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Post Info TOPIC: Longhorn


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Vista Transformation Pack 5.0
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Windows X's Vista Transformation Pack 5.0 has been released.
The transformation pack features some extremely exciting features, including the ability to update VTP without uninstalling, and the ability to slipstream VTP 5 into your Windows setup files.

VTP 5.0 boasts many visual updates based on build 5472 of Windows Vista, including icon updates, better visual styles, and an improved Window Blinds skin. This release also fixes many bugs that existed in VTP 4.0.

Download Vista Transformation Pack 5.0: (12618 kb)
MIRROR 2

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Vista Patch
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An issue has been identified that may cause you to lose access to protected media music, videos, and recorded TV after upgrading to Windows Vista RC1. You can help prevent this scenario by installing this update from Microsoft. After you install this item, you may have to restart your computer.

Download: Update for Windows Vista Beta 2 (KB922917) | x64

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
VistaBootPRO
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VistaBootPRO, the program developed by PROnetworks, is now available for download.
The update has new features and a new and improved GUI interface. They have added full support for Vista Beta 2 and Build 5456, as well as included a number of new and improved features.
VistaBootPRO 2.1 Beta has been written using Microsoft C# for added reliability and stability.

VistaBootPRO 2.1 Beta is compatible with Windows Vista Build 5472.

Designed for both beginners and advanced users, VistaBootPRO can be used to make "cosmetic" changes to the Windows Vista boot Menu such as changing the name of the Operating Systems shown in the boot menu and make advanced "functional" changes like adding an Operating System to the boot menu and repairing the Windows Vista boot configuration data. Advanced settings include backing up and exporting your boot loader configuration and modifying various details for the entries. Included in this latest release are additional features, including a built-in help file and more advanced boot configuration options.
For those who have had to use the command prompt based bcdedit.exe in the past, you will be impressed with the ease of use and functionality that VistaBootPRO provides.
File size: 1.41 Mb

www.vistabootpro.org/

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Breaking Vista
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APCMag.com has explored Vista's dependence on user-specified metadata and concluded that once you delete Microsoft's perfectly tagged set of sample document files from the Vista beta, things start falling to pieces.

The problems aren't related to bugs in the beta: the dependence on metadata is a design failure that's going to haunt users who upgrade. Vista provides options like "Sort by unspecified" for files that don't have tags applied.
Meanwhile, startups like Riya are out-innovating Microsoft with useful file search technologies like facial recognition on photos that allow useful searching of images without copious user tagging.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Vista coupon
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When Microsoft announced that the consumer release of Windows Vista would miss the crucial 2006 Christmas shopping season, many PC retailers and OEMs saw visions of sugarplums dancing merrily away from their wallets. It was rumored that Microsoft might help lessen the pain slightly by offering free Vista upgrade coupons for people who buy PCs at the end of the year, and now these rumors have been confirmed, thanks to leaks from certain Taiwanese PC manufacturers.

The coupon offer will begin in October, and is a result of a joint effort between Microsoft and a group of leading PC vendors worldwide. According to the anonymous sources, Microsoft actually reached an agreement with these PC companies back in July, but decided not to reveal their plans so as to protect PC sales in the third quarter.

Source

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Hacking Vista
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Last week, the company invited hackers at the Black Hat USA 2006 security conference in Las Vegas to hack into Windows Vista after giving them a tour of the upcoming OS's new security features. Hackers at the show came away impressed with both Microsoft's candor and some of the new security features, although many of them added that the improvements were long overdue. But the real news from the show is that Vista was actually successfully hacked the very day that Microsoft made its Black Hat presentation. And that news has to have Microsoft's customers worried.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
Windows Media Player 11
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According to leaked information, Windows Media Player 11 for XP will be released on September 14th, 2006.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Subverting Vista Kernel
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Microsoft spent a whole day here at the Black Hat conference extolling the security enhancements in its upcoming Vista operating system.

Joanna Rutkowska, a security researcher with security firm Coseinc, spent a day picking it apart.
Then again, what else would you expect from a session at a hacker convention titled: "Subverting Vista Kernel For Fun And Profit"?
Rutkowska took the stage in front of a capacity audience and proceeded to explain how to get around Vista.
She demonstrated two potential attack vectors. One could allow unsigned code to be loaded into the Vista kernel. The second vector involved taking advantage of AMD's Pacific Hardware Virtualization to inject a new form of super malware that Rutkowska claimed to be undetectable.
Rutkowska's Vista kernel attack did not rely on any known bugs in Vista, which is still in beta testing. She stressed that her demonstration did not rely on any implementation bug nor any undocumented Windows Vista functionality.
She characterised her approaches as "legal," using documented SDK (define) features.

One of the new features in Vista Beta 2 is that it requires all kernel mode drivers to be signed. The general idea is to prevent malware from being injected. Rutkowska's effort suggested that Microsoft still has some work to do on this feature.
Rutkowska's method for injecting unsigned (and therefore potentially malicious) drivers into the Vista kernel involved taking advantage of paged memory to bypass Vista security.
In her demo, the shellcode used disabled signature checking, thus allowing any unsigned driver to be subsequently loaded. Taking her attack a step further, she implemented a one-click tool, which she called "Kernelstike" to execute her Vista kernel exploit.
Call it fresh meat for sharks: The audience erupted into spontaneous applause, followed by whoops and woo-hoos throughout her demonstration.

"The fact that this mechanism was bypassed doesn't mean Vista is insecure. It just means it's just not as secure as advertised" - Joanna Rutkowska.

Rutkowska brought suggestions that could potentially prevent the subversion of the Vista kernel. One of them involves denying raw disk access from usermode, though she said that approach would likely break many applications.
Rutkowska said she disabled kernel memory paging on her own machine and is just using physical memory instead. She did admit, however, that her machine had 4 GB of RAM and as such paging makes little sense.
Rutkowska also demonstrated a new form of super malware that she said she could use against Vista. The attack involved compromising chipmaker AMD's 64 SVM hardware virtualisation features with a tool she called "Blue Pill."
It creates a hypervisor that can control the operating system. A network backdoor can then be inserted onto a compromised Blue Pill machine. Rutkowska developed such a backdoor. She named it "Delusion." She said it was undetectable.
When she connected to it, the remote shell on the compromised Blue Pill machine greeted Rutkowska with the following response: "Hi this is Delusion. Where do you want to go today?"

Source

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Windows Vista
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With Windows Vista nearing its first release candidate in preparation for a final launch early next year, Microsoft is providing more details about possible upgrade paths. Of note: Windows 2000 cannot be upgraded to Vista.
While Windows 2000 Professional customers may purchase a cheaper "upgrade" copy of Microsoft next-generation operating system, Windows Vista must be "clean installed," which means users will need to back up their files and data manually and then copy everything into place. Applications will also need to be re-installed.

A standard in-place upgrade will "retain your applications, files, and settings as they were in your previous edition of Windows" - Microsoft.

The x64 version of Windows XP will also have the same requirement. Although the final release of Vista will include both 32-bit and 64-bit iterations of the OS, Microsoft has not designed an upgrade path for the current x64 release.
Windows XP Professional, meanwhile, can be upgraded only to the Business and Ultimate editions of Windows Vista. This is due to features built into XP Pro not being added to the Home Basic and Home Premium SKUs of Vista.

"If the edition of Windows Vista that you choose to install will result in a loss of functionality over your current edition of Windows, a clean install must be done or the installation must be completed to a new partition on your PC" - Microsoft.

All versions of Windows Vista can be installed atop Windows XP Home, while Windows XP Media Centre Edition can be upgraded to either Vista Home Premium or Vista Ultimate. The Tablet PC Edition of Windows XP is upgradeable to Vista Business and Vista Ultimate.
Microsoft is providing a beta of its Upgrade Advisor tool that will evaluate whether a PC is ready to run Windows Vista. The application scans the computer and creates a report of all known system and device compatibility issues, along with suggestions for resolution.

Source BetaNews

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Vista
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Microsoft® Windows Vista™ brings the shadow copy feature provided in Microsoft Windows Server2003 to the client. The system automatically makes shadow copies of files and folders daily. You can also create shadow copies by setting a System Protection Point using the System Protection tab in the System control panel. When you right-click a file or folder, you now see a Previous Versions tab that lets you copy any of the stored previous versions or restore the item to any of the prior states.

In the event of an inadvertent change or deletion of a file or folder, Previous Versions allows you to revert the file or folder to any previous version, restore a previous version from a backup (made with Windows Backup), or make a copy of a previous version.
Previous Versions accomplishes this locally, without requiring a server to act as a repository for the shadow copies. This means that information technology professionals no longer have to administer or manage the process unless they want to.

vistapreview

This feature is automatically enabled in Windows Vista. You can enable or disable the feature for each available volume using the System Protection tab on the System Properties control panel. To view or change the settings, click Start, right-click Computer, and then click Properties. In the window that opens, click System Protection.

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