... A lot of the compatibility issues were the fault of device manufacturers and not Microsoft.
Well, Microsoft did cave to pressure from computer manufacturers to loosen the requirements for "Vista Certified" qualification. I bought a Gateway laptop for my sister around the time Vista was released -- and it was completely unusable from day-1. For years, I didn't really realize why. Before I sent the thing across the country, I spent 1-2 months tweaking scripts on the recovery partition to avoid installing bloatware in the first place, then doing "factory" restores from the progressively de-bloated recovery partition. I realy never got the machine to feel usable. To my sister, it felt like a downgrade from her first-gen Centrino laptop. I think there was a class action lawsuit against Microsoft.A lot of "Vista Compatible" computers ran like cold molasses.
I've used my ancient Canon "LIDe" USB-powered scanners with Vista/7 64-bit.I've got a perfectly good scanner collecting dust in the basement because Canon never released Drivers for Vista/7.
How many times has a UAC prompt saved anyone from hijacking? It basically conditions people to accept / allow anything.... UAC was very intrusive. ... Most of these problems were fixed in 7.
How many times has a UAC prompt saved anyone from hijacking? It basically conditions people to accept / allow anything.
I've used my ancient Canon "LIDe" USB-powered scanners with Vista/7 64-bit.
It's a CanoScan 5000f. Was a pretty good scanner when it was new back in 2003. Canon never made 64-bit drivers for it though. So it's not compatible with anything past XP. Nor does it work with Intel Macs.
Not that I use scanners that often, but I do have a backlog of old slides I want to get digitized. Be nice if I didn't have to buy a new one for that.
Vista had a baffling trigger on UAC. With GNU/Linux, I pretty much always know ahead of time when I need root. Vista was a mystery "I have no idea why you're asking me this". That said, Vista was the last Windows I regularly used, and is still my favorite Windows(Haven't tried 10 at all).
If you liked Windows Vista, then Windows 7 would have seemed like it was sent from heaven. Vista isn't even in the same league as 7 in terms of day-to-day usability...
...which is ironic considering that Windows 7 is arguably just Vista with a lot of tweaks.
I've used 7. It was just Vista with an uglier interface. Taking support out of consideration, I'd run Vista over 7. I don't have a lot of experience with 8x, but my trials of it were favorable from a usage standpoint.
They look nearly the same.
They look nearly the same.
The flat glass of 7 is inferior to Vista. "Nearly" isn't close enough when you can't change it.
Windows 10 is hampered by a Microsoft who's desperately trying to be Google. As an OS, it's a big improvement over its predecessor. What's bogging it down is some rather anti-consumer policies coming out of Redmond. I suspect Satya Nadella is behind a lot of this nonsense. I think they need to find themselves a new CEO.
Have you tried the 5200f drivers?
It's the direction all companies are going. FB and Google (and in some ways Amazon) have proven that most people simply don't care, even many of the tech people will defend what they are doing. It's pretty insane how so many people think it isn't a big deal and are willing to give up all privacy just to use a product. Windows 10 may be a 'better' OS, but it certainly isn't the step in the right direction and should be avoided or extremely crippled. Yea, so there are plenty here who will flame about how wonderful it is and how tin foil hat it is to talk like this, but this is just a step into the future, and it doesn't look good. An OS should function to do YOUR tasks and do that first, not collect data for a company to control and/or make money off of you. This is Xbox One all over again.