetheless, at least one enterprising user has posted a driver that enables the JooJoo to run Windows 7. The hacked Windows 7 driver doesn’t engage all of the JooJoo’s functions but gets most of them and in surprisingly good fashion. One of the big features that’s left wanting is the JooJoo’s accelerometer. The accelerometer is the component that enables these devices to reposition the screen when its orientation is changed, and to incorporate device motion as a command or data input. In other words, if you shake this device, it won’t do anything, and probably can’t calculate your carbon footprint if you take it for a ride in your Prius.
The origin of the driver presents an interesting alternative, however, for Windows users whose hardware isn’t supported by the hardware manufacturer. Some hardware is simply worth having, even when the manufacturer of the device doesn’t think so.
I suspect that, in at least some cases, we’ll see consumer demand for Windows device drivers for abandoned or orphaned products. That also opens the question of whether or not manufacturers that no longer want to support a particular device will support volunteer programmers (a la open source) who are willing to invest their time and talents to create a guerilla driver for an orphaned device. The support might include device information that the manufacturer has, work that it started and abandoned and/or code for the existing drivers.
Even if the original manufacturer isn’t willing to create a driver update, consumer demand may be steady enough to warrant the creation of a driver by a third-party. Sometimes (as demonstrated by the JooJoo hack), third parties will develop the driver anyway.
Photo Credit: José Goulão, via Flickr
Patch Tuesday releases include security updates, driver updates and patches to the operating system that have not been deemed a flat-out, “all-hands-on-deck” emergency. The system has worked relatively well since it was introduced by Microsoft in 2003. Now Adobe says that it may move to monthly product and security updates.
Several prominent attacks against Windows Vista and Windows 7 have been launched using Adobe Flash and Adobe Reader, and users and vendors alike are pressuring Adobe to pay more attention to product vulnerabilities and to address potential exploits faster. Currently, Adobe issues product updates once per quarter. This leaves malware designers significant time to discover and develop attacks using the company’s products.
Another problem for Windows users is that Windows Update does not automatically download and install Adobe product updates. Instead, Windows Update handles only new third-party driver releases. Adobe says it plans to adopt Microsoft’s Security Center Update Publisher (SCUP) by the end of 2010. This move will enable Adobe to distribute product updates to Windows users more quickly and effectively.
Currently, Adobe doesn’t post its most recent product updates on the company’s Web site. Instead, users download an update, then use the Adobe Updater tool to patch the version of the software they’ve just downloaded. One drawback of this approach is that it relies on users to update the product. If users don’t seek out the updates, or don’t allow automatic updates on their computers, the unpatched, out-of-date product(s) will remain.
Since Adobe products are becoming the vector of choice for certain types of attacks against Windows, expect Microsoft to notch up the pressure on Adobe to move to a more regular system of patching, adopt more efficient methods of updating products, and to design products with tighter security controls in mind.
Photo Credit: emma.kate, via Flickr
One of the most critical concerns with any kind of laptop hardware is power consumption. Because laptops work primarily on batteries, the amount of power that each device consumes has a direct bearing on the performance of the system. As a result, manufacturers attempt to reduce power consumption as much as possible for devices designed for use in laptops.
That design decision is not without cost. Laptops frequently work with older processors, older memories, older displays and older peripherals that consume less power. Not having the latest processors means that laptops perform some tasks more slowly than their conventional desktop counterparts.
Flash drive technology is attractive for laptop designs because it consumes less energy than mechanical drives do, and lacks moving parts. By eliminating moving parts, laptops become more reliable and more road-worthy. The trade-off? Not-so-good performance.
With the new hybrid drives from Seagate, Windows 7 and Windows Vista performance has been properly addressed and Seagate says that the new drives willl operate seamlessly with not only Windows 7 and Windows Vista, but also with laptops that run the Mac OS and Linux as well.
Improved performance and improved Windows drivers aren’t the only things users can expect from the new Momentus XT drives. Seagate says that it will offer the drives as upgrades for a new Republic of Gamers G73Jh notebook starting at just $113.
If the hybrid drive and its drivers deliver genuinely improved performance, better integration with Windows 7 and Windows Vista and reduce the cost to just over $100 for 500GB of laptop storage space, Seagate will have a hit on its hands. Although the new drives are being marketed to the laptop gamers, you can bet that if the drives perform well, you’ll be seeing them in non-gaming applications in the not-too-distant future.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Seagate