A
Amaris
Guest
For various reasons that really have nothing to do with the OS itself.
1. People don't like change. Vista works considerably differently from XP.
2. Driver support has been absolutely abysmal. Shame on the manufacturers who won't support Vista. Unbelievable.
3. The overly-complicated pricing model. How many versions of one OS do we really need?!
The only thing it has in common with Me is poor adoption. It's not a marginal improvement over XP, it's a significant change and it requires adjustment. People didn't like the new GUI of Windows 95, either, but they just dealt with it--sometimes they waited until 98 to jump on board, though. We've had the same basic GUI paradigm for Windows since 1995, you know? People just don't like to change, I guess.
Vista did and does have problems in and of itself, but they are far less egregious than the problems, say, 95 or XP had at launch.
Well there the was the whole "Vista Ready" debarcle that's seen Intel on the recieving end of a lawsuit.
I'm not sure if there was ever a lawsuit over it, but something similar happened when Microsoft released Win95. People believed about the minimum requirements which go the OS ticking over, just, but forget actually doing anything with it. Microsoft learnt their leason this time. In order to be Windows 7 Ready a system must be able to run the 64bit version of Windows 7.
An Australian retailer had a big midnight opening for the release of Windows 95 only to be innundated by people who couldn't use it on their computer.
Oh yeah, I forgot about that "Vista Capable" nightmare. That reminds me of the whole other side of the debacle: Microsoft mishandled Vista adoption from day one. The OS itself was fine--if you had the hardware to run it. But way too many PCs were sold that couldn't really handle it. Major screwup on MS' part. Even their own VPs were pissed off and confused about the whole thing.
I was working at Dell at the time. Our software download machines had just been brought in to handle the new Vista OS (these systems had to be Vista capable so they could run the installs with the OEM and image data). We get 80 new Vista capable workstations in to handle the new OS, and the trial run (I was at the switch on this one), and all the systems failed. All of them. They failed because the hardware wasn't up to speed for Vista. We missed about 3000 orders before we were able to jury rig something to work. I laughed, but only later, and not in front of the Engineering Lead.

J.