basically said MS can now "shove it" because he's completely happy with XP.
Your Dad is a smart man!
Thats basically the attitude taken by businesses worldwide, including the one I'm IT Manager for!

basically said MS can now "shove it" because he's completely happy with XP.
basically said MS can now "shove it" because he's completely happy with XP.
Your Dad is a smart man!
Thats basically the attitude taken by businesses worldwide, including the one I'm IT Manager for!![]()
basically said MS can now "shove it" because he's completely happy with XP.
Your Dad is a smart man!
Thats basically the attitude taken by businesses worldwide, including the one I'm IT Manager for!![]()
Don't know if read slashdot but it's had some links to articles that caused a few red faces at red faces. Seems even people within in Microsoft aren't enamoured with Vista and it that they down graded the hardware requirements as a favour to Intel.
5 years of development and we get a turkey (though Server 2008 is looking pretty good.
And if you're still running XP, apparently SP3 for XP is everything SP1 for Vista isn't but Microsoft don't really want to trumpet it that.
I've had no issues with SP1, or with Vista (x64) at all for that matter.
I've had no issues with SP1, or with Vista (x64) at all for that matter.
If you install it on a new PC, or a PC with very new hardware, you dont need to use legacy hardware or software and you have a positive outlook on the new bells and whistles there is no particular reason you would.
BUT -considering it provides nothing the average home user, and less than nothing the average business user really needs, and on the same hardware runs far more slowly than XP, why would anyone upgrade?
With Vista MS has filled a hole in the market only they feel exists.and like most other people if I can wait for Windows 9 I probably will, especially if it gives us some genuine new capabilities.
I run a dual boot of Vista and XP, and Vista is not any slower than XP. I do a lot of video editing and encoding which requires a lot of processor and memory, and there is no difference in performance that is noticable to my human senses. A job that takes an hour of encoding on Vista also takes an hour of encoding on XP.BUT -considering it provides nothing the average home user, and less than nothing the average business user really needs, and on the same hardware runs far more slowly than XP, why would anyone upgrade?
Again, I run XP and Vista on the same hardware, literally, and there is no difference in speed, and this is with applications that stress my hardware and use maximum resources. To say that Vista runs "far more slowly" than XP is an exageration.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/352442_vista23.htmlI have done plenty of reading. Microsoft didn't "lower" it's requirements to run Vista, there was some arguable fudging where some systems that were perfectly capable of running VISTA BASIC and got the Vista label, wouldn't have had the video power to use the Aero desktop. The label was accurate strictly speaking, but I agree that some people bought their systems without doing the research, got sold by some salesmen that just wanted to move older boxes, and might get pissed because they can't upgrade to Premium with buying a video card.
In a blow to Microsoft Corp., a federal judge granted class-action status to a lawsuit late Friday alleging that Microsoft unjustly enriched itself by promoting PCs as "Windows Vista Capable" even when they could only run a bare-bones version of the operating system, called "Vista Home Basic." The slogan was emblazoned on PCs during the 2006 holiday shopping season as part of a campaign by Microsoft to maintain sales of Windows XP computers after the launch of Windows Vista was delayed. At a hearing two weeks ago, lawyers for Microsoft argued that because each consumer who bought a computer touted as "Windows Vista Capable" had different information at the time of purchase, the lawsuit should not be granted class-action status, while plaintiffs' lawyers said that all individuals who bought "Windows Vista Capable" PCs were united in that "each person in our class did not get what they paid for." In her ruling, Judge Marsha Pechman granted class-action status, stating that "common issues predominate." "These common issues ... are whether Vista Home Basic, in truth, can fairly be called 'Vista' and whether Microsoft's 'Windows Vista Capable' marketing campaign inflated demand market-wide for 'Windows Vista Capable' PCs," she wrote.
I run a dual boot of Vista and XP, and Vista is not any slower than XP. I do a lot of video editing and encoding which requires a lot of processor and memory, and there is no difference in performance that is noticable to my human senses. A job that takes an hour of encoding on Vista also takes an hour of encoding on XP.
Inevitably and eventually Vista will probably become a standard - but it has a long way to go and it is hard to shake the perception that the released version of Vista needed more testing and development, and that the only reason it was released when it was, was because of sparing MS's blushes over the delays already caused.I find I've been using XP less and less and only boot it about every two weeks or so. I have a couple of older programs that won't run in Vista, but I only need them rarely. I have an older version of Nero that only runs in XP, but for the last year now I only use it to do a Lightscribe disk label. As well a couple of freeware programs that are useful, but Vista versions are being released more now and I'll probably retire those soon.
Possibly, though not my words. I was as I have said referring more to desktop speeds. Especially on basic hardware (cheap laptops that come with home basic for example) Vista is quite, quite horrific.Again, I run XP and Vista on the same hardware, literally, and there is no difference in speed, and this is with applications that stress my hardware and use maximum resources. To say that Vista runs "far more slowly" than XP is an exageration.
I agree that there are no compelling reasons to "upgrade" from XP to Vista - in my case I picked it up with a new system build at OEM pricing, not then being in possession of a legitimate copy of XP
There are various different aspects to the criticism but I find it hard to dismiss them with "XP was the same", it was not quite as bad though certainly it was a dog with many systems that shipped with 128MB of RAM as they did at the time.- but not having had any problems with it whatsoever it's difficult to empathise with all the doom and gloom that surrounds the OS.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/352442_vista23.htmlI have done plenty of reading. Microsoft didn't "lower" it's requirements to run Vista, there was some arguable fudging where some systems that were perfectly capable of running VISTA BASIC and got the Vista label, wouldn't have had the video power to use the Aero desktop. The label was accurate strictly speaking, but I agree that some people bought their systems without doing the research, got sold by some salesmen that just wanted to move older boxes, and might get pissed because they can't upgrade to Premium with buying a video card.In a blow to Microsoft Corp., a federal judge granted class-action status to a lawsuit late Friday alleging that Microsoft unjustly enriched itself by promoting PCs as "Windows Vista Capable" even when they could only run a bare-bones version of the operating system, called "Vista Home Basic." The slogan was emblazoned on PCs during the 2006 holiday shopping season as part of a campaign by Microsoft to maintain sales of Windows XP computers after the launch of Windows Vista was delayed. At a hearing two weeks ago, lawyers for Microsoft argued that because each consumer who bought a computer touted as "Windows Vista Capable" had different information at the time of purchase, the lawsuit should not be granted class-action status, while plaintiffs' lawyers said that all individuals who bought "Windows Vista Capable" PCs were united in that "each person in our class did not get what they paid for." In her ruling, Judge Marsha Pechman granted class-action status, stating that "common issues predominate." "These common issues ... are whether Vista Home Basic, in truth, can fairly be called 'Vista' and whether Microsoft's 'Windows Vista Capable' marketing campaign inflated demand market-wide for 'Windows Vista Capable' PCs," she wrote.
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