How “Windows Phone 7 Series” Makes Sense
I’m sure every single person in the tech world can agree that Windows Phone 7 Series is a stupid name for a product, almost as bad as iPad.
However, if we take a step back and re-think about this incredulously long name and what it means exactly, you’ll see it may not be as entirely stupid as it was at first glance.
Windows Phone 7 Series describes the combined devices that will be running this new Operating System. Just like the older OS devices will be called Windows Phone Classic Series. “Series” is simply an added word to describe the devices together.
Therefore, in truth, Windows Phone 7 is the name of the OS itself, which is a lot less stupid than Windows Phone 7 Series.
I’m still wondering if there is a specific way they could make the name for the series itself more appealing.
More Windows 7 Steam Goodness
This is just a small update to the whole Steam on Windows 7 thing. Looks like they’re embracing more Windows 7 features than I saw previously. Discovered this while downloading Zero Gear today:

Why Steam on Windows 7 Disappoints Me
This actually isn’t a post against Windows 7. In fact, you will find very few of those among this blog, if any at all. This is actually a post voicing my disappointment with the very popular Social Network Gaming Software, Steam.
One of the first things quickly and easily noticed is that it uses its own Window customization. This really isn’t such a big deal for me. Sure, it’d be nice if it could do the whole aero thing and fall back on this, but this looks pretty cool, so I’m not really going to fault them for this.
Next is actually mostly a good thing. Steam has this very nice jumplist for Windows 7, something not a lot of other programs have really taken the time to integrate just yet. You can see video games I have recently (attempted to anyway) launched from Steam, their own quick links to important parts of their client, and an optional (disabled by default) ability to change your current status from the jumplist.
The one problem I have with this jump list is that the tasks have no icons. You could easily find some sort of icon for each of their little tasks. A shopping cart for Store, a generic user-like figure for community, etc etc but there is nothing there.
Then of course, there is my ultimate pickle with Steam. As I’m sure you can tell from the above screenshot – Steam has NO PRESENCE in the Windows Games Explorer. This is awful! The Games Explorer has been around since Vista, and yet Steam has yet to embrace it.
There could (and should) be (at the very least) a high resolution steam icon under Game Providers. It’s not very difficult to make, and the “News” feed you see from Games for Windows LIVE is a simple RSS feed. They could either populate this with the news from their site, or just a list of new releases, creating a steam:// URI (if it doesn’t already exist) to open up links in their own client. Instead, they don’t even touch this.
As for games, I don’t know if they show up in the Explorer or not. I don’t have any spare cash lying around, so I haven’t been able to check for myself – but somehow I doubt that the games appear there (though, I could be wrong – can anyone vouch for this?).
Hopefully, these issues will be addressed in a future version of Steam, and embraced by Rival companies. (I’m looking at you On Live. Yes, I expect this from you as well).
What are your thoughts on the matter, anyway?
Chrome 3.0.197.11 Introduces “Jumplist”
The newest Developer version of Chrome has introduced support for the fantastic Windows 7 Jumplist. So, to see what you’ll be able to get soon enough:
As you can see, it supports Tasks, Shows you what you recently closed, and gives you a list of your most visited websites for easy two-click access! And don’t worry about something bad showing up. If you want to get rid of something, just right click and “Remove from this list.”
You can also PIN any item you wish to the list!
Good going Chrome!
Windows 7 Genuine Advantage
Should be aptly renamed to “Windows 7 Ungenuine Disadvantage.”
Why you ask?
Simply because a single simple hardware revision (“upgrading” your computer for example) can make it lose it’s mind.
Would you like to know the modifications I had to make to my computer to get “You may be a victim of software fraud” and “Activate Now” popping up all the time since the first time I activated with a serial code provided from Microsoft?
I had to make one: Attaching a second IDE hard drive that’s less than 20GB.
That one IDE hard drive freaked Windows 7 out like there is no tomorrow.
Luckily, since the Beta is free; I have another key; and have re-validated my version of Windows 7 as genuine.
Windows Live & Windows 7
There is nothing more noticeable by running the Windows Live Beta on Windows 7, then the fact that the two were made for each other. This shows most with Windows Live Messenger; and how it has tasks for everything and is built into the new taskbar perfectly.
All of the Windows Live programs that I’ve tested (excluding the hopefully nowhere near finished Windows Live Movie Maker) also now have high-resolution icons to represent their programs (instead of just the old 32x32 pixel images).
You have to admit though, Windows 7 looks beautiful.


