i do think that that makes me feel more secure..maybe true, but i never liked vista, and intalled it on enough machines. seeing only the installation procedure and time and how it reacts to old software and drivers, i would rather say it is what vista should have been.
Oh, I agree completely. Reminds me a lot of Windows XP, actually. People forget now, but Windows XP was, at the time, well known as "What Windows 2000 should have been."
EDIT: I think that for the future, Microsoft should seriously consider adopting a "tick, tock" style development cycle for Windows, similar to what Intel is doing with their CPUs. Meaning: concentrate nearly exclusively on alternating goals with each successive release. For example, in the "tick" cycle concentrate on redesigning underlying technology, introducing large new features to the kernel and codebase, and other "infrastructure" and "future targeted" changes, while leaving everything else alone (no major UI changes, don't worry about making new kernel features have a wiz-bang interface, etc). Then, with the subsequent "tock" cycle, concentrate on UI, polish, speed, and making those new features more accessible and usable to non-technical users.
It seems like that's what ends up happening anyway, and making it official and not trying to "do everything at once" might make future releases go a lot more smoothly. Of course, it then becomes more difficult to sell the "tick" versions of the release cycles to the general public, but you sell those to the tech crowd and IT pros (to prep for the next major consumer release).
And, you avoid the public marketing disaster that happened with Vista. Vista just tried to be too much, do too much, and incorporate too much. Plus, Microsoft blabbed way too much and way overpromised. It just seems like the only lesson they learned is the last one.
(PS: If you're interested, the most recent episode of Leo Laporte's TWiT show has some very fascinating insight on the Vista debacle from Robert Scoble who was working at Microsoft throughout much of the process.)