Posted on 10/16/2001 7:03:16 PM PDT by Maceman
OK. I've held off as long as I could, but now I REALLY need to upgrade from my 1997 Dell Dimension Desktop with Windows 95. I have decided on a desktop over a laptop, but am unsure about which WINDOWS operating system to get.
I have a home-based consulting business to Fortune-1000 type clients, which requires heavy use of the Internet and MS Office apps (Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, and some basic Access). I'm sure that before I buy the next system after this new one, I'll be heavy into video meetings and such (since I don't plan to upgrade again for at least 3-4 years).
I don't need to have any local networking, as I am a one-person shop.
Question: What are your thoughts about Windows 98 vs. Windows 2000 vs. Windows ME vs. Windows XP?
Also, what is the best thing to use for back-ups? Is it a CD-RW? Zip drive? Or is there something better? (The tape drive on my current system just died, so I don't have an easy way to make back-ups at the moment).
I really need the input, and appreciate your help. Thanks.
98 and ME are not recommended for business users. I'm finally stamping out the remnants of 9.x systems on my corporate LAN, much to my relief.
Ah. Work in IT, do you?
For backups, use Norton Ghost to create a large compressed image to a second drive if you have one. Or image it to a second partition you can create on your existing drive using Partition Magic. Otherwise just burn important files to CD regularly and use Windows XP's handy "system restore" feature for most problems.
You can also get Ghost, along with Norton AV, Disk Doctor etc bundled with Norton Systemworks Pro.
I've always wanted to try Linux but am a fraidy cat...
Here are some suggestions:
1. Use Office 2000 or higher - Office97 does work but doesn't install well on 2k. If you are keeping current with your clients, you probably need Office2000 anyways.
2. At the same time you are runing Win2k, you should be looking for an out - you can download StarOffice 6.0 and evaluate it for free. In a few months it will be out of beta, and then you can evaluate how good it is. If SO6 is good enough, you can switch to Linux.
The industrial strength product line started with Windows NT and evolved to Windows 2000. These operating systems are installed in virtually all large businesses because of advanced memory management, security and remote management. If properly installed they typically run for weeks or months without rebooting. Applications are truly protected from each other and if one dies that doesn't kill everything else. Stability is assumed.
Having said all of this, Microsoft decided to merge the product lines resulting in XP. XP will be fully released in a few days and will have a few warts on some computers, BUT compared to Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows ME, you probably wouldn't even notice. "Service Packs" are issued about once a year on MS operating systems, or more frequently if serious problems are found. You just download them from the web and you are good to go. (XP probably even automates that.) I loved Windows NT, love WIndows 2000, but XP is the only answer to your question.
Win 98 is fine, 2000 is very stable, never seen much XP ... ME stinks</P.
CDRW is awesome for backup, and has other uses too
I would suggest doing some reading at a site like zdnet.com or cnet.com. Do a search for reviews of the operating systems you're interested in.
Also check out some of the articles to get a flavor of what's going on out there. Microsoft's licensing policies are really under fire, for example. How will MS's .NET strategy affect you? Who can figure that out? You can at least get some feel for where things are going.
Me personally, I plan to wean myself from MS products. You shouldn't need a lawyer to understand your license, but that's the way it has become with MSFT. Not to mention the never-ending blue screens with W95 and W98. NT4 has been OK for me for the most part, but not being supported any more is a problem (no USB support, for example). 2000 and XP are more stable, but I don't make the buying decisions at work - at home, why pay $150+ for 2000 when I can get a good, stable, gui Linux distribution for next to nothing. The Nimda virus (aimed at MS Outlook products, I believe) got me at the office. Sitting behind firewalls and not even using the Outlook program installed on my machine no less.
I plan to move to Linux as much as I can (although I use MS at work). Corel's Office for Linux is a decent office application with file compatibility with Word and Excel (at least they say so, I haven't had to use that capability yet). I prefer Word Perfect to Word anyway, so that works out fine. Of course, where Corel is going with Linux is a mystery to me. There are also some articles out there saying the next version of Sun's StarOffice is pretty good, too. And Netscape works for me as a browser. I'm still checking out my next email client though.
If I was going to stay with MSFT, I would go with 2000. The XP licensing scheme of having to get authorization to reinstall after certain hardware configuration changes is enough to make me say "no more."
Are there any applications other than Office you will need to run that your clients use (which may be platform sensitive)?
This may be a bit of a technical answer, but I'd make sure to keep your current box on Win95 with what ever version of office you have on it and then get a system with a large amount of HD space (or two drives). You can load more than one operating system on that new box and thus more than one version of Office. (You'd choose which OS to run on Boot)
The short answer (IMO), go ahead an get XP with Office XP, too and keep the old box around for your clients who are slow to upgrade (if there is a downward compat issue).
I have 256M on a 300 Mhz PII and when surfing am always locking up because of memory overload.
I am sure XP would take more!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.