Dave
I have the RC that says "Evaluation Copy Build 7100" in the lower right screen. The start-up screen tells me it's an Windows 7 Ultimate copy. There were several updates through the "Windows Update" just after I finished installing it on Thursday evening.
It is running on DirectX11. I was under the impression before I ever got to the actual OS installation part of my plan that W7 was going to by-pass the experimental DirectX10 completely and go directly to DirectX11. That's why it never dawned on me to look for that DirectX10 Preview button in FSX. I'm thinking that's probably also got something to do with why FSX looks pretty awfull when I click that experimental preview button.
Headwind
I've noticed the same thing with the monitor going to sleep. I've gone through all of the regular places I know to deactivate power saving features, but yet it still puts the monitor to sleep after some period of time. It like it has ESP or something as it's never gone off while I'm in the room, but if I go out to walk the pup or tinker around the house it'll shut itself down. The one thing I don't think I've seen yet, is it shutting down while I'm flying a long haul. I can't remember seeing it power down while I'm in flight???
One thing I'm wondering is if Windows7 is smart enough to know something about my monitor that I don't.
I was incredibly impressed when I first went to check on the status of my hardware just after the initial W7 installation. It knew exactly the model numbers for several pieces of my peripherial harware including the newer of my two Samsung monitors. It recognized my older Samsung monitor also but, but not by exact model number.
When I went into the Device Manager out of post-format habit, W7 already had everything up and running except my TrackIR. It knew what it was but just didn't have any drivers for it. In W7's words, it pretty much said "Hey, you have a TrackIR installed and your going to have to go get those drivers youself."
With XP, it knew the drivers for something was missing but it had no clue as to what it was.
FSX/W7 related:
One thing I found unusual with FSX and W7 so far is in the process of manually adding custom scenery. There is an extra click of the mouse needed. Everything is normal from opening up the Scenery Library to hitting Add New Scenery and then pointing to the correct scenery you want to add. Normally once the proper scenery info shows up in all of the correct info windows, you hit okay and that new scenery is automatically added to your scenery library stack. With W7 when you hit the okay button the scenery library then opens up that actual scenery folder so that what you see in the Scenery Library screen is the actual sub-folder labeled "Scenery". You have to right click in the middle of that screen and then the scenery gets put in the library stack.
It took me a little bit to figure that one out by accident. It was a little frustrating at first because the normal procedure wasn't working and anything I tried that made sense didn't work.
FAC