The individual improvements are too numerous to mention in detail, but there are some in particular that stick out. First, I have to say that I am definitely a fan of the new taskbar, where there are only icons and hovering over them shows a thumbnail of that window. They also feature a few other goodies, such as displaying the status of a status bar within a window and giving options relevant specifically to that application when you right-click on them. You can even rearrange the order of the icons! (Figuring out that people might want that must have been hard for Microsoft :)Also, the improvements in performance are definitely noticeable. I haven't had a chance to test it on a netbook yet, but as I can I will definitely let you know how that works.
Finally, the new Aero Peek, which, by pressing Alt+Tab, shows you a thumbnail of each open window and allows you to quickly switch between them, is actually pretty nice to have. It creates an entirely new (for Windows, that is) multitasking environment and certainly helps increase efficiency.
Overall, Windows 7 is most certainly an improvement over Vista, and this time it's actually worth upgrading to from XP. (I've been using the Windows 7 Pre-Beta (Build 6801) since it was originally leaked shortly after Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference as my primary operating system, using XP only for applications that aren't fully supported yet in Windows 7.) It's surprisingly stable for only the first beta, and it supports almost any application that works in either XP or Vista (Although, I still can't find a color print driver for my printer that will work with it.) and I'm sure this time around there will be much better initial software and hardware support from third-parties. Right now, I'd say Windows 7 is on track to be a great operating system, and I can hardly wait to see it once it's finished. (I'd also like to try out the multitouch capabilities, but I don't have a multitouch monitor.)
However, I'd also like to see all of Windows 7 put into a slightly modified package and called Windows Mobile. Microsoft can make as good of a desktop OS that it wants, but if they can't bring that to mobile, they're going to lose in the long-run because it's inevitable that the cell phone will be the next big thing in computing as we see a shift away from the desktop. Microsoft just needs to understand that.

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