Originally posted by: spikespiegal
Working in a computer shop for several years, I get people in who don't know their ass from a hole in the ground when it comes to computers, yet they'll come in and swear up and down that Vista is the worst thing since Lucifer betrayed God.
I guess that mean all of us corporate types who've put Vista deployments on hold because our CIO can't justify a few million dollars in hardware upgrades to run the same damn frikken applications on a different OS aren't as smart as you.
Much of the blame for poor Vista adoption rates stem directly from hardware vendors, big box sellers, and OEMs, rather than Microsoft. On a properly configured computer, Vista is far, far faster than XP.
Every application benchmark I've seen, other than pitting 32-bit XP apps -vs- 64-bit ones on Vista shows a performance hit for Vista. Christ, even MS has published this.
Also, if your aren't aware of it, MS doesn't make computers, and bullying OEM's into installing PET OS's for the benefit of MS shareholders isn't exactly a good practice.
Yet, in the quest to provide every cheaper computers and save as much money as possible, OEMs will do stupid things like sell Vista Home Premium on a system with integrated graphics and 512mb RAM.
Maybe they should add a few hundred bucks for high powered video just to run the OS desktop GUI without crawling. Not sure what makes less sense. Home users need to concentrate more on running applications that operating systems, but as long as people like you try to avert their attention to the fancy OS.....well, then perhaps they should consider Apple. Oh wait...many of them are.
The fault behind the stygma that Vista is slow lies squarely with system builders and hardware manufacturers (nVidia, this one's on you).
Wow. I thought *I* was a Microsoft apologist.
I've installed Vista on legacy and new machines about 20 times now. One thing that is perfectly clear is that my Photoshop rig running on a single core 2.2 Athlon 64 with Windows 2000 Server is orders of magnitude more responsive than anything I've yet to install Vista on, including Intel quads. Getting into a command applet in even Win2k on that processor occurs in the blink of an eye while Vista slogs along doing something in the background.
I recall having to run Terminal Server in corporate branches on P3s with 512 meg of RAM, Win2K Server, and yet being able to support over a dozen users desktop sessions and applications simultaneously, and running quite fast. Fast enough that a lot of those same boxes are still deployed and running apps.
I wonder what those older Terminal boxes score on the WEI? I know this much - the people using those older platforms and not concerned about OS benchmarks are likely making more money than those that are.