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Upgrading to Windows Vista has been banned by the U.S. Department of Transportation
Are you still thinking on upgrading to Vista? Read this then:
http://aaxnet.com/editor/edit043.html http://www.usatoday.com/tech/columni...problems_N.htm http://www.computerworld.com/action/...leId=901 2140 http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=198000229 http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl...44209&from=rss http://www.dailytechnobabble.com/200...g-like-a-rock/ And course don't forget about this one: http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut00...ista_cost.html Happy upgrading! :winkwink: |
i am so glad that i am a mac user
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For HP users
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I Love my mac |
it doesn't really matter...flash forward 5 years everyone will be running vista and the same complainers will be crying about how they're sticking with Vista instead of going with whatever new OS microsoft is releasing then...
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Vista has been a godsend for my PC. Runs faster than XP and is soooo much more stable. Seems like they have finally got windows to use all the available ram and actually release it again when you close apps.
I can't reccomend going to Vista enough. |
Major problems there. A quote from, one of the articles:
\ ".....I was trying to set up a daily backup, simply copying all my stuff from one hard drive to a second one, without any kind of compression. Vista stores all my documents and settings in a single folder called /users/AK. So all I had to do was back up that entire folder. I tried Microsoft's own RoboCopy tool. It gave me an error. I tried 2BrightSparks's (also excellent) SyncBack. Another error. I tried a neat one I found called Karen's Replicator. Ditto. All three had the same problem: A path was too long. I apparently had too many nested folders. I looked more closely and found the problem. They were all trying to back up C:\users\AK\Application Data \Application Data \Application Data \Application Data ? and so on, ad infinitum" Scary :Oh crap |
There was no reason to upgrade to Vista from XP. Hell, there was no reason to upgrade from W2K to XP, unless you were a gamer.
Stick with XP. It will still be supported for quite a while. Nobody needs DX10. There's only 1 video card out on the market that supports DX10. Stick it out, you don't need Vista right now. Let M$ screw it up more before fixing it, then go get it if you really need it. PS - You won't. |
More fun:
Vista and its companion programs, Office 2007 and Internet Explorer 7, offer precious little Windows users want beyond what's in Windows XP, but plenty they don't want. A confusing new user interface. Vista actually reduces user productivity according to a consulting firm's study (V7). Blamed for so many security problems, Microsoft has placed security responsibility right where it doesn't belong, squarely on the shoulders of the average user. Confusing security pop-up dialogs are so common users get used to just hitting "Yes" automatically to everything, including malware. Most existing software is not compatible with Vista. You will have to purchase upgrades to almost all the software you run and many programs will never be upgraded to Vista. It's an exercise in frustration to try to upgrade an XP computer to Vista. Few Vista drivers are available except for new devices designed for Vista, and manufacturers don't plan any. Even many current printers don't have Vista drivers, and many never will. Developing Vista drivers and getting them approved by Microsoft is just too expensive. Vista is effectively a Windows price increase. Vista Home Basic, shipped with lower cost consumer market computers, is rather minimal, This often forces a $79 upgrade to Home Premium (equivalent to Windows XP Media Center) or Ultimate for $139. Vista's built-in Anytime Upgrade handles that - have your credit card ready. Actually all versions are on the machine but must be "activated". Vista Activation is a hassle and failure prone, but Microsoft says they'll be turning the screws down even tighter due to rampant piracy already taking place. This does little harm to the pirates, just to legitimate users (V5). Vista Activation, should it fail or be aborted, phones home to Microsoft with enough details to identify your computer and possibly your location (V3). Vista's much ballyhooed security has already been shattered in various ways, and Microsoft's One Care, intended to protect Vista from malware, has scored at the very bottom in independent tests of anti-malware programs (V2). Microsoft's draconian DRM (Digital Rights Management) features not only interfere with your enjoyment of entertainment media you have purchased, but force you to have a much more powerful and expensive machine just to achieve XP level performance (V14). Windows Update is now mandatory. What's wrong with that? You have no defense against patches that break other stuff. Worse, Microsoft has promised the media moguls they will cripple your computer if any DRM problems are found with your computer's hardware or drivers - this by Windows Update, of course (V14). Microsoft president Steve Ballmer said Vista was so good a service pack would not be needed. Service Pack 1 went into "critical" development even before Vista's public release at the end of January. There are flaws aplenty. |
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I guess our Federal government isn't as stupid as we think it is. |
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:1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh |
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VISTA will be the point where MS dies and Linux/Mac really start to move forward. Linspire should really hit the marketing wagon, easy to install, cheap, has games, software, easy learning curve for basic users.. MS is boned. |
certainly not happening here any time soon
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No upgrade to Vista here! Gonna stick with XP Pro! :thumbsup
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Complain all you want. I upgrade for some new features and for something new. Running windows2k is like having a 1995 Nissan Altima right now. Sure it's great and you like it but I'd much rather have a new Altima.
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With new machines, I never buy one with an OS. I build most of my machines and the few prebuilts I have purchased I got without an OS so I could put win2k on it. pcclub.com will sell prebuilts without an OS. |
Please note, after you go looking further into some of the articles that are being used to make the claims, you find this:
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I don't understand how they handle compatibility issues by moving to linux. That just seems to be a really weird move. |
I just got a new Sony VAIO with the Vista Home Premium on it.
Needless to say, so far I'm not impressed. |
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1) Disabling of Functionality 2) Indirect Disabling of Functionality 3) Decreased Playback Quality 4) Elimination of Open-source Hardware Support 5) Elimination of Unified Drivers 6) Problems with Drivers 7) Denial-of-Service via Driver/Device Revocation 8) Decreased System Reliability 9) Increased Hardware Costs 10) Increased Cost due to Requirement to License Unnecessary Third-party IP 11) Unnecessary CPU Resource Consumption 12) Unnecessary Device Resource Consumption |
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I was checking Dell, looking for a new laptop. Pretty much all their systems that you can adjust via their online interface offer Vista only. So I called them and they said sure, we can put XP on the box if you want to. What's scary is that it would actually not occur to most people to call them and even enquire about this...
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99% of the bitching on that particular site either involves (a) third party issues that the writer is attempting to pin onto microsoft, or (b) a failure to understand certain legal restrictions for digital media playback that exist. I would think that this guy probably writes freeware for linux systems. |
Go read that guy's site more closely. He is a professor in New Zealand who's great accomplishments include hacking bus pass codes and 10 year old encryption tools.
Nice. |
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Because no other company EVER in the history of anything has realesed anything that had bugs in it. |
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2) There are many articles with various dates :winkwink: |
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Further, considering his position in life and his experiences with security, you would think that he would have more of a clue about the legal ramifications of some of the security "features" in Vista, specifically those dealing with content licensing. Blaming Microsoft because Sony chooses not to license material for certain playback formats is just so fucking lame. He might as well blame a duck for the price of foisgras. The guy started out with the intention of bashing the fuck out of Microsoft, and that is all he did. It is a mean spirited one sides article, and certainly NOT a balanced look at the reality of both modern computer operating systems and the legalities of content distribution. |
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The first day after Apple TV began shipping, a bunch of sharp-as-a-tack coder types hacked Apple's new set top box to shreds: http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=472 |
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1 - 10 of about 3,100,000 for serious problems with xp |
cyberxxx, the mistake most people make is thinking that vista is an "upgrade" - it isn't, it is an entirely new operating system, similar to the differences between ms-dos and windows 3.1 It is a huge gap, and many older pieces of software just don't work with it.
If you poke at anything, you will find incompatibilities. Would you like an entire list of network cards that don't work with Unix? Would you like to hear about the horrors of upgrading apache only to find out that certain common modules no longer work with certain other modules, or they aren't available, or don't work with this version of MySQL or that version of ProFTP? Bitching for the sake of bitching is just bitching. Read the list carefully. There is one word that keeps re-appearing: Drivers. Drivers are the responsiblity for the most part of third party companies. If they chose not to do the work or not to conform to the rules of the new operating system, well... talk to the people not doing the work, and quit blaming Microsoft for all the issues. |
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2) I'm working with PC's (not only using but also programming) from the DOS 16-bit real mode times, however I don't remember there any comparable problems with XP ever. Quote:
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Compatibility issues with software often arises because programmers wrote code that either (a) didn't use the API correctly, or (b) purposely bypassed the API or abused holes that existed in that API. Many of the programs that use their own programming to directly deal with networking issues (to communicate) are totally fucked because all of those holes have been plugged. Remember, windows 3.1 was just ms-dos with a nice graphic display. |
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Some of his biggest bitches are about "more CPU being used", and complaining about bloatware. Sounds like this guy would be really, really happy with a MS-DOS prompt on a 20 mhz IBM PC-jr. |
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I'll just try to show you this on example. MS-DOS is intended to run 16-bit MZ-executables. Windows 3.xx was intended to run 16-bit NE executables. Windows 32/64-bit (95/NT etc) systems are intended to run 32/64-bit PE executables. There is a big difference between MZ, NE and PE file formats. So you can guess what was a difference between MS-DOS, Win16 and Win32 systems. They were really different operating systems with different executable file formats and intended for different CPU modes (16-bit RM, 16-bit PM, 16/32-bit PM). As about Vista. It still uses the same PE (32/64-bit) file format which was developed for the NT series (the first system able to run it was Windows NT 3.1) Sorry for the tech. terms but it was my primary work within the years before I came into the adult industry :) |
Its kind of becoming a bargaining strategy for government shops or big business to threaten to move to Linux or some other platform, in a very public way.
MS usually sweeps in with some huge drastic discounts to sway them. Helps them save face, and get some publicity. |
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