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Tom's Hardware Looks at Microsoft Vista Beta

RockClimbingFool writes "Tom's Hardware has a pretty good overview of what the current beta version of Microsoft Windows Vista has to offer. The article is written from an average user's perspective, specifically highlighting exactly which differences the average computer user can expect to see from Windows XP to Windows Vista. It covers everything from IE7, to the new Windows Aero interface, to brand new games." But if you'd like your eye candy open source and downloadable now, check out Lunapark6's review of the current version of Ubuntu Dapper, with "emphasis placed on helping someone set up the system for everyday desktop usage."

16 of 338 comments (clear)

  1. Can we leave the politics out of it? by Infernal+Device · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nice article posting, but was it necessary to shill for Ubuntu as part of the post? Advocacy is one thing, but it's really starting to get out of hand around here.

    --
    "My God...it's full of trolls!"
    1. Re:Can we leave the politics out of it? by strider44 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If it upsets you then perhaps you should start visiting a web site that's *not* run by the Open Source Technology Group.

    2. Re:Can we leave the politics out of it? by rbarreira · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But there are more appropriate sections such as "IT".

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
  2. Give me a break by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    But if you'd like your eye candy open source and downloadable now, check out Lunapark6's review of the current version of Ubuntu Dapper, with "emphasis placed on helping someone set up the system for everyday desktop usage."

    And this is relevant to the article how ... ?

    It does nothing good for the Open Source movement to desperately insert some plug at any opportunity. It just reinforces the notion that it *needs* the desperation (which may not be false, but that's another subject). See also: religious cults, Amway (or any MLM), smokers who quit, Libertarians, and the Apple Macintosh. If people just want you to Shut Up Already, you're not helping your pet movement.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  3. I understand the bias but.. by Spytap · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But if you'd like your eye candy open source and downloadable now... Now I understand the Slashdot bias, but some of us are just genuinely interested in the progression of computing; and yes, a new version of Windows qualifies. Not EVERY article needs to be an ad for Linux. Yes, I tried it, and yes it was neat. That's...well, that's pretty much it. I'm still going to use a Mac, I'm still going to dual-boot Windows when needed, and I'm still going to be interested in occasionally reading articles that don't mention Linux whenever the words "operating system" appear...

  4. Vista review? or tutorial? WTF? by yagu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well I was able to get through about 30 pages of this "review" and pretty much gave up. Hundreds of screen captures of Vista "stuff" with a caption describing said capture does not a review make.

    So, I went to the last page to work my way back for summary and recommendation info. Turns out, last page is the summary. Save yourself some time, the gist of this article is:

    Microsoft's new Vista is surprisingly entertaining. The new look of the operating system is good, and lets it outshine its Linux and Mac OS competitors. One notices repeatedly while working with this software that Microsoft scoped out its competition very carefully.

    This is a review?

  5. If this is the best... keep trying. by mad.frog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No big deal to fix though. All I had to do was edit the xorg.conf found in /etc/X11 and change the driver from nvidia to vesa.

    I stopped reading when I got to this point.

    If this is supposed to be "Linux For The Masses" and it (1) can't recognize common commodity video cards correctly, and (2) requires you to hand-edit a config file to correct the situation...

    Well, let's just say I won't be recommending it to Mom anytime soon.

    1. Re:If this is the best... keep trying. by Mr_Tulip · · Score: 5, Insightful
      To be honest, I doubt that I would ever give my mum a computer and tell her to install the OS herself.

      More likely, I'd just set it up, plug it in and show her where 'the internet' is.

    2. Re:If this is the best... keep trying. by mad.frog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      most of the stuff is in easily edited configuration files and the like, and not some oft-sketchy GUI tool

      Sigh.

      Look, I've said this before, but I'll try again (with the foreknowledge that flames and/or bad karma await):

      Editing config files is fine for the typical slashdot user, but an absolute stopping point for 99% of normal computer users.

      If you ever require the user to edit a config file by hand -- or drop to the command line, for that matter -- you have failed. (Assuming you are striving for mass-market acceptance, that is. If not, well, not, but somehow I think "mass-market" is exactly what Ubuntu is striving for.)

      If the GUI tool is "sketchy", then the problem is not to provide a config-file backdoor, but to fix the freakin' GUI tool.

      All this is a shame, really, because on the whole, Ubuntu looks like one of the most user-friendly Linux distros I've seen.

    3. Re:If this is the best... keep trying. by drsmithy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Editing config files is fine for the typical slashdot user, but an absolute stopping point for 99% of normal computer users.

      I would argue that editing text files is an atrocious form of configuration modification - outside of disaster-recovery scenarios - for everyone, regardless of skill level.

    4. Re:If this is the best... keep trying. by grcumb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "I stopped reading when I got to this point."

      Well maybe you should have started reading the paragraph at the top of the article that explains its audience and purpose. Here, I'll save you the effort of clicking the back button:

      "*Disclaimer this article was written for Linux enthusiasts. If you are coming from the Windows side and the command line seems intimidating you can accomplish all of the updates and installs from Synaptic or Adept package manager applications. Both have nice graphics and require nothing more than checking the box next to the program you want to install and then selecting the install button and you are set to go. I prefer the command line because it is faster."

      "If this is supposed to be "Linux For The Masses" and it (1) can't recognize common commodity video cards correctly, and (2) requires you to hand-edit a config file to correct the situation..."

      1. Linux is perfectly capable of recognising commodity video cards. The issue is not one of recognition, but support. Ubuntu's baseline support (i.e. drivers that ship with the OS) is a significant multiple of that available in Windows. But, just as with any operating system, not all hardware is supported equally. Driver development takes time in Linux because certain corporations have yet to dig their heads out of their borked marketing models and so driver developers have to go through a time-consuming reverse-engineering process to make them work. Linux also features a perfectly decent graphical fallback mode, which meant that the author was able to use X just fine even though the particular driver that he wanted was flaky. Windows does that, but not nearly as gracefully.
      2. Linux does not require that you hand edit a file. The author chose to hand edit the file because that's the way he prefers. Wake me up when Windows allows me to do things exactly the way I like.

      Changing video drivers is extremely simple in Ubuntu. I should know, because I boot Ubuntu from my external USB disk on about 6 different machines every week. That, incidentally, is something that you cannot even dream of doing on Windows.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
  6. Are you shitting me? by Phanatic1a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    40 pages?

    Fourty. Fucking. Pages?

    Look, Tom's hardware used to be a useful site. It's not anymore. Stop posting their paginated ad-cancer garbage until they realize that so long as they make their stuff intentionally difficult to read, people won't read it.

  7. Not Gonna Happen by foo+fighter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, I'm a tech security consultant.

    I only bring it up because it means I see about a zillion different companies and talk to their IT Directors/CIOs/Whatevers, Fortune 500 down to Dave's Community Bank-member FDIC, every week.

    They are all Microsoft shops. Yeah, they have some small-u unix boxes (various flavors of linux, bsd, solaris, or etc.) running important stuff. But the core of their network, the centralized authentication servers and groupware servers (read Active Directory and Exchange) -- which means their app servers are typically Microsoft-based even if their DB and web servers aren't -- serve the core of what they do.

    None of them have any interest in Vista. Many have recently in the past year or two finally rid themselves of the last vestiges of 9x boxes. Basically, Windows 2000 satisfied any and all needs they had. Everyone running Windows 2003/R2 had a Microsoft partner consultancy come in to "help" them with their network.

    That's not to say they're anxious to jump to other platforms. Most show at least mild interest in my choice of a 12" PowerBook G4 to travel with and would start switching if "no one ever got fired for buying Microsoft". But no one is ready to start seriously investigating a wholesale switch to a non-Microsoft OS on desktops or servers.

    There are many reasons for this.

    But the core point is that enterprises have been pretty happy with their core OS since circa 2000. Everything since then is just features added to satisfy some niche constituency.

    Vista would be dead on arrival if the PC manufacturers weren't so in bed with Microsoft that everyone who buys a PC after Xmas of 2007 had it coming to them by default. The reason OS X and Ubuntu, et al, are seeing their market share creep up is because they have finally caught up to the feature set and a bit of the mind share Microsoft had 6-7 years ago.

    The computers in my house -- including my wife and kid's -- run OS X. My computers at work run Win XP, OS X, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and Open BSD. I am familiar with Win Server 2k and 2k3, many Linux distros, and various flavors of Unix.

    Operating systems are a solved problem. The devils are in various niche details. Rational people with complete information (I heart Adam Smith) should be running OS X on the desktop and whatever they want/have to use on the server.

    Flame at will.

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
  8. Re:Not Necessary but Useful by Columcille · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you really believe all those points, then I don't think you've used Linux for very much or on sophisticated hardware. XGL support, while looking good, is buggy and immature, not all software is under the package manager and updating manually installed software can be a pain, easier to use than Windows? On what world? For many basic tasks I could agree that the ease-of-use is probably about even, but I wouldn't call Ubuntu easier. Easy to install? On this one I think Windows still remains quite easier, even if Dapper does bring with it a lot of improvements. No drivers? The kernel has come a long way, but there is still quite a bit it doesn't know. I've never installed Linux for desktop use that I didn't have to spend quite a bit of time making all the hardware work right. Ubuntu is doing a lot to make it easier for the average user to use Linux, but it's still got a long way to go before ease of use can compare to Windows.

    --
    I love my sig.
  9. Re:So... by jalefkowit · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Now why won't they work in XP? Some essential feature of XP missing?

    Congratulations, you've just discovered how all of us who run Windows 2000 have been feeling for the last few years.

    Microsoft has been holding back features from Win2000 for ages to encourage uptake of XP. Perhaps the most annoying example is their ClearType screen-font technology for LCDs; ClearType is XP-only, for reasons that I've never found particularly compelling. And the last two versions of Windows Media Player have been XP-only too. There's no reason that stuff couldn't be made to run on XP, given that XP is just 2000 with a facelift; so it's no surprise that they would pull the same act with Vista.

  10. Re:Not Necessary but Useful by this+great+guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your post seems to emphasize the negative sides of your experience with Linux. But as Columcille put it in his reply to my post, it is all a question of perspective. I would like you to look at your experience from another viewpoint, so look at my comments below...

    it took me 3 weeks of posting to forums (fora?) to get my sound card and video card working

    What happened to you here is NOT the norm in Ubuntu. For most users, Ubuntu correctly detects and configures the sound & graphic cards. It's not 100% reliable (else you wouldn't be here to complain), but you shouldn't assume it to be totally unreliable either :-) The current situation is already rather good (it works in most cases), and the Ubuntu developers are continuing their efforts to fix the remaining cases. So you should expect it to work when you install Ubuntu on another box.

    and a further week to get the laptop to connect to a projector for presentations etc

    Enabling the secondary video output is indeed a feature that often relies on chipset-specific features and there is no common API in Linux to configure this. Which explain your problems. Not a lot of work has been put into making this feature more user-friendly because only a minority of desktop users need it. I am not trying to justify the poor support for it, I am just explaining the current state of affairs. So once again please realize you belong to those 10% of users that, unfortunately, need to use something that has not yet been made user-friendly in Linux in general. The remaining 90% of Linux users don't care at all about this feature so it is not a pb for them (IOW you shouldn't expect your bad experience as something that HAS to happen to anybody trying out Linux).

    I've already done all my searches for replacements for proprietary software, but it took a long time.

    Why did it take you a long time ? You may not realize it, but your current knowledge of Windows apps is something that has taken you months/years to acquire. You seem to think that somehow, it's not normal that Linux doesn't provide you with a similar knowledge almost "instantly and magically" :-) But the truth is that, as with Windows, you have to gain this knowledge by yourself. So you shouldn't see that as an inconvenient of Linux only. This is an inconvenient present in ALL OSes.

    Also something that upsets me (and this thread proves it once again) is that EACH time people criticize Linux (and they have the right to do it since Linux is not perfect), somehow NOBODY ever points out the current huge flaws inherent to Windows environments in general. Namely: no package management system, no way to fully upgrade the system, quality of third party drivers not guaranteed, lack of innovation (Windows == one of the last OS to have been ported to AMD64), vendor lock-in, poor security track record, costly proprietary applications, forced h/w upgrades (Vista will require 512 MB of RAM), poor interoperability with other systems in enterprise environments, etc.