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Vista vs. OS X? - Rebuttal: Microsoft's Imperfect Perfection
Technology Review ^ | 02/08/2007 | TR Editors - Brad King

Posted on 02/08/2007 8:40:11 PM PST by Swordmaker

In early January, we posted a review of Vista, Microsoft's new operating system. Written by senior editor Erika Jonietz, the piece first appeared in the January/February 2007 issue of our magazine. In the piece, Jonietz described her disappointment with the company's new software--and confessed to having crossed that clearest of lines in the cultural sand: she went from being a Windows user to being a Mac user.

The piece is the most widely read story we have ever posted on our site; it continues to be viewed by thousands of people every day. Clearly, it struck a chord with a lot of our readers. In response to that reception, we're encouraging readers to share their thoughts with one another about the look and feel of Vista and Mac's OS X.

To help get a discussion started, we've asked our former Web editor Brad King to write a pro-Microsoft response to Erika's review (see below). We encourage you to read both pieces, then post your thoughts in this comment section!

Microsoft's Imperfect Perfection

Reviewers have been unexcited by Microsoft's new Vista operating system. But despite its flaws, the O/S makes for good computing.

By Brad King

After five years and $1 billion, Microsoft's Vista operating system is here. Gates and his lieutenants hailed the release of the O/S as a world-changing event, hoping that everyone from the hardened reviewer to members of the general public would fall all over themselves with praise for the feature-rich, aesthetically pleasing, and user-friendly package.

That hasn't exactly been the case.

Most reviewers have treated Vista with, at best, a shrug; at worst, Microsoft and Gates have been skewered for creating a bulky, resource-hogging Apple knockoff. Even Technology Review's senior editor, Erika Jonietz, a Microsoft user, described Vista as "terribly familiar" to any Mac OS X user and "a prime example of software bloat."

Jonietz and the countless reviewers who warned users not to purchase any of the early versions of Vista are absolutely correct. Microsoft's early software iterations are always glitchy. For the general user, upgrading to Vista (sifting through each option, optimizing the computer for one's existing hardware) can be quite maddening.

But Gates understands this. We know this because he estimated that only 5 percent of the PC market would upgrade to Vista before those people purchased a new computer.

However, the fact that most people won't upgrade to Vista until they buy a new PC isn't an indictment of the company's operating system--or even the company's development process. It's a testament to the Redmond giant's ability to change and turn with an ever-evolving PC market that requires its developers to create tools that can be used by many highly various people.

The company's software--and Microsoft is a software company that exists in a hardware-agnostic world--must be developed in such a way that it can conform to the needs of all of its hardware partners. It must power hundreds of millions of computers around the world, some for personal use, some for networking and data security, some for servers, some for gaming, and some for digital entertainment.

The only way to create a product that can serve so many purposes is to build it "broken." In that imperfection--or, rather, incompleteness--there is room for customizing, tweaking, cajoling, and hacking, all of which ultimately make for a more personalized computing experience.Dave Weinberger, in Small Pieces, Loosely Joined, argues that this type of imperfect code is precisely the reason for the innovation and expansion of the Web: "In the real world, perfection is held as an ideal we humans always disappoint; on the Web perfection just gets in the way."

I have no idea if Weinberger would approve of Microsoft's O/S development--and I certainly wouldn't want to put those words in his mouth since Microsoft's code is proprietary, which is a different matter altogether from Web protocols--but the underlying idea that creating imperfect code can be adapted by individuals is the same.

Which begs the question: if Microsoft's O/S development is actually rational, why the uproar over the not-so-impressive release of Vista?

The most obvious answer is that Apple sets the standard very high for operating systems.

It would be pointless to argue that Microsoft does a better job at developing user-friendly interfaces and plug-and-play software. Clearly, this is Apple's forte: Microsoft cherry-picks its design cues from Apple. Add to that fact Apple's total control of the hardware and software environment upon which its software runs, and there is no way that Microsoft can compete against Apple in the development of an operating system that is truly integrated with its hardware.

But then we're faced with this dilemma: if Apple's product is truly superior to Microsoft's, why do so many people still use inherently flawed software?

There are several answers, none of which offers a complete view: Windows is such a part of people's lives that they are unwilling to change systems; PCs are cheaper than Apple computers; computer games are designed for the PC; and IT professionals who oversee corporate networks are trained in the Microsoft environment.

Each of those answers is true. However, I believe there is something more basic happening, particularly as the world becomes more technologically savvy. Microsoft's operating systems leave room for improvements by individuals, by companies, by governments, and by countries. The system is set up to allow you to better optimize your computing experience to give you the results that you want.

Four years ago, when I was doing press for my book, I used an early version of the XP Media Center like a TiVo to record the news programs on which I appeared, strip off the digital-rights management, edit the clips down to bite-sized chunks, and create a DVD media kit. While I'm comfortable with technology, I'm by no means a hacker of any sort. With the assistance of Google Groups and the Hewlett-Packard online help center on my PC, I was able to do all this in less than an hour.

Today, that's hardly a revolutionary idea--using your computer to record TV and create a DVD--but four years ago, with little formal training and limited technical skill, I could build my own user experience with a PC much more easily than I could with an Apple.

Of course, it's not important that I found a way to make my PC work the way I wanted. Countless Apple-lytes can explain to me how their computer's environment was optimized to do just that. But that misses the point: computer code is meant to be broken because from that unjoined code comes personalization that no company can give me. And Microsoft understands better than Apple that broken is better than perfection.

Brad King was Technology Review's Web editor from 2004 to 2006. He is now an assistant professor of media informatics at Northern Kentucky University.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: bloatware; vista
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The only way to create a product that can serve so many purposes is to build it "broken." In that imperfection--or, rather, incompleteness--there is room for customizing, tweaking, cajoling, and hacking, all of which ultimately make for a more personalized computing experience.

I am in awe of such prescient foresight.

1 posted on 02/08/2007 8:40:12 PM PST by Swordmaker
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To: 1234; 6SJ7; Abundy; Action-America; af_vet_rr; afnamvet; Alexander Rubin; anonymous_user; ...
The Editors of Technology Review had to ASK ex-editor, Brad King, to write a favorable review of Vista after their senior editor wrote an unfavorable review and announced she was switching to Macs... This is the result... PING!

If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.

2 posted on 02/08/2007 8:44:50 PM PST by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Swordmaker
After five years and $1 billion, Microsoft's Vista operating system is here.

Most reports are saying that Microsoft spent $6.5 billion to develop Vista.

3 posted on 02/08/2007 8:52:59 PM PST by HAL9000 (Get a Mac - The Ultimate FReeping Machine)
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To: Swordmaker

It's not a bug: It's a feature!


4 posted on 02/08/2007 8:55:38 PM PST by SlowBoat407 (A living insult to islam since 1959)
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To: Swordmaker
computer code is meant to be broken because from that unjoined code comes personalization that no company can give me.

Please tell me this is satire.

5 posted on 02/08/2007 8:57:19 PM PST by SlowBoat407 (A living insult to islam since 1959)
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To: Swordmaker
The only way to create a product that can serve so many purposes is to build it "broken." In that imperfection--or, rather, incompleteness--there is room for customizing, tweaking, cajoling, and hacking, all of which ultimately make for a more personalized computing experience.

Is that from a Dilbert cartoon?

6 posted on 02/08/2007 8:58:47 PM PST by LibFreeOrDie (L'Chaim!)
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To: Swordmaker
Imperfect Perfection

LOL! I hate word game crap like this!

7 posted on 02/08/2007 9:00:31 PM PST by MrsEmmaPeel
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To: Swordmaker

This is the height of PC rationalization.


I do not see why people slur Mac lovers when such slavish devotion is published as a professional review.


Making Vista broken is part of its genius?


8 posted on 02/08/2007 9:04:08 PM PST by lonestar67 (Its time to withdraw from the War on Bush-- your side is hopelessly lost in a quagmire.)
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To: Swordmaker
"Microsoft's early software iterations are always glitchy. For the general user, upgrading to Vista (sifting through each option, optimizing the computer for one's existing hardware) can be quite maddening.

But Gates understands this....

And that's why it's the highest price, most bloated OS?

Head shaking

9 posted on 02/08/2007 9:10:26 PM PST by Covenantor
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To: Swordmaker
Most reviewers have treated Vista with, at best, a shrug; at worst, Microsoft and Gates have been skewered for creating a bulky, resource-hogging Apple knockoff.

That is Gates' history. Steal some innovator's idea, throw in the necessary bloat to make it fit on top of DOS or its successors, and introduce the results as new and innovative from MS.

MS position in the world is a convergence of external circumstances (IBM building a PC without an operating system, Gates snookering the developer of GDOS and IBM to present MSDOS, IBM getting out of the SW business, Gates stealing "windows" from Jobs, etc.) and the market share dominance that resulted.

Another happy circumstance for Gates was Xerox and AT&T deciding to abandon the PC market. A classic case of being at the right place at the right time and Gates' cleverness an guile in taking advantage of the situation.

He has not changed that business model nor has Jobs changed his history of innovation. In the future, without Jobs there will be no MS.

10 posted on 02/08/2007 9:33:05 PM PST by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all that needs to be done, needs to be done by the government.)
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To: Swordmaker
But then we're faced with this dilemma: if Apple's product is truly superior to Microsoft's, why do so many people still use inherently flawed software?

Why do people vote liberal?

11 posted on 02/08/2007 9:42:02 PM PST by IncPen (When Al Gore Finished the Internet, he invented Global Warming)
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To: Swordmaker

Wow. I thought only liberals used such contorted logic! Though, this guy could be a liberal I s'pose.


12 posted on 02/08/2007 10:34:20 PM PST by rom (A new Mac convert.)
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To: Swordmaker
I'm posting this on several of these MacPing threads for those who haven't seen it. It has to do with virtualization and the upcoming release of VMware Fusion on Mac. Parallels is working on and will probably deliver the same feature set.

The first link is to the blog for the lead developer of VMware Fusion for Mac. He is thanking the person who leaked the video of Fusion's latest beta build. Obviously, he's very proud of what the company is doing.

VMware blog: Double Dragon

And this page at YouTube is the exciting part, showing DirectX games running on the Mac desktop in windowed mode.

YouTube: 3D Graphics in VMware Fusion for Mac OS X

Not only are we going to be able to run Windows apps, we'll be able to run the DirectX games in XP and Vista. And the multimedia apps like Adobe Premiere and others will also work. VMware plans to support DirectX 9 features fully for both Vista and XP.

BTW, this is also good news for the Linux folk.

Of course, the upcoming games with DirectX 10 support are not supported. But then, Vista doesn't support the nVidia 8800 card, the only full DirectX 10 card on the market.

What excites me about this is that so many people who have held back on Mac because they don't want to reboot to Windows to play games (or run a few productivity apps) will no longer have to worry. It will "just work".

Reducing all of Microsoft's consumer and server products to just a set of virtualization clients is the killer app for these new multicore CPUs. And it will bring 99% of Windows apps straight to the Mac desktop. That includes all the Windows programs and games you already own.

No wonder Microsoft slapped a "virtualization tax" on Apple and Linux (and their own users). Yeah, like we're going to let that stop us!
13 posted on 02/09/2007 4:06:05 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: Swordmaker
And Microsoft understands better than Apple that broken is better than perfection.

So Vista's best attribute is that it's "broken"?

Muhahahahahaha!!
14 posted on 02/09/2007 4:53:20 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: George W. Bush
Not only are we going to be able to run Windows apps, we'll be able to run the DirectX games in XP and Vista.

That will help lure the gamers. What will still be missing though, is what professional developers need, the ability to run OSX itself in a virtual machine. Many Windows and Solaris programmers such as I have develop in their host O/S, but want one or more virtualized O/S's running on the same box so they can test as a user. As it stands with OSX you'd have to either use your development system to test, which isn't a good test, or have another seperate piece of Mac hardware. Hopefully one day they'll offer this, just not yet.

15 posted on 02/09/2007 5:18:16 AM PST by Golden Eagle
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To: Golden Eagle
Rumors are that Apple is going to license Leopard to run in VMs but only on Apple hardware.

Both VMware and Parallels have said their new products will be fully supporting OS X virtualization. So even if it isn't by the book with Apple's licensing, it won't be any great impediment. At least, no more than virtualizing Vista in ways that M$ says you can't.

It's just not a big issue. Everyone that wants to will be able to. Will you be able to publish it and such? Well, no. But plenty of sites are already passing around OS X that can boot on commodity PCs and there are plenty of Vista virtual machines floating around already. I think you should be discreet but you aren't really shackled by these user agreements. Generally, Microsoft and Apple are smart enough to avoid litigating these opening-the-package-means-you-accept-whatever agreements. That's because they know how dubious their prospects really are in court.
16 posted on 02/09/2007 5:46:11 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: Swordmaker
The only way to create a product that can serve so many purposes is to build it "broken." In that imperfection--or, rather, incompleteness--there is room for customizing, tweaking, cajoling, and hacking, all of which ultimately make for a more personalized computing experience.

This is like my friend Joe, an engineering student, who said the Windows-running non-Mac PC was a better computer because breaking down all the time and requiring him to learn how to fix it made him a better and more savvy computer user.
17 posted on 02/09/2007 5:51:03 AM PST by aruanan
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To: Swordmaker
Most reviewers have treated Vista with, at best, a shrug; at worst, Microsoft and Gates have been skewered for creating a bulky, resource-hogging Apple knockoff. Even Technology Review's senior editor, Erika Jonietz, a Microsoft user, described Vista as "terribly familiar" to any Mac OS X user

No surprise. Win95 was also vaguely familiar to Mac users.

18 posted on 02/09/2007 5:55:36 AM PST by al_c
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To: Swordmaker
In that imperfection--or, rather, incompleteness--there is room for customizing, tweaking, cajoling, and hacking, all of which ultimately make for a more personalized computing experience.

Perhaps M/S is providing a surrogate 'Heathkit' experience.

19 posted on 02/09/2007 6:23:33 AM PST by 6SJ7
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To: George W. Bush
t's just not a big issue.

It obviously is if you're actually a "big" shop and follow licensing legally. Hopefully they will allow it in the near future, but your recommendation to in the meantime basically ignore the license and download hackware from foreigners might cost someone their job where I work. Where lots of others work too I'm sure.

20 posted on 02/09/2007 6:26:46 AM PST by Golden Eagle
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