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On Thursday, the company is expected to give details of two marketing programs that computer makers and retailers can use to indicate whether, and how well, their computers will run the upcoming Windows operating system. The "Vista-capable" program lists the features needed to minimally run the new operating system. The "Premium Ready" program will identify PCs that can take advantage of Vista's high-end features, including its new Aero graphics, according to a source familiar with the company's plans.
To be Vista-capable, a machine needs at least an 800MHz processor, 512MB of memory and a graphics card that can run DirectX 9 graphics. Those requirements are similar to the minimum guidelines the company has been recommending for Vista for some time.
To carry the Premium Ready designation, a PC must have a 1GHz processor, 1GB of main memory, 128MB of memory and a graphics card that supports Vista's new graphics-driver model.
The amount of graphics memory needed to run Vista's Aero graphics also varies based on the size and number of monitors. Multiple displays and larger screen sizes require more dedicated memory.
The programs are designed to help PC makers characterize and label new systems, but they also give existing PC owners a better sense of whether it is feasible to upgrade their machines.
Microsoft is also expected to announce on Thursday a test version of an upgrade-advisor tool that can be downloaded from its Web site. The tool helps a user know which versions and features of Vista their PC should run, as well as which hardware upgrades might allow them to take fuller advantage of the OS.
Vista also has a built-in tool for evaluating its performance based on a computer's components and overall performance abilities.
The Vista-capable program comes as Microsoft is preparing to offer a broader test version of the Windows update, which the software maker has said will be made available this quarter to about two million testers. The company also hosts its annual Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) for hardware makers next week in Seattle. Details of the Vista-capable program were noted earlier Wednesday by eWeek.
See more CNET content tagged:
WinHEC, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows Update, memory, Microsoft Corp.







http://www.realmeme.com/roller/page/realmeme?entry=virtualization_meme_again
Simply put, XP is good enough. It ain't the flashiest or slickest kid on the block, and it has more than its share of issues, but the plain fact is it's an effective OS and lets me run the apps I need/want to run with a minimum of headaches. Unless I'm dealing with really old apps, or high-end programs that require a whole bunch from the hardware, I can buy pretty much whatever I need for the task at hand, hardware or software, and not worry about things like drivers or compatibility. Just install it and nine times out of ten it works. Maybe Macs and OS X do it as good or better, but I gotta buy a whole new machine and new apps to run on it, and Linux seems like a hobby in and of itself to maintain, over and above what apps you run on it. Perhaps also I'm just so acclimatized to Windows idiosyncrasies that I no longer acknowledge all of them, i.e. better the devil you know than the one you don't. Let's put it this way: when I can put OS X on my current hardware AND run City of Heroes/Villains on it, then I'll give a damn! ;)
Whatever that means anyway..lol
osX to the OEM market, forcing MS to lower there prices. Nobody
will buy Vista (except for some geeks and nitwits) but they'll force it
in with the new hardware. Now is the time Apple, just go for it!
Yes, yes... I've heard the arguments around controlling your hardware. I understand the benefits of not having to support 40 million different sound cards. Does Apple understand how much money this could be worth?
It's all about risk versus reward.
But what's going to happen as the hardware/software community migrates? Eventually I'm going to be stuck upgrading.
Let's hope that by then we can get all the software we want in Linux.
I have pretty much the same specs on my PC as you do and I'll be upgrading for sure (however, I might wait for SP1. I've not decided on that yet).
Vista doesn't have anything I "need" just a lot of stuff I want.
Either way, just like today, I'll still be using Linux more often than Windows.
One can never have too many operating systems....
- Why so high!?
- by adam_the_atom May 18, 2006 9:39 AM PDT
- Wow.. its too much system requirements.. Mac OS X has been delivering a stunning graphical user interface for years with specs well below those.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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- It's interesting...
- by drfrost May 18, 2006 10:05 AM PDT
- I can run linux on a very old machine and have no problems whatsoever. And there's really nothing missing in my linux windows manager that I really care about.
- Like this View reply
Processing -
(13 Comments)Vista has made one promise that I do care about. They've said the new graphic drivers (under the new driver model) will be significantly faster (they claim 10x improvement but I suspect that's only measuring time spent inside the driver and the real bottleneck is the card). If that's true THEN I might be interested. But I'm guessing the first benchmarks will dispell those claims.
The fundamental questions of the universe:
Will Apple ever wake up?
Will gaming publishers ever port to Linux?
Will M$ ever understand their consumer (not business) user base?