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More => Old Versions => Media Center 12 (Development Ended) => Topic started by: JimH on April 14, 2008, 10:38:37 am

Title: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: JimH on April 14, 2008, 10:38:37 am
Microsoft wants to end distribution for Windows XP and I'm seeing a lot of opinions in the news.  We're interested in yours.

Do you use it?  Would  you do it again?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: p7389 on April 14, 2008, 10:57:27 am
I'm a Vista early adopter on quite aged hardware (P4 and 1 GB RAM)... But I'm happy, and wouldn't want to go back.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: AoXoMoXoA on April 14, 2008, 11:06:27 am
My laptop came with Vista, I had no choice. After the warranty expired I immediately "downgraded" to Windows XP Pro.

After turning off most of the built-in security and the excess eye-candy in Vista it ran just ok, but not great. Then I started to read up on all the costs or running Vista. And about all the compatability issues. And about the hardware driver issues. And all the performance issues. And I bought myself a full-retail copy of XP Pro.

I am much happier with the machine's performance now. It does everything I need and without issues, it has shown itself to be a really stable OS. Next machine I will do the same or look to Mac as an option.


** edit:  "A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection"  http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html (http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Listener on April 14, 2008, 11:13:14 am
Microsoft wants to end distribution for Windows XP and I'm seeing a lot of opinions in the news.  We're interested in yours.

Do you use it?  Would  you do it again?

I did my homework and decided not to use Vista.

I have 4 PCs running XP.  3 are 2 GB desktops with 2 GB of Ram and lots of Hard disk space - 2 bought after Vista went on sale.  I have a copy of Win XP Pro OEM on the shelf for use in the next PC I build.  I might buy another copy of XP today.

I don't see going to Vista so I'm looking for a long term alternative to Windows. (I don't see paying Microsoft an annual subscription for the successor to Vista either.) If MC 12 ran on Linux or Mac OSX ,I'd be free to move 1 or more PCs to something other than Windows.

Bill
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: mark_h on April 14, 2008, 11:18:00 am
You'll have to drag me kicking and screaming to Vista.

Mark
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Valisystem on April 14, 2008, 11:34:39 am
Vista is a winner.

The architectural improvements for security are important steps forward in an online world where attackers are becoming ever more sophisticated.

Microsoft dropped the ball badly on marketing. They should have made it clear - firmly and unequivocally and unapologetically - that Vista requires new, powerful hardware. Yes, people would have moaned about bloatware but the feedback on Vista would be far more friendly if everyone using it had 2Gb of memory, a new processor, and a dedicated video card. Intel wanted to keep selling underpowered motherboards and Microsoft caved in and created a Vista marketing classification for them, opening the door for all the underpowered cheap computers still on the market. That might turn out to have been a fatal miscalculation.

The hardware and software vendors bear some responsibility for Vista's poor reception, too. By itself, Vista is speedy and stable, with features that are virtually identical to Mac OS X. Almost no one sees it by itself, though, because new computers arrive loaded down with crapware and too many products include unnecessary or confusing  or poorly designed software. The result is frustration and unstable computers. Too many manufacturers used Vista as an excuse to force customers to replace hardware or upgrade software but made little effort to explain to customers that their motive was anything other than greed.

I've been advising my clients for a year - never upgrade an existing computer to Vista; buy Vista Business, which has a better set of features than Vista Home Premium; and buy decent hardware. Those people like Vista a lot.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: BartMan01 on April 14, 2008, 11:48:10 am
I run Vista on my desktop (old Athalon 64 X2 machine) and XP on my corporate laptop.  Of the two, I prefer Vista overall.  When I loaded Vista, I set the machine up to dual-boot to XP and also created an XP VM to run on top of Vista.  Haven't used either yet.

I wonder how many people will vote 'not as good' or 'clearly worse' when they haven't even used Vista as a primary OS (on a machine really capable of running it) for any length of time.  Most of the issues I have seen have been non-MS issues such as vendors refusing to create drivers for recent hardware or (in Creative's case) just doing lousy drivers with limited functionality.  Most of the 'UAC' issues are due to software vendors that have not updated their code to work with Vista's new security infrastructure.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 14, 2008, 12:01:23 pm
Microsoft wants to end distribution for Windows XP and..

If you are talking about for OEMs or system builders (http://www.microsoft.com/windows/lifecycle/default.mspx) or business customers then yes.

However if you are referring to just mere consumers isn't it 2014 (http://support.microsoft.com/lifecycle/?LN=en-us&C2=1173&x=13&y=13) ?

I wouldn't bother with vista until SP2 is out and even then only if there isn't anything better on the horizon.

I wonder how many people will vote 'not as good' or 'clearly worse' when they haven't even used Vista as a primary OS (on a machine really capable of running it) for any length of time. 
..and that precisely is the problem, the heftier horsepower does not really get you anything earth shaterring in comparison to XP.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Mr ChriZ on April 14, 2008, 12:15:24 pm
Not had a good time with Vista overall, although new laptops with it
are working fairly well, apart from delays when typing sometimes...

Sick to the teeth of it on my home machine though, always grinding the disk for some reason
so tried installing Ubuntu the other day.
After a week of playing I'm completely failing to get Wifi working, will not recognise WPA key =(
What was amusing was yesterday after giving up, I sat down and started playing
Gnometris a clone of the good old fashioned Tetris.
After a while the pieces weren't rotating properly.  I brought up system manager
and watched the processor while playing, and found that my AMD X2 5000 was being
pegged out 100% on both cores by the game...   ? ::)

So I think my next new operating system will probably Windows 2000 with SP4.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: lee269 on April 14, 2008, 12:32:14 pm
feedback on Vista would be far more friendly if everyone using it had 2Gb of memory, a new processor, and a dedicated video card

This is me. I got Vista Home Premium just over a year ago with a new PC. So far its worked fine with no problems. On my first XP PC this state of affairs was amazing after years of imaging/restoring Win98 PCs to keep them up an running. Vista was less impressive because it also did what it was supposed to do(!) - a bit flashier, sure, but nothing obvious as a killer feature. My vote: About the same. I wouldnt recommend it as value for money to anyone buying an upgrade, but equally wouldnt recommend avoiding it on a new PC.

MC has worked fine on it too.

new computers arrive loaded down with crapware

Amen to that.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: matt-uk on April 14, 2008, 12:56:16 pm
I don't think Vista deserves anywhere near the negative publicity that it's been given . I'm very happy with Vista. It's been extremely fast, stable and reliable for me. I actually now use it more than OS X on my Macbook Pro!  ;D
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: steveklein on April 14, 2008, 01:47:39 pm
Vista Ultimate with SP1, after modifying it to your tastes, absolutely obliterates XP. i haven't used macs enough yet to really know how it stacks up... but with my limited use, i just find PCs still preferrable to Macs.

i am running a dual core 2.2ghz system. 2 gb ram, on-board video though. i'm about to drop a video card in..
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: brossmac on April 14, 2008, 03:37:07 pm
I wouldn't go near it.  I've used it on powerful machines, but it doesn't justify the outlay of a new machine for the range of features it offers.  I'd either pay the extra and go Mac or pay nothing and go Linux.

It seems like MS thought they could do no wrong, since they own such a huge percentage of the operating systems in operation.  In their hubris they assumed people would get new machines.  But the economy is crawling and people are realizing that they don't have to chase the latest version all the time.  The computer they have does more or less what they need it to do.

Between the Vista debacle and online office suites, MS sees the writing on the wall.  Hence the Yahoo! offer.

Chances are very great that my next computer will be Linux, even if there isn't a native MC....   :'(
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 14, 2008, 03:50:40 pm
It's funny because this was pretty much the same debate as when XP came out. Everybody hated the way it looked, it was incompatible, nobody could find the control panel applets, etc.

Now here we are and XP was apparently the savior of humanity. Never mind the fact that it wasn't until SP2 came out that it was really a decent operating system. Don't believe me? Go stick a pre-SP2 XP machine onto the internet without the benefit of a firewall and see how long it takes before it's completely unuseable.

Is XP a great OS? Yes. But it didn't start off that way and it took quite a long time before it earned the respect it has now. Vista may or may not ever achieve the same level of respect, but to just write it off because of adoption pains is ridiculous. I've running Vista on three seperate (modern PCs) and it's fantastic.

Is UAC a pain? Depends on how you use it. If you use it as intended, it's really not that intrusive. By "intended" I mean that you follow every PC expert's advice and don't use your PC on a day to day basis logged in as admin. Even if you do, it's still less intrusive than OS X constantly pestering you for your admin password even if you're logged in as admin. At least with UAC, you can just click "Continue" instead of keying in your password over and over. And if you really don't like it, you can shut it off. I really don't see what the big deal is with it.

Hardware support? Can't really blame MS for this one. It's not like the hardware manufacturers didn't have years to write Vista drivers. But why would they? They've got a choice of writing Vista drivers for existing hardware or selling you a new device. I wonder which choice they'll make. Does it suck for the end user? Yes. But again, it's not Microsoft's fault.

Ultimately, it's kind of our fault. We always demand backwards compatibility. Windows is shackled by it. The OS isn't as good as it could be because some company somewhere refuses to update their DOS based software that half of the automotive/medical/scientific community uses so the new version of Windows has to somehow work with it. If it doesn't, it's crap. If it does, it's unstable. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.

Apple picks on MS and Windows saying it's not Windows fault that it doesn't work because everything is made by so many different companies. Well, they're right. Microsoft's taken on a nearly impossible task and for the most part, they've pulled it off. Why does it take so long for security and compatibility patches to make it out for Windows? Because they have to be tested on a billion different configurations before they can be released to the public.

Meanwhile Apple is in control of their hardware, OS, and the software that runs on it. Every time my Macbook crashes (which is far more often than the Vista machine I'm typing this post on now), it is absolutely inexcusable.

So um... hm. What was the question again?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: KingSparta on April 14, 2008, 03:58:12 pm
I Think I Will Stick With Windows XP For Now.

It Works.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: steveklein on April 14, 2008, 04:01:12 pm
I Think I Will Stick With Windows XP For Now.

It Works.

certainly nothing wrong with that.

for me, windows vista works better and faster and is a whole lot prettier to boot.

and since i know i will eventually have to upgrade, i went ahead and bit the bullet.

vista ultimate with service pack 1 is awesome.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Vulcan on April 14, 2008, 04:08:19 pm
Honestly, I'm a big fan of Vista.

It's a letdown in the fact so many features ended up never getting implemented, but overall its still a step above XP in my books.

The key for running Vista is having a powerful system.  I have an E6750 @ 2.8GHz, 4GB of ram, and a 9600GT graphics card and I get superb performance.  You really shouldn't bother with Vista if you aren't using a real dual core processor and don't have at least 2GB of ram. 

Admitedly, the thing I like most about vista is the way it looks.  Albeit superficial, DWM realy makes Windows more usable for me.  Finally I can resize and move windows without any tearing.  DWM's other features such as live previews and animations just make my experience better.

Vista is an evolutionary upgrade more so than anything revolutionary but you won't catch me running XP anymore.   ;D

Let's hope Windows 7 ends up actually being a rebuild of Windows from the ground up, though.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Marty3d on April 14, 2008, 05:10:18 pm
Liking Vista as well. Sure, when my new laptop arrived, it had it's quirks, but the major bugs was ironed out pretty quick. SP1 didn't do much for me actually, except removing stuff to comply with stupid EU regulations. (Search functionality mostly, thanks for nothing, Google!)
Some things I really miss on XP:
1. Search from Start menu. It's soooo nice! I belive it saves me at least an hour a day.
2. Reliability monitor. Cool to have an instant report on whats not working so good. :)
3. Problem reports and solutions. To get updated info on bad drivers and fixes is super
4. Media handling. It's so much prettier! Images in folders, for instance
5. Small things as well... the expanded info when you hovering the clock :)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: rjm on April 14, 2008, 07:10:52 pm
I use XP (desktop) and Vista (laptop) on a daily basis. Provided that you turn off UAC Vista works well. I find it completely unusable with UAC on.

I see no advantage of Vista over XP other than looking pretty.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: johnnyboy on April 14, 2008, 07:17:11 pm
I have a triple boot with Vista, XP and Ubuntu.
I spend 90% of my time in XP.

Vista crashes on me tons and is a resource hog and offers me nothing over XP while losing me some compatibilities and I'm not about to go out and buy more new hardware after already buying a new OS.
Why spend money to then make you have to spend more money and gain nothing (how I feel about Vista - it really doesn't offer me anything over what I already have with XP).

I think Vista is a bit of another ME and I think Windows 7 is going to be the next XP from the sounds of it.
I'll happily jump from XP -> Windows 7 I think.
My friends have Vista on new laptops they've bought and both want me to downgrade them to XP. The machines (reasonably high spec) are running slow as hell (they're just average web surfers etc) and the reason is the machine isn't high enough spec to properly run Vista. The shop told them to buy more RAM to properly handle Vista - I personally see no reason average Jo user should have to buy these power beasts just to surf the web and write emails.
XP is what your average Jo user should be getting on a PC.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Frobozz on April 14, 2008, 08:51:36 pm
I use Vista.  A+++++ fast service would use it again

I would only consider using XP for computer applications that aren't ready for Vista yet (things like DAW work and other specialty applications).

For home use Vista rocks.  The media handling is well integrated.  Explorer has special views for MP3, pictures, video, documents, and such.  It imports photos from digital cameras intelligently.  The search features are improved.  The Start menu is improved.  Search in the Start menu is wonderful.  Desktop Gadgets are nice.

And under the hood Vista has many improvements as well.  You can now actually run the computer with a lower privileged account and not be completely stymied.  Security features like ASLR and improved memory protection is nice.  Better caching (that's why it uses as much RAM as it can).

A nice benefit of Vista is that it is encouraging and forcing software developers to be more security conscious and think about their application works on a lower privileged account (so users don't get annoyed by constant UAC prompts).  That is a good thing.  Apple's latest QuickTime update (http://www.eweek.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=47437) included security fixes like ASLR and proper hardware DEP support.  Finally, Apple finally gets security religion with QuickTime and takes advantage of some of Vista's improved security features.  More developers need to do the same.

I have two computers at home. Both run Vista.  A desktop with an AMD X2 4200 and 2GB RAM and Nvidia 7600 GPU.  A sub $700 Acer laptop with the lowest spec Core 2 Duo and 2GB RAM.  Both run Vista quite adequately for my needs and I consider myself a power user.

Vista has never blue screened on me.

My main complaint is that NVidia's drivers for Vista are not yet up to the same feature set as the XP drivers.  Dual monitor support isn't as well done in the Vista drivers and there is no virtual desktop support.  NVidia still has work to do.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Matt on April 15, 2008, 06:15:06 am
Funny how if you post a message with some facts and say that you hate vista, your post mysteriously disappears.

way to remain objective.

Opinions are fine.  Crude language is not.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: JimH on April 15, 2008, 06:38:15 am
Funny how if you post a message with some facts and say that you hate vista, your post mysteriously disappears.
way to remain objective.

p.s - vista is crap. I would explain myself, but my post would be deleted for being too damaging to the vista camp.
I'll confirm what Matt says.  Your post was removed for language.  Your second post was better, but "vista is crap" doesn't mean much.  Specifics might help.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: eba on April 15, 2008, 08:34:28 am
I agree very much with what Doof said.
I've been using Vista since the beginning, and for the most part it's good.  My laptop's a couple of years old and not the most powerful ever.  I've just upgraded to 2GB of memory as 1GB really wasn't enough.

Going the reverse way to everyone else, I'm sorry, but I think what has to be said about XP is this: it's ugly.  I thought that when it was released, and I still think it now.  It took me a long time before I finally started using the XP theme, previously having always used the classic theme.  The reason to finally convert was because the classic theme didn't work nicely with newer apps like Live Messenger.  Changing from the default blue to the less bright silver, and reducing the hideously oversized Minimize/Maximize/Close buttons, I learnt to cope with it.  I still never liked it.  This is something that they have definitely got right in Vista.  The only thing that annoys me is the fact that they never do the less resource heavy themes properly.  Vista Basic looks hideous, and Vista's classic theme is virtually unusable.  Even using the Classic Style Start menu on Vista, I'm treated to far too much baby blue.

Would XP's ugliness stop me going back?  No (and due to performance issues I have been tempted at times).  The main reasons I don't are actually far more simple things that, in many cases, always annoyed me on XP:
1. Using Explorer, Alt-Up goes up one level.
2. Renaming files doesn't by default try to rename extensions.
3. Start plus number gives access to the Quick-Launch toolbar.
4. Explorer Windows' really nice and easily customizable Favourite Links section, plus the Folders View always available with one click.
5. Network Connections are just so much simpler.
There are others but I always forget what they are until I start using an XP machine again, and get thoroughly frustrated when they're not there...

Oh, and the poll options seem to have an option missing (Vista is a bit better, which is what I would select).  There are two options for Vista is not as good, which gives the impression that more people think it's better as the people who think it's worse are split between two...
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 15, 2008, 09:14:57 am
Funny how if you post a message with some facts and say that you hate vista, your post mysteriously disappears.
way to remain objective.

p.s - vista is crap. I would explain myself, but my post would be deleted for being too damaging to the vista camp.

Yeah, as if the JRiver guys have some reason to want to only have pro-Vista sentiment in here. Reading through many of the threads on here, it's pretty clear that they have no particular love for Vista. It's obvious that it's caused them more than a few headaches.

It's funny that a whole bunch of other people managed to post negatively about Vista but for some reason you were targeted to have your post removed. Clearly it's only because you don't like Vista.  ::)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 15, 2008, 11:18:58 am
This got lost in the confusion about the deleted post, so I'll put it back :)
Vista is a whole change in kernel and architecture. Something people often forget is the age of XP compared to Vista (Nearly 7 years now!). In XP, both developers and users developed hacks and ways around the idiosyncracies of the OS, and complain when these don't work in Vista. Equally, MS have tightened up the kernel and driver practices in many places to improve overall stability. This once again means that sloppy coding or old kludges that worked at the time won't any more- Blame lazy developers, not MS!

Equally, technology has moved on since the advent of XP. Don't expect Vista to run on the same ancient machines as XP will, as it won't. Instead, you get more features, and better user friendlyness. Additonally, on any newer machine you should in fact see an increase in performance, as Vista has moved the basic screen painting (Creating what you see on your monitor) from the processor to the graphics card.

Free memory- This is NOT good, most emphatically not in Vista. Free memory is not doing anything, hence== Wasted! Vista uses the memory that was 'free' in XP to pre-cache programs etc. that it thinks you might want to use. This should speed things up, not slow them down, especially as this memory is released as soon as another app needs it- Win/ win situation :)

Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 15, 2008, 12:57:22 pm
It's funny because this was pretty much the same debate as when XP came out. Everybody hated the way it looked, it was incompatible, nobody could find the control panel applets, etc.

Yes for the most part cept XP ran quite well on existing hardware.

What's important about this 2009 date is that it will effectively force business users to migrate as there won't be support provided. So to companies where this matters they will be left with no choice.

I think this move alone will drag in the rest of the dissenters kicking  & screaming.

personally, i'm hoping windows 7 will be the full monty :D
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 15, 2008, 01:19:31 pm
Yes for the most part cept XP ran quite well on existing hardware.

Vista runs nicely on pretty much anything from a P4/ AthlonXP up- I really don't see your point. A comparable level of hardware for XP would be about the 486=> P133- Theres no way in heck you'd get XP running nicely on a 486 without very major hacking.
Its the rose-tinted spectacles phenomon again- You wouldn't expect XP to run on every machine 98 runs on, so why expect Vista to run on every machine from the last 7 years; Not feasable!

Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 15, 2008, 01:57:24 pm
Point is simple the extra hardware does not really get you anything much over XP on a lower spec machine.

I don't really buy the productivty arguments as you can be quite productive once you become proficient with any app. Therefore any 'improvements' are mainly from an admin pov ie invisible to users. Now if you buy a PC chances are XP won't be offered anymore and as i said earlier, Vista is what will be there, Now onceSP2 comes out i'm sure a lot of the wrinkles will be ironed out just like with XP.

If i'm springing for new hardware its cos the current setup isn't really doing it anymore. Cept now with the apps etc more or less stable and a lack of new killer apps since the last few yrs. The reasons to upgrade are lesser than they used to be, if you don't play games or *need* HDTV on a PC.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 15, 2008, 02:15:56 pm
Sorry, but thats only a surface illusion :)
Vista is a whole new kernel architecture, and one that should be far more stable and easier to use. Just because you can't see anything new on the surface doesn't mean that there haven't been internal changes. You could say exactly the same thing about the transfer from 98 to XP- Again, all that was really added when you distill down to the visible basics is a few more UI bits and tweaks & the firewall; 98 at the time of XP's launch would have exactly the same characteristics you describe, but would you like to run 98 now? ;)

Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: ogurgey on April 15, 2008, 02:20:38 pm
It's yet another OS; which has good, crispy sides, but as well as some nags, and some major deficits.  I think it is just badly marketed, to much hyped, and too late arrived.

I have used Vista since the Beta period, never was really impressed.  Have a system installed, mainly for compatibility tests, with our existing software.  Have no intension for the near future to give up ol' XP.  Just wait 'till the SP2 for Vista comes our way ;)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: gregoryx on April 15, 2008, 02:48:10 pm
I find it very similar to every other OS upgrade I've been through on PCs (DOS6/DRDOS, Win3, Win3.1, Win95, Win98, Win98SE, NT, W2K, XP, now Vista) including my experience with the server stuff (Novell 2+, NT, WinServer, Unix, etc): there's a lot of good stuff and a lot of "maybe" stuff that seems really bad at first and ends up seeming like a pretty good idea a few years later.

From Win95 through Vista (and even all the way back on Novell 2.1), I've found that I'd prefer to: 1) wait a bit before actually using it too much (now seems good, for example); and 2) turn off many of the new "maybe" features until they seem like a good idea.

So I have UAC disabled and many services turned off, etc. This is the same as with NT and XP, etc.

Vista is SO much better for TabletPC handwriting than anything else now or in the past that it's well worth the trouble if using a pen. Also, the focus of responsiveness over file-transfers and the such is something I welcome on a system that has many, many things open but only one that I'm "using".

I am not using it for my home MC system. I'm using XP for that. My file servers are Linux-based NAS units. All our office PCs (except TabletPCs) remain on XP for now. Office servers are W2K3 or Linux or Linux appliances.

I don't see going the Mac or Linux desktop direction any time soon - especially if they don't get a decent Tablet working really well.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 15, 2008, 03:19:22 pm
Again, all that was really added when you distill down to the visible basics is a few more UI bits and tweaks & the firewall; 98 at the time of XP's launch would have exactly the same characteristics you describe, but would you like to run 98 now? ;)

Haha, nice try.

Stabilty of XP vs. 98
XP (or even W2k) no contest

So yes, internal changes are responsible here, true multi-tasking as opposed to pre-emptive multitasking, def productivity improvement.

Stability of XP vs Vista not any different (yes with proper vista drivers incld.)

What did i get for these 'internal' changes again :)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: JimH on April 15, 2008, 03:27:29 pm
It is pretty.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 15, 2008, 03:31:36 pm
Haha, nice try.

Stabilty of XP vs. 98
XP (or even W2k) no contest

So yes, internal changes are responsible here, true multi-tasking as opposed to pre-emptive multitasking, def productivity improvement.

Stability of XP vs Vista not any different (yes with proper vista drivers incld.)

What did i get for these 'internal' changes again :)

Rot  ;)
You're looking at things through the rose-tinted spectacles perspective again because you've been using XP for the last 7 years!
XP/ W2K were unstable when they were launched, programs stopped working and all sorts- Things didn't just magically 'work' off the bat, it took at least until SP1 to iron out many of the major problems.


Internal changes wise, the whole kernel has been rebuilt. Graphics drivers are now one of the few things left with full kernel stack access, whereas in the XP era, most stuff used a kernel mode driver, not a user mode one. This means that there's far less opportunity for bluescreens under Vista than there is under XP.
UAC, although an overworked pain in the but (Yes, I have turned it off FWIW), increases security a massive amount, by only allowing things to run in the user space, not the admin area. Notice that just about anything needs admin access to work in XP, Vista has built this out :)

Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 15, 2008, 03:37:03 pm
What did i get for these 'internal' changes again :)

Try better security, for one. Support for new technologies and improved support for existing technologies (IPv6, WPA2, etc), parental controls, instant search (I love how integrated this is. It even helps me find control panel applets, even though they are much easier to find than they were in XP. None of the other desktop search utilities are this thorough).... none of which even involves the new GUI.


But let's look at the GUI for a minute and see the improvements there...

Start Menu search - has completely changed the way I start apps. I don't even hunt for an icon anymore, I just hit the Windows key, type a couple of letters and hit Enter.

Taskbar Preview - hover your mouse over the taskbar buttons and see a preview of the window. Now I don't have to keep switching back and forth to check on the status of that CD I'm burning, or that big download. Just hover your mouse over it and see where it stands.

The new File Copy/Move tool is incredibly useful. Now you get detailed explanations of your choices when you try to copy a file over an existing copy, including the option to keep both! Now I don't have to cancel out of a huge file moving operation just because one file was going to overwrite another and I said no. Plus, when you drag a file from one place to another, Vista tells you exactly how many files are being moved/copied and where to. No more guesswork.

Those are just my three favorite GUI enhancements, and the three features I miss the most when I sit down at an XP machine now. There are tons more, and I'm sure I'm even missing some that I now take for granted.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: DarkPenguin on April 15, 2008, 03:48:14 pm
those of us who were running win2k prior to loading up xp found xp to be wonderful pretty much from day one.  those who were running 98 or me probably didn't have the same opinion.

vista has auto updated itself into non function twice so far.  it has crashed an insane amount.  it has given me a nice search setup and one or two other things i like.  but it is slower and it is ugly.  for the most part it gives me little that i didn't already have with xp.

it has to be helping apple in a big way.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 15, 2008, 03:50:19 pm
Rot  ;)
You're looking at things through the rose-tinted spectacles perspective again because you've been using XP for the last 7 years!
XP/ W2K were unstable when they were launched, programs stopped working and all sorts- Things didn't just magically 'work' off the bat, it took at least until SP1 to iron out many of the major problems.

Internal changes wise, the whole kernel has been rebuilt. Graphics drivers are now one of the few things left with full kernel stack access, whereas in the XP era, most stuff used a kernel mode driver, not a user mode one. This means that there's far less opportunity for bluescreens under Vista than there is under XP.
UAC, although an overworked pain in the but (Yes, I have turned it off FWIW), increases security a massive amount, by only allowing things to run in the user space, not the admin area.
Sure, SP2 is usually watershed time, when's vista's coming out btw ?

I'm typing this on my net laptop a P3(!) thats been running W2K for the last 5 yrs on the trot. Only blue screen i got was with a bad memory chip.

..and yes the net box is on 24/7/365 x 5...all these yrs.!! (minus the downtime for updates)

Even on the XP boxes blue screens are pretty rare. To date faulty hw has been the usual culprit or the odd dodgy software but that's exceptional. Never reinstalled an OS, as i keep OS images at each software install.

Notice that just about anything needs admin access to work in XP, Vista has built this out :)
Perhaps, but this is mostly an admin issue, i've been virus free for many yrs now and i dont even run an active anti-virus!..runinng behind a NAT solves 99% of infections right there.

My point is stability wise that was nailed already, the changes you mention AFAICT are certainly a boon to admins the world over, makes their lives easier but its not translating to a 'feature' for me the user. There's certainly other features added that i've considered nice to have but nothing essential.

Security is something thats very easy when you control the boxes and are sufficently clued up on what to click or not. Add less clueful users into the mix and the game  changes quick :)

found best was to just firewall myself from them
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: rjm on April 15, 2008, 03:55:13 pm
Sleep/resume is much snappier on Vista than XP. A real plus for laptop users.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 15, 2008, 05:27:26 pm
Dunno what you're running then  :P
All sorts of slightly less common stuff, but not out of the ordinary can crash XP at the drop of a hat from my experience. (Graphics drivers in combination with certain games, Daemon Tools & CD images on network drives, some of the really ancient W95 stuff, drivers for a godawful scanner, seen plenty more)

I've found that Vista has been more stable overall, but have still seen some BSODs, again graphics driver related. The point is, theres far less loaded into the kernel stack. Whether any given setup crashes or not is wholly irrelavant- Its all about limiting the potential for crashes before they happen :) If you're running wholly stable drivers and common basic apps (Internet, JR, Word etc), you're far less likely to see BSODs than someone like me, who has multiple virtual drives, debuggers at times and various other bits and bobs running in the background. (I have a list of 6 basic background apps that run in the background of any install before I even consider it usable  :o Added to that, theres about 200 other applications that I need installed and available- May seem like a lot, but its what I've evolved, with each filling its little niche :) )

Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 15, 2008, 05:34:17 pm
I guess it's just me, but I really think this poll should be reworded to:

Would you rather be using Vista now, or XP the way it was a year after release?

Let's compare apples to apples, at least.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Frobozz on April 15, 2008, 08:14:27 pm
The days of the lightweight desktop OS are over, at least for Windows.  The game now is more security.  The OS needs to layer on more security in the forms of things like memory protection, ASLR, more DEP, compartmentalization, sandboxing, virtualizing, etc. etc.  All more layers in the name of better security.  The internet is a nasty place for a full featured desktop OS to connect to.

Linux will be able to stave off the desktop security bloat, but will eventually have to succumb.  Apple is already on the same path as Windows.  The result is inevitable.

This direction does present a challenge for applications like DAWs that need realtime response and interaction with the OS.  I don't know how that is going to work out in the future as the OS gets more and more layered along with more restricted direct access to the hardware.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: johnnyboy on April 15, 2008, 08:51:48 pm
The internet is such a nasty place yet I barely get Virus's or anything else, guess I'm just lucky huh?

As for stability, all this new kernel re-writing etc might sound great but I get more BSOD's in Vista than in XP and this is with new hardware with the latest drivers.

As for XP being ugly - sure it is, that's why stardock have such a raging business and for FAR less than the cost of Vista, you can make XP look as gorgeous as you want, you can also give it widgets and any other number of things.

As far as seeing the status of a download, 'download status bar' for Firefox gives this instantly with no hassles.
For launching apps - XP's start menu sucked as does Vista's. Easily fixed by manually tidying it up a bit and also by using something like 'truelaunchbar' I can get to most apps I want in two clicks, 1 (to launch it) for my most used. There are a ton of super lightweight apps out there to launch your apps super fast, most even faster and easier to use than Vista's - try: http://www.launchy.net/#screenshots
Cost: $0, speed 10/10
That canes Vista's start menu.

Vista doesn't have much to offer me that I cant get super easily for XP with a bit of effort. Sure if you're lazy just fork over a few hundred dollars, if like me you enjoy playing with a computer than save yourself the money and get XP humming like a bird :)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: darichman on April 15, 2008, 09:32:06 pm
I haven't jumped ship to Vista yet... no bad experiences, no bad sentiments about it, just giving them time to sort out all the major issues and maybe release a service pack or two :)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Frobozz on April 15, 2008, 09:44:59 pm
You can dress up XP as much as you want to improve the UI and user experience.  But you cannot do much to improve the security measures under the hood.  XP is already showing its age there.

We live in a world where content from a web page or documents or files from wherever can take advantage of buffer overflows and other errors to pwn a machine.  We can either believe that developers are never going to make any more programming errors that allow bad guys to compromise a machine or we can address the problem with more layers of security in the OS.  Vista is a step in the direction of more security layers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_and_safety_features_new_to_Windows_Vista) in the OS.  Future versions of Windows are going to have to go even further and add even more layers of security.  Application developers are also going to have to get on board and program their apps in ways that are more secure and to take advantage of the security features that Windows provides.

It's not a pretty future for those who strive for minimalism and want an OS to stay out of the way.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: meaningless on April 16, 2008, 02:14:52 am
It's ok for me But I'm Not big Fan of Vista  because Some time it's missing my Sound card driver And I can't play Some old and my Fav games on it ...


Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: jmone on April 16, 2008, 03:20:58 am
For me, on average, Vista is a winner for HTPC applications:
- Better Sound
- Better Video
- More Stable
- Built in Drivers for MCE Remote / Keyboard
- Inbuilt Blu-ray / HD-DVD hardware support

....but not all things are "better"
- It has taken a long time to get Audio/Video drivers working properly
- in MC12/Theaterview you see the Desktop when playing Video from time to time
- You have to get used to UAC (not to bad now)

Nathan
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 16, 2008, 11:08:11 am
All sorts of slightly less common stuff, but not out of the ordinary can crash XP at the drop of a hat from my experience. (Graphics drivers in combination with certain games, Daemon Tools & CD images on network drives, some of the really ancient W95 stuff, drivers for a godawful scanner, seen plenty more)

I've found that Vista has been more stable overall, but have still seen some BSODs, again graphics driver related.

Common theme i'm reading here is graphics drivers and their legendary ability to take down a whole OS. Agreed Vista is maybe more robust with them. I'll let you in on a dirty secret, if you test apps on a staging box before rolling them out you catch all these nasties b4 they affect you ;)

All i'm doing is working around windows limitations and this is also what i tell the non-windows lot  ::)

If you install 100s of apps without any testing then it can get pretty hard to find problems later. Granted its not as much fun but then neither is fixing the mess afterwards.


Whether any given setup crashes or not is wholly irrelavant- Its all about limiting the potential for crashes before they happen :)

Exactly, question of strategy and i've been doing the above much before XP. I'd go so far as to say, follow the above and it won't really matter what OS is being used  and stability then becomes a moot issue :D


If you're running wholly stable drivers and common basic apps (Internet, JR, Word etc), you're far less likely to see BSODs than someone like me, who has multiple virtual drives, debuggers at times and various other bits and bobs running in the background. (I have a list of 6 basic background apps that run in the background of any install before I even consider it usable  :o Added to that, theres about 200 other applications that I need installed and available- May seem like a lot, but its what I've evolved, with each filling its little niche :) )

What's interesting is you say you prefer Vista which i think even you would agree is not as stable so early in the game compared  to say XP.

Nevertheless you still find Vista to be the more solid platform  ?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 16, 2008, 11:31:09 am
You're trying to compare apples with oranges again & horribly confusing matters in the process  ;D
My opinions as they stand in simple bullet points:
Cheers

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 16, 2008, 11:43:38 am
  • XP at start was just as bad as anything else. Now it has a slight advantage, but this is because there have been 7 YEARS of development and tweaking to get round the problems
  • Vista is inherantly more stable than XP, with less chance of a BSOD. This doesn't mean that applications are more stable- Applications which have been developed to work around XP bugs are much less likely to work properly under Vista. Conversely, if one of these apps crashes, it will be far less likely to take down the whole system than on XP.

Sure, but aren't you also saying then that its better to remain with XP till things stabilise ?
ie the sum of apps+OS more stable on XP over Vista.

No, there's something Vista has, that you need and i'm trying to put my finger on it  ?

You mentioned games ( or i think you said that)...

How important is DirectX10 ability for you ?

If yes, then of course you have no choice but to use Vista in this case.

Not implying that it is *the* reason of course but an important factor and in which case Vista is the better overall option.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: gappie on April 16, 2008, 11:57:04 am
both work most of the time. but i think vista is a bit heavy for just 'a platform'.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: leezer3 on April 16, 2008, 12:01:50 pm
Sure, but aren't you also saying then that its better to remain with XP till things stabilise ?
ie the sum of apps+OS more stable on XP over Vista.

I'm trying to explain that thats irrelevant ;) (This is an over simplification I know)
XP, crash= Bluescreen
Vista, crash= System recovers itself, things carry on. The application may need re-opening or updating, but things still work.


The difference is in what happens when the OS crashes, not how/ why it does.

-Leezer-
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Mr ChriZ on April 16, 2008, 12:12:43 pm
I've never had any stability issues with Vista.
Performance issues, wifi issues, compability, Usability yes but never stability.
Been running 1 Vista machine for over a year now, but have two others I play with
at work.  This also includes performing development and working with SQL Server apps
with it.

Only issue like this I find is it can get carried away with assuming an app is dead, when in fact it's just busy
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: secretsuperstar on April 16, 2008, 12:17:50 pm
It's funny because this was pretty much the same debate as when XP came out.
The difference is that XP didn't suck.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: MrHaugen on April 16, 2008, 12:33:46 pm
There have been alot of negativity towards Vista. I don't blame anyone. I have been there my self, but have changed opinion after a while. With the release of SP1 there is very limited reasons not to change.

Here are my arguments:

1. The hardware support is really starting to get close to XP. Mostly outdated hardware that's not supported anyway. As drivers for Vista are more tricky to develope than for XP, alot of produces descides to drop support for their older products. This also gives them an excuse to sell new hardware I guess.

2. The hardware requirement. YES, they are much higher than XP. Would be strange not to except a good increase after so many years since XP came out.
   - You don't HAVE to run aero.
   - You don't HAVE to have a superfast CPU.
   - You do need alot of RAM. 80 bucks or less for 4GB.... Come an. That's not a huge problem.
The reason it also uses alot of RAM is that it's trying to load data into memory that you will use later on. That way it will be a faster and better user experience. When an application need more RAM, Vista will make some available. The games today have similar requirement when it comes to hardware. Why is it so unacceptable for an OS?
As people say: Intel and Microsoft have both nuts on their legs when it comes to Vista compatibility and Vista ready products. Shame on you both. But when you do zero research before buying a computer, you probably deserve it :P

3. Choose the right version. Don't go for Ultimate. It has a really nice looking, but crappy Media Center. That's about it, and it slows down your PC. I have to have my computers in a domain, so a business version is about the only choise for me.

4. UAC can be a nightmare for people tweaking settings all the time. This can be disabled with 3 clicks or so. Normal users don't run into this problem as often. And I belive it will help some people in preventing malware for doing harm.  So this is not an issue. But the MAIN reason for UAC was to get the programmers of application and drivers to develope apps that did not need admin rights and access to the kernal. This is a GOOD policy. Security wise. Microsoft ALLWAYS intented for this to be a nuisance of sorts. It was a big step, but had to be done. Hopefully this can be a bit lighter in Windows 7.

5. DX10 is not all that right now, but just wait. Developing games to take DX10's full advantage takes time. It was the same for DX9 as well.

6. The bad file transfer and Windows Exlorer not responding alot is REALLY frustrating. It have gotten a little better, but is still an issue. This is the only negative I can come up with now.

Running 2 Vista business, XP Pro (HTPC). Reason why my HTPC still is XP is because of all the codecs and the small apps I use to tweak my system. Don't think they are all supported on Vista yes.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 16, 2008, 12:58:26 pm
3. Choose the right version. Don't go for Ultimate. It has a really nice looking, but crappy Media Center. That's about it, and it slows down your PC. I have to have my computers in a domain, so a business version is about the only choise for me.
That's second vote i see for Vista Business...

Are you saying its like XP Pro in the XP world (also my preferred version of XP) but for Vista ?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: MrHaugen on April 16, 2008, 01:10:49 pm
Yes. It's less bloated by useless small apps and services, and that makes it more professional in my book.
I don't know all the details here, but when my colleague with 15 years of experience with MS products and twice the ammount of certifications on the products say it is less demanding; I tend to belive them.
Only thing I know fore sure is that business/enterprise don't include MC, Ultimate extras and video background support (or is that a part of Ultimate extras?). Not sure, but either way it's all a bunch of junk.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: datdude on April 16, 2008, 01:46:30 pm
Other than UAC, I have had zero problems with Vista.  I really like it and think it is a big upgrade over XP.  I think this is assuming you have a PC built for Vista.  If not then yes, you are going to have problems.  Is that something Microsoft should have a dressed, maybe, but not going to happen now.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Matchbox on April 16, 2008, 02:13:54 pm
I guess it's just me, but I really think this poll should be reworded to:

Would you rather be using Vista now, or XP the way it was a year after release?

Let's compare apples to apples, at least.

I think it's fair to compare the current XP to the current Vista.  If the current Vista is no better than the current XP, why switch.

My XP on my desktop works and Vista on my laptops is a pain.  Just using Windows Explorer in Vista is painful without the toolbars.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: MrHaugen on April 16, 2008, 05:20:39 pm
OH OH! Speaking of Windows Exploder. I just HATE the way they have removed the UP button. THAT is a really negative point.
I allways used backspace to get up levels in the directory, but OH no. That's back now. It's SO logical to go back into a deleted folder etc.
Now we gotta use Alt + Up arrow. Christ! An extra toolbar is shown when you hold down ALT key by the way.

Explorer could be sooo much better. Make it look a bit like norton commander and toal commander.
Preferrably with option for up to 4-8 windows in one frame. I would be in heaven.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Valisystem on April 16, 2008, 06:42:36 pm
That's second vote i see for Vista Business...Are you saying its like XP Pro in the XP world (also my preferred version of XP) but for Vista ?

A few months ago I wrote up a short list of the features that distinguish Vista Home Premium and Vista Business - http://www.bruceb.com/news/2007_06_01_archive.html#3106878328180764281  The unique features in Home Premium are not all that exciting for most people, and Vista Business has a couple of features that are quite nice - in particular, Shadow Copy (Vista's version of Apple's "Time Machine"). Extra copies of documents and pictures are tucked away in a hiding place twice a day, automatically, so it's easy to recover earlier versions of files or accidentally deleted files.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: KingSparta on April 16, 2008, 06:54:13 pm
Quote
Just using Windows Explorer in Vista is painful without the toolbars.

Try Using Directory Opus 9

They Have A 30 Day Trial, And it Is Very Good.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: GHammer on April 16, 2008, 11:46:33 pm
I've run Vista for quite some time.
Early on, I had NVidia drivers cook my video card. Seems they forgot to throttle the GPU if it started getting too hot. Surprisingly, the GPU ran hard with the new UI... Not exactly MS' problem.
I had a few apps that did not work well with Vista. The important ones were fixed quickly, others I found a replacement for. Just like when I started using XP.
For me, drivers have not been an issue. Except for the deadly NVidia driver anyway. My hardware, including an OLD laserjet is recognized and the drivers are either available or already in Vista.
I disable UAC on first boot after an install. Why? I don't like it and I don't need it.
I don't care for the liberal use of junctions in Vista. I have some tools that get confused and keep looping back on the junction. C:/Users/GH/AppData/AppData/AppData/AppData, and on until they hit max length. Again, is it a problem with Vista? Nope, but it still annoys me to have to find new tools that are junction aware.
My wife got a new laptop for Christmas. She runs a statistics suite that only liked XP. I downgraded her laptop and quite a bit of the 'magical' functionality went away. She asked every week when I could put Vista back. When her suite was finally upgraded, she went back to Vista. There is a noticeable difference in the usability of the system. And, she just likes the way things are done in Vista. It's shinier too!

I never had much luck with skinning XP and I have a few apps I use that feature WindowBlinds compatibility options. Not a good sign in my opinion.

Maybe that's why I don't have the problems others have. I have reasonable but not new hardware. I have new applications when they are available. I do not skin or tweak. I do not disable drivers, don't use "Lite" install creators, don't add "supercharger" utilities.

I run many, many things in the course of a day. I beta test a fair number of apps including anti-malware. Yet Vista keeps humming along. Same for the wife's machine, and 3 of 4 family members I provide "support" for. In fact, Vista has cut down on family and friends calls drastically. I'll miss them...

Now, some just plain don't like change and that's fine I guess. I have a client who is running their business on Server 2000 SBS. It is running on a Celeron 1.7 with 256 Mb RAM. Is it slow as snot? Yep. Does it cost them extra when I go to do maintenance? Yes, it takes FOREVER to do anything on that machine and we charge by the hour. But run it does and they will keep it until it dies.

Server 2008 shares a great deal of code with Vista. In fact, many updates/patches are common. Server 2008 simply sits and runs. Day in day out. Of course it is not being changed/tweaked and has certain hardware requirements. Maybe having adequate hardware and not second guessing the designers is the key to stable operation?

Downgrade my machine to XP? Not likely.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: xen-uno on April 17, 2008, 12:15:07 am
Where's the option "Hell no!!!"
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: GHammer on April 17, 2008, 12:24:34 am
** edit:  "A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection"  http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html (http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html)

Kind of lost credibility with this:
"If you take an eight-year-old PC running Windows 98, put it next to a current PC running Windows XP (with the Fisher-Price colour scheme turned off), the typical user won't be able to tell you what's changed without a point-by-point comparison of system features from one machine to the other."

Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: xen-uno on April 17, 2008, 01:02:18 am
The article is credible to me. You can probably de-toxify Vista enough to be included in that quoted comparison, but you'll still need a ton of RAM, CPU, and disk space. Sure ... all of these items have never been better or cheaper, but I sure wouldn't waste a 3GHz C2D and 4 GB of RAM just to run a bloated OS whose claimed architecture is superior, when it's predecessor was easily up to the any task. Leave content protection to the content providers, rather than gunking up the OS (so apparent with Vista, isn't it? ... or not?). XP x64 and Server 2003 is what Vista should have been, with the further massaging & improvements that 3 years or so would have made. So where is that Linux version of MC? I saw the link somewhere ...
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 17, 2008, 07:14:50 am
The difference is that XP didn't suck.

That was insightful. Thanks for your input.

OH OH! Speaking of Windows Exploder. I just HATE the way they have removed the UP button. THAT is a really negative point.
I allways used backspace to get up levels in the directory, but OH no. That's back now. It's SO logical to go back into a deleted folder etc.
Now we gotta use Alt + Up arrow. Christ! An extra toolbar is shown when you hold down ALT key by the way.

Use those breadcrumbs! That's what they're there for. Not only can you go up a level in a single cick, but you can also go up two or three levels in a single click, or switch to a sibling folder (or aunt/uncle folder?) with two clicks. I don't see how you could miss the up button when it's functionality is still there and greatly improved upon.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: MrHaugen on April 17, 2008, 09:36:17 am
Use those breadcrumbs!

What's breadcrumbs? I suppose you refer to the directory structure in the adress field? Instead of the old "C:\Program Files\J River Media Center 12" look right?

Those ARE usefull, yes. But only when you can see them. If the directory above is to long, it will not show up in the adress field. That's a person.
I'm also a big fan of using the keyboard to navigate. It's simply much faster when you get the hang of it. With the arrows, typing of the letters and the backspace.
Now I have to use another key. Just don't like that. But there ARE alternatives. And I will inverstigate a few of them for sure.

Just don't understand that explorer have not evolved more that it have to this date. The Commander apps was, and still is far ahead in a few ways imo. Even after so many years.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: flac.rules on April 17, 2008, 11:06:54 am
I have used vista a little over a year. Think I will go back to XP when SP3 comes out, my dualcore with 2 gigs of ram is to slow for vista. I also have problems with Media Center hanging up and displaing "not responding" from time to time, seems to be triggered by some kind of workload. i have a libary of approx 150k files shared over local network, maybe somethin in this combo doesn't work out too well.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: hit_ny on April 17, 2008, 12:46:17 pm
but I sure wouldn't waste a 3GHz C2D and 4 GB of RAM just to run a bloated OS whose claimed architecture is superior, when it's predecessor was easily up to the any task. Leave content protection to the content providers, rather than gunking up the OS (so apparent with Vista, isn't it? ... or not?). XP x64 and Server 2003 is what Vista should have been, with the further massaging & improvements that 3 years or so would have made.

I think you encapsulated very well what the detractors feel about Vista.

Why an OS that crashes less ie supposedly better engineered or looks better should necessarily require more resources ?

That the direction was more inline to serve content providers with the future aim to drive more revenue M$'s way than the *actual* customers of said system. As such it marks a shift away from M$'s attention to their customers as was the case in the past,

Is the writing on the wall already ?

That M$ can't rely on ppl to automatically keep on upgrading without additional income from other areas..like content.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: gappie on April 17, 2008, 03:13:22 pm
i just hope windows 7 will really improve things, so i can use part of the memory vista (and also xp, but less) uses for programs.

interesting to see how passionate people always get about an os, is it apple, or xp or vista.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: pank2002 on April 17, 2008, 04:15:22 pm
Why an OS that crashes less ie supposedly better engineered or looks better should necessarily require more resources ?

Exactly what I think too! Why make an OS that uses more of everything, while not adding anything significantly (IMO)? I do not get it! It seems that some Linux systems have added more fancy stuff, while not adding need of extra CPU, RAM etc. On laptops, Vista had less battery life than XP -- might have been fixed, though.

I doubt I will be getting Vista. Next time I will get a new OS it will be a Linux distribution or maybe Seven. MC is kind of what it holding me back from going Linux.
-Rasmus
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: BillT on April 18, 2008, 11:43:47 am
I also have problems with Media Center hanging up and displaing "not responding" from time to time, seems to be triggered by some kind of workload. i have a libary of approx 150k files shared over local network, maybe somethin in this combo doesn't work out too well.

Vista is significantly slower in its file handling than XP, particularly over a network. SP 1 improves this a lot (although it still doesn't get up to XP performance).
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: dgoodrie on April 18, 2008, 08:31:11 pm
I didn't see any performance differences between VISTA running in basic mode verses XP.  I did replace my laptop and I am now running in Aero mode.  One thing I did notice that after running in Aero mode for about a month is that when I switched back to basic mode and rebooted and then switched back to Aero mode screen panes seem to snap up faster.  Perhaps Aero mode has a memory creep issue or the caching MRU/LRU is not operating correctly.  I'll try the same procedure later to validate my observation.

I don't see the cost benefit in going to VISTA verses XP today.  Perhaps later when the PC turns into a TV and you want to run split screen. However, I prefer the 50" screens for that type of operation. ;D
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: flac.rules on April 19, 2008, 09:56:16 am
Vista is significantly slower in its file handling than XP, particularly over a network. SP 1 improves this a lot (although it still doesn't get up to XP performance).

Yeah i know its slower, but i have SP1, and its not the usual "hiccups" that MC12 has when updating a lot of folder art for instance, wich only slows it down some seconds, quite frequently the program stops completly (it plays the song currently playing to the end though), and I hav tried waiting for an hour for it to "get started" again, with no luck, so I doubt network-performance is the only culprit.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: JimH on April 19, 2008, 10:30:52 am
so I doubt network-performance is the only culprit.
You could prove that by playing local files.

We have seen problems in the past that were fixed by updating drivers.  The "Weird Problems" thread in my signature has a few examples.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: flac.rules on April 20, 2008, 04:23:33 am
Difficult to reproduce the conditions locally, I'm sure as hell not installing Vista on the fileserver :) And I don't have the room for nearly as much music locally.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 20, 2008, 09:12:25 am
I'm running Vista on both my primary PC (which acts as the fileserver) and my HTPC (which accesses all of the music on my primary PC through the network) and even when neither was at SP1, I never saw the problem you describe on either machine. Right now only my primary PC is at SP1, and I still never see that problem.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Stargazer on April 20, 2008, 11:37:49 am
OH OH! Speaking of Windows Exploder. I just HATE the way they have removed the UP button. THAT is a really negative point.
I allways used backspace to get up levels in the directory, but OH no. That's back now. It's SO logical to go back into a deleted folder etc.
Now we gotta use Alt + Up arrow. Christ! An extra toolbar is shown when you hold down ALT key by the way.

Explorer could be sooo much better. Make it look a bit like norton commander and toal commander.
Preferrably with option for up to 4-8 windows in one frame. I would be in heaven.

When using Windows Explorer in Vista.... Click on the arrows/triangles between the directory levels in the and you can go straight to ANY directory at that level...  or click on the directory name to go to that level.... no need for a UP button any more.

Doug
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: gregoryx on April 20, 2008, 12:22:43 pm
... and ALT-left-arrow still works for up / back.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: flac.rules on April 21, 2008, 02:29:14 pm
I'm running Vista on both my primary PC (which acts as the fileserver) and my HTPC (which accesses all of the music on my primary PC through the network) and even when neither was at SP1, I never saw the problem you describe on either machine. Right now only my primary PC is at SP1, and I still never see that problem.

How big is your library?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 21, 2008, 04:08:06 pm
How big is your library?

Well, it's not monstrous. ~26,000 files (audio, images, and videos), but it uses up ~250 GB of drive space. The majority of the music is in APE format, images are almost entirely JPG and the videos are a mix. Some are simple little quicktime or wmv files, but I've streamed 1.5 GB MKV videos across my network without a hiccup.

I currently have everything running on a gigabit LAN, but even when it was all on 100 megabit, it was fine.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: JimH on April 21, 2008, 04:10:58 pm
I currently have everything running on a gigabit LAN ...
Why?   ;)
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: MrHaugen on April 22, 2008, 11:40:18 am
When using Windows Explorer in Vista.... Click on the arrows/triangles between the directory levels in the and you can go straight to ANY directory at that level...  or click on the directory name to go to that level.... no need for a UP button any more.

Doug

I know, I know. I use them all the time. Simply miss having one button on my keyboard to go up. Browsing with a keyboard is just faster in most cases. Especialy when you know where you are going and using those letters to quickly finding the right directory. It's good they still left some keyboard choises though. As gregoryx mentioned, ALT key is good to have. ALT + Up arrow works as "up" and left works as "back". That will help, but I'd preffer to have one single button. Don't like to use two hands where I used to use one. Just that lazy.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 22, 2008, 01:45:55 pm
Why?   ;)

Simply because every motherboard they make these days comes with gigabit NICs on them? It's really as simple as that.  The final piece was my wireless router. I came home one night and it was dead. So I replaced it. Instant gigabit.
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Doof on April 22, 2008, 01:49:54 pm

I know, I know. I use them all the time. Simply miss having one button on my keyboard to go up. Browsing with a keyboard is just faster in most cases. Especialy when you know where you are going and using those letters to quickly finding the right directory. It's good they still left some keyboard choises though. As gregoryx mentioned, ALT key is good to have. ALT + Up arrow works as "up" and left works as "back". That will help, but I'd preffer to have one single button. Don't like to use two hands where I used to use one. Just that lazy.

Refresh my memory... how did it work in XP? I know there was a single toolbar button that would take you up a level, but you still have that with the breadcrumbs. Just click the name of the folder at the level above the one you're on. Except that you now have the benefit of also being able to go up two or even three levels with a single click, or more easily moving to sibling folders.

So the only difference I guess is the way the keyboard works in explorer? What were the keys that moved you up a level in XP?
Title: Re: POLL: Is Vista a Winner?
Post by: Dutch Peter on April 23, 2008, 02:49:58 pm
I use Vista on my Desktop. Works fine.
My laptop came with XP. I will not upgrade it although it is Vista capable.
It works fine with XP.
My next laptop (in the coming months) will be Vista, and I will leave it like that.
I am looking into Microsoft Virtual PC to be able to run XP if necessary.