
Microsoft has seen better days when releasing new operating systems. Vista, Microsoft’s newest operating system has been under fire with criticism for several months yet the issues business and home users are having continues to exist for most. I have been reading many articles regarding the new operating system and I’m also running Vista live with sp1 in my home. First of all I want to discuss the ridicules Windows Vista recommended system requirements. Remember this is for Vista Home Basic and not Ultimate.
* 1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
* 512 MB of system memory
* 20 GB hard drive with at least 15 GB of available space
* Support for DirectX 9 graphics and 32 MB of graphics memory
Now let’s be honest! There is no way you’re going to be running Windows Vista and all your other needed/daily programs on this little amount of system resources, especially if you’re a business. If you do decide to run the computer as a business with your applications and security programs running in the background this means you will be reducing productivity from your employees. You’re better off staying with XP Pro and maintaining your company’s productivity. If you’re a home user it’s going to be even worse. You’re not going to run Vista and Norton’s while surfing the web, you’re pc will be so slow it’s going to be shoot out the window. I know this for a fact because like I mentioned I’m currently running Vista and the following specification is what’s on my desktop.
- NEW Intel® Pentium® D Dual Core Processor 840 (3.20GHz, 800MHz FSB, 2MB cache) HT Technology
- NVIDIA® nForce4 SLITM X16 MCP chipset
- 1GB Dual channel DDR2-800MHz SDRAM,
- 500 GB3 SATA II internal storage (single drive)
Now when I’m running Vista it’s pretty smooth but if I start doing a Virus scan and surfing the net I notice a major performance difference. I currently have 2 operating systems on my desktop and to test what the performance difference is I boot up Windows xp and simply do the same actions, run a scan, surf the net and I have zero performance loss. Vista was poorly designed to handle stress and performance stress tests compared to the XP pro release some years earlier.
Microsoft has attempted to make all businesses and home users of personal computers upgrade their current hardware even if it’s relatively good like mine. I think the company should have been making Vista so that it ran exceptionally great on my personal pc mentioned above without performance loss at any time. Another issue I personally have with Vista is all the permissions and questions the Operating system asks when you literally do anything with the computer. Installing programs, deleting files and even when you want to remove programs, it asks for confirmation always. I have learned to turn this off but I mean could Microsoft blindly call us bigger idiots?
Enough about what I think let’s take a walk over to Google and type in, Vista Problems shall we?
The problems with Vista lay bare
Part Two what might have been?
By Liam Proven: Thursday, 22 March 2007, 10:07 AM
http://www.theinquirer.net/en/inquirer/news/2007/03/22/the-problems-with-vista-laid-bare
The article pretty much complains about the performance issues and how Apple has been releasing software that is always shows an increase in performance and stability where as Microsoft has failed to do since earlier os releases. Read the article if you’re interested but I’m moving on. If you’re a gamer good luck getting to play all the new releases! You’re going to find yourself stressed out, on the net trying to download all the right drivers for yourself. Look I run windows vista very well besides the Virus scan exceptions but I still play my games on the xp operating system and I will continue to do so. As for the majority of the pc market you have to and it’s unfortunate seeing you should be able to with the recommend requirements as mentioned earlier.
Researcher: Vista prevents users playing high-def content
Researcher outlines numerous features that harm system performance, calling Vista’s content protection rules ‘the longest suicide note in history’
By Jon Brodkin, Network World
August 10, 2007
This Article talks about how Vista implemented a no high def concept so that when you rip and burn your movies they won’t play at high def quality. I don’t get affected by this but what about the millions of users that back up their original copies of movies and only watch the backed version via s video from the pc? When asked by bbc, Microsoft stated, “they are common features of many playback devices”. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6286245.stm
Whatever Microsoft, stop trying to maintain dominance over individuals inside their own homes and let them do what they want with their pc’s. You can’t sell people a product and also tell them how to use it, especially if it harms no one during usage. For releasing Vista prematurely and highly over rated as it currently is regarding Security, Performance, and Compatibility I would have to say without question…
Microsoft, you can officially say iknownil