Originally posted by: Cooler
Do we even know what hardware vista supports yet?
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Personally I don't see the point of it. It's a new OS but the only thing that is new is eye candy. Pointless. Of course I'm one of those that turns off all the visuals in XP so I can get it to look like 2kPRO.
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Personally I don't see the point of it. It's a new OS but the only thing that is new is eye candy. Pointless. Of course I'm one of those that turns off all the visuals in XP so I can get it to look like 2kPRO.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Originally posted by: dnuggett
Personally I don't see the point of it. It's a new OS but the only thing that is new is eye candy. Pointless. Of course I'm one of those that turns off all the visuals in XP so I can get it to look like 2kPRO.
If you think Vista is just eye candy you haven't read a single thing about it's capabilities.
Please refrain from speaking.
How about finding some of the multitudes of information yourself. Google, or the search engine of your choice is a great start. channel9.msdn.com has a ton of videos of features in Vista. There are tons of reviews of the CTP builds that have been released.Wow. Really? Have you tried Vista yet? Or maybe you can enlighten me since I can no longer speak about the subject. Just what does Vista bring to the table for a home computer that XP Pro or MCE doesn't?
Most Vista threads in AT are FUD-filled disasters, this one is no exception.Most threads point to staying with XP. This poll does...
Originally posted by: stash
How about finding some of the multitudes of information yourself. Google, or the search engine of your choice is a great start. channel9.msdn.com has a ton of videos of features in Vista. There are tons of reviews of the CTP builds that have been released.Wow. Really? Have you tried Vista yet? Or maybe you can enlighten me since I can no longer speak about the subject. Just what does Vista bring to the table for a home computer that XP Pro or MCE doesn't?
Some Vista features:
* User Account Control (aka LUA)
* LoRIE (low rights IE)
* Improved firewall
* new network stack
* NAP
* Superfetch
Most Vista threads in AT are FUD-filled disasters, this one is no exception.Most threads point to staying with XP. This poll does...
An emotionally charged Internet message board is hardly the place to find quality information in abundance that can be used to make an informed decision. There are certainly posts scattered around that have good information, but you have to sift through all the trolls such as yourself to get to it.So then as spherrod recommendation to read the threads in AT is junk. Thanks that helps prove my point there
I have no idea what your first sentence is trying to say, but suffice it to say, XP does not do what Vista does. This is not runas. Even users who are members of the administrator group get a split token, where they run with lowered rights most of the time.My guess is after being prompted to extend privileges after every app install the user will go to silent, instead of being bothered. This type of of usability an be obtained with a least priviliged account in XP with "run as" being used. So XP does this.
LoRIE is intended to isolate the user from vulnerabilities in IE. Right now, if someone exploits a vulnerability in IE, it runs in the context of the user (usually admin) and can do whatever it wants on the sytem. In LoRIE, even if you are an admin, exploiting a vulnerability in the browser will get you nothing. As for running malicious code, you are forgetting about LUA. To call LoRIE a marginal benefit is an ignorant troll.LOWIE- Doesn't prevent malicious downloads, obviously. It only prevents malicious code from being run, and doesn't prevent it in ActiveX or script. Thsi is where a ton of the vulns are. Marginal benefit at best.
Since when is the network stack restricted for enterprise users, genius? Vista users will see improved network performance, either between machines on their own networks, or on the Internet.new network stack- Great for enterprise users, no real benefit for home users. Look like you need to do some reading yourself, this thread was started by someone looking for Vista for a personal PC (home use). No benefit over XP.
You give no indication otherwise. You just continue to post trollish blather.You act like I don't know this stuff already
Originally posted by: DarkKnight69
Simple Poll: Do I get Vista for my home Computer?
Have a
840D @3.8
2GB ram
x800GTO2
Have the option to pick up the beta...should i?
Originally posted by: stash
An emotionally charged Internet message board is hardly the place to find quality information in abundance that can be used to make an informed decision. There are certainly posts scattered around that have good information, but you have to sift through all the trolls such as yourself to get to it.So then as spherrod recommendation to read the threads in AT is junk. Thanks that helps prove my point there
I have no idea what your first sentence is trying to say, but suffice it to say, XP does not do what Vista does. This is not runas. Even users who are members of the administrator group get a split token, where they run with lowered rights most of the time.My guess is after being prompted to extend privileges after every app install the user will go to silent, instead of being bothered. This type of of usability an be obtained with a least priviliged account in XP with "run as" being used. So XP does this.
LoRIE is intended to isolate the user from vulnerabilities in IE. Right now, if someone exploits a vulnerability in IE, it runs in the context of the user (usually admin) and can do whatever it wants on the sytem. In LoRIE, even if you are an admin, exploiting a vulnerability in the browser will get you nothing. As for running malicious code, you are forgetting about LUA. To call LoRIE a marginal benefit is an ignorant troll.LOWIE- Doesn't prevent malicious downloads, obviously. It only prevents malicious code from being run, and doesn't prevent it in ActiveX or script. Thsi is where a ton of the vulns are. Marginal benefit at best.
Since when is the network stack restricted for enterprise users, genius? Vista users will see improved network performance, either between machines on their own networks, or on the Internet.new network stack- Great for enterprise users, no real benefit for home users. Look like you need to do some reading yourself, this thread was started by someone looking for Vista for a personal PC (home use). No benefit over XP.
You give no indication otherwise. You just continue to post trollish blather.You act like I don't know this stuff already
I use Vista every day. Where is the option to suppress cred or consent UI prompts?As far as you not knowing what I am saying I suggest you read up on the prompts. Any program requiring admin access will be prompted for permissions or did you not know that? Turn it on "no prompt" or silent and permissions are elevated silently.
I have no problem with differing opinions. I do have problems with FUD. LUA and low rights IE will be major reasons for people to upgrade. Sure you can do LUA on XP with runas and some tweaks, I do it on my laptop. But most people have no idea how to do that, nor do they have the inclination to figure it out.Get off your high horse and stop calling people with different opinions than your's a troll
Originally posted by: stash
I use Vista every day. Where is the option to suppress cred or consent UI prompts?As far as you not knowing what I am saying I suggest you read up on the prompts. Any program requiring admin access will be prompted for permissions or did you not know that? Turn it on "no prompt" or silent and permissions are elevated silently.
I have no problem with differing opinions. I do have problems with FUD. LUA and low rights IE will be major reasons for people to upgrade. Sure you can do LUA on XP with runas and some tweaks, I do it on my laptop. But most people have no idea how to do that, nor do they have the inclination to figure it out.Get off your high horse and stop calling people with different opinions than your's a troll
Since apparently these improvements are not enough to sway you to upgrade, I wonder what you would deem worthy of an upgrade. I have laid out several new features that will be beneficial to both home and business users. There are over 2000 new features in Vista, so there is much more than what I've listed.
Additionally do you happen to know how many applications there are that will not function correctly unless full admin access is granted by default? According to MS it is any program not designed to run under UAC
Originally posted by: stash
Most of the information on that technet page is way out of date. The group policy setting on that page controlling the prompt behavior doesn't exist in that form anymore. There are currently about six GPO settings for UAP, and the closest one gives two options: prompt for credentials or no prompt. There is no option to allow the user to use the consent UI, where credentials are not entered.
If an administrator configures these settings, the user will be unable to change them without knowing the administrator password. And if the user knows the administrator password, there isn't much that can be done to prevent them from reconfiguring things. That will always be the case. However, if users leave the settings alone, it will be very difficult for malware to run within an elevated context.
Additionally do you happen to know how many applications there are that will not function correctly unless full admin access is granted by default? According to MS it is any program not designed to run under UAC
I do not know how many, but there will be a virtualization layer to help work around crappy applications. So when an app requires access to an area of the file system or registry that is restricted to a regular user (HKLM, Program Files, etc), it will be redirected to a virtual store in the user's profile that holds those files and registry settings. This will not fix all crappy applications, but it will definitely help.
Your UAP settings? Yeah that was in Beta1, but was removed after that. If you want to play, I would recommend the February CTP that will be out in a few days. It is the first public build that is feature complete. Hell, I'll even sign you up for the beta if you want.My settings were accessable through the start panel