Vista Beta 2 has Major Problems
WebHostingGuy writes "In a review by Gary Krackow from MSNBC who reviewed Vista Beta 2 over the last week he had very disappointing problems. "for me [it] was one of the worst operating system experiences that I've ever encountered." Built-in audio and wireless didn't work on his Levono laptop. It took four days to get the first installation."
"I tried to install on a laptop, and it didn't work."
;-)
Am I the only one who's sitting here and wondering, "What was this guy thinking?!" Laptops have so much custom hardware these days that it's a Bad Idea(TM) to attempt an OS installation from anything but restore CDs. This guy not only tried to install from new media, but he tried to install a cutting-edge operating system that isn't even out of beta!
Desktops are cheap these days. Would it kill him to keep one or two around for "kicking the tires" of new Operating Systems? His install experience probably would have been smoother, and we might have actually been able to hear some real complaints about Windows Vista.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
First off, you spelled the man's name wrong. It's Krakow, not Krackow.
... save yourself some time and just thoroughly read the Wikipedia article on it.
Secondly, as Mr. Krakow points out, it's a Beta. Do we all know the concept of that word? It's still being tested. Ironically, he loves the operating system but his main gripe seems to be ill-supported hardware drivers. Laptops are notorious for having odds n' ends hardware in them as everyone thinks their proprietary integrated devices are the best but oddly stop supporting them after that model is done selling.
Ever installed Linux in a laptop? I think you'll find that the scavenger hunt for drivers is similar to what Gary experienced. It's a bit of a pain in the ass but a big payout at the end. Give Vista the year or two and when it's released, I'm pretty certain companies will start updating their drivers to be "Vista ready." Is this Microsoft's fault? Possibly for not making certain the early Beta versions were universal and adaptive to different hardware but I don't know enough about drivers to speculate any further.
The points he makes about the actual Vista operating system sound optimistic. In fact, I didn't hear him complain at all about the functioning aspects and features.
All in all, this review was a waste of my time to read. The man spent all his time bitching about his laptop/driver problems and no time at all on analyzing what the operating system has to offer.
Perhaps the next time he reviews Lenovo Laptops and raves about them, he'll actually check if their drivers are supporting all operating systems. I don't know if you can depend on IBM to support their old laptops or expect the new makers of Lenovo to support the old hardware. Hell, even my Dell laptop has some obscure sound and wireless card models which are painful to find the right drivers for.
I don't want to spout conspiracies but I think that Mr. Krakow favors the "almighty Apple" over "evil Microsoft." You can read his other reviews which may be a bit biased. That last one is really pro-iTunes. I guess what I'm trying to say is that this man may be a tad biased
My work here is dung.
To sum it up, his first laptop didn't have updated Vista drivers, and the other two he tried both had hardware problems, so "obviously" Vista is crap. While I haven't installed Beta 2 yet, I did install the February CTP on a Dell Latitude D610 laptop, and it worked quite well, I had all my drivers, and apart from the somewhat pokey video performance, it worked great.
When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
Somehow I find that hard to believe. Windows 9x made for some pretty hellish experiences.
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
From reading TFA, it looks like he had the majority of problems because of his laptops. Hard drive dying, replace batt. Perhaps he should invest in new testing equipment. I thought the article was going to be about vista beta 2, not, why I couldn't get windows installed on my hardware. Yes, vista is supposed to support a ton of hardware, but I feel the article's title was misleading. Yes, I like linux and windows... No, I am not looking foward to Vista. 2000 and XP (and a wide range of linux) is fine for most workstations in the corp world.
The above comments are not guaranteed to make sense to anyone other than the author...
Even though Gates is quoted in the NYTimes as saying Vista will ship "on-time" (relative to the last delay), on the same day CEO Ballmer is expecting more delays even to the current January 2007 date.
When the two cheifs can't even agree, at least in PUBLIC, it doesn't bode well for the rest of the project.
Now where did I put that OS X brochure?...
I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
Beta has bugs. And here, many of the problems are with drivers (laptop drivers at that).
Release Candidates are supposed to be near release quality with few (if any bugs).
But beta is still a buggy risk. Google has really warped the definition of the word with their products.
I propably will be modded down to hell by Microsoft PR guys here as troll or something, but I would like to point out that Beta or not, drivers usually should in this stage of version. For example, I run Ubuntu Dapper betas for three months and...emmm...it works :) Almost any hardware I have trown at it simply works, or works after checking out Wiki/several Synaptic sessions.
Anyway, as IT guy I would say that such driver problems gives OS bad name, so it is rather strange that Microsoft have major problems with it. Maybe it was too early to call it beta.
user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
By far the WORST Window experience ever is Windows ME. What a waste of a release.
A beta this scruffy is not sounding that uplifting. Since Vista is due gold in October there aint that much time left to ease the quirks out. If you believe the developers at Microsoft its very time consuming to fix bugs in Windows Vista. I really hope Vista wont be as ridden with bugs as Windows XP.
Actually i dont think Microsoft will meet the October deadline if they dont let a lot of bugs slip through their fingers. Doing that would really be to shoot themselves in the foot. The last thing Microsoft needs right now is another Windows Millenium that people just ignore. If most people just hold out until the next version of windows instead it could do a serious blow to Microsofts income.
HTTP/1.1 400
I think this article is spot on the issues coming from an as imprecise term as "beta". On Google services, Beta often doesn't end up meaning anything more than "new" to end users because they're usually very solid, and can also remain in beta for years without anything even happening to them. In computer software, the same can sometimes apply, but others use "beta" with the older definition at least when developing large applications, like Microsoft. A "beta" that means "don't run this in anything like production systems".
He has these things to say when excluding his whining:
- I was given a pre-beta 2 release but will call it "Beta 2" in this article.
- I can't install this "Beta 2" on my Lenovo ThinkPad X60 laptop.
- I know beta software can be quirky.
- I couldn't run an automated upgrade from XP.
- I could run a clean install, but not all drivers are available yet, like that to my wireless card.
- A clean install will not let you keep old drivers.
- Install on Computer #2 failed because my clock battery was too old.
- Install on Computer #3 failed because my hard drive crashed early on.
- With Microsoft support help, I now have Vista running to some extent on my laptop.
Now, is this in any possible way a surprising turn of events for beta software with about a half a year left for bug fixing, polish, and catch-ups from driver developers? I really have to defend MS a bit when clueless people like him are given enough attention to appear on Slashdot.
Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
The clock is ticking.
Nonetheless, did anyone think the highlights weren't that high?
* A streamlined Start menu.
* Instant Search in every Explorer window.
* Search Pane lets you organize information by author, date, or type of document.
* Windows Sidebar puts frequently used information and tasks right on the desktop. This feature will remind OS X users of that system's Dashboard feature.
* Network Explorer puts all network connections -- like printers, other computers, and devices - into one centralized location.
* Sync Center helps users manage all their devices from one place.
* Tablet PC functionality is integrated into most versions of Windows Vista.
* Windows Media Center 11, also standard in Vista, includes live and recorded television, music, photos and videos.
* Improved Windows Media Player.
* New power management features for mobile computers to optimize battery performance.
* Windows Defender regularly scans and removes spyware and other unwanted software.
* Classic Windows games, as well as several new ones.
None of these are compelling reasons to upgrade from XP. I see minor features and re-organizations. Power management? Hmmmm... not enough. Windows Defender? Not doing it for me. I thought there were a lot of other more compelling reasons?
Ever installed Linux in a laptop? I think you'll find that the scavenger hunt for drivers is similar to what Gary experienced.
:)
Yes... yes I have. Quite a few times actually. And you know what? Over the years the install process has gotten easier and easier. On my current laptop I am now running Ubuntu Dapper which is still Beta. Everything just works out of the box, including built-in wireless with WPA. My last laptop ran Fedora then Gentoo, and once again everything just worked.
I do not know of these mythical driver problems you speak of. I think you will find installing Windows these days is more of a pain in the ass than installing Linux. I see our desktop/network guys at work re-install windows from time to time, and I always chuckle about the nastiness of a windows install... and thats with *non* Beta versions. I showed one of the guys a Ubuntu install, and he just about pee'd his pants at how easy it was!
...that mainstream "tech news" is usually done by morons. Lesson #1 that a REAL tech learns is that you never, NEVER, N E V E R install the "latest and greatest" or beta software on the latest hardware and expect it to work. Only an idiot would do that. Of course I've met a LOT of idiots who profess to being "Windows experts". No I'm not slamming all Windows users. I'm slamming the variety of Windows user who only wants the latest toys regardless of if he or she actually needs them. Living on the bleeding edge and expecting no problems is the true sign of idiocy. If you want bleeding edge, then expect to have problems. That's the way a REAL tech does it.
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
However, Lenovo laptops have very popular and generic hardware and there's nothing exotic about them.
If an officer ever threatens to taze you, say you have a pacemaker.
This is the first article about Vista I've seen that actually describes what is new; how it is different than XP.
I'm underwhelmed. From TFA:
A streamlined Start menu.
Streamlined how? They made it more like Win98?
Instant Search in every Explorer window.
So, I have to click once instead of twice to search? YAWN! TFA doesn't say whether the search itself is any better (but XP's search is so bad it would have to be)
Search Pane lets you organize information by author, date, or type of document.
If I'm getting so many results that I have to organize them, then the search still sucks. Desktop search is inherently different from internet search; on the internet, I'm looking for new information. In a desktop search, I'm looking for a particular document. I don't want to search through the results of my search to find the one document I'm looking for. If I tell it to look for "the one" I don't want every instance of every document with "the" OR "one" imbedded in the name, I want "THE ONE".
Windows Sidebar puts frequently used information and tasks right on the desktop. This feature will remind OS X users of that system's Dashboard feature.
Automatically whether I want it to or not, unlike 98's "send to" menu item that would send a shortcut to the desktop in 3 clicks? And, er, yeah I know it was an MSnbc article, but I don't think many Mac users are going to be switching to Vista.
Network Explorer puts all network connections -- like printers, other computers, and devices - into one centralized location.
As suspected, there will be a learning curve. MS can't design any software without changing where you have to look for stuff. How about putting network printers with local printers, like it is now? How is this an improvement?
Sync Center helps users manage all their devices from one place.
I'm not sure what this means, or if it's a good thing.
Tablet PC functionality is integrated into most versions of Windows Vista.
So... what?
Windows Media Center 11, also standard in Vista, includes live and recorded television, music, photos and videos.
I can get this now, with any OS, so long as I have a broadband connection. I really don't need fifteen gigs of sample files I'll never watch. When I watch a movie, it's not some random crap, I choose what to watch.
Improved Windows Media Player.
I use Winamp. WiMP phones home by default (or is one of the improvements that it doesn't?); WMA's DRM allows you to make a music file that will actually play yet is a virus. Rename it to MP3 and WiMP is teh only player that will open it. Did they fix this incredibly bad design flaw? And what could they possibly have done to make it as good as Winamp?
New power management features for mobile computers to optimize battery performance.
They fixed that XP bug. Nice. A hundred fifty bucks for a bug fix.
Windows Defender regularly scans and removes spyware and other unwanted software.
I already have spybot and three others. How is this an improvement? Wouldn't it have been better to write Vista to make it harder to catch spyware, than to bolt on an inferior product to catch this malware after the fact?
Classic Windows games, as well as several new ones.
Soo... I should upgrade to Vista so I can still play Solitaire? Huh?
I wonder why TFA doesn't say anything about the built in DRM I read about last year? Is it still in there?
I think I'll pass, at least until that program I can't live without and only runs on Vista is released. If any of you can give me some valid reasons to upgrade, I'm listening.
I tried to beta test software and I found bugs in it, and this was Microsoft software!!! Can you believe it??? I bet this would make a great news story.
Has anyone seen his video interviews on MSNBC? His really doesn't know what he is doing. He constantly mixes up terminology (i.e. megabyte and gigabyte, etc... pathetic, et al.) and writes things that don't always make logical sense. No one should quote this guy or use him as any kind of defacto judge for proper computer knowledge. It is very sad indeed that he is even quoted on Slashdot... have we lowered our standards? Oh wait... don't answer that.
Got the cheapo Winbook A210 at Microcenter, saved $250 by buying a mini-pci wireless card and antenna, slapped on an Ubuntu testing daily cd and my only issue was it tried to use my wired connection, rather than my wireless connection during the install.
After my first boot, I plugged in my WEP key, and I was off to the races. Seriously, that's all I had to configure - everything other piece of hardware worked right out of the box - off a 750MB CD no less. Vista comes on a DVD, with enough room for every driver under the sun and it couldn't detect my wireless or integrated graphics or my wired NIC.
Wu-Tang Name: Half-Cut Skeleton Get your own Wu-Na
Maybe he should install Linux instead. I'm sure the Audio drivers and WiFi drivers will work perfectly out of the box. So because they don't, Linux blows! That's some faulty logic if I ever heard it.
Nothing to see here, move along.
Keep in mind that it is Microsoft that likes to push "innovation" as something unique to Microsoft's environment. They use the term to induce fear of Open Source and they use it when comparing themselves to other competitors. It may be unfair to say Microsoft does not innovate at all. However, Microsoft is just as dependent on the environment around them for ideas as everyone else is. Much of what Microsoft does is not new and not innovation.
I do agree with your second statement. I believe that is where a lot of the Mac crowd's disdain comes from. Macs have a history of providing a truely unique and arguably superior environment to the market. Yet they were not market leaders. Little wonder Mac fans get irate.
A side note - Apple lost because IBM lost. When IBM lost control of its platform and it became a commodity hardware base, it was trouble for proprietary hardware outfits like Apple. What we're watching now is (possibly) the same market shift with software (and more specifically the OS).
And Vista has been in development for what FIVE years? Hmmmmm...
Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
Clearly you haven't run the beta.
Vista is not going to be twice as stressful as xp.
If you can run xp well you can run vista well the only extra workload seems to be with the aero stuff (which needs a compliant graphics card to do the trasparencys and such).
PC's have been far over powered for all but games for some years now I'm not sure what you think vista would be doing to need atleast a dual core.
Keep one thing always in mind: Linux ships with all device drivers. And with no BSODs. People blasted 9x because it was so much more unstable than Linux. Now people blast XP because, if we consider only the "certified" drivers, it has worse support for hardware than Linux. How difficult would it be for Microsoft to have a decent set of updated hardware drivers?
We hear all the time from the Microsoft astroturfers that Linux has poor hardware support. XP is much worse. I once mentioned a particular problem I had, with XP bluescreening when a JVC camcorder was plugged into the USB port. They told me "but that model has no certified driver!". Well, then that model of camcorder is *not* supported by XP. And if the hardware is too old, XP has no drivers for it. I know because I have an old Adaptec PCMCIA SCSI card and a Genius scanner for which I could never find XP drivers.
Now you are saying that if the hardware is very new then XP doesn't have the drivers either. I know that too, because I have a Philips wide screen LCD monitor that I could never get working perfectly in XP, the drivers supplied in the CD aren't recognized by XP. The best I could get was a squashed 1600x1024 resolution, instead of 1680x1050. Should I blame Philips for that? In Linux it took me thirty seconds to get that monitor working perfectly, why is it so hard to get it working in XP?
If it's too old it doesn't work, if it's too new it doesn't work, if it isn't certified it doesn't work... I have a Dell desktop at work, a white box desktop at home, a HP laptop. All of them are dual-boot, XP+Ubuntu. In Ubuntu all the hardware I have works perfectly, with only one exception, an HP 3570c scanner which only works in some modes. Everything else, including the Adaptec SCSI card, the Genius scanner, the Philips monitor, and the JVC camcorder work perfectly in Linux, but not at all or with BSODs in XP.