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10 Reasons Not to Get Vista


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mimi_44
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10 Reasons Not to Get Vista
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PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar, 2007

Ran across this.... I agree, for now. Wink
Being a gamer and having EAX on my systems, this:(Creative's popular DirectSound based EAX no longer works at all, muting this feature for just about all gaming titles on the market today.), this would not make me a happy camper. Evil or Very Mad Even Firefox has issues with Vista!
mimi_44

1. You don't actually need it --
No, think about this. Vista doesn't do anything you can't already do with XP. About the only significant shift requiring Vista is DirextX10, but as no titles support it yet and, according to John Carmack (the godfather of modern gaming) there's no need to yet either.
2. Cost $$ --
It's so blindingly obvious, most people will be blinded to it. You already have XP, and alternatives like Linux are free. If you really want to throw money away, go give it to a local charity.
3. On that note, it's outrageously overpriced --
At least in Australia. As revealed in the current APC, even after taking into account the profit margin micros0ft Australia previously applied to XP (as well as exchange rates, as you would expect), Australians are paying hundreds of dollars more for their copies than in the US. In fact, it's cheaper for Australians to buy Vista direct by mail order from the States. If you think micros0ft Australia is reaming us, vote with your wallet.
4. Upgrading hardware --
XP was demanding at release, but Vista more so. If you have an older machine that struggles with XP at the best of times, Vista is out of your ballpark unless you spend even more money to upgrade. If this is you, see point 1.
5. Driver support --
Key hardware like video and sound is crippled at the moment -- while Nvidia is working furiously to get a stable driver for the 8800 out by the 30th, there's still no SLI support for any of the Nvidia range. And thanks to the removal of hardware accelerated 3D sound in Vista, Creative's popular DirectSound based EAX no longer works at all, muting this feature for just about all gaming titles on the market today. Creative is in the process of coding a layer for its drivers to translate EAX calls to the OpenAL API which is seperate from Vista, but going by past experience with Creative drivers we won't see these any time soon.
6. Applications that don't work --
There's been plenty of coverage about applications that won't work without a vendor update. These include anti-virus, backup and security software such as those from Symantec, Sophos and ilk; CD and DVD burning tools like the suite from Nero need updated versions to work; and even basic disk management and partitioning tools such as Paragon's Hard Disk Manager are awaiting an update for Vista to be compatible. How many more will fail as Vista enters mainstream? Even Firefox has issues with Vista.
7. It's a big fat target --
With a new and untested in the global wild architecture, virus and malware authors are going to work overtime exploiting the holes micros0ft missed. In fact it's already happening. Loath though I am to use the word 'security' and 'Windows' in the same sentence, Windows XP has at least been patched to the hilt and can be used with a plethora of reasonably effective security tools that work now, without waiting for an update down the track.
8. UAC --
Oh yes, the micros0ft solution for an operating system where mutli-user was an afterthought. Sure, you can disable it, but the OS then makes it clear then that the onus is on the user for any damaging programs that got to run with permissions, rather than with Windows in the first place. If you do have it on, it is going to annoy the hell out of you. It pops up far too frequently, and even on a fast PC, the UAC screen takes too long to come up and disappear.
9. DRM --
And to a lesser degree TPM -- were made for the RIAAs and MPAAs of this world, and the even tighter integration of copy protection mechanisms and 'Windows Rights Management' into vista are nothing more than a liability to you, the user. This ComputerWorld piece says is succinctly: 'it's hard to sing the praises of technology designed to make life harder for its users.' As for TPM, this short animated video shows just how far the rabbit hole goes. And to think you pay for the privilege of having the use of media you purchased and own dictated by third parties, even on your own system.
10. The draconian license --
Somehow, micros0ft has forgotten that it built its business from products that empowered its customers, not hampered them. Of course, we forget that micros0ft's customers aren't you and I, afterall (see point 9). Aside from the backward thinking that is licensing, and not actually owning, your software new terms with Vista include being able to transfer the license only once; half the limit compared to XP for Home Basic and Premium on how many machines can connect to yours for sharing, printing and accessing the Internet; limits on the number of devices that can use Vista's Media Center features; activation and validation governing your ability to upgrade hardware and use Windows itself; and outlawing the use of Home Basic and Premium with virtualisation software, and Ultimate only if DRM enabled content and applications aren't used. But then again, who reads these anyway?
Courtesy (web information)
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Mop
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Re: 10 Reasons Not to Get Vista
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PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar, 2007

Most of this I agree with , but bare in mind that the same sort of things were said when W98 ME and 2000 came out.

New is scary.

I remember being very sceptical about XP while using W98. Now I know better of course.

But yes , XP has most of what we want , I've heard and read about some very buggy hardware and software issues too.

Being a (hard to find the time but trying hard to) gamer I don't see any advantages right now in changing from XP to Vista.

I intend to just wait and see what happens and wait until micros0ft fixes (most) problems , and by that time the price tag will be different from what it is now.

I hope.

Or by that time I'll buy a new PC that has Vista on it , probably.

Although my PC is hardly a year old so that will have to wait for a while. Laughing
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mimi_44
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Re: 10 Reasons Not to Get Vista
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PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar, 2007

I remember Millenium (don't remember how MS spelled it), getting a bad rap, and for good reason, it was "%$#@!!". Win98 still has its constant crashes, but at that time I liked it (not the crashes, the OS.. lol). In fact still have it on my old computer so I can play my older games because WinXP won't run them. I hesitated getting WinXP when I bought my most recent computer about 2-1/2 years ago. It was made by my specs so I had a choice and I'm glad I did, WinXP's pretty cool. Wink

But as far as getting Vista, all the bugs and indifferences will have to be ironed out before I install it on my computer. Evil or Very MadEvil or Very Mad
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aiolos
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Re: 10 Reasons Not to Get Vista
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PostPosted: Tue 06 Mar, 2007

Add to this that you'll have to buy (if you do that sort of thing Very Happy ) new versions of many programs that don't work on Vista.

Also I hate the idea of the OS polling the hardware 60 times a second to see if I'm stealing HD content. F**k HD content, I never watch movies on my pc and I don't want crappy licensing-control schemes eating my cpu cycles.


I'm realistic enough to know that sooner or later we'll all be forced to run Vista. But I'd rather hold out for as long as I can.


Intel's CEO seems to agree :

If it's not good enough for Intel, is it good enough for you? We're talking micros0ft's Windows Vista, which the chip giant's CEO, Paul Otellini, this week indicated has not won the backing of his technology experts.

"I know of no organisation doing an upgrade before [Service Pack 1]," Paul Otellini told attendees of the Bank of America Technology Conference held in San Francisco this week, according to a ZDnet blog. "Intel isn't upgrading either."
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Mop
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Re: 10 Reasons Not to Get Vista
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PostPosted: Tue 03 Apr, 2007

And: You can't use THE animated cursor! Laughing Laughing
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