Originally posted by: mechBgon
Yes, but for the average user with a Intel Pentium 4 2.8ghz or an Athlon XP 2500+, it does not really make sense to upgrade to Vista. But really, what is really the reason to upgrade to Vista anyway besides getting the latest and greatest?
"Major increase in out-of-the-box OS security" comes to mind. And
especially for the "average user" whose WinXP box has been spewing Spam email, hosting phishing websites and performing DoS attacks right under his nose without him knowning. Not to mention sending his keystrokes, screenshots and other identity-theft ingredients off to the bad guys.
Interesting: the Mac security researcher who hacked a MacBook at a security conference holds the opinion that
Vista is more secure than OS X.
Actually, I'd say this is a common "problem" across the industry in general.
Things people bought a few years ago are "good enough".
My brother has a computer that's....3-4 years old? AXP 1.43 GHz anyways, 512 MB RAM I think.
Parents have a 1.3 GHz Coppermine Celeron with 448 MB of RAM, grandma is sitting on a 2 GHz Athlon(because her old mobo broke down mostly) with 512 MB.
All of them have a proper line of defense, in the form of either a router or a local firewall.
I don't really see any reason to upgrade any of their hardware or software.
Me, I have a C2D and 2GB of RAM, with an 8800GTX, by most measurements a high end rig, I just reused my XP license, because again, I don't see any reason to upgrade.
Nothing Microsoft exclusive, the entire computer industry has just matured enough that the old stuff is "good enough" for most people, hardware as well as software.
Of course, all of my relatives will eventually move to either Vista, Vista.2(I forgot the code name), Linux, Apple, or whatever some day, but not while their current stuff is working.