Posted on 12/13/2006 8:22:40 PM PST by Zakeet
After five years of starts, stops, executive shuffling, feature rethinks and delays, Windows Vista is finally complete. Its available to corporations already, and starting Jan. 30, its what youll get on any new PC. Its programmers, who probably havent seen their families in months, will have an especially merry Christmas this year.
So after five years, how is Windows Vista? Microsofts description, which youll soon be seeing in millions of dollars worth of advertising, is Clear, Confident, Connected. But a more truthful motto would be Looks, Locks, Lacks.
Looks
Windows Vista is beautiful. Microsoft has never taken elegance so seriously before.
Discreet eye candy is partly responsible. Windows and menus cast subtle shadows. A new typeface gives the whole affair a fresh, modern feeling. Subtle animations liven up the proceedings.
If the description so far makes Vista sound a lot like the Macintosh, well, youre right. You get the feeling that Microsofts managers put Mac OS X on an easel and told the programmers, Copy that.
Here are some of the grace notes that will remind you of similar ones on the Mac: A list of favorite PC locations appears at the left side of every Explorer window, which you can customize just by dragging folders in or out. You now expand or collapse lists of folders by clicking little flippy triangles. When youre dragging icons to copy them, a cursor badge appears that indicates how many youre moving. The Minimize, Maximize and Close buttons glow when your cursor passes over them. Theres now a keystroke (Alt+up arrow) to open the current folders parent window, the one that contains it.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
well... everyone will be buying Vista at the end of January if they buy a PC from Dell, HP, Gateway etc...
You get the feeling that Microsofts managers put Mac OS X on an easel and told the programmers, Copy that.
PING!

If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.
here comes the apple trolls... ;)
I never said it wasn't a well-seeded beta.
But if you have 2GB of main RAM, and a max of 1GB of additional RAM on the motherboard doing all the nice caching stuff, that strikes me as a marginal improvement hardly worth talking about. Multiply it by ten, and then it might be interesting.
Hey, be fair. Art students go to museums to study and copy famous paintings. None can match a Leonardo or a Renoir or a Monet. Only one in a thousand can get within 33%. But that's how they learn.
I'm all for anything that makes Windows suck less. Not because I intend to use it, but because my day is a bit nicer when I have fewer grumpy people to deal with.
...well, that was my point.
On the other hand, the world runs on MSFT. That's just the way it is, and I'm not stating a preference. If Mac was ubiquitous, had 95% penetration, and was the most useful standard for the purpose, I'd probably us it.
If windows is the backbone, organs, and muscle of the technological infrastructure of today, Mac is the designer jeans and prada bag.
Oh, and those guys who make all those really necessary video games and porn swear by macs, too. Can't forget that.
I've had the same general experience although we have a few newer computers.
LOL
LOL. Good point!
They'll be grumpier from DRM fatigue though.
My brother has an XP computer with 1G of main RAM. I was thinking that a seperate RAMdisk of 1G of flash RAM would be nice - but certainly not world-transforming. To get serious benefit, you would not even consider the 512M el cheapo unit . . .
If you have a spare U.S.B. flash drive, your PC can use it as extra main memory for a tiny speed boost.You can use a flash drive for swap space? That might be a little faster than using a hard drive, but overall it strikes me as about as useful as teats on a boar hog.
My brother's XP Pro system is for Dragon Naturally speaking, and has a fast (SATA, I believe it is) hard drive on that account. I'd consider giving him a USB flash drive for Christmas, if it'd nudge up Dragon's performance enough so's you could tell it. But if they mention this as a feature of Vista, XP Pro probably isn't smart enough to take advantage of it.Even if it isn't on the motherboard, at least a USB flash drive would be available in more than 1 GB . . .
That sounds like what you want to accellerate mass data access. Coming Real Soon Now.
boot times, and all sorts of other neat things will start happen...
Isn't that kind of like like being better than the Detroit Lions?
You forget the two rules of Windows:
I always thought that was an extremely stupid idea. The actual throughput on USB 2 to a flash drive can be about 25 MB/s read and half that for write, with a latency that in cases goes far higher than that of any modern hard drive. And compared to main memory, it's dead slow.
However, hard drive manufacturers are expecting to ship their hard drives with flash memory built in, so you get the boost of what is effectively a huge L2 cache for your hard drive over SATA speeds. I can see this feature, which is also expected for Leopard, to boost speeds quite a bit with that setup.
And Leopard (which will be out by then) is supposed to take advantage of flash too. There's also the rumor that Leopard will continually save your current working state to flash in case of a power outage, so you're instantly right where you left off when you turn the computer on again. Couple that with the "Time Machine" and you'll probably never lose any work you ever did unless your hard drive blows up (and you didn't do anything to mitigate that possibility).
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