Comments on: The main problem with Windows Vista
XP is still the right decision for many Windows users--yet again, making the case for XP over Vista.
XP is still the right decision for many Windows users--yet again, making the case for XP over Vista.
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Michael Horowitz is an independent computer consultant and the author of several classes on Defensive Computing. He views Defensive Computing as taking steps, when things are running well, to avoid or minimize the inevitable problems down the road. It's about educating yourself to the level where you can make your own intelligent decisions about keeping your computers and data happy and healthy. If you depend on computers, yet are on your own, without an IT department or nearby nerd, this blog's for you. His personal web site is michaelhorowitz.com.
He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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And if you don't think linux has a marketing department then why do you think companies like SUSE and redhat are still around. there have been many situations with linux where hardware drivers were not available for current technology. Ask any linux user if he had an SATA drive when these were first produced and you will have an answer as to why Microsoft survives as a business model.
Yes, Linux has "issues" with hardware device drivers, certainly more than Windows, but my point was simply that the OS kernel is never released before the developers think it's ready. Every OS has its pros and cons.
Michael Horowitz
SuSE and RedHat don't advertise in television or most traditional media - they get known mostly by word-of-mouth and through trade paper (and trade website) ads.
MacIntoshes have always been able to open PC disks (until Vista) but never the other way around. This PC chauvinism is curious and stupid.
I live in the Seattle area and know, through multiple sources, that Microsoft never beta tests anything, but rather inflicts that on the public. Each new OS is huger and slower. I also know that their corporate culture rewards mismanagement, incompetence, ignorance and back-stabbing mendacity. I like Bill, and don't want to believe he would approve of what his company has become, but I could be wrong. Anyway, his charities absolve him of sin in my book. Still, a thorough house cleaning would make Microsoft better and more profitable. They could easily fire most middle management. Their customers should be happy, not beset by a never ending assault of viruses, spyware, patches and things that crash.
Besides, the issues with Vista have been fixed except for on machines that shouldn't have Vista on them to begin with. The only reason people aren't asking for it is they don't need it. They never needed it. Vista only existed to make money for Microsoft. It was never created to fulfill an actual need of the consumers. Even if that weren't true some of us are just waiting to see Windows 7 now so it doesn't even matter.
How does a business prepare for a product before release anyway? Hardware drivers were a problem. This is why companies need to look into their own standard for how a kernel talks to the drivers instead of having to rewrite drivers every time MS decides it wants to change the Windows driver model. They at least need to try anyway.
If such a thing existed then the drivers would have already been written and tested long before Vista was made. There's got to be a way to create such a common interface. We can put a man on the moon, but I need a different driver for every operating system I use? Even for different versions of the same OS? Come on. Yeah, that's good for Microsoft, but not for the hardware makers. However, here we see it's not even good for Microsoft anymore. In fact it's exactly what made Vista's release so bad. Obviously it is time to look for a better solution for hardware drivers.
Perhaps people weren't ready for Vista. I'll bet you ten dollars that if they had made a different product, something people were ready for, it would have went over much smoother. Trying to sell something that people "aren't ready for" is probably not the business model I would personally choose. I suppose MS can ask themselves how that's working for them and if they'd like to continue with that strategy in the future though.
IMO your points are correct. Microsoft came out with Vista because it needed to come out with a new product. It needed to sell something. It could be argued that the industry needed Vista as well to sell new, more powerful machines. Something to necessitate the advancement of the low end. The high end is never really pushed by the OS, games and programs like Photoshop and CAD will do that.
You can see the effect of this still in Microsoft allowing XP to be sold on netbooks. How much power do people need to surf the net, e-mail, and type? Not a whole lot. So why have a humongous, resource hungry OS for only those minimal tasks?
I don't want computers to stop progressing. I won't complain if something legitimately uses more resources. I don't want to stop at 4 gigs of ram. That would limit us too much. However, when you compare Vista with Linux or OS X you have to wonder where all your resources went, and that's from someone that likes Vista post SP1.
Nobody can tell you one thing Vista does that XP couldn't, but yet it uses four to eight times as much power? Even today nobody can tell you exactly why. People have guessed at the DRM or bad drivers or Aero or indexing or Superfetch, but so far no one really knows what it's doing. That's sort of creepy isn't it?
I know that Vista is not the best operating system out there but then again, what is the most used desktop and corporate client environment in use by more than 90 percent of computer users? Windows is.
I have been using vista since it was available to the consumer, and have learned the many problems of having minimal hardware running Vista. If you want a decent experience, you MUST have more than 1 gig of ram and your computer MUST be less than a year old since Vista barely came out. You can't expect to upgrade a computer with Vista and expect it to be a blaze. Microsoft has part of the blame for this because they were thinking about not losing money when they set the bar too low when it came to upgrades and what will work to run the entire "Experience" of Vista.
Yes, Windows is the most used operating system. Windows XP in fact is the most used operating system on the desktop. What does that have to do with Vista? Are you making the argument that we should use what everyone else is using? If you are then wouldn't you actually be making the case to stay on Windows XP? Also, if we should always use the OS that everyone else is using how would we ever manage to upgrade? Someone has to eventually be the oddball and upgrade first.
I've think that's the worst pro Vista argument I have seen in a while.
"In fairness, the same can be said of Apple. Leopard (Mac OS X 10.5) too, was far from fully baked when it was released."
The issues with Leopard were a kin to stubbing your toe - they hurt for a moment and the pain went away quickly. The issues with Vista are much more akin to falling off the bleachers and feeling the pain for more than a year. "In all fairness"? There is nothing fair about your comparison whatsoever. The scale of misery that Vista users suffer is far beyond anything Leopard ever caused. Horowitz's comparison is purely partisan and dilutes the relevance, scope, and intelligence of his writing.
Vista's biggest problem-other than CNET's biased 'reporting'-WAS, in fact, the drivers. Personally, I did not encounter any of the issues it supposedly had. People tend to make blanket facts out their own personal observation, so...I am making the argument that Vista had no problems since I did not encounter them. Makes about as much sense as 'the issues with Leopard were a kin to stubbing your toe'. Same can definitely be said for Vista. Unless your name is Chris...then you switch platforms because your ten year printer won't work.
If you want to thank someone for the system you're using today you can thank Compaq, they produced the first clone (by reverse engineering the BIOS). You want to thank someone for HOW your PC works? Thank Apple, if it wasn't for the Lisa/Macintosh Windows would not have happened (or at least not so quickly).
What Microsoft have done is be behind the industry, like a race car in the slipstream - not innovating, be implementing (or more often buying) products the are starting to become popular. They haven't always played by the rules (next time you see Microsoft talking about software patents or piracy look at the Wikipedia page for Stac Electronics - yeah, exactly).
Let's give the devil his due, Microsoft Windows has been many users introduction to personal computing and has defined what most people have thought of when they think about a PC. But make no mistake, the real innovations happened elsewhere.
Well, you can only drive a dodgem not a car...
I use both mac and windows daily as a graphic artist... OS X is really a very professional designed and supported Linux distro, the "hype" factor mainly based on superior build quality and components, but isn't it easier to create a driver for 2-4 specific video cards than to write one which should works for all? I never understood the buzz about mac vs. windows, in my daily process it does not make any difference that Photoshop or Vista runs on OSX or Vista. But I do think we -who wasting time on the issue at all LOL, are all marketing and fashion victims. Marketing, yess Apple makes better looks, packaging adds etc has a character or a certain appeal while Vista like all other products which tries to fit all tastes are over designed while somewhat cheep looking, plus a lot of people are very tired of the "evilness" of MS, but I can make you sure that Apple ain't any better! They have more fans because if you dumped MS FOREVER once than not much other option had left... and also apple attracts fashion and design conscious folks and people with a low self esteem ( they need the factor that even my computer is better/more expensive than yours...) one fellow designer stated that he can see on a Photoshop job that it was made on a mac or windows... which made me laugh for days, the only truth in it more people with Windows making craps in Photoshop without really knowing what they doing... But this is all not about function at all!
(Personally I buy a macs, looks better! LOL)
After the realease people is saying,they didnt need vista.
Actually any OS after XP,would all be more or less the same as XP.
And whatever would be there in Vista or upcoming Windows 7,there would be a free installation for XP as well to make it feel as if you are using those.
As for programmers,or big it companies,they would switch to new OS according to users around the world.They cant go advance or behind the users.
1. My smokin' quad-core, 4GB RAM, 500GB video belchin system is just as stupid as my IBM Selectric typewriter was in the 1970s. If I browse to C: data ninety percent of the time when I open a file browser, why does the operating system not ask the user if this should be the default directory when opening the browser? Where is the Artificial Intelligence we all feared in the 1980s? I say bring it on.
2. Why Does "Windoze Vistless" fail to offer a dual pane file viewer like PC Tools v7.0 for DOS did nearly 10-12 years ago, or 2xExplorer offers today? In a world where External USB Drives, memory card readers for digital camera cards, etc., it seems that most people spend a significant amount of time moving data from one drive or diretory to another, opening two instances of MS My Computer to see two drives side by side is very inefficient.
3. Seems that the OS should help the user manage data, which is of course the most important and irreplacable part of the computer, all the man hours invested in scanning family photos, creating MS Access files, updating spreadsheets, represents a significant investment in an irreplaceable commodity, YOUR TIME. Why does "Windows Vistless" fail to assist the user by offering incremental back-up softwware to help a user keep a primary and back-drive in sync.
4. Take MS Office 2007, why is the Print Icon hidden by default?
It seems that "Windoze Vistless" after nearly 20 years of home PC Computing is not making the user experience any more enjoyable or productive. Sure I can play Crysis on my system like crazy, but what about productivity in the aforementioned areas?
Craig Knapp
1. My smokin' quad-core, 4GB RAM, 500GB video belchin system is just as stupid as my IBM Selectric typewriter was in the 1970s. If I browse to C: data ninety percent of the time when I open a file browser, why does the operating system not ask the user if this should be the default directory when opening the browser? Where is the Artificial Intelligence we all feared in the 1980s? I say bring it on.
2. Why Does "Windoze Vistless" fail to offer a dual pane file viewer like PC Tools v7.0 for DOS did nearly 10-12 years ago, or 2xExplorer offers today? In a world where External USB Drives, memory card readers for digital camera cards, etc., it seems that most people spend a significant amount of time moving data from one drive or diretory to another, opening two instances of MS My Computer to see two drives side by side is very inefficient.
3. Seems that the OS should help the user manage data, which is of course the most important and irreplacable part of the computer, all the man hours invested in scanning family photos, creating MS Access files, updating spreadsheets, represents a significant investment in an irreplaceable commodity, YOUR TIME. Why does "Windows Vistless" fail to assist the user by offering incremental back-up softwware to help a user keep a primary and back-drive in sync.
4. Take MS Office 2007, why is the Print Icon hidden by default?
It seems that "Windoze Vistless" after nearly 20 years of home PC Computing is not making the user experience any more enjoyable or productive. Sure I can play Crysis on my system like crazy, but what about productivity in the aforementioned areas?
Craig Knapp
4. The reason why the print icon is hidden by default is that a lot of people on the older version of Microsoft Office, myself included, were hitting it by accident and printing things that they didn't want to print.
3. The reason that the OS doesn't help the user manage data (which was planned for WinFS) is that it takes WAY too much power away from other things, slowing the computer down by half or more. That is the reason why Windows Vista didn't include that functionality.
It was planned... but they found out it wasn't 'fully-baked' yet.
2. A dual pane viewer? Give me a break. Only a severe techie would need one of them and it doesn't take very long to open two Windows for both devices or Directories. Hell, with the 'folder pane' on the left side of the window in Vista, you already HAVE that functionality, in all honesty.
1. There is a reason why it doesn't remember stuff like that: you might not want to go directly to C drive at a point in the future, and it would get on your gourd then if Microsoft had it do that. Better to have shortcuts for Documents, Music, Pictures, Games, My Computer, etc. as Vista does on the start menu. Basically, with those shortcuts..... what you are asking for is NOT necessary.
#4 is sheer idiocy in an office environment. You gotta print sometime.
#3 Vista sucks down too many resources in the first place. A file system shouldn't have to (for example ext3 does full journaling, yet it requires no real resources to do it, and maybe 1 sec. of boot time unless you had a power failure.
#2 is all personal preference. The option, if it was there before, should really still be there.
#1is trivial to code. Where's the harm in doing it? (OSX usually opens Finder --and Linux Nautilus-- in the user's home directory, where the user normally keeps all of his/her stuff).
Why should I pay Microsoft for a bloated OS that requires me to spend twice as much for the hardware to get the same speed as XP? Microsoft does not say how many people bought the retail versions of XP. Since Microsoft is a monopoly, they will get away with ****** software by forcing people to buy computers loaded with Vista.
The fact is that Vista and XP on the same hardware (as long as that hardware is medium or medium-fast hardware).... they get the same exact speeds.
OTOH, you are right in that there are choices - which probably explains Apple's explosive sales figures :)
That's basically the same speed as a Mac I was looking at, which I had the guy at the store SHUT DOWN and boot back up so I could time it to see how fast it was.
Get off the 'Mac is faster!' BS. I am truly getting tired of hearing that junk from people who know NOTHING about what they are talking about.
The biggest problem I saw was lack of drivers at first (the reason why I delayed updating). But I found out that most of the drivers for my stuff had been there since day 1, even in the Vista pre-releases for testing.
* "In fact, there are no Linux headquarters at all."
There is one, sort of. The Linux Foundation (which hires Linus Torvalds, who in turn calls all the shots on the kernel) is based in Beaverton, Oregon. OTOH, you are correct in that individual distro makers are the ones who decide when they release new versions of it and various things that use it. This can range from 'relatively quickly' (Fedora) to 'sometime in this geologic era' (Debian).
* Re: Leopard. You would be more correct in using OSX 10.0 as a parallel example, which was released way too quickly, and was full of bugs. OSX 10.1 (which had all the fixes) came out very quickly after that, and was distributed to all OSX users for free as a partial apology. Leopard itself (like Tiger before it) had only minor bugs, especially when compared to Vista.
* You are perfectly correct in that Vista is a paradigm shift, but without any compelling features to sell it.
* Enterprises (disclosure - I worked for Intel; my last day was this past Friday) have to deal with Vista as well, and most don't like what it will take to shift to it. The shift from 98 -> Win2k (or 98 -> XP for some) took time for many corps, but it had compelling reasons to justify the work, and didn't require a massive productivity-sucking re-adjustment. They also didn't require buying massive hardware upgrades, which is important when you're discussing capital budgets. Sure, the fanboys in here will whine about how one can get a Core Duo for cheaper and etc. (esp. in Intel's case - they make the CPUs, right? well, it doesn't work like that, folks). Businesses don't work that way. They have vendors and support contracts to factor in - and they don't have the luxury of cobbling together units off of pricewatch.com, or of buying cheap discount-of-the-day machines. They need boxes that will run rock-solid and have a decent ROI... and that costs money. Lots of money.
/P
As to Windows Live stuff being better than the built-in stuff in Vista..... yeah, it is. But then again, those came out nearly 8 months AFTER Vista did, so of COURSE they were going to be better than Vista's built-in stuff..... there was just no question that was going to be the case.
What are the selling points for Vista? UAC, improved security, protected mode in IE 7 and 8, easier connection to networks, higher network speed vs. XP (they REALLY improved this, I have to hand it to them), the ability to run most applications in standard user mode instead of administrative user mode with no problems, and a few other, smaller things.
More than enough to allow me to say "Microsoft.... YOU ARE AWESOME!" though I still have a problem with the high prices for their OS's.
We've read about many of these issues and if you're buying a new machine, the vast majority of uninformed people (about 99.99%) when it comes to security are better off with Vista since it does not have you running with administrative privileges out of the box. I have found that even "tech people" don't fully understand (far from it in fact) the consequence of how Windows XP has you running by default (hint: this is why malware is such a problem)
Vista with its privilege escalation for installing applications and managing your system is what Windows XP should have been with SP2. You're much less likely to catch malware with Vista than XP as far as how each comes out of the box. I've heard people complaining about the password prompting in Vista but that's just being uninformed. (Aside: Trust me, it's good for you)
Vista does have one glaring issue. The rearchitecting of the display driver model has resulted in some code running user space and this constant transition from user space to kernel space incurs a performance penalty. This is likely why many benchmarks I've seen show Vista lagging XP when it comes to the all important Frames Per Second (FPS) metric.
So if you're a gamer, XP is actually better.
Going back to security, if you're still on Windows XP, I highly recommend the following utility to get some of Vista's resiliency when it comes to malware:
http://www.download.com/RemoveAdmin/3000-2381_4-10824971.html?tag=lst-1&cdlPid=10835515
RemoveAdmin installs a proxy program with convenient shortcuts for IE and Firefox that removes administrative rights when you launch your browser. What this means is that like Vista with UAC, you won't readily be breached because unbeknownst to you, your browser has served as the proxy for instrumenting your machine with a keyboard logger. If your browser doesn't have administrative rights, then that means the browser you forgot to patch won't suddenly find itself as the agent for placing files in C:\Windows. That I/O will fail.
Not running with administrative rights is *the* reason Mac OS X has been seemingly impervious to malware for many, many years. And no, it is not the lack of market share, Apple now has almost 20% of the laptop market. It turns out Windows XP has very robust security... but few people know how to leverage it, including tech people.
RemoveAdmin is a tool MS should have provided in Service Pack 2 of Windows XP in 2004. More shockingly is the API that it leverages to work its magic, CreateRestrictedToken, was introduced with Windows 2000. Hence, MS' apathy in leveraging this API and empowering users by providing such abilities seems remiss. But I'm sure they figured if they made SP2 for XP too robust it would eat Vista's sales. Penny wise, pound foolish.
I use RemoveAdmin to strip the administrative rights of any application that talks on the Net. Browser, IM client, Outlook, etc., etc. Iterating the installer creates shortcuts but if you look closely, there's a general purpose tool at work there so you can create shortcuts leveraging it to launch other applications.
-M
Those simulated benchmarks need to be totally rewritten, because they have a built-in flaw somewhere.
I use DropMyRights to serve the same purpose as RemoveAdmin. See
http://blogs.cnet.com/8301-13554_1-9756656-33.html
However, it does not offer full protection - software can still install into folders the user has write access to, even if it cant install into a system folder.
Cool CNET userid. :-) Michael Horowitz
Now I know there are other advances in Vista's design, but the visual improvements are the most well known (and the ones Microsoft seems keenest to talk about). Other aspects are sometimes seen as less appealing (the system of confirmations for potentially dangerous actions) and it's a hard sell to get users to like these.
- by Jim1900 September 7, 2008 10:11 AM PDT
- When people have nothing better to do, they write about Vista. It is better than XP. Not by a huge amount for most people, but enough to want it on a new PC, or to upgrade the PC you have if your hardware is up to it. Enough said.
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- by GadgetDon September 8, 2008 5:13 AM PDT
- Jim, you say Vista is better than XP enough to upgrade my PC if your hardware is up to it. What the article, and I, are saying is that for a lot of people, it ISN'T better enough to go through the expense and pain of upgrading. I use my PC for gaming, one of my games that I play a lot is an old one called Zeus, a citibuilder game. If it doesn't run on Vista (and if the software that allows me to "mount" a virtual CD that has it so I don't need the physical CD in place), then Vista is a significant downgrade for me. And no, looking for an upgrade isn't an option, the company that makes it isn't around.
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Showing 1 of 2 pages (76 Comments)But even setting it aside...what is this benefit that you assert is worth the cost and hassle of upgrading?