Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3), just out from Microsoft as Release Candidate 2 (RC2), may not necessarily be worth the download now, but when it's finally released, it'll be worth the effort.
Windows XP SP3 won't make any noticeable cosmetic changes to your operating system, but underneath the hood are several security improvements worth having.
In addition, one researcher claims Windows XP SP3 will slightly boost XP's speed as well.
Microsoft is using an interesting method to distribute Windows XP SP3. You don't download it as a separate .exe file – instead, you download a small executable file that, when run, changes your Registry so that Windows Update will download Windows XP SP3. If you are comfortable with editing the Registry, you can instead use a hack to tell your Registry to download SP3.
The actual download of Windows XP SP3 weighs in at 65.6MB. Once we downloaded it, it took about 30 minutes to install on a 1.83GHz Core Duo laptop with 1GB of RAM. Reboot after the install, and you're in business.
Don't bother looking around for any visible changes to the operating system; you won't find any. You'll have to go to System Properties and check your OS version just to make sure Windows XP SP3 installed properly.
Microsoft claims there is one, exceptionally minor interface change – according to the Release Notes, a Security Options Control Panel applet "offers more descriptive text to explain the settings and prevent incorrect configuration of settings". Doesn't make the pulse race, does it?
But we couldn't find even that – our version of XP doesn't seem to have the applet in question.
One of the biggest changes to XP won't affect people who already have the operating system – it's to do with product activation and Genuine Advantage, Microsoft's way of validating its OS. Before Windows XP SP3, when you installed XP for the first time, you had to enter a valid product key or else you couldn't install the operating system. With SP3, you'll be able to install XP for 30 days without the key.
If you already have XP, of course, you won't need a product key to upgrade to Windows XP SP3, so it won't really affect upgraders.
Security changes
Most of what's new has to do with security. In fact, five of the seven changes Microsoft lists on its Release Notes are security-related.
Particularly notable is Network Access Protection (NAP), which is available on Vista and on Windows Server 2008, but until now was not available on XP. NAP gives network administrators a way to determine a computer's access to network resources based on the PC's identity, and whether the PC complies with security policies set by the administrator.
With NAP, network administrators can set this kind of access at a finely granular level. In addition, NAP gives the administrator tools to bring the PC into compliance with the security policies, and then give the PC access to the network.
In addition, Microsoft has beefed up security by upgrading the random number generator. Last November, Israeli researchers said that attackers could exploit a weakness in Windows 2000's pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) and be able to predict encryption keys. In Windows XP SP3, Microsoft claims that flaw is fixed.
Windows XP SP3 also rolls up a variety of previous patches and hotfixes. Particularly noteworthy for Wi-Fi users is Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA2), which supports the new Wi-Fi Alliance certification for secure wireless networks. WPA2 is already available in Windows Vista and Windows Server 2003 with SP2.
Microsoft did not claim any performance boosts for Windows XP SP3, but one firm, after testing an earlier version of SP3, claims that in fact, users of Microsoft Office will see a moderate speed boost .
Using a previous version of Windows XP SP3, Devil Mountain Software ran its OfficeBench suite performance tests pre-SP3 and post-SP3 on an Office 2007-equipped notebook with a 2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor and 1GB of memory. The company found a 10 per cent speed increase compared to the pre-Windows XP SP3 version of XP, which was equipped with XP SP2.
Craig Barth, Devil Mountain's chief technology officer, wrote in his company's blog, "Since SP3 was supposed to be mostly a bug-fix/patch consolidation release – unlike with Vista SP1, Microsoft made no promises of improved performance for XP – the unexpected speed boost comes as a nice bonus."
On our test machine, on a 1.83GHz Core Duo laptop with 1GB of RAM, we didn't notice a perceptible difference in performance between Microsoft Office 2007 pre Windows XP SP3 and post-SP3. But we're not sure that a 10 per cent difference would be noticeable.