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Is Windows Vista Ready? 'No. God, no.'

torrensmith writes "Paul Thurrott answers the question that some IT folks are asking: 'Is Windows Vista Ready?' His answer is not only no, but 'No. God, no. Today's Windows Vista builds are a study in frustration, and trust me, I use the darn thing day in and day out, and I've seen what happens when you subject yourself to it wholeheartedly. I think I've mentioned the phrase "I could hear the screams" on the SuperSite before.' He also addresses the more important question, 'When Will Microsoft figure out what's important?' and to Paul, like most IT pros, its not about when the next OS will be released, it is about having the OS work."

578 comments

  1. If even Thurrott is saying this... by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...how can Microsoft still be saying RTM by November with corporate available in December?

    How can Vista possibly be ready on time?

    1. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by timster · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, they say that, but when pressed on the issue they insist that they will definitely release on those dates, for sure, as long as it's ready. When asked whether it will be ready, the answer is that they are pretty sure. Bottom line is that nobody in the whole world can say with any certainty when Vista will actually be released.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    2. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by The+Real+Toad+King · · Score: 1
      Also, he even says in the article that
      After five years of delays, another six months isn't going to make a difference.
      They're just taking their time and answering with "soon" whenever asked about a release date, IMO.
    3. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You make the mistake of assuming that release == ready.

    4. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by noidentity · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "Bottom line is that nobody in the whole world can say with any certainty when Vista will actually be released."

      Prepeare to be amazed!

      Vista will be released at the same time as Duke Nukem Forever. Unfortunately, our sun will have run well before then and the universe's time counter will have run out of bits.

    5. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Schemat1c · · Score: 3, Funny

      How can Vista possibly be ready on time?

      They should just change the name to Microsoft Vista Forever and then they can take as long as they want.

      --

      "Nobody knows the age of the human race, but everybody agrees that it is old enough to know better." - Unknown
    6. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by SIGALRM · · Score: 1
      If even Thurrott is saying this...
      Thurrott isn't a Microsoft shill--and this isn't the first article of his which has been critical of Microsoft and Vista (his was one of the first highly skeptical, less-than-anticipatory, looks at the Longhorn Project).
      --
      Sigs cause cancer.
    7. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Khomar · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Bottom line is that nobody in the whole world can say with any certainty when Vista will actually be released.

      That is a reality of life that we all too often overlook. Nothing is certain until it happens, and even then our interpretation of it may be incorrect. Even if they were the most organized company in the world with stellar software engineering skills, Mount Rainier could erupt causing the release to be delayed (to put it mildly). No one can tell you with absolute certainty what will happen this afternoon let alone tomorrow or six months from now (except for God, but most people here don't believe in Him anyway). I dare say that even the best of us could not say with certainty the exact day that a project of this scale would be released.

      --

      I believe in de-evolution. God made the world perfect, man fell, and its been going downhill ever since!

    8. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by networkBoy · · Score: 4, Funny

      "I dare say that even the best of us could not say with certainty the exact day that a project of this scale would be released."

      While not an exact day, I feel comportable saying: before the heat death of the universe... maybe.

      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    9. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      comportable, hmmm like easy typo, seing as P and F are so friggen close to each other on the keyboard...
      sheesh I need sleep.

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    10. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It'll probably ship around that time, but I doubt it will be ready.

      It looks like MS is going to do what Apple did with OS X. They're going to get Vista "good enough" and ship that. By the end of the year massive patches will have finally made it usable.

      --
      "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    11. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 5, Informative
      Thurrott isn't a Microsoft shill

      You've got to be joking. I've traded emails with this guy, and his lack of technical knowledge is surprising. He actually argued with me at one point that Apple's Spotlight was inferior search technology because it requires plug-ins to tell it how to read third-party file formats. I mentioned that Vista's search technology wasn't powered by a goddamn crystal ball and requires the same thing to read third-party file formats. He didn't reply.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    12. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by cranktheguy · · Score: 1

      that is the most insightful thing i have read in a long time. when was any windows release "ready"?

      --
      yeah, that's about it
    13. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Fred_A · · Score: 5, Funny
      Unfortunately, our sun will have run well before then and the universe's time counter will have run out of bits.
      Isn't that what 128 bit computing is for ? So that Vista can display the current date whenever it's released ?
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    14. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by dna_(c)(tm)(r) · · Score: 1

      No one can tell you with absolute certainty what will happen this afternoon let alone tomorrow or six months from now (except for God, but most people here don't believe in Him anyway)

      Yeah, if proof of intelligent design would have been found in Vista, we all would have believed in Him. But some people here would suggest Bill didn't design it very well.

      And even Thurrot says it: 'No. God, no.'

    15. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by jcr · · Score: 5, Informative

      . He actually argued with me at one point that Apple's Spotlight was inferior search technology because it requires plug-ins to tell it how to read third-party file formats.

      He was probably echoing something that some clown from MIcrosoft sputtered in reaction to Spotlight.

      The funny thing about that is that it's Spotlight that sent MS back to the drawing board on this whole searching buiness. Their previous plan was that third party developers would have to conform their way of storing documents to work with the filesystem-as-RDMBS model, unlike the spotlight model where you write an importer that decides what metadata matters for your particular document types.

      Right after spotlight was shown, MS went out in a panic to buy something that looked like it, and they grabbed an app that did full-text indexing of mailboxes.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    16. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by larkost · · Score: 1

      Hey Dave!

      The guys I am talking to say that Microsoft will be releasing a version in December, but that it will only be to fulfill their contractual obligations to large institutions that they sold subscriptions to. They do not actually expect that code to be legitimately used. This will probably be the end of Microsoft being able to sell subscriptions like that.

    17. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Dretep · · Score: 1

      And with all the marketing money they have, they might even be able to bring the Spice Girls together to create a special Vista Forever track.

    18. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by navyjeff · · Score: 2, Funny
      (except for God, but most people here don't believe in Him anyway)

      Well I believe in God, and the only thing that scares me is Keyser Söze.

    19. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by mr1337 · · Score: 1

      128? Why must we be so optimistic?

      --
      For sale: Parachute. Used once. Never opened. Small stain.
    20. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by ViaD · · Score: 0

      What happens if it's not ready for launch 2007 or on time? Nothing... Well, I bought a new CINET Homebook 945PM. Had no choice but to take a 800 Norwegian kroner = 130.17867 U.S. dollars M;S Windows Home with the bargain. I imidiatly booted kanotix.com, that should be the most innovative GNU/Linux OS out there? But found that som Texas Instrument wireless, nor network cable card was recognized... Even some controllers of something was unknown to the Kanotix, Ubuntu, Suse, PcBSD... And nothing what so ever on thee manufacutrers sites on drivers... (Win2kXP only compatible)... I admit that i should have checked the specs forehand, but CINET might allso not be a good trademark :( Now, running Kubuntu in vmware, it all looks nice, effective and smooth. ---MS has tricked you into unconsiousuly run as root! all the time, and will continue too blast your brain with this tremendous good commercial channel Windows has become, or was intended to be... Windows wins, because thats the only OEM PC choice, and the nature of greed, patents, monopolism and general power. --- Noone cares

    21. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      What scale? Its XP with 10 million lines of bloat added.
      Do the maths. 10 million lines devided by 2,000 coders = 5,000 lines each. Thats a puny project.

    22. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Do I hear another NT coming? It sounds like the rush of 6 service packs coming! Run Away!

    23. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by pogson · · Score: 1
      If they were FLOSS, they could use the GNU Multiple Precision package and really write millenium-proof stuff...

      --
      A problem is an opportunity http://mrpogson.com
    24. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by smaddox · · Score: 1

      Wait.. are you suggesting programming in IPv6?

      .
      .
      .
      GENIUS!

    25. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by spazekaat · · Score: 1

      "...how can Microsoft still be saying RTM by November with corporate available in December?"

      Yeah, but did they say which YEAR said November and December fall in ???? :-)

    26. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by pilkul · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know if you're joking or not, but that's hardly a good way to measure the amount of work involved. On large projects it can take a week to write a single line, if that line is (say) a bugfix for an bizarre race condition emerging from the interaction of several components.

    27. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll be sure top tell my landlord the same come first of the month. The degree of pro-MS astroturfing has reached cosmic (or is that comic?) proportions. No can say when it'll be ready, Vista is the wind?

    28. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Darundal · · Score: 1

      "I dare say that even the best of us could not say with certainty the exact day that a project of this scale would be released."

      While not an exact day, I feel comportable saying: before the heat death of the universe... maybe.

      Optimist.

    29. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Oh sorry. /me turns sacasm knob to max.

      So they have had 260 race conditions? Eww. That must be some really ugly code then.
      Good thing I'm not using it.

    30. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by VlartBlart · · Score: 0

      We know what's going on - why don't they?

    31. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by ccmay · · Score: 1
      Vista will be released at the same time as Duke Nukem Forever.

      Rubbish, it's going to come out right after Copland.

      -ccm

      --
      Too much Law; not enough Order.
    32. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 1

      If I ever found myself in the situation where I was arguing with Paul Thurott over Macs versus Windows, I'd know it was the time to give up on computers forever.

    33. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by kryten_nl · · Score: 1

      ... a bugfix for an bizarre race condition emerging from the interaction of several components during booting.

      There, fixed that for you....

      --
      For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
    34. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by fireman+sam · · Score: 1

      ... But not before Duke Nukem forever

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    35. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Wolfrider · · Score: 4, Funny

      Plus, I heard that when Vista is finally ready to ship, it will arrive bundled with a FREE copy of Duke Nukem Forever!!
      :b

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    36. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Right after spotlight was shown, MS went out in a panic to buy something that looked like it, and they grabbed an app that did full-text indexing of mailboxes.


      Indeed, the "lookout" app based on the open-source Lucene -- a Java project, of all things.

    37. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      If you look at Win2000, that should have had a couple more service packs too. Now it's sp4 + 84123E66 patches and 45123 reboots. Building a slipstream is a nightmare with so many patches.

    38. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Orange+Crush · · Score: 1

      Check out AutoPatcher. Not nearly as elegant as a good slipstream, but it's great for getting an older install up to date without going through update-and-reboot-a-zillion-times hell.

    39. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      This probably doesn't relate to you, but in a lot of languages P and F are the same 'sound'. Which is why sometimes you will hear a philipino say he is from the Pilifines. Some middle Eastern languages are this way too, which is why the word Palastine is related to Philistine. A lot of words in English that use ph for the 'f' sound come from such languages.

      --
      Qxe4
    40. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? They want Visa be like Debian? Never release it, because number of open bugs are never under 500?

    41. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by sdnoob · · Score: 1

      the holiday shopping season says it will be available to (at least selected) oem's shortly after thanksgiving (usa). if not, then it doesn't really matter too much, as they missed the back to school season (that earlier versions hit) and the holidays. if they miss december 1, they might as well polish it up the best microsoft is capable of and release mid-2007 instead.

    42. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by thevoice99 · · Score: 1

      You mean Duke Nukem will come with a free copy of Vista? Yeah that sounds right.

    43. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by DrPizza · · Score: 2, Informative

      Er... Spotlight is a direct rip-off of technology that MS have shipped since the NT 4 Option Pack, and which has been part of the default OS install since Windows 2000.

      A Spotlight model where you write an importer that decides what metadata matters?

      Do you mean an Indexing Service model where you write an importer that decides what metadata is available etc.?

      An importer implementing the interface IFilter, the same interface that Vista will use?

      IFilter which has been in use for more than half a decade, and several years prior to Spotlight?

      MS have been there, done that. They wanted to move *beyond* the "Spotlight model" (that is to say, the model that they shipped long before Spotlight was ever even conceived) because they felt at the time it would afford greater flexibility and capabilities.

      At this point in time it now very much appears that this WinFS-style indexing is for one reason or another unworkable (probably the biggest issue is that it's just not all that useful), so with Vista they're sticking with the old model. But they're not fucking copying Spotlight. Spotlight *is* the copy.

    44. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by pjotrb123 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh pflease...

      --
      I liked my next sig a lot better
    45. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Prog_Burner · · Score: 1
      Mount Rainier could erupt causing the release to be delayed (to put it mildly)

        [managerspeak] What, no disaster recovery? Honestly, with a proper plan all software should be released on time! [/managerspeak]
    46. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Macthorpe · · Score: 1



      You're really in a position to complain about spelling and grammar.

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    47. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Listen+Up · · Score: 1

      You must be a business major.

      And you mispelled him, you must have held the shift key down by accident.

    48. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Prod_Deity · · Score: 1

      I was thinking the same, but GNU/Hurd instead.

    49. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by db32 · · Score: 1

      Maybe he is just smart enough to not show himself to be a fanboy all the time so people defend him saying he isn't a Microsoft shill. I have known TONS of Microsofties to openly complain about MS product XYZ not performing to their expectations...the trick I usually use to expose them is mention a linux/unix project that does what they are after in the typically simpler fashion than a MS product does it. Just add water instant fanboy is what you get. MS products have their place (yes yes, in the trashcan I know) and some of them are decent products or decent ideas...but when you couple their wholly unethical business pracices, their theivery, their FUD, and their apprent lack of desire or ability to compete with anything on a truely technical level rather than pure marketing FUD...well you start to lose faith in them being able to offer anything worthwhile that someone else can't do better with less hastle. I may change my opinion when I have to have a product key to install linux, and then have to 'activate' my linux install, and then have to have to upgrade to a more expensive linux to run server services, and then have to pay more again to add another processor, oh and then have a product key for my mail server...etc etc etc.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    50. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Just because you don't believe in Him or despite how much you may not want Him to exist that doesn't stop him from existing.
      The statement "just because you don't believe in X doesn't mean that X doesn't exist" is as logically true but practically meaningless as "just because you do believe in Y doesn't mean that Y exists."

      Neither statement tells you whether X or Y exist at all.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    51. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      filesystem-as-RDMBS
      surely you meant to say "RDBMS". what exactly is an RDMBS? i thought this was slashdot, how can someone not get that right.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    52. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      owned. well done.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    53. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by XnavxeMiyyep · · Score: 1

      They are close on the Dvorak Keyboard Layout

      --
      I put the 't' in electrical engineering.
    54. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1
      Er... Spotlight is a direct rip-off of technology that MS have shipped since the NT 4 Option Pack, and which has been part of the default OS install since Windows 2000.


      Uh, MacOS Classic also had its own indexing services back in the 90s, BEFORE Windows 2000 (ever heard of Sherlock?). The idea for Spotlight actually was modeled after the popular iTunes real-time search field, applied to the Finder.

      I know it's typical Microsoft fanboy FUD to claim Spotlight is ripped off from Microsoft, but history just doesn't support the claim.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    55. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, "owned?" apple had indexing services way back in the 90s in the old MacOS, before M$ has anything shipping. pretty much everything in windows, especially vista, can be traced back to something apple did first, from the trash can to the "File Edit View Window Help" menu layout to the phrase "cut and paste" to the keyboard shortcuts to pretty much ever other interface convention you take for granted in Windoze XP. vector-based, hardware-accelerated graphics? been there done that with Quartz way back in 2001. even Vista's filesystem layout is a 1-for-1 rip-off of OS X's filesystem layout.

      looking at your sig, it appears you're just a M$ fanboy Apple-hater. have fun waiting until 2007 to get a minor update to your six-year-old OS. in the meantime, keep on runnin' as admin with your firewall software, registry cleaners, antivirus software, antispyware software, etc. etc. etc....

      me? i like to use the GUI from the company that started consumer desktop GUIs. not the company that lamely ripped them off with a third party clone that was never as good.

    56. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IFilter which has been in use for more than half a decade, and several years prior to Spotlight?

      As opposed to the indexing service that was available back in the 90s with the old MacOS?

      Man, you are one angry Windows guy. It must suck to know that Vista is a "direct rip off" of a bunch of Apple technologies from freakin' five years ago, like Quartz, and even earlier if you count NeXTStep's Display Postscript from 1989. In fact, most of NeXT's technologies, now incorporated into OS X, have yet to be matched by Microsoft over 15 years later. Hell, using Cocoa after coming from the bloated Java rip-off that is the .NET mess is like breathing again.

      MS have been there, done that.

      ROFL. Oh, yeah? Where is it? I love how Windows fanboys always refer to Microsoft's non-existent vaporware as if it's a shipping product. The most Microsoft has done is release that crappy MSN indexing toolbar.

      You have to face facts here. Apple shipped with metadata indexing FIRST. Microsoft didn't. It doesn't matter if some "Option Pack" for NT4 had some lame indexing service that resembled Apple's Sherlock. Apple was once again first to market with a technology that Microsoft will be quietly ripping off in Vista, just as they rip off everything else about OS X (and in the online world, Google).

      WinFS was dumped because it didn't work. It was never a good idea in the first place. It was marketing fluff to get people like you excited about vaporware so you didn't jump ship to superior alternatives like OS X, which actually ships its technologies instead of promising them for half a decade.

      Have fun waiting another 12 months for Microsoft to squeeze out Vista onto a plate. Mac users already have Vista's features--since April of 2005, in fact. Microsoft has been following Apple's technical lead for over two decades. You can't change history, bub.

    57. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      Whatever, you f'in AC fag. I'm not a Windows fanboy. I'm a linux user, and before that BeOS (which had it all right years ago, while you had a single tasking POS operating system.) and if you think that vista is a minor update to xp than you really need to go read some docs. so have fun running your proprietary almost unix, almost microkernel, almost fast operating system while i run my free software without worries.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    58. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Khomar · · Score: 1

      I did not say that I did not believe in God. I, in fact, do. However, I was acknowledging that this point would not be shared by a large percentage of the slashdot population. It is my belief that God does know what is going to happen that gives me peace and security in an otherwise very insecure world.

      --

      I believe in de-evolution. God made the world perfect, man fell, and its been going downhill ever since!

    59. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by jcr · · Score: 1

      MS have been there, done that.

      No, they haven't. Read up on Spotlight's integration with the filesystem. A separate indexing app isn't the same thing, not by a long shot.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    60. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by x-caiver · · Score: 1

      Noones moderated you, so I don't know if I should take your post as being a joke or being a serious one.

      If you are being serious...While it would be great if software truly was as easy as "each dev just writes 5k lines", it just isn't. Those lines all have to work with each other, they are not 5k lines written in a vacuum all thrown together at the last minute. Many of those lines are also more complicated the "if some_counter The interaction between the various parts of the system, the complexity of individual parts of the system, and tons of other things all combine to make it much more complicated then "just a bunch of people writing a few lines."
      I have never met any computer scientist that would say writing an operating system (Windows, Linux, an RTOS, even a custom OS for an embedded processor) is a 'puny project'. No CS would be that naive.

      If you're joking... sorry for the previous paragraph ;)

    61. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by DrPizza · · Score: 1

      "ROFL. Oh, yeah? Where is it? I love how Windows fanboys always refer to Microsoft's non-existent vaporware as if it's a shipping product. The most Microsoft has done is release that crappy MSN indexing toolbar."
      What the fuck are you talking about?

      The Indexing Service has been around for ages. It's not fucking vapourware. It's real.

      "You have to face facts here. Apple shipped with metadata indexing FIRST. Microsoft didn't. It doesn't matter if some "Option Pack" for NT4 had some lame indexing service that resembled Apple's Sherlock."
      It doesn't matter that something for NT 4 did what Apple are touting as remarkable innovation in OS X nearly a decade later?

      "WinFS was dumped because it didn't work. It was never a good idea in the first place. It was marketing fluff to get people like you excited about vaporware so you didn't jump ship to superior alternatives like OS X, which actually ships its technologies instead of promising them for half a decade."
      The Spotlight technology is something that's been in Windows for years. Why would it cause anyone to jump ship?

      "Have fun waiting another 12 months for Microsoft to squeeze out Vista onto a plate. Mac users already have Vista's features--since April of 2005, in fact. Microsoft has been following Apple's technical lead for over two decades. You can't change history, bub."
      What, Apple's technical lead like pre-emptive multitasking and protected memory?

      Oh, wait.

    62. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by DrPizza · · Score: 1

      That it uses change notifications (which are for some unfathomable reason performed in kernel-mode) is neither here nor there. It does nothing that separate apps cannot do; external apps can listen for changes just as well as kernel modules.

      Windows' built-in indexing doesn't work in this way; it instead uses the NTFS usn journal. This allows it to track changes that Spotlight would miss (for example, if you dual boot, the usn journal still gets updated so the indexer still knows what needs indexing), and allows you to for example suspend indexing temporarily without having to start from scratch (because, again, the journal gets updated regardless of whether the indexer is indexing or not). Spotlight, however, has to depend on a background periodical scanning/indexing process to pick up anything that falls through the cracks (due to e.g. booting into an older OS X, connecting a removable disk to a non-10.4.x computer, disabling Spotlight)

    63. Re:If even Thurrott is saying this... by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      The really funny thing is that Apple copied ideas from the open source Beagle project when making Spotlight - Beagle was in fact Demoed over a year before Spotlight was announced

      So again, rather than MS copying ideas from Apple, its Apple and MS copying ideas from Open Source.

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
  2. To the person who asked the question... by RagingFuryBlack · · Score: 0, Troll

    I thought it was common knowledge that even at times of release, microsoft products aren't ready for consumers. What the fuck were you thinking?

    --
    Warning: Corny karma killing post above.
    1. Re:To the person who asked the question... by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      History has shown that Microsoft products aren't stable until the second service pack. That's about when I'll upgrade to this Vista crap.

    2. Re:To the person who asked the question... by rainer_d · · Score: 1
      History has shown that Microsoft products aren't stable until the second service pack. That's about when I'll upgrade to this Vista crap.

      When they dare to release in Q4, the service-packs will follow quicker than you can say "Bob".

      --
      Windows 2000 - from the guys who brought us edlin
  3. the force is strong with this one. by User+956 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think I've mentioned the phrase "I could hear the screams" on the SuperSite before.'

    Yes, it's almost as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:the force is strong with this one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      I think I've mentioned the phrase "I could hear the screams" on the SuperSite before.'
      Yes, it's almost as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.
      There, fixed it for you:
      Yes, it's almost as if millions of voices suddenly tried to cry out in terror, and were suddenly silenced by DRM.
  4. There is a vote on this in the beta program by gcnaddict · · Score: 4, Informative

    Someone initiated a vote for the Tech Beta testers to see if there will be a Beta 3. It's accessible only for techbeta, but it's here

    --
    Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
    1. Re:There is a vote on this in the beta program by Luscious868 · · Score: 0

      Even if there is no official Beta 3 release as we all know from experience the RTM version will in fact be the Beta 3. Avoid any new Microsoft Operating System until at least SP1 unless you're an early adopter who is ready and willing to deal with the inevasible bugs and security vulnerabilities or if you just a mashochist who enjoys the pain.

    2. Re:There is a vote on this in the beta program by Jugalator · · Score: 2, Informative

      From what I've seen and heard, they've already started on the RC1 branch, so I find the chances of them going back to betas by now more than slim.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:There is a vote on this in the beta program by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Or get bored of waiting and just use Linux where you dont have to wait.

  5. Wow by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 2, Funny

    Maybe he's Fair and Balanced. After all, we had all kinds of opinions about his WGA reporting.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    1. Re:wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Microsoft can box up a petrified turd

      You mean it's already available? Where do I get it?

      I don't care what it is, the only thing I know is that I need to buy it!

    2. Re:wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially if it is pre loaded!

    3. Re:wow by randomaxe · · Score: 1

      Microsoft can box up a petrified turd and people will still buy it.

      They did that already. It was called Windows ME.

    4. Re:wow by HoboMaster · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft can box up a petrified turd and people will still buy it." Yeah, it was called Windows ME.

      --
      Remember kids, tin foil doesn't work, so use LeadHat.
    5. Re:wow by FreonTrip · · Score: 1

      Hey, you can learn a lot from petrified turds. They're a treasure trove of paleoecological and paleogeographic information, and there's always the chance that you'll find evidence of parasites or microbes inside 'em. Calling Vista a coprolite might actually be too generous...

  6. Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Windows XP isnt ready as a fully featured stable product yet.

    1. Re:Vista? by rapett0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      What? Come on now. I know /. is very pro-Open Source, con-MS, but thats ridiculous. I have only had 1 actual XP crash since it came up, and that was due to a fan dying on the graphics card causing it to overheat. XP (Pro anyway, can't speak on Home), is extremely stable and it has been my primary development platform for several years. I was even co-founder and ex-pres of my Alma Mater's LUG, so I am not some MS fanboy. But the blind XP bashing really needs to stop around here, its very counter productive and not even funny anymore.

    2. Re:Vista? by IAmTheDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed - SP2 is definately what one should be running, but it's definately the best.

      For Mac fanboys (that includes me) SP2 isn't that bad, considering that Tiger is on 10.4.7 - that's like XP being on SP7.

      Getting off of the 9x kernel was the first great step, and 2000, XP, and 2003 are solid OSes. MS is right in one aspect - a whole boatload of the OS problems are caused by 3rd party drivers, hardware, and software.

      As for viruses and rootkits, etc - all OSes are hackable. MS just happens to be the OS that turns a virus into a nuke instead of a pesky BB pellet, were it written for Linux or OSX.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    3. Re:Vista? by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      XP is the most stable operating system I've seen come out of Redmond, with the exception of DOS.

      However, Linux has me spoiled. I was pissed when I discovered I couldn't use remotedesktop to log into an XP Pro box while someone else was logged in locally.

      (So was my cousin...I kicked him off in the middle of a COD2 round. :)

    4. Re:Vista? by ferrgle · · Score: 1

      What the hell??? I use Win XP on my laptop all the time and it crashes. I have at least one call a month from customers who have rebooting XP (home and pro) becuase of a hardware problem and they mostly loose their data. I admit to using GNU/Linus on servers - but its for very good reasons - It's more stable. XP isn't and from what I have seen in Vista - that isn't either. At least call a spade a spade.

    5. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I call bullshit. I have a friend that had Winblow$ XP, crashed every other day. On top of that had viruses spyware"

      - Maybe learn how to use windows? If that were truly the case, there would be far, far, far more outcry than there is. It's stable (not secure), that's all there is to it. Instability is more often caused by 3rd party drivers.

      "When will people realize that Linux is easier to use... "

      - When it becomes true.

    6. Re:Vista? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I've just downloaded Knoppix 5.0; Maybe Microsoft could be a mirror site for Knoppix until their "vista" improves?

    7. Re:Vista? by TechDogg · · Score: 1
      I admit to using GNU/Linus on servers - but its for very good reasons - It's more stable.


      GNU/Linus? I hope they didn't GPL him in the process... Imagine, you would have the right to "use" Linus as long as you mention his mom and dad.
      --
      Got MILF? It does a body good!
    8. Re:Vista? by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      How many times do your desktop icons disappear momentarily & reappear like the desktop is rebooting ?

      That's a crash.

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    9. Re:Vista? by Wooloomooloo · · Score: 0

      We had a similar problem at the place where I work. It turned out that it's possible to use Remote Desktop that way, as long as the machine is not part of a domain.

    10. Re:Vista? by CFTM · · Score: 1

      That sounds like a "mouse driver" error to me. I work with XP every day in the corporate environment. It ain't perfect but it's pretty damn stable; the only reason I've been rebooting my machines lately has been due to trying to cut back on electrical useage otherwise my XP machines need to be rebooted once every couple months.

      Tell your friend to avoid p0rn websites and XP is fine.

    11. Re:Vista? by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Blind MS bashing on /.? Never. Ok, a bit.
      Actually, the biggest problem with XP (and 2003) is that a driver problem or a program problem can escalate to a full system lockup. To me, the bigest change MS could make to the OS, which would help, would be to isolate the drives and programs enough that I can lose say the IDE controller in a SCSI based system and not end up at a BSOD (I'm actually dealing with this exact problem today on a Server 2003 R2 system). A similar problem I run into is on my laptop (A Sony Vaio). It has a fingerprint reader for logon, which is fun (if bad for security). The system is XP Pro with SP2, and all updates. However, the software for the fingerprint reader replaces GINA.DLL with a special DLL for handling login via fingerprint. That DLL is buggy and about 1 out of 10 boots and/or shutdowns, it crashes to a BSOD. Reboot, and everything is good.
      The problem is, since it causes Windows to crash out, many people see this as the OS crashing, not as a driver crashing. And in the end, they are right; the OS lost it because of a non-essential DLL crashing, the OS is just as "at fault" as the DLL. For a DLL which runs the logon process, just let it die and restart it, don't punt me to a fatal crash screen.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    12. Re:Vista? by codemaster2b · · Score: 1

      XP Professional is a good operating system, but it is not in its very nature "crash-proof". My wireless campus uses at least 3000 Dell laptops running XP Professional, and they DO crash. Mine crashes less often than most, because I take care of it. And to be honest, most of the crashes aren't the OS's fault. MacAfee, IE, and all the other 400 MB of memory-consuming programs they put on the laptops are at fault. Bad drivers are a biggy. Hardware, occasional. They are portable, after all.

      But then, a good operating system *shouldn't* crash with bad drivers, or let a rogue program with improper memory needs clog stuff up. I can crash Linux (NLD 9) in a matter of minutes with a small program (just while(fork()); and see how happy YOUR computer gets :-)). Windows crashes every couple weeks, or at least gets to where it performs better with a reboot.

      In other words, XP performs sufficiently for many people and environments. I don't mind the idiodic liscencing scheme with XP because I don't feel it - I use Enterprise Edition only. No registering. I would never recommend Home to anyone, though.

      Linux is better in many ways for several types of development work, especially embedded systems where I work. But that's another story. Glad to hear XP works for you. But since the topic was Vista anyway, I should say that as long as it is up to me, I will never own it. Or more specifically, I will never, ever LEASE my OS. That's what it really comes down to. XP was close - you can't even transfer your rights to another person, legally. I can only assume Vista will continue the tradition. Cheers.

      --
      And over there we have the labyrinth guards. One always lies, one always tells the truth, and one stabs people who ask t
    13. Re:Vista? by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      But the blind XP bashing really needs to stop around here, its very counter productive and not even funny anymore.

      Counterproductive? Oh, absolutely. Not funny anymore? Let's not be hasty. Personally, if I don't see "m$ suxors!!!1" written somewhere before I start my day, I'm in a really foul mood. I need that morning bash. It's like coffee, y'know?

    14. Re:Vista? by sid77 · · Score: 3, Funny
      I admit to using GNU/Linus on servers
      I tried GNU/Stallman on a desktop but it was too bloated :D
      ciao
    15. Re:Vista? by adwb · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It is the opinion of most of IT professionals I work with that 99% of Windows XP crashes are due to sub-par driver programming by non-Microsoft developers.

      To use customer calls as a source of evidence that Windows XP is unstable is rediculous. I would wager that 80% of Windows users are more destructive than productive if left to maintain their own systems. The fact that most people who install and use Linux systems are part of the other 20% (technical users) explains why you might not get calls about broken Linux machines.

      In response to the "GNU/Linus" servers you run: What evidence do you have that they are more stable? My experience has been if I install a package without knowing exactly how it will effect the system I'm going to have unexpected problems with stability. This is true for Windows and Linux systems alike. I'm going to go out on a limb here and use the same logic I used before: If it requires more technical knowledge to install a package on a Linux system you will get fewer unexpected problems just because Windows-based applications have wizards. Just hitting next is a tempting alternative to actually reading the installation documentation.

    16. Re:Vista? by A+Nun+Must+Cow+Herd · · Score: 2, Insightful
      considering that Tiger is on 10.4.7 - that's like XP being on SP7.
      So Apple's accomplishments count less because they put out updates more often?
    17. Re:Vista? by Khuffie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe when Linux users stop calling Microsoft Micro$soft and Windows Winblows so others can actually take them seriously.

    18. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that funny, you Winblow$ fanboyz claim it's "hardware" or "drivers" when Winblow$s crashes, but yet it's "bugs" when Linux 'Crashes'. Oh wait, Linux has never crashed so there goes your 'fanboyz' delusion. BTW, Linux is much easier to use than Winblow$. That friend of mine had to download a driver to get his NIC working. This is a card that is around for a while. Funny thing is, he didn't need to download any drivers to get Ubuntu to work properly. So yeah, it's true that Linux is easier, more stable and secure than Winblows.

    19. Re:Vista? by jozeph78 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      For Mac fanboys (that includes me) SP2 isn't that bad, considering that Tiger is on 10.4.7 - that's like XP being on SP7.

      I'm not sure how many hotfixes and patches OS X has had but my guess is that's an unfair statement. There have been countless updates that don't constitute a service pack. In fact when I install from my XP cd, I have to first get an update to the updater, then around 15 updates, then SP2, then 15 more updates. Not to mention the bi-weekly security update. On this note XP would closer to XP.2.30(+++).

      At least Mac is honest about the version of software you are running. I'm sure there's a change log for 10.4.6 -> 10.4.7 but I would be hard pressed to tell you what the hell I downloaded last week and what it did to my system short of "updating it".

      --
      Ever done a `man` on `top` ?
    20. Re:Vista? by rapidweather · · Score: 1

      I have only had 1 actual XP crash since it came up, and that was due to a fan dying on the graphics card causing it to overheat.
      I had pet hair getting into that fan, causing XP to crash. Did have another totally unuseable XP partition that I had to give up on, extremely slow. Used the Dell restoration CD to "start over" in a new partition, on a new HD. XP seems mostly fine now, except when I allowed the updates that are rather sensitive when Excel is run, other users say it locks up.
      While installing the new XP HD, I made two linux ext2 and one linux swap, so I could run my livecd linux with the "tohd" option, and also have one partition for storage.
      Put Skype directories there, so I could copy them back into /ramdisk to make phone calls using my livecd linux. (I didn't want to put Skype in the CD permanently due to the license, etc.)
      Actually, I now rarely boot up into XP on that box, others do, so I keep it.

      Overall, I am sorry to hear that Microsoft is having problems getting a new OS out the door, I have said all along that if it were not for Microsoft, we would not have all these cheap PC's around today. Computers would cost thousands more, and do less. When Bill Gates announced the rather high performance requirements for boxes running Vista, I thought to myself, "we linux folks will benefit when these boxes get tossed out by newbys and joe sixpacks that fowl them up." That's where all of my machines come from today. Given to me, cost $2400 new. One was over three grand new!
      Another is a Mac, fun to play with, most are Windows 98, but still nice X86 machines that I enjoy running livecd linux on.

      --Rapidweather

    21. Re:Vista? by jcr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Maybe learn how to use windows?

      Exactly!

      I have been telling people for years that if they must run Windows, they should run it under VMWare on Linux or *BSD. The only way to run a broken OS safely, is to run it under emulation on a working OS.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    22. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess what, he has been avoiding porn sites. As a fact, you can get spyware even without surfing the web. The only ones that make the false claim that winblow$ is stable either is lying through their teeth or they don't have anything installed.

    23. Re:Vista? by eljasbo · · Score: 1

      Microsoft actually had this functionality in a sp2 beta, but crippled it at the last minute. Check out this link for a quick fix for that problem. Works quite well. You need fast user switching enabled though, so you cant use it on a domain computer. http://sala.pri.ee/terminal-server-patch/

    24. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will you astroturfers give this one up already? You cannot convince the world that concepts like "Blue Screen of Death" were made up by opponents of Microsoft. We have pictures. By the way, the Holocost happened.

    25. Re:Vista? by Cromac · · Score: 0
      I have at least one call a month from customers who have rebooting XP (home and pro) becuase of a hardware problem and they mostly loose their data.

      Sure looks like it's Microsofts fault. Damn them for not fixing hardware problems.

    26. Re:Vista? by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      What? Come on now. I know /. is very pro-Open Source, con-MS, but thats ridiculous.

      What? Come on now. I know /. was very pro-Open Source, con-MS, but thats ridiculous.

      There, fixed that for you. Come on now, they've even changed SlashBack to Backslash. The readership has changed dramatically, as has the demographic. It's not necessarily a bad thing, they're still Open Source advocates, but, eh, there are a lot of MCSEs on this site. Then again, there are a lot more MCSEs running Linux these days too. It's culture at work.

    27. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah the Winblow$ fanboyz don't call Linux 'linsux' and open source 'open sores'. Oh wait, not only do they say it, they also created it. So then why is Micro$hit Winblow$ taken seriously?

    28. Re:Vista? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1
      I have noticed more stability in XP, at least over the 3.1-98 line (2k had comparable stability). The real issue I have with XP is that, after having switched to a Linux system running KDE 3 years ago, I find that I am limited in what I can do with XP. For example, it is not possible to have more than one person connect to an XP system at a time, and there is clearly no technical limitation the remote desktop software (since 2k3 will allow, for a fee, many users to connect). Explorer simply doesn't have support for things that are useful to support -- like the ability to edit files over an FTP connection (why has this been left out?). It's not a question of stability for me, it is a question of usefulness. I do a lot of work involving remote filesystems, and I do not usually get to choose how I will be connecting to them (usually it is either FTP or SFTP, neither of which explorer does a good job with).

      The general design of Windows is limited in scope to a very specific situation, but Microsoft has marketed Windows as a one-size-fits-all OS. It is great for use as a simple office computer, as you might find at a secretary's desk, but for anything more sophisticated I would avoid Windows as much as possible -- I certainly wouldn't use it for developing anything other than Windows applications.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    29. Re:Vista? by colmore · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think SP 2 of XP is Microsofts biggest problem right now.

      It works fine. I think a lot of the Vista re-designs and such have been to address the problem of "why would any volume license customers upgrade?" They've been having this problem with office since '97 (hence the dinosaur ads)

      It's a larger problem in closed source software : eventually if you are successful, you dominate the market with a pretty functional product, and suddenly you're your own biggest competitor. There are a number of techniques to deal with it. Breaking compatibility is a classic (cough - Apple). Arbitrarily rearranging your interface (cough - Adobe) to force training headaches on your customers is another. Microsoft has generally had the benefit of a very fast moving target platform - generic x86 hardware - to make OS upgrades really needed. But computers are more similar to themselves 5 years ago than they ever have been, and XP is a flexible enough system that its unlikely that major changes around the corner will render it suddenly unusable.

      Sure Vista will sell - nearly every new PC that is sold sells a copy of Windows, and in the long run, offices will probably have to upgrade - MS can offer cheaper service contracts or whatever. But the real question here isn't if Vista will generate sales, its if it will sell the slow but noticable drift toward Apple (just look at those laptop numbers) in the end-user market and Linux in the corporate market, and if it will have enough hard-to-reproduce features to prevent someone (google, IBM, some "anyone but microsoft" coilition) from releasing an actually functional-for-dummies desktop linux.

      One wonders what MS would be looking like if Dell etc. weren't bribed into not offering OS-less PCs. Shouldn't I be able to use the XP license I had on my old machine on the new one I buy?

      --
      In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
    30. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you die. Really. You're just so fucking stupid.

    31. Re:Vista? by Script+Cat · · Score: 1

      Are you sure?
      XP by default does a reeboot when it blue screens.
      This way if you're not looking the only sign is all the open programs are missing.
      Try checking your system logs.

    32. Re:Vista? by lordeldor · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked you are allowed to move a retail box copy of Windows to your new PC, but OEM's die with the machine. Dell sells Redhat or Suse on servers, and most of their product line without an OS . (Oddly enough the No OS option says: Microsoft add $0)

    33. Re:Vista? by TClevenger · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I've worked for several companies where the standard was to throw away all PC's when they reach the age of four. The idea was simple: in four years, PC's would be so much faster and more powerful, it would be cheaper to replace the old ones rather than repair them.

      Times have changed. An average corporate desktop bought in 2002, if they thought of the future at all, will have a Pentium 4 processor between 1.8GHz and 2.53GHz, probably 256MB to 512MB of RAM, at least a 40GB drive, a DVD-ROM or combo drive, and a Windows XP license on the lid. With $150 of parts (RAM and possibly a hard drive), these machines are more than adequate for most corporate tasks. While a few companies still toss machines at that age, regardless of condition, more and more are realizing that it's no longer necessary to toss that 2.53GHz machine, only to replace it with a 2.8GHz machine. These aren't the olden days where you threw away a 486 to upgrade to a Pentium Pro four years later.

      Vista will be the same way. While Windows 95 was a worthwhile upgrade from WFW (at least it had an integrated TCP/IP stack, better UI, 32-bit app support from the get-go and better DOS compatibility), companies are realizing that Windows XP, and even Windows 2000, are more than adequate for their needs now. (A well-known Fortune 100 company still uses Windows 2000 on all their machines. The only thing that W2K doesn't have built-in is the WiFi software--and they don't support WiFi anyway.)

      On the consumer side, the gravy train still rolls on, where people throw away perfectly good machines to get a $700 Vista PC with prettier menus and no spyware (until they get back on the web, that is.) But I think PC manufacturers (and Microsoft) better expect a large slowdown from their corporate customers for a while, until something rolls along that necessitates upgrades (and a pretty new version of Office isn't it.)

    34. Re:Vista? by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

      Otherwise insightful but:

      Dell without OS:

      http://www.dell.com/content/products/features.aspx /byo_xpsdt_700?c=us&cs=19&l=en&s=dhs

      OK not 100% there but still.

      Or if you simply screw together your own PC otherwise you can buy the retail version of XP which allows you to move your license from machine to machine.

    35. Re:Vista? by jaypaulw · · Score: 1
    36. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For Mac fanboys (that includes me) SP2 isn't that bad, considering that Tiger is on 10.4.7 - that's like XP being on SP7.

      Do you mean that Microsoft is five Service Packs behind?

    37. Re:Vista? by ViaD · · Score: 0

      Na, not that odd? Red Hat and Suse Enterprise costs money!

    38. Re:Vista? by insane_machine · · Score: 0

      I've gotten Linux to crash on me. But those were application issues or bugs. It never brought down the whole OS though. I really doubt that Ubuntu is as easy to set up with wireless card. The only way I have gotten mine(Netgear WG111) to work is with ndisrapper. Linux is not quite as easy to use for noob user as you might think. The first thing that comes to mind is: OMG where the exe! That said, Linux is much more fun to use than crappy windows.

    39. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Agreed - SP2 is definately what one should be running, but it's definately the best.
      You have mispelt "definitely" twice in a sentence such that I feel compelled to remind you of your mistake.
    40. Re:Vista? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Yup. I would consider that begining with 2000, windows had become pretty stable. However, it was too late for me. I have never been an early adopter and was always late in the hardware race. W2K and Win XP are too ressource-hungry for me. I am happy I am knowledgeable enough to configure a debian and not have to chose between security, stability and performance.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    41. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When will people realize that Linux is easier to use... "

      "- When it becomes true."

      Its already there, its called SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 10.

    42. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What? Come on now. I know /. is very pro-Open Source, con-MS, but thats ridiculous."

      Finally a bit of truth. Yes, the first 3/4 of that sentence is ridiculous. Read the topic's post with a +5 threshold and tell us how again "/. is very pro-Open Source, con-MS". And 'come on now', I just love it. Almost every post defends MS, takes shots at OSS or the article's author, or is +5 Funny off-topic. It's simply staggering how people prefer being told what they see over using their own judgment.

    43. Re:Vista? by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      Actually, they count less because they only support a very specific set of hardware. Windows has to support everything under the sun and do it well. The difference in difficulty is night and day. Frankly, OSX is child's play compared to what has to be accounted for in Windows. That said, I think Microsoft is a mediocre software shop that's trying to develop something well beyond their technical ability.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    44. Re:Vista? by ArcticFlood · · Score: 1

      Slashback still exists, and even had an Slashback in it last night.. Backslash is a new recapping section that has mixed reviews.

      --
      This is here so you don't ignore the last two lines of my posts.
    45. Re:Vista? by gamlidek · · Score: 1

      I just wish it didn't feel like an upgrade every time a new maintenance release was issued by Apple. I have to run all this stuff (repair permissions, backup data, etc) to prepare to install the update, then install the update, reboot, run all that stuff again, reboot, run all my apps to make sure they all still work... maybe I'm being too careful, but when I don't run all that stuff something ends up not working. Can't all that stuff be part of their pre- and post-update procedures or something? I'm really really lazy and hate massaging my computer all the time. Not to mention having to hunt for the page that describes exactly what's in the update and what new goodies I should expect...

      what were we talking about again? Oh yeah. Vista. I'm *so* not switching back. Ever. hugs his ibook

      /gam/

      --
      "In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice, they are not."
    46. Re:Vista? by gamlidek · · Score: 1

      Oh, don't worry. Their updates are slowly making it less and less stable. Eventually my wife will demand a new laptop... one that runs that other OS. Like the one I'm using right now which "just works". She hates me some days... but I know it's just mac-envy. Plus I'm not sure if saying "I don't have that problem on my computer" helps any.

      /gam/

      --
      "In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice, they are not."
    47. Re:Vista? by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Anyone who is running Windows XP and is not running SP2 is an idiot.

    48. Re:Vista? by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      otherwise my XP machines need to be rebooted once every couple months

      So you don't patch?

    49. Re:Vista? by JFitzsimmons · · Score: 1

      They also count less because you have to pay for things which should have been in the first release.

      --
      Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master. -Anonymous
    50. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you don't take Linux seriously because of an AC troll on Slashdot? Your analytical powers astound me!

    51. Re:Vista? by Mafia$oft · · Score: 1

      "I can crash Linux (NLD 9) in a matter of minutes with a small program (just while(fork()); and see how happy YOUR computer gets :-))."

      See "man ulimit". IOW PEBKAC or admin error. ;)
      Whether there should be restrictive default limits of process counts established in common Linux distributions is another question, though...

    52. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But beware of GNU/Balmer, it'll throw chairs at your files possibly leading to data loss.

      *rimshot*

    53. Re:Vista? by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1
      update to the updater, then around 15 updates, then SP2

      Just a note - SP2 will install those 15 updates that you had to do prior to SP2.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    54. Re:Vista? by MrSenile · · Score: 1

      "... Maybe learn how to use windows? If that were truly the case, there would be far, far, far more outcry than there is. It's stable (not secure), that's all there is to it. Instability is more often caused by 3rd party drivers..."

      --- Really? How about this. Give someone a home built system, fresh harddrive, then give them a WinXP/2000/2003 CD/DVD, then hand them a Linux (or BSD) CD/DVD, and have them install. My guess they will be frustrated with both equally, most likely moreso with Windows because they don't have the existing driver support usually on the installation CD/DVD.

      The issue is what you just labeled. 'Maybe learn how to use windows?'. When 99% of every system is sold with an OEM version of windows (where you don't have the original CD's to reinstall if you lose or corrupt the system mind you) how many people out there using it can you seriously say know how to 'use it'? Or really give a rats ass on bothering to learn?

      Yet these are the same people who piss and moan about Linux being 'evil' or 'hard to learn'. Rather funny how that works.

      Fact is, if you 'know how to make Windows work' you're still rebooting it every few weeks, if for nothing else than patching. And sorry to say, this DOES constitute down time. Linux (and most unix systems) don't need to be rebooted for the patches (barring kernel upgrades which happen in a blue moon).

      Or better yet, do (what most people do) and have windows auto-update you. Always a fun thing when a patch partially fails and you're left with an unstable system. Oh that's right, just boot in single user mode, restore previous session (if you're lucky) or maybe uninstall it and cross your fingers that things wern't overwritten, because it shows in a log exactly what files were touched with the patch so you can recover from it, right? Oh yea, it doesn't.

      For crashes? Try running multiple applications that are highly CPU intensive at the same time. Then talk to me again on how stable windows truely is.

      So sir, it is I who call bullshit.

    55. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      regarding your sig: STFU.

    56. Re:Vista? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      It has a fingerprint reader for logon, which is fun (if bad for security).

      Why is it bad? Do users get a false sense of security?

    57. Re:Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never had problems with security on XP for the whole 3 days i ran it. thats becasue it wouldnt let me online.

      it goes like so....

      buy new computer (built it my self from parts whoo!). new sound card doesnt like win98. friend pipes up, XP will suppourt it by default! so we go ok, hook us up. One cpoy of win XP later (courtesy of the state university of somewhere ive never been, thank you volume keys) we're up.

      it does indeed like the sound card now, didnt even have to configure it! cool! pile softwar onto machine time (wheres my version of winamp before it got bloated?) unhook machine from buddies network and take it home.

      get that sucker home all of a sudden it wont go online, ok cool new IP after all one release and renew later.... nothing. 4 unhelpfull wizards later (we had to run all four casue they were jsut so clear about what they did we couldnt be sure)...its still offline.

      tracking the problem manually, we find ti fast enough DCHP is on (since the machine was installed on a network and isnt on one at home) we need it off so my ISP will tell me my IP. run the handy helpfull wizard again.... it does jack.

      seach though a bunch of hidden features. hidden so idiots cant fuck up their computers, well that jsut annys peopel who know what tehy are doing. i LIKED 98se, id still be using it if not for needed to see an NT network now, on win2k now. See win98 i could LIE to it to make something work, it wouldnt tell me how it was working id tell it how to work. ill get back to that though.

      finnaly find a small hidden away greyed out check box in an option panel nested so deep im not sure how i found it. it was simple it had the caption "DHCP" and it was checked i needed it unchecked. IT WOULDNT LET ME CLICK. 98 would have let me click dammit and then blame me if it fucked up, but thats all good cause i know how to work a computer.

      3 days of searching, none of the oh so handy wizards worked, couldnt locate any other network options.

      well easy choice, XP wont let me online *toss* hello win 2k! and holy shit, 2k knows weather or not im on a network!

      XP? XP sucks dogs balls, XP basing? damn right. and before you wise asses tell me where the option im missing was and how its so easy consider. if ANYONE can be given that much trouble about one fucking check box let alone people who earn cash to fix computers you have a problem with your os.

    58. Re:Vista? by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Yes actually. I have had some who didn't realize that they should still change their password from the default. Also, a determined hacker can use Gummi Bears to fool them.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
  7. Then wait by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No point in having an OS that frustrates you when you already are using one that frustrates you less. Users don't care about release deadlines (other than some who want the latest toys ASAP). The only people who care about Vista release "deadlines" are corporate stock holders. There's no value in rushing it out if you end up angering customers who may later switch to another vendor.

    1. Re:Then wait by Biff+Stu · · Score: 1

      What other vendor? Us /.'ers can grasp of using alternatives like OSX and *nix, but what about the great unwashed masses of home users who only know windows and aren't comfortable with the concept of exploring another OS, even if OSX is ultimately easier to use. What about the great hordes of corporate Microsoft certified IT weenies? I don't see them seeking an alernate vendor.

    2. Re:Then wait by TubeSteak · · Score: 1
      There's no value in rushing it out if you end up angering customers who may later switch to another vendor.
      What other vendor?

      IT head honchos at any large corp that uses Windows have probably been factoring the XP ---> Vista upgrade path into their plans for a year or three.

      Don't forget that a lot of the corporate customers have bought into the "Microsoft Software Assurance Upgrade Program"
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Then wait by f00dif00 · · Score: 1

      Oh, yeah, what other vendor is that? Yes, I do run Ubuntu.

    4. Re:Then wait by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      What about the great hordes of corporate Microsoft certified IT weenies

      If MS drops the ball hard enough, for long enough, Apple will take these customers.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    5. Re:Then wait by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      Users don't care about release deadlines (other than some who want the latest toys ASAP). The only people who care about Vista release "deadlines" are corporate stock holders. There's no value in rushing it out if you end up angering customers who may later switch to another vendor.

      We definitely care about it at my workplace, because it's likely that the next desktop we roll out to all our users will be a Vista desktop. We're not exactly going to roll it out immediately on release, but we do want a good idea of how long the final product will have been out there and tested before we use it on a large scale ourselves.

      A 3 or 4 month delay in the Vista release probably means we'll have to factor in a 3 or 4 month delay in our own rollout schedule, just so we can have enough time to play with it properly (post-beta), check everything works, wait for other vendors to sort out their apps to fit Vista, and sort out problems with our specialised apps. This affects all kinds of things in the running of the business, and on short notice a delay can be a real annoyance. (One that we're prepared for given Microsoft's repution, but an annoyance all the same.)

    6. Re:Then wait by JonTurner · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >>What about the great hordes of corporate Microsoft certified IT weenies
      >If MS drops the ball hard enough, for long enough, Apple will take these customers.

      You don't know how true this is. Way back when, I was a Mac developer and my shop was also involved with the Windows 3.0 beta. The contrast was striking -- Microsoft reps treated us like gold -- they sent us free compilers, books, checked in to see how we were doing, offered assistance, etc. Apple, however, charged a small fortune for their compiler/development tools (MPW), we bought the multi-volume Inside Macintosh documentation out-of-pocket, paid for membership in their developer's groups, etc. The difference was like night and day. Apple acted like it could live without us, MSFT acted as though it COULDN'T live without us. Microsoft made it cheap and easy to port our software to Windows and made us want to develop for Windows.

      Flash forward to 2006. I believe the tables have largely turned. OSX is a great environment to be productive, Apple includes their fantastic XCode development environment and developer documentation with every new Mac, etc. Meanwhile, Microsoft now charges a LOT of $$ for Visual Studio Enterprise Extreme Radical 2008 .Net (and yes, I am aware it is technically possible to develop .net apps from the command line just as it's technically possible to build your own house using nothing more than an axe and a drill) and unless you wanna get screwed and pay full price next year when there's an update you'll pay to join their developer club. IMO, MSFT has gotten complacent and Apple is now wooing developers.

      The Alpha geeks I know are now carrying Macbooks and writing code on Macs. Funny what a difference a couple decades makes.

    7. Re:Then wait by kfg · · Score: 3, Funny

      it's technically possible to build your own house using nothing more than an axe and a drill. . .

      And if I've got an axe, I'll make the drill. Actually, only the axe head is the important bit to start out with, although chopping down that first hickory might go a bit slow.

      Ahhhhhhhhh, screw it. I'm just gonna build with stone and mud.

      KFG

    8. Re:Then wait by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      Well, you can use SharpDevelop to program c# apps in, worked quite well when i did it a few years ago, sure it's better now. You also got MS Visual studio Express, which is free to play with. and actually, building .net apps from the command line is no harder than building java apps from the command line, preetty much the same tools are there (even if .net is still lagging a bit), where java use ant (like make but nicer), does .net use nant, etc, etc. I'm MS fan boy, but .net is actually a nice thing, guess that's why mono picked up on it. gonna be interesting now when (if?) java goes open source and see what happens!

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    9. Re:Then wait by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      > The only people who care about Vista release "deadlines" are corporate stock holders.

      Yeah sure. It is not that hardware vendors wait for Vista since it boost their sales. It is not that people that *plan* purchases of new PCs (and systems) plan to get the best option. It is not that software vendors need to think how to manage how to cope withThe New OS (its advantages, its incompatibilities etc.). It is not like people planning *new* deployments (like in comming years) consider Vista as OS.

      There are in fact quite *some* of folks that are dependant on Windows new OS release and they need to plan their actions. I can imagine (I am free of this crap since I don't use Windows) that *some* people can be concerned with MS actions.

      But again - this is nothing new - common MS (which is near-monopoly status so they can basically do what they want) pracices. Like to (few years in advance) announce the product which will have all *current* competing products features.

    10. Re:Then wait by JonTurner · · Score: 1

      That's pretty funny.

      In my spare cycles I think about what it would take to reconstitute civilization from scratch. I mean, what if the whole of the world was reduced to the technology of Survivor Island, basically subsistance living? What would it take to get to the point of that first iron casting? The first electronic circuit? Mining, farming, production? An electric grid? An economy? Medicine?

    11. Re:Then wait by bschmitt · · Score: 1

      You do know that they offer a free version of Visual Studio http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/express/

    12. Re:Then wait by jcr · · Score: 1

      Apple, however, charged a small fortune for their compiler/development tools (MPW),

      That was an extremely small fortune. Last I recall, MPW was only a couple hundred bucks.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    13. Re:Then wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > There's no value in rushing it out if you end up angering customers
      > who may later switch to another vendor.

      What also angers customers, corporate ones, is if they are paying annually for upgrades but they never get them. The whole annual fee basis was that this would save money compared to buying each new version: 95, NT, 98, ME, 2000; as it came out. They got XP and then nothing for years.

      Once MS got the revenue assured there was no need to waste money developing new Windows, they could throw it at taking over the world of games consoles, PDAs, phones and music devices.

      Now the 3 year contracts are up for renewal they find they should have had something they could promise so as to get the next 3 years signed up. Still, once they have all new contracts secured they can put Vista on the back burner again.

    14. Re:Then wait by Mr2001 · · Score: 1
      Flash forward to 2006. I believe the tables have largely turned. OSX is a great environment to be productive, Apple includes their fantastic XCode development environment and developer documentation with every new Mac, etc.

      I gotta say, I'm not impressed with XCode. The whole "one program for designing dialogs, another for writing code" paradigm is so 1990. It's better than classic Mac development and pre-VB Windows development, but it's still stuck at the Visual C++ 1.x level, while the world has largely moved on to the Delphi/VB/VS.NET model of controls with various event handlers.

      Meanwhile, Microsoft now charges a LOT of $$ for Visual Studio Enterprise Extreme Radical 2008 .Net (and yes, I am aware it is technically possible to develop .net apps from the command line just as it's technically possible to build your own house using nothing more than an axe and a drill)

      Actually, you can use the Express versions, which are free to download and contain just about everything most people need. The biggest difference between VC#/VB/VC++ 2005 Express and Visual Studio 2005 Standard is that VS puts all the compilers together in one IDE, while the Express versions split each compiler off into its own (identical) IDE.

      and unless you wanna get screwed and pay full price next year when there's an update you'll pay to join their developer club.

      They have discounts for upgrading even if you're not an MSDN subscriber. And if you're in the right place at the right time... I got free copies of VS 2005 Professional and SQL Server 2005 (and free popcorn!) just for going to a 3-hour presentation when they were released. Even got to hear the Microsoft presenter make a few jokes at MS's expense.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    15. Re:Then wait by kfg · · Score: 5, Informative

      In my spare cycles I think about what it would take to reconstitute civilization from scratch.

      In my spare time I actually go out and try it. I've posted about some of it over the years.

      Making the jump to metal (and I'm talking copper, not iron) is the highest hurdle, even if you already know how it's done. After that it's really all downhill, but not, as most people might expect, because it makes things possible. I can make a drill that will put a hole through a block of granite with nothing but plants and a bit of sand. Metal just makes things so much faster that one man can accomplish more in a given unit of time.

      I mean, what if the whole of the world was reduced to the technology of Survivor Island, basically subsistance living?

      See that phrase up there; "even if you know how it's done"?

      It's the figuring shit out that takes the time. I guesstimate that a group of about 24 people on a reasonably resource rich land and sufficiently motivated to do so could rebuild from standing naked to pre atomics in about a decade, if they already know how shit's done (oh yeah, and if none of them have modern "issues." The big, strong lug is gonna haul stone and five foot two, eyes of blue is gonna spin and weave; and that's the way it is).

      To save technology don't save too many things, save knowledge and make the things from it. Turns out that people are really quite capable of making some amazing things from nearly nothing. Who woulda thunk it?

      Nor are we always as advanced as we think we are today. See those blue jeans you're wearing? Ancient Egyptian technology, only if he needed to the Egyptian would know how to duplicate them starting with no more tools than his bare hands. If you'll settle for linen instead of cultivated cotton all you need can be found along nearly any riverbed.

      That's actually how American pioneers went west. They didn't carry much in the way of clothing because they knew all they needed to acquire more was a riverbed and some time. We're talking fine woven linens here, not crude bearskins or something.

      The most prized possession they tossed into the wagon in Conestoga? An axe head. That first bit of worked metal is a godsend.

      KFG

    16. Re:Then wait by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      That Visual Studio example is a terrible example.

      First of all, the express editions are totally free, working versions of the IDE, nor would you even need to possibly consider getting anything higher to develop any .NET based code. C++ on the other hand could benefit from being at least the standard edition, which wont cost much. The reason the enterprise edition things cost a lot is because they include a lot of extra server and client related things, that unfortunately cost money. You're essentially paying for the bundle of things. You really don't need those high end versions either for day to day development.

    17. Re:Then wait by Rimbo · · Score: 4, Funny
      Yes, but the MPW compiler did have those groovy error messages...

      These are some of the error messages produced by Apple's MPW C compiler. These are all real. (If you must know I was bored one afternoon and decompiled the String resources for the compiler.) The compiler is 324k in size so these are just an excerpt I hope. I'm not sure where I stand on the copyright issue. Tony Cunningham

      "String literal too long (I let you have 512 characters, that's 3 more than ANSI said I should)"

      "...And the lord said, 'lo, there shall only be case or default labels inside a switch statement'"

      "a typedef name was a complete surprise to me at this point in your program"

      "'Volatile' and 'Register' are not miscible"

      "You can't modify a constant, float upstream, win an argument with the IRS, or satisfy this compiler"

      "This struct already has a perfectly good definition"

      "type in (cast) must be scalar; ANSI 3.3.4; page 39, lines 10-11 (I know you don't care, I'm just trying to annoy you)"

      "Can't cast a void type to type void (because the ANSI spec. says so, that's why)"

      "Huh ?"

      "can't go mucking with a 'void *'"

      "we already did this function"

      "This label is the target of a goto from outside of the block containing this label AND this block has an automatic variable with an initializer AND your window wasn't wide enough to read this whole error message"

      "Call me paranoid but finding '/*' inside this comment makes me suspicious"

      "Too many errors on one line (make fewer)"

      "Symbol table full - fatal heap error; please go buy a RAM upgrade from your local Apple dealer"

      "Trailing comma not permitted in enum definition. (This time I'm letting you off with a warning)"
    18. Re:Then wait by SEE · · Score: 1

      What about the great hordes of corporate Microsoft certified IT weenies
      If MS drops the ball hard enough, for long enough, Apple will take these customers.


      Even if Microsoft is still shipping XP Service Pack 2 in 2012, Apple will make only marginal corporate inroads if you have to buy a Mac to get OS X. Companies always like to have choice in hardware supplier -- whether mainframes running MVS (IBM, Amdahl, Hitachi), workstations running Unix, or personal computers running DOS/Windows. The winner if Microsoft drops the ball hard-enough-long-enough will be Linux.

      Unless, of course, Jobs licenses OS X. But given what he did to the last group of Apple OS licensors, Dell, Gateway, and the rest would demand license terms that amount to a permanent cession of control. And I don't think Jobs could bring himself to do that, unless he decided to get out of the Mac business entirely.

    19. Re:Then wait by ScuzzMonkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, but it's not just the knowledge, it's the availability of the resources.

      You get to the point where you start needing petroleum products, how easy is it going to be to get access to those oil reserves with your bootstrap technology, now that all the easy pickings are gone? Same thing with a lot of metals... the easily accessed deposits have been mined out, and the hard to get at stuff requires higher technology... which may well require the hard to get at stuff in the first place. Catch 22.

      I think what things would look like if we had to restart civilization from scratch would involve entirely different kinds of figuring shit out... it would be about reuse and recycling rather than re-implementing old technologies from whole cloth. Why spend time with wood and stone when you've got a bunch of metal already laying around? I don't think the jump to metal actually would be the hard part; I think the jump to non-petrochemical bases would be the hard part.

      Yeah, yeah, it's all off-topic, mod me down, I know.

      --
      No relation to Happy Monkey
    20. Re:Then wait by thegameiam · · Score: 1

      Insightful, thank you.

      Although I'd think the most useful bit of worked metal would actually be tongs...

      --
      Need Geek Rock? Try The Franchise!
    21. Re:Then wait by kfg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ah, but it's not just the knowledge, it's the availability of the resources.

      Note that I mentioned resources?

      You get to the point where you start needing petroleum products. . .

      Why the hell would need those? You're thinking from where you are now backwards. The first twentieth century harpsichord makers were piano makers. They tried to develop harpsichords backwards from pianos.

      They sucked.

      The harpsichord was developed forwards from the lute. When luthiers turned to harpsichord making the "secret" was rediscovered.

      Stop thinking "petroleum" and start thinking "oil" and alchohol. Hydrocarbons.

      That last sentence might come as something of a shock to those who have read some of my posts on biofuels, but we're talking a different scenario here.

      Same thing with a lot of metals... the easily accessed deposits have been mined out, and the hard to get at stuff requires higher technology...

      Now you're talking the "Mad Max" post apocolyptic scenario, which is something rather different than the Survivor Island scenario. Notice how in the movies they discovered something called "junkyards"? Axe heads and refined aluminum are "natural" resources post apolcolypse. You're boot strapping from 1890, only with 20th century manufactured stuff to do it with.

      Also bear in mind that "accessable" is often economically defined. Our mass needs define the sorts of deposits we find useful. Many, many smaller deposits are ignored completely, but completely accessable; and useful to 24 people trying to rebuild.

      KFG

    22. Re:Then wait by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      At one time, Apple was going around telling people they would have to rewrite their apps in Dylan. They were out of touch. For a long time, the best professional development tools were not made by Apple. It was Think, then Synmantec, then Metrowerks.

      They have their act together now.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    23. Re:Then wait by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      I have used a LOT of different IDEs and I actually am pretty impressed with XCode. Since I spend very, very little actual time using Interface Builder, who cares that it is a separate program? There are some things that could be better, but it is very nice, especially for a free product.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    24. Re:Then wait by kfg · · Score: 1

      Although I'd think the most useful bit of worked metal would actually be tongs...

      Green wood makes exellent tongs, even for holding crucibles. Axe, knife, spear and awl are the core tools.

      And quite frankly, if all you're interested in is living well, beyond fire about all you really need is, clay, stone, grasses (bamboo is the queen of grasses) and a bit of chemistry. Metal makes things fast, but who said you need to live fast?

      That's not to say I'd want to give up metal, very useful stuff, but I can live quite well without, and at a very advanced state of tecnology with surprisingly small amounts of the stuff. Just a few, simple tools. An axe, a knife. . .movable type. Most of what we've got is really quite a pile of superfluous crud that serves no purpose other than being there.

      The biggest thing you'd notice in your home if most of the metal went away is that . . .the lights would go out. Very useful stuff, metal, for dealing with electricity.

      But when you stop and think -- I mean really think, you might well discover that most of the things we use electricity for could be replaced by . . .community. Might even be an improvement.

      KFG

    25. Re:Then wait by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I've never understood the "but we won't have easy to mine high grade ore deposits next time" argument.

      You're right -- no high grade ore. Next time around we'll have piles of the pure stuff laying around. Okay, not iron, it'll be more or less pure iron oxide.

      Do they think metal disappears after we mine it, refine it and turn it into cars?

    26. Re:Then wait by sgtrock · · Score: 1

      Heck, if you postulate Northern Minnesota I can show you plenty of mines that still have millions of metric tons of 95+ percent pure iron in them. One of the demonstrations that they used to do (back before safety regulations made them stop) was drawing an arc bead on the wall with an arc welder. The mining companies gave up on the tunnels and switched to open pit mining when taconite was invented. It made processing and transporting iron a lot easier. Trust me, there's still plenty of iron in Minnesota. :)

    27. Re:Then wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds interesting. Is there a book, wiki, or other source that pulls together this sort of forgotten knowledge? If not, you might consider putting one together.

    28. Re:Then wait by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      There are a lots of abandoned mines around Canada that have plenty of whatever left in them too. There are places not too far from here where you can pick coal up off the ground and use it for a camp fire.

    29. Re:Then wait by dcam · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I don't understand why Microsoft charges for MSDN subscriptions. Well I do (it costst them money to produce it), but $4K (AUD) for a universal license would seem a bit steep. This is for something that people use *to increase Microsoft's market share*.

      --
      meh
    30. Re:Then wait by kfg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Is there a book, wiki, or other source that pulls together this sort of forgotten knowledge?

      Not that I've ever come across, no. I'm a bit of a strange bird, with a strange background and some strange ideas. I mean, just how many home schooled with semi-traditional Zapotec Indian physicist, luthiers who dress like an ancient Egyptian while prancing around in the forest and married an anthropologist, but eschewed academia are there?

      Let's just say our conventions are "intimate."

      The knowledge isn't exactly forgotten, but it is dispersed and somewhat incomplete. A lot of it is the result of academic research, but academicians are strange birds who often know very important things that other people don't, but get it all wrong because they don't know some simple things that everybody else does.

      And of course they typically only publish for other academicians.

      Thor Heyerdahl started changing that, but then Thor wasn't exactly held in universal high regard for having done so.

      Cable televsion has actually helped here as it's created a few knowledgable people who can smelt and pour copper for the cameras and such, but with the move to "All psychic ghost hunters for Bible secrets all the time " "science" programming I'm afraid that trend may not grow.

      Some of the knowledge is in the hands of the survivalists, who are really strange birds. Their essential problem is that they look at their information from the point of view of *Survival(tm)*. Really, all they're doing is "walking through the woods without dying," something any juvenile chipmonk can manage quite nicely (until they get eaten) and virtually all of their ancestors did. They just called it "living," without layering too much macho bullshit onto it.

      Some of the knowledge is in the hands of the Back to the Land people, who are strange birds, but at least generally nice, if slightly deluded, folk who do not understand tech at all, even the sort they use, and do not want to.

      And some of the knowledge is still being used every day by "native" peoples. They can be a bit closed and xenophobic, with good reason.

      I'm just a guy who has moved among all these groups (and several others I haven't bothered bringing up), who don't actually talk to each other all that much, at one time or another, as well as through the halls of high tech.

      The survivalists and the Back to the Land people actually hate each other's guts. The "natives" distrust the anthropologists studying them and are prone to play practical jokes on them, or even outright lie, said jokes and lies getting recorded as Truth(tm). The various natives are isolated from each other, so you've got "flint and steel cultures" and "fire piston cultures"; and the physicist/engineers never look at much beyond their blackboards, cyclotrons and computer terminals in Boston and Berkeley.

      But it's not like the information isn't out there and I'm not the only one who has pulled it a bit closer together. I've seen other people who've realized that if you've got some sticks and stones and some copper wire and magnets you've got a generator, but you'll need to know how to make a bow drill before you get it running to the point where you can run your electric drill.

      I've declined a few attempts to get me to write an autobiography, which would include some of this stuff I guess. I dodged 20/20. I've declined attempts to get me to put out a newsletter or put up a website. I obviously post a lot here, but I don't have that particular itch to scratch. In fact the idea of it makes me feel a bit "itchy."

      I'm currently being pursued a bit by a biographer and a film maker. We'll see if one of them manages to catch me or not, but I really do just like to go about my life quietly, even if I do seem to make little "splashes" here and there while I'm about it.

      And to sort of, kind of, edge this thing back full circle; sometimes a compiler and vim really is all you need for your

    31. Re:Then wait by Mr2001 · · Score: 1
      Since I spend very, very little actual time using Interface Builder, who cares that it is a separate program?

      Anyone who has to design an interface and hook code up to it. In most modern IDEs, you lay out your interface, then write handlers for each event exposed by a control that you want to handle: a button's Click event, an edit box's TextChanged event, etc. Each control has a list of properties you can change and a list of events you can handle. The IDE writes the appropriate glue code to make your event handlers run when those events occur.

      In Interface Builder, you basically just draw the interface, then pop back over to XCode and write all the code yourself.

      Furthermore, you can write your own controls in most IDEs, either simple combinations of existing controls or a brand new one written from scratch. They appear in the designer just like built in controls, drawing themselves and responding to property changes, and you can change their properties and event handlers just as if you were working with an edit box or a list box. I don't know if you can do the same in XCode... can you?

      There are some things that could be better, but it is very nice, especially for a free product.

      Well, there are a lot of good free IDEs that don't use the "design interface over here, write code over there without any help" paradigm.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    32. Re:Then wait by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      I believe that having the GUI design and the coding happen in separate applications is better because it pushes the developer to see a separation between the GUI and the application.

      The GUI is not the application. A developer with a well designed program should be able to bolt on a GUI, or HTML Forms, or AJAX, or a command line, and have the application's core code not change.

    33. Re:Then wait by Mr2001 · · Score: 1
      I believe that having the GUI design and the coding happen in separate applications is better because it pushes the developer to see a separation between the GUI and the application.

      The GUI is not the application. A developer with a well designed program should be able to bolt on a GUI, or HTML Forms, or AJAX, or a command line, and have the application's core code not change.

      Yes, there is something to be said for separating core functionality from the GUI. But the thing is, XCode forces you to do it, even if you're just writing some one-shot utility. With other IDEs, you can do it easily enough - put your core functionality in a class that doesn't touch any of the GUI, and have your separate GUI simply use the methods and properties exposed by that class in response to events - but you can also keep them together if you'd rather do that.

      And frankly, for most applications, you don't need all that separation. There are very few programs which have GUI versions, command line versions, and web versions. The most common use for that kind of separation is probably cross-platform GUI work, where you'd need to rewrite the GUI to port your app to another platform, but these days there are plenty of cross-platform GUI libraries to solve that problem.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    34. Re:Then wait by Magada · · Score: 1

      "It's the figuring shit out that takes the time."
      So take the time to document everything. "HOWTO Bootstrap to a Steam Age civilisation" should make a great read and an instant hit with the survivalist fringe. Build a wiki, maintain it, print an edited version each year. Profit!

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    35. Re:Then wait by Gleng · · Score: 1
      In my spare cycles I think about what it would take to reconstitute civilization from scratch.

      No problem. As long as you've got a Settler, you can build your first town in one turn. Just hit "B".

      --
      "Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
    36. Re:Then wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the very first step is getting enough food so that you don't have to spend your entire day on subsistence farming or hunter/gatherer lifestyle. And for that to work you have to be lucky enough to have a high energy/high yield domesticable plant (like oats, wheat, rice etc). If you don't have that you wont be reconstructing your grand society anytime soon.

      Read "Guns Germs and Steel" - will change the way you look at the world, and history.

    37. Re:Then wait by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      I mean, just how many home schooled with semi-traditional Zapotec Indian physicist, luthiers who dress like an ancient Egyptian while prancing around in the forest and married an anthropologist, but eschewed academia are there?
      42?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    38. Re:Then wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the reply. It's truly a pity that no collection exists; I would have liked to have studied such things. I guess I'll add it to my "list of things to do if I could live forever". :)

    39. Re:Then wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the big leap is in getting to a secure multi-user operating system ...

  8. Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by RonnyJ · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Of course it's not ready - it's still a beta - it hasn't even reached the first 'Release Candidate' stage.

    More importantly though, will it be ready in time? From the relevant part of the article, which of course is omitted from the Slashdot summary:

    Will it be ready in time? Actually, I think it could be.

    1. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by truthsearch · · Score: 2, Informative

      But it is in "feature freeze." Therefore if there are design issues it will probably be released with them if they don't allow it time to go through another whole cycle.

    2. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by MrFlibbs · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ah, but TFA also predicts an October release date would be followed by a steady stream of patches. The gist of the article is that several things are seriously broken and Microsoft should not ship Vista until it's ready, whenever that is. He admits he has no idea if that's this October or August 2007.

      The article also raises the question as to why enterprise users are getting Vista first since they typically are slow to update. Perhaps because they're already paying for upgrades? TFA doesn't pose an answer -- the author just says he doubts very many will attempt an upgrade until SP1 and so why not give it to the consumers first.

    3. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by laffer1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Here's a possible answer. Many of the new consumer level features aren't present in corporate versions of Vista. Microsoft might be trying to get the core os done and then give them a little more time with the end user fluff. It might also be a shakedown cruise. IT people will most likely start testing vista right away for later deployment and find bugs in the process. I suspect a very quick SP1 release within 3-5 months of corporate customers getting it. Remember NT4 had a service pack immediately. Its also possible they will pull their old games and release a "b" release and later do a special edition or some crap. Windows Server R2 reminds me of Windows 98 SE. It allows them to EOL buggy software faster after they've got a service pack or two under their belts. It also is a great revenue source as people re-buy what they already have. Ballmer is calling the shots now and he's a greedy guy.

    4. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by RonnyJ · · Score: 1
      Ah, but TFA also predicts an October release date would be followed by a steady stream of patches.

      The article only predicts those if they "arbitrarily hit their latest release promise" - i.e. if it's not ready in time, but Microsoft ship it anyway. As he says, he thinks it "could be" ready.

    5. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by dan828 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The answer (put forth by a MS guy at a seminar I attended), is that many enterprise users bought software assurance contracts with the understanding that they'd get Vista as part of the contract, and a good portion of those contracts will be ending this December. No Vista this year would mean some bad PR at the enterprise level.

      And yes, this is entirely hearsay.

    6. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      More importantly though, will it be ready in time?

      That's the freakin' point of his article, Sherlock.

      All Thurrott says is that it's possible, if Microsoft is able to fix all the current bugs. But it's been stated many times that this product is the buggiest of any Windows beta ever this late into the cycle. He says he could be proven wrong tomorrow.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    7. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Of course it's not ready - it's still a beta - it hasn't even reached the first 'Release Candidate' stage.

      Microsoft declared RC1 a few builds back.
    8. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by grcumb · · Score: 1
      'But it is in "feature freeze."'

      For everyone else in the software world, 'beta' means 'feature freeze'. Beta is defined as the time when an application is feature complete, but whose features are still unstable, making the software unsuitable for production environments. This, by the way, is why so much FOSS spends literally years reaching the 1.0 mark. The software may (or may not) be stable, but because it's not feature-complete, it's not worthy of a 1.0 designation.

      Commercial pressures have forced some products to move away from this, so that pre-beta software is released as beta, actual beta software gets an arbitrary version number (remember the version wars of the mid 90's?), and release software gets called a 'service pack'. It's kind of sad that it has to be this way, but marketing is a cross we all have to bear.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    9. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by pogson · · Score: 1

      cp XP Vista

      --
      A problem is an opportunity http://mrpogson.com
    10. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article also raises the question as to why enterprise users are getting Vista first since they typically are slow to update.
      If I had a product that wasn't fully ready for prime time, of course I would ship it to the slowest adopters first.

    11. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by Matt+Perry · · Score: 2, Insightful
      More importantly though, will it be ready in time?
      In time for what?
      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    12. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they release it in Novemeber, it will take a couple of moths to get it inside the boxes on the store shelves or onto the hard drives of delivered computers.

    13. Re:Of course it's not ready - it's still beta. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      I don't know that I'd agree with that.

      More often, a major version number increment (1.0, 2.0, 3.0...) means that a new *round* of features have been added and are stable. You don't have to have every feature the product will ever need to be able to call it 1.0. Otherwise it might as well be version infinity, there'd be no need for anything after that.

  9. Fix-it man. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "When Will Microsoft figure out what's important?' and to Paul, like most IT pros, its not about when the next OS will be released, it is about having the OS work.""

    Maybe we should give him the same advice some get when open source is criticized? If it's good enough for us, then it's good enough for him?

  10. Is it ready? no. so? by Klaidas · · Score: 1

    It's not ready, so? Is it anything new about it?
    First thing, it's still beta. And if open source/free software betas are almost 100% usable, that doesn't mean that Windows are like that too.
    The second thing, I don't think they can do so much in such time *personal option*
    Well, we just have to wait and see how it turns out

    1. Re:Is it ready? no. so? by peragrin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is a major difference betwen a F/OSS beta and a MSFT beta.

      F/OSS beta's are basically feature complete and are being error tested.

      MSFT beta's don't even have the full feature set yet and are being error tested while new or rewritten componets are being set into place for the first time.

      I have been using Firefox since the 0.3 days of Phoneix. Since that time it has maybe crashed 2 dozen times. Can you say the same about ANY MSFT product?

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    2. Re:Is it ready? no. so? by ScaryFroMan · · Score: 1

      XP? It's only crashed on me once, and that's because of a shitty driver when I was doing a reinstall over a new hard drive.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, backwards is everything.
    3. Re:Is it ready? no. so? by suggsjc · · Score: 2, Funny

      Thats great for you, but how many times has solitare crashed for you? Well if your answer is like most all XP/Windows users, then ***that*** is what is defined as stable for them. AND, solitare has been redesigned! A (if not THE) reason for people to upgrade!

      --
      When I have a kid, I want to put him in one of those strollers for twins and then run around the mall looking frantic.
    4. Re:Is it ready? no. so? by bmajik · · Score: 1

      F/OSS beta's are basically feature complete and are being error tested.

      That's a bit disingenuous. Don't you suppose it depends on the F/OSS project in question? And isn't "feature complete" in many F/OSS projects "what the developer felt like writing", not "what should something do?"

      I have been using Firefox since the 0.3 days of Phoneix. Since that time it has maybe crashed 2 dozen times. Can you say the same about ANY MSFT product?


      You and I have had different experiences. I started using Firefox after it got pretty famous and allegedly stable. It has crashed more than IE6 ever did.. to the point that it would die once every day or two. I decided I wanted something stable and reasonable, but I missed tabs, and I didn't want to mess with Avant or whatever the IE6+tabs is.

      So I started running IE7. First it was nightly builds on my XPSp2 machine. Then it was the IE7 that was built with Vista on my vista machine. At home on my home XP machine, i am also running IE7 beta.

      The only time i use Firefox is when a site has browser version checking code in it that doesn't know what to do with IE7. I don't think IE7 has crashed _once_ in all of the crazy different builds I've used. It is much more likely to fail by doing a 100% cpu loop that it never returns from, but even that is rare. It still has some cpu-hogging situations but it usually gets out of them after 5-10s.

      All of the browsing I do on my main machines - home or work - is on IE7. I like the tab features (which does offer one or two innovations over FF tabs), I like the RSS integration, and I like the speed/stability.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  11. FTA by Reverend528 · · Score: 5, Funny
    In other words, Microsoft should have simply pulled an Id Software and said they'd ship Windows Vista when it was ready. Period.

    I believe that is called "pulling a 3d Realms".

    1. Re:FTA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was iD software that originally coined the term.

    2. Re:FTA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The name should be changed to "Windows Vista Forever"

    3. Re:FTA by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1
      It was iD software that originally coined the term.
      Actually, the honor goes to Mr. Paul Williams, but since you've likely never heard of him, or the software that he produced, well, I guess you'll just have to go on believing it was iD. ;)
    4. Re:FTA by poulbailey · · Score: 1

      > I believe that is called "pulling a 3d Realms".

      Why do you say that (other than to try to appear funny)? Microsoft seems to have an actual tangible product (however unstable it might be).

  12. Stating the obvious. by Chaffar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well if Vista was half-ready it would already be on the shelves. The holes can always be patched later... (Not flaming Microsoft particularly, but software developers in general :)

    1. Re:Stating the obvious. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Software developers are usually the ones who want to make sure software is as bug free as possible before it is released. The problem lies with the pointy haired management who insist that deadlines be met at all costs, and usually it is the comsumer who pays the costs.

    2. Re:Stating the obvious. by garylian · · Score: 1

      It's called "Software Anti-Piracy Protection".

      Nobody ships clean retail software nowadays. They ship it with various critical bugs still in the program, to help kill the clone-CD/DVD pirates.

      What they are really shipping are demos. You purchase the CD/DVD, play for a few hours, and encounter a hideous bug that either makes gameplay really poor, or outright crashes the application. Then, you patch it, and voila, fixed!

      Game manufacturers have been doing this for years, I am convinced. There is no way many of these games had NOBODY encounter some of the bugs that games get shipped with. Some of them have been so blatant it isn't even funny.

      MicroSoft is just one in a long string of companies that are figuring this out. It is also one of the reasons that MMOs are so popular for developers. A long string of continual revenue from montly fees, and customers HAVE to buy the game to get the CD code.

    3. Re:Stating the obvious. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1
      Software developers are usually the ones who want to make sure software is as bug free as possible before it is released. The problem lies with the pointy haired management who insist that deadlines be met at all costs...
      "Pointy Haired Management" is an out-dated cliche which shows ignorence of basic business concepts. Without "Pointy Haired Management", "Overweight Basement Dwelling Geeks" would not have jobs because there would be no marketplace for products and services.
      ...and usually it is the comsumer who pays the costs.
      Also, there is very little relationship these days between the retail cost of commercial software solutions and the costs of development.
      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
  13. Remember Windows 95? by MSFanBoi2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I do.

    People said the same thing for years before and after its release about it's compatbility with Windows 3.x software, about how un-behaved the beta's were, but that didn't stop it from becoming the most popular OS in the world for quite a few years...

    1. Re:Remember Windows 95? by QuantumFTL · · Score: 1

      Yes, but Win95 was lightyears ahead of 3.1, but I have yet to see a *single* thing in Vista that's "revolutionary."

    2. Re:Remember Windows 95? by XCondE · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Duh. Do you also remember the alternatives? Hm.. OS2 was quite alright actually; if only it could print. :)

    3. Re:Remember Windows 95? by Azarael · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That may be the case, but what 95 brought to the table beyond 3.x was revolutionary. I don't think that you can say the same about XP and Vista. When Vista is deemed ready for release, it better have most of the quirks ironed out, otherwise we'll be seeing the slowest adoption rate of any MS OS (disregarding ME) in the last decade.

    4. Re:Remember Windows 95? by MSFanBoi2 · · Score: 1

      You really haven't used much of Vista have you?

    5. Re:Remember Windows 95? by fermion · · Score: 1
      By the same argument, MS Windows 3.11 was very popular for a number of years. Up until last year I knew a number of machines that was running MS Windows 98.

      The place where your argument fails is that (1) a computer comes with whatever OS is currently available and (2) when a previous version is nearly useless, the next version is extremely welcomed. MS Vista will be popular because next year it will be on every new PC. But the popularity won't be like 95 or XP because it is not following a basically flawed line of products, such as MS WIndows 3.11, 98, ME. Recall that one reason that 95 was popular for so long was not that it was a good OS, it had many problems, but those problems were not fixed until XP completed the integration that MS began with 2000. In fact many of us who were more concerned about getting work done, and not games, left 95 in favor of NT, and in many cases did not upgrade until XP.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    6. Re:Remember Windows 95? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      The difference is that Vista is buggier than any other Windows release this late in the game.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    7. Re:Remember Windows 95? by MSFanBoi2 · · Score: 1

      Gee, maybe its because IT IS STILL IN BETA?

      Good god...

    8. Re:Remember Windows 95? by schmiddy · · Score: 1
      but that didn't stop [Win 95] from becoming the most popular OS in the world for quite a few years...

      Ah, but the difference here is that Windows is already by far the most popular OS in the world. Depending on what stats you believe, they've got 90-95% locked in already. That doesn't leave much room for conversion with their shiny new OS. From here on, the only direction Windows marketshare can go is down.

      And yes, I realize that they could expand the number of installs without increasing percentage marketshare, with third world people etc. getting new computers for the first time. I don't think this is likely, especially with the $100 laptop taking off, and foreign governments being more Linux-friendly.

      --
      http://cltracker.net -- powerful craigslist multi-city search
    9. Re:Remember Windows 95? by TallDad · · Score: 1

      Yes, and I remember having to support apps there. Scars still visible. Consequently, I stayed with OS/2. In fact, I still use OS/2 in it's new incarnation, even though I am no longer doing a lot of support. OS/2 - declared dead each year of its life, and still going strong. PS: If I wasn't so tired I would have dictated this reply using the original VoiceType Dictation software which was released 10 years ago. So puh-lease spare me all the beta tester excitement over this "real kewl stuff - talkin' tuh yuh compootuh!" Windows - still trying to be OS/2!! John from Australia

  14. Cry, agnostic version by ch-chuck · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    No, God, if there is a God, No!

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  15. Why does he use it then? by 10Ghz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, OK, so it's still in beta. But it seems to me that he is having problems with Windows that are not solely restricted to Vista. Why does he then put up with it? Why not simply say "Enough!", and try Linux or Mac instead? Surely the alternatives couldn't be any worse? Is it simply because he earns money by writing about Windows, so he HAS to put up with it, so he could pay the bills?

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    1. Re:Why does he use it then? by MSFanBoi2 · · Score: 1

      Maybe he would have more problems with Linux or Macs?

      Didn't apple take a few releases of 10.x to provide just what they promised in 10.0? Didn't Apple just release a massive update for security updates?

    2. Re:Why does he use it then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why not simply say "Enough!", and try Linux or Mac instead?

      I did when XP came out. And if my suspicions are correct, each time this happens Linux gets a boost. After all, download it, burn it and put it on the PC Vista does not support. The best part, many releases of Linux have long since become quite stable. Or a least you will not have to endure 2-3 years of insatiable patching to keep it going.

      My biggest problem is finding a manufactured PC I like that I don't have to pay the Microsoft tax. Although I have used VMware for XP (had the license, what the heck) I haven't powered up XP on that machine for over a year now. I don't plan on using Vista nor XP at home in the future.

    3. Re:Why does he use it then? by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can't think of anything that Apple's officially announced for any version of OS X that they later pulled. As for security, yes, they release security updates. And they even release them when they're ready rather than waiting for the second Tuesday of the month...

      --
      This guy's the limit!
    4. Re:Why does he use it then? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Didn't apple take a few releases of 10.x to provide just what they promised in 10.0?

      Have you noticed that not even Vista will have that database filesystem that Microsoft has been promising since Windows 95 or NT 4 or whatever?

      Didn't Apple just release a massive update for security updates?

      Hasn't Microsoft released massive security updates from time to time?

      Reasons why he might have more problems with Linux or Mac OS might exist, but these aren't them.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Why does he use it then? by kfg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Surely the alternatives couldn't be any worse? Is it simply because he earns money by writing about Windows, so he HAS to put up with it, so he could pay the bills?

      Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm, yes? You expect he'd be running Fedora to put Windows through its paces?

      KFG

    6. Re:Why does he use it then? by Jugalator · · Score: 1
      Why not simply say "Enough!", and try Linux or Mac instead?

      He has tried out Mac and its OS X.

      Part of his conclusion:
      If you can look past Apple's corporate bravado, you'll see that Tiger is one impressive cat. And unlike Longhorn, it's shipping any day now. What a concept.
      ;-)

      I'm not sure why he sticks (or does he? maybe he do run OS X on some computer; I'm not sure) with Windows, but I know he has "friends" at Microsoft, whatever the hell that means. Financial or real ones? ;-)
      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    7. Re:Why does he use it then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the Quartz 2d Extreme that was heavily hyped but ended up being disabled in Tiger?

    8. Re:Why does he use it then? by Fancia · · Score: 1
      How about the Quartz 2d Extreme that was heavily hyped but ended up being disabled in Tiger?

      Quartz 2D Extreme was never heavily hyped. It was only ever briefly mentioned as a feature at one developers' conference.

      That said, I was disappointed as well to see that it didn't make it into Tiger in finished form, but hardware didn't generally seem to have been up to it, anyway.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    9. Re:Why does he use it then? by MSFanBoi2 · · Score: 1

      Care to remember Copland which began development in 1989 (ok discussions around it anyways), released DR0 in August of 1996, and then freaked out in a way never seen before and had to go BUY an OS to keep Apple afloat.

      Then we can get into OS X shall we? March 24, 2001 10.0 was released and was quickly found to be quite wanting by just about everyone on the planet. Puma hit about 6 months later and fixed some of the issues, but still didn't bring OS X up to what Apple promised for the release of OS X (care to discuss DVDs anyone). It really wasn't till late Aug. of 2002 that OSX was anything close to what Apple said it was going to be.

      They release security patches when they are ready?

      Like hell they do. Why would the security patches released by Apple a few days ago contain 21 some odd patches then?
      Are you SERIOUSLY saying that all 21 patches were all done at the same time by magic?

      Remember, unlike Apple, Microsoft has a massive corporate presence and monthly security updates are much more acceptable than willy-nilly releases...

    10. Re:Why does he use it then? by prockcore · · Score: 1
      I can't think of anything that Apple's officially announced for any version of OS X that they later pulled.


      That's because Apple doesn't make any OSX announcements until they're done with the whole thing.

      Who knows what Apple tried to put into Tiger and failed to do?

      Apple is still king of unreleased software. The pink team started on a new OS in 1989. It turned into Copland, had several developer releases, and then got scrapped completely in 1997.
    11. Re:Why does he use it then? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      well, he is a smart man. he could do something else than write about something that drives him up the walls. he could write about os'es in general, instead of just one os. he does not have to write about windows, let alone use it.

      would you like to spend your time about how it feels to be constantly punched in the face?

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    12. Re:Why does he use it then? by kfg · · Score: 1

      . . .would you like to spend your time about how it feels to be constantly punched in the face?

      No, but then I'm not George Plimpton or a boxer. I'd be more likely to write about broken collarbones, road rash and saddle sores.

      KFG

  16. Won't get fooled again by amliebsch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How many times is Slashdot going to be suckered by Paul Thurott? He has one basic strategy: first, review it poorly. This gets him all kinds of attention and credibility as people rush to hold him up as such a wise person, who is willing to tell the truth! Then, later, surprise! Everything he wrote before is better now, and $PRODUCT is the best thing ever to exist, and if you believed him then but don't believe him now, you're obviously a lying hypocrite!

    Seriously, people, get a grip. This is a set-up for when Vista is available to consumers, at which time - mark my words - he will write about Microsoft's amazing efforts to pull off the seemingly impossible and deliver a polished product that, despite not completely living up to Paul's high standards, is still the best ever made! Highly recommended!

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    1. Re:Won't get fooled again by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Umm... every new Windows release is touted as the best ever made, and not just by Paul Thurott.

      Windows ME is pretty much the only MS OS that was (from a technical standpoint) a failure.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:Won't get fooled again by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      I didn't say the best "Windows release" ever made.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    3. Re:Won't get fooled again by Azarael · · Score: 1

      He will look like an ass though if he changes his tune but all the things that he complained about were not fixed ;-)

    4. Re:Won't get fooled again by krunk4ever · · Score: 1

      Are we confusing between Paul and Dvorak?
      http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/06/10/ 1529257

    5. Re:Won't get fooled again by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      Yeah I think he stinks. :) Mybe Novel or Ubuntu should *pay* him to get a nice shallow review of their products. ;) Nice way to make money.

    6. Re:Won't get fooled again by OzRoy · · Score: 1
      This has to be one of the worst reviews I have ever seen.

      Let's look at his major arguments.

      Photoshop doesn't work.- Well maybe the fact that photoshop pops up an alert when installing saying it's not compatable with Vista is a clue that maybe it's photoshop's problem and they are working to fix it.

      IE doesn't work with his website. - MS have been very clear that they are making a lot of changes with IE7, and this is why they has been released to the general public to allow web developers to update their sites and be ready for the final release. Besides, any website that only works for IE deserves to be screwed by this.

      That leaves a slow loading network places, a recent documents that doesn't seem to order properly, and some occasional com errors. All of which are hardly surprising in beta software.

    7. Re:Won't get fooled again by Maserati · · Score: 1

      Well, his point on Photoshop Elements is actually valid. He knows it isn't compatible. He's worried that it's becoming *less* compatible. Slow loading network places, and a removed shortcut, are major issues to still be cropping up late in beta. Recent documents are a solved problem, you don't have to re-use code but it's not *that* hard. This is late-beta software, the networking issues are a Bad Sign.

      I don't have a lot of sympathy for the IE issues, they did develop themselves into a corner.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    8. Re:Won't get fooled again by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      Paul is a promoter of Windows. You are right in that he does break you down to build you up. That's his tactic. Overall he's not bad. This time he's trying to protect Microsoft by saying that Vista is much more than XP. Here he almost outright lies to the public. Vista is nothing more than XP with a new interface and is highly infested with DRM at its core. Everything in this version of Windows is just fluff. The only real feature to be added to a stripped out OS is the security that prompts you to verify any change, and that is overdone.

      Those vulnerabilities that exist in XP are being shown to still exist in Vista.

      In my opinion, after more than 20 years in the field, is that there's no reason to upgrade to Vista.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  17. Hm sounds like deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Where I work we've got a software product which to be kind would be best taken out and buried in an unmarked grave at midnight (with the mandatory stake, garlic and silver bullet) at some lonely crossroads.... its buggy, seriously flawed implementation of our design (the software is a third party product built to specs from my company). Every month we lurch from one crises to another but our programme management team will not face reality and allow us to slip release... we must release on time no matter how flawed is the message.

    With 6ish months to go until drop dead date we can only fix major or critical issues which will seriously impact functionality of the entire system.

    I have total sympathy with the MS developers and designers as I suspect they've got the same bone headed project managers as my firm :(.

    1. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      You work for SAP?

    2. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by Al_Maverick · · Score: 1

      Im sure you are working on a desk next to mine. :)

    3. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      If things are that messed up at your company then why do you stay there?

    4. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by monoqlith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because he gets to feed and clothe himself and perhaps his family with the money he makes there, I'm guessing.

    5. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably the same thing I'm doing still at mine: waiting for an iminent buy-out.

    6. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gp implies he's been there for months, which is enough time to look for other employment. I think the parent post's difference in perspective from yours is between having loose and tight family ties, and having regional ties.

      If you can move anywhere, and aren't tied to anyone else, it's pretty silly to stay in any even "uncomfortable" job for more than a couple months.

    7. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      If you are a good programmer then you have options as to who your employer is. Given those options, why stay at an employer than makes you miserable?

    8. Re:Hm sounds like deja vu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's waiting patiently and naively for the company to get big enough to split the development teams, so one can maintain the current release, and the other can rewrite the product from scratch.

  18. Considering their recent acquisitions: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll
    Based on their recent acquisitions I'd say the'll base in on Linux.

    It looks like every company they've been buying are Linux companies (except Groove, which was a recruting move to get their CTO - and evne groove used competing technologies (BDB, now from Oracle)).

    I think they've given up on Windows for the future, and are looking elsewhere for help.

    1. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Senzei · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I think they've given up on Windows for the future, and are looking elsewhere for help.
      This has to be some kind of a troll, no one with any speck of sense in their head would possibly believe something this stupid.
      --
      Slashdot: Where anecdotes and generalizations can be freely substituted for facts, logic, or intelligence
    2. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No troll (I'm the grandparent poster).


      IBM is doing it, phasing out AIX in favor of Linux.

      HP is doing it, phasing out HPUX, Ultrix, and Tandem Unix in favor of Linux.

      SGI is doing it, phasing out Irix in favor of Linux for their supercomputers.


      Each of those had a supperior product to Windows - just not the monopoly position that's kept Microsoft profitible longer; so it's not a troll at all to say I expect Microsoft to switch too as their monopoly erodes. They already announced Linux support for a few of their products (virtual server). Without Gates around, I don't think their NIH syndrome will last that much longer.

    3. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by EndlessNameless · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If Microsoft is going to start from scratch with a new kernel (by this, I mean new to them) then why wouldn't they do it using a kernel developed in-house?

      Microsoft switching to Linux would totally undermine their method of gaining and maintaining marketshare, which is to make everything interoperate with everything else (as long as it's all their stuff).

      --

      ---
      According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.
    4. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by codemachine · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Apple sort of did it with OS X, basing it on Mach and BSD instead of Linux (well actually it was NextStep, but whatever).

      This is a model that MS could use as well. Open up or borrow the base layers, and build on top of it. With MS being in the virtualization market, backwards compatibility becomes less of a problem, as it can be built into the new OS.

      Heck, rumour is that Apple has already implemented this Windows compatiblity this with OS X 10.5. Apple may have a better successor to Windows XP than Microsoft does.

    5. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Sparohok · · Score: 1

      so it's not a troll at all to say I expect Microsoft to switch too as their monopoly erodes.

      Microsoft sells software. IBM, HP, and SGI sell hardware. I hope you can appreciate why the economics of switching to a free operating system would affect them differently.

      Martin

    6. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by NetCow · · Score: 4, Interesting

      IBM sells services and the occasional bit of hardware.
      HP sells hardware and isn't doing badly, but they're not having stellar financial results either.
      SGI's filed for bankrupticy.
      Bottom line: Services is where the money is, and that's what Microsoft's is trying to do. And failing.

    7. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by pogson · · Score: 1
      Apple may have a better successor to Windows XP than Microsoft does.

      Ooooh! Cruel! I like it. Apple: embrace, extend, extinguish... It is consistent with the move to Intel hardware, too. I hope they leave some crumbs for us GNU/Linux geeks.

      --
      A problem is an opportunity http://mrpogson.com
    8. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Elektroschock · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apple sort of did it with OS X, basing it on Mach and BSD instead of Linux (well actually it was NextStep, but whatever). This is a model that MS could use as well

      True, just another 5 years of development. Or microsoft licenses Tiger and builds a wine based compatibility layer...

      but honest: Why does Ms develop IE when there is Firefox? IE is a product that is not sold. No one buys Windows because of IE.

      MS may outsource a lot to open source... It is an ideology trap created by the media.

    9. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by prozac79 · · Score: 1
      Microsoft switching to Linux would totally undermine their method of gaining and maintaining marketshare

      I don't know if that is entirely accurate. I just came from the future and found the following memo. Sure, this was meant to be more for entertainment than some deep analysis on the future of Microsoft. But it does make you think that the future of Microsoft is not in doing everything their way and from the ground up, but instead let others deal with the low-level stuff and they can focus on what they are really selling -- a GUI with lots of bells and whistles. Looking at Vista development, how much easier would it have been to use a tried-and-true Unix security and permissions model and focus their attention on how to provide the user with the best interactive environment?

      --
      "Oh dear, she's stuck in an infinite loop and he's an idiot" -Prof. Farnsworth (Futurama)
    10. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by mreed911 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Why does Ms develop IE when there is Firefox? IE is a product that is not sold. No one buys Windows because of IE.

      If I had mod points I'd mod you insightful. Why indeed?

      Some could/would argue that Microsoft develops and releases IE because they have to refine their own networking and shell (explorer) code, and IE is just a UI on top of those that happens to hit http:/// links. They'd say that if they depended on Firefox, and Firefox "understood" that as a developer community, that Firefox could influence the direction of Windows development because it would be a core component - and one that Microsoft doesn't control.

      I tend to agree with that. Microsoft doesn't want to spend cycles on a "free" product that's become ubiquitous... but they don't have a choice - they can't give up control to an outside developer pool and cede control over the direction of Windows in re WWW access. So, given that they have to maintain control, and maintaining control requires maintaining, to a degree, market share, they can burn just enough cycles to a) make it work enough for 90% of people out there and b) add enough new things / change enough things to generate PR about "why IE is teh bomb!"

      You do remember that IE was, at one point, sold on store shelves and had a SKU, right?

    11. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by labratuk · · Score: 1
      Apple may have a better successor to Windows XP than Microsoft does.

      It's even complete with proprietary lockin and DRM!
      --
      Malike Bamiyi wanted my assistance.
    12. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by eric76 · · Score: 1

      They also want their users to use only IE instead of Firefox, Opera, or other browsers so that they will feel uneasy should they try to switch to Linux or some other operating system.

      The more software packages one uses that have counterparts on other OS's such as Linux, the more one feels at home when trying out Linux and the more likely one is to actually switch to Linux. Thus, the better for the user and the worse for Microsoft.

    13. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by ceoyoyo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's a pretty complicated reason. I think the real one is simpler. By using IE Microsoft can dictate to a large extent how the web works. Yeah, there are standards and standards committees and such, but really, if it doesn't work with IE, it doesn't work. So MS makes IE just a bit different than the standard (do you REALLY think that all MS's programmers can't implement web standards properly?) and by doing so web page developers' support for everybody not running Windows is an afterthought at best.

    14. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by pnewhook · · Score: 4, Informative
      IBM sells services and the occasional bit of hardware

      I'd say they sell more than the occasional bit of hardware to sell over $24 Billion worth in 2005. And that's down from 2004's $31 Billion.

      But you are correct saying services is where the money is. IBM made over $47 Billion in revenue from their services division last year.

      To put those numbers in perspective, Microsoft's revenue for the entire company was $39 Billion.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    15. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Elektroschock · · Score: 1

      Four years ago IE was an argument for the windows plattfom. Mozilla was not mature, some Linux users run an outdated Netscape 4.7.

      This has changed. Microsoft may now catch up and IE7 does not look bad. However it is the less secure browser.

      The first breakthrough happened when Microsoft paid AOL for using the IE engine. This is no option anymore because the IE monopoly is gone. Not that users do not take IE. But those who choose FF do it because it is the better browser.

      We have now equal competition. I will upgrade to FF 2 but FF 1.5 is sufficient for me, I was pleased with gunmen parliamentarians start to hate microsoft. Anti-Microsoft sells, press likes these stories. And Bill Gates who was portrayed a kind of spirtual leader left development. Viruses, spyware, spam, delays. Ms is held responsible by its users.

    16. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      They'd say that if they depended on Firefox, and Firefox "understood" that as a developer community, that Firefox could influence the direction of Windows development because it would be a core component - and one that Microsoft doesn't control.

      Which is completely false.

      One of the great things about OSS is that YOU can push the code in any direction you want. Microsoft is no exception to this.

      They're free to fork the project any time they wish. The would NEVER be held hostage by an outside team.
      The worst that would ever happen is that someone else would no longer be maintaing it for them for free. (Oh the horror!)

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    17. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you REALLY think that all MS's programmers can't implement web standards properly?

      Actually, yes

    18. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1
      Microsoft switching to Linux would totally undermine their method of gaining and maintaining marketshare

      Embrace, extend, extinquish. Microsoft switching to Linux would totally be in line with their method of gaining and maintaining marketshare.

    19. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by x2A · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the end of the walmart southpark episode, where the town set out to destroy a monopoly, by all shopping at the "small" shop, creating a new one.

      Business is business, and people who think Apple are saints are completely naive, they're not, they're just smaller. They've done just as many anti-innovation things as anyone, dating right back to when they held and enforced a patent on allowing windows to *overlap*.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    20. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by jonathansizz · · Score: 1
      but honest: Why does Ms develop IE when there is Firefox? IE is a product that is not sold. No one buys Windows because of IE.
      Yeah, great idea! Maybe they could include OpenOffice & Gaim as well, plus incorporate Google ads into Windows Explorer and set Firefox's homepage to sourceforge..
    21. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by normal_guy · · Score: 1

      Microsoft develops IE to keep MSN the homepage on as many computers as possible. With the demise of ActiveX, there's no need for it to drive standards anymore. The hottest and easiest-to-develop standards aren't Microsoft anymore, even in a corporate environment. Nobody buys Windows because the web works better on it.

      --

      Linux: Free if your time is worthless.
    22. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by weg · · Score: 1

      This is a model that MS could use as well. Open up or borrow the base layers, and build on top of it.

      Their base layer (=NT kernel) is good enough.. I don't see how Vista would profit from a Mach kernel...

      --
      Georg
    23. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by ultranova · · Score: 1

      They're free to fork the project any time they wish. The would NEVER be held hostage by an outside team. The worst that would ever happen is that someone else would no longer be maintaing it for them for free. (Oh the horror!)

      No. The worst that could happen is that porting Windows applications to other operating systems would become easier. IE is a component used by many Windows programs; if Microsoft switched to Firefox, not only would it need to leave IE there to support those programs, but any new programs would use Firefox instead of IE, making them easier to port to Linux, BSD or whatever.

      Windows is an inferior product compared to almost anything; what keeps it alive is the host of programs that only work on Windows. Even it being pre-installed is not sufficient anymore, since newer Linux distributions are very easy to install - put the CD in the drive and turn on the computer, in the case of LiveCDs. Hardware support is also very good nowadays - 3D cards are the only problems, but NVIDIAs drivers are pretty much "run me and answer yes to everything" to install.

      For Microsoft to lose its lock-in means death. No one uses it for its own merits, since it doesn't have any. Even games generally work better under Linux, presumably due to more efficient memory management and better scheduler. Embracing any kind of standards is a death sentence for Microsoft.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    24. Re:Considering their recent acquisitions: by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I hear that all the time. "You know, we'd like to switch to WIndows but our existing web app suite just doesn't work on IE!"

      On Slashdot even, there are always people saying "hey, design for Firefox, Opera and Safari first. If you've got time make your stuff work with IE."

      With IE's slip away from the high nineties marketshare things have changed a bit. MS doesn't wield as much power over the web anymore, but that just emphasizes the point.

  19. Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am also using the latest Vista builds (not the public beta 2) at work. It is still NOT ready to me because it drives me nuts. The biggest complaint I don't like about it is the User Acess Control (UAC). I know it can be disabled, but the design is just annoying (memorized alt-c hot key so I don't have to move and click with the mouse) and I don't think it will be changed much. For every thing I run as an administrator seems to pop up the permit/deny. I read this interesting article about why UAC works this way. It remindes me of the way Mac OS X (10.2.8 -- haven't used the newer versions) works.

    What's worse on this test machine (ASUS K8V SE Deluxe, Athlon 64 3200+ 754 CPU, 512 MB of RAM, etc.), my screen tend to black out before and after the pop-ups occur. I don't see this problem on a co-workers' computers. Maybe it is because of the old ATI Radeon 9600 All-In-Wonder video card. I am using the Aero effects (very pretty). Or worse, the pop-up is in the taskbar minimized without focus. So I can be using a program that calls another EXE, then nothing happens because I haven't granted permission because it is minimized!

    Other things that bugged me:
    1. How do I access c:\ProgramData\Application Data\? I keep getting permission denied even though my account is already set with an administrator access.
    2. How come tab, arrow keys, and F3 keys don't work in command.com/CLI? I miss being able to recall history and hit tab for autocomplete.
    3. In command.com, I cannot seem to change long paths with cd command like: cd "Program Files". It says: Parameter not correct - "program.

    I was a bit surprised when MS decided to declare RC1 a few builds ago (5472?). I really hope Microsoft decides to delay again and take their time! So what if it loses money! They're rich and can get more after Vista is released with few problems. Make it good and maybe I will use it at home (using XP, Linux, and Mac OS X). :)

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by dinodipp · · Score: 1

      did you try to change c:\program files\ to "c:\program files\" ? By the look of how you write it it sounds like you didn't include the "

    2. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      GOOD GOD, MAN! You're trying to run Vista with 512 MB of RAM?!?!? Jeez, no wonder you're having troubles.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    3. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As far as points 2 and 3, you should probably try running cmd.exe instead of command.com. command.com is a port of the command line shell from the Win9X line of OSes. cmd.exe is the "new-fangled" command line shell for the WinNT series, which acquired many of the features you seem to miss so much when XP came around. Even better yet, you should try PowerShell (formerly msh, formerly Monad).

      Also, they haven't declared RC1 yet. That will be in a month or so.

    4. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 4, Funny

      Here is what even funny. Co-workers have Dell machines (Intel Pentium 4 CPUs) with 1-2 GB of RAM, and THEIRS run slower than mine!!

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    5. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Oooh, that explains why I had problems. Thanks! I didn't know they were different (never noticed). :)

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    6. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Yep! I always did in UNIX, Linux, Windows, etc. I found out wthat I was supposed to use cmd.exe, not command.com. Thanks to the previous poster for catching that. :)

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    7. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by NSIM · · Score: 1

      > 2. How come tab, arrow keys, and F3 keys don't work in command.com/CLI? I miss being able to recall history and hit tab for autocomplete. > 3. In command.com, I cannot seem to change long paths with cd command like: cd "Program Files". It says: Parameter not correct - "program. You do know that command.com & cmd.exe are two completely different beasts. Command.com is the old (way old) 16-bit shell, cmd.exe is what you should be using and will not give you the problems outlined above.

    8. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Informative
      I used to believe in Dell. But then they got lazy and now every Dell machine I've dealt with in the last 5 years has been a total piece of crap, no matter what processor or how much memory you throw at it. Makes me ashamed that I used to recommend them.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    9. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by nonane · · Score: 1

      5472 wasn't RC1 - it was a technical refresh of Beta 2.

      RC1 is yet to come.

    10. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I was just told that in another reply. Thanks. :) Big oops from me. Funny how I never really noticed that.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    11. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      If you are frustrated with that, try moving or deleting an item or creating an item (manually) on the start menu.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    12. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Heh, yeah. Nothing I can do because we use Dell at work a lot. I am using one right now to type this post. :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    13. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      It seems OK in the latest build to me. I do remember the annoying UAC prompts in the past for similiar tasks with Start Menu.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    14. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      > 3. In command.com, I cannot seem to change long paths with
      > cd command like: cd "Program Files". It says: Parameter not correct - "program.

      Command.com (at least in XP, I haven't been testing Vista since I get nothing for testing it) is old 16-bit interpreter - think DOS. In XP the shell is "cmd" - which is 32-bit supports long names etc.

    15. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by pe1chl · · Score: 2, Funny

      You mean you need 32 bits to have long filenames?
      Will we hear the same bullsh*t when moving to 64 bits?

      Anyway, the CD command always had very dumb parameter conventions. Maybe they have now fixed that.
      For example:
      - you can type the pathname after CD without space, like CD\Windows
      - it accepts pathnames with spaces without quoting them, like CD \Program Files\Internet Explorer

      Users switching from commandline-Windows to a Linux commandline interpreter often do not understand why they should type cd /etc and not cd/etc or cd\etc
      But other commands in the Windows CLI do not offer this freedom. I think it was a big mistake.

    16. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      > You mean you need 32 bits to have long filenames?
      > Will we hear the same bullsh*t when moving to 64 bits?

      No. I mean that "command" is somewhat different from "cmd" (look for parent posts). "Command" emulates DOS interpereter (on Windows XP) - so it does not have access to long names.

      (...)

      > But other commands in the Windows CLI do not offer
      > this freedom. I think it was a big mistake.

      I fully agree that Windows CLI sucks ass (as for XP) but only thing I wanted to say that "command" is an emulator of DOS so it is obvious that it will not support long file names. The native shell of Windows (XP) is "cmd".

    17. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Chikenistheman · · Score: 1

      One thought might not be to write all these things to Slashdot only.

      When people complain to Mac Fanboys they get the infamous "Move to Apple and feel good".And when people complain to Windows Fanboys they get the all important "Hack the registry or just don't do that".

      Why don't you make a difference and write in the feedback for each problem that occurs?

      Every chance I get at telling my "Two lincolns" to Microsoft directly I do so. This is why the BETA is out. Not for Fanboys to complain about how it's obviously not done.

      Do your part. Submit your problems.

      --
      If a million people jumped off a cliff, it'd only be a short time until I landed in a nice soft mountain of bodies.
    18. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Curate · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Are you a frigging idiot, or a troll? If you really work at Microsoft, you're making us look bad. (Yes, I work at Microsoft too.) Don't run command.com. Ever. Run cmd.exe instead. Then your arrow keys, F3, tab, etc. will suddenly start working, and so will cd "Program Files". You can also just say cd Program Files. We have not declared RC1 yet. The newer builds says RC1, yes, but then the older builds for the past couple of months all said Beta 2. There's only one official Beta 2, and there will be only one official RC1. We aren't there yet.

    19. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Nope, I am not at your company. I am your competitor though.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    20. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Curate · · Score: 1
      Nope, I am not at your company. I am your competitor though.

      Well, that doesn't exactly narrow it down. Most companies are competitors of ours. Just be aware: We're going to fucking kill (your company)!!! :)

    21. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Hahaha! Well, we will f**king your new OS up. [grin]

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    22. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Assuming those Dell machines use DDR memory, I would recommend staying late one night and nicking a couple of sticks of memory from them. It'll probably help your machine a lot, and won't really hurt the Dells much (almost every Dell I have worked with in the last 5-6 years seemed to perform well below what their specs would lead you to believe - like P3 systems performing like a decent P2 system, etc).

    23. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Actually, all of these are high end Optiplexes (e.g., GX280). Do they use the same type of RAM?

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    24. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Off the top of my head, I think the GX280 is a P4 based system, and uses DRR266 memory. An AMD 754 system uses DDR400 memory. So it's basically the same stuff, except your memory is faster. You should be able to swap the memory sticks around, however if you put the Dell's memory into the AMD system you'll have to slow the memory speed down to 266Mhz in the BIOS.

    25. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by vistic · · Score: 1

      As a long time Windows user who has used Mac OS X as a primary OS the past 2 years, I can say that the entering the password thing never seems to get in the way for me. To me it's just like graphically doing sudo in a shell in Linux (or sudo in the bash shell in Mac OS X, for that matter). It doesn't prompt for the password unnecessarily or at odd times... just at the right times for good security.

      I really think Apple did it right.

      From what I've read about this user access control in Vista though... it sounds like a lot of people are finding it pops up at all the wrong times and unnecessarily.

    26. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by dioscaido · · Score: 1

      Uhm, you don't want to run command.com, you want to run cmd.exe. Viola -- command history, auto-complete, long file names, etc... command.com is a hold over from the DOS days.

    27. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "command.com is a hold over from the DOS days."

      That's not the only thing! I haven't used Windows much in years, and it made me cringe to see C:\ in a comment about Vista. Drive letters...oh, boy.

    28. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. I mean that "command" is somewhat different from "cmd" (look for parent posts). "Command" emulates DOS interpereter (on Windows XP) - so it does not have access to long names.

      But the DOS command line on Windows 98 DOES support long file names (with quotes used as necessary if there are embedded spaces) as long as it is invoked while running Windows, as opposed to booting DOS standalone.

    29. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by rs232 · · Score: 1

      "GOOD GOD, MAN! You're trying to run Vista with 512 MB of RAM?!?!? Jeez, no wonder you're having troubles."

      He should switch to SuSE Linux. It can run with 512 MB with no problem.

      --
      davecb5620@gmail.com
    30. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      But is there actually another manufacturer out there like Dell? You know, that you can specify the specs and they'll build it for you? Or do you have to select from a pre-packaged model from all the other providers (not that that's necessarily bad but I've witnessed some spectacularly bad creations from Packard Bell and Compaq)?

    31. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Why are Microsoft still including a DOS relic commandline in Windows Vista that still uses tilde-shortening of names?!

    32. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by kosmosik · · Score: 1

      For backward compatibility I guess...

    33. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Indeed. They're way more confusing than finding your 3 hard drives, USB dongle, CD-ROM drive, DVD-ROM drive and ZIP drive in /dev, if you're new to this kind of thing.

    34. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by x-caiver · · Score: 1
      I was a bit surprised when MS decided to declare RC1 a few builds ago (5472?).
      They have not declared RC1. I'm not sure where you heard that, but it is inaccurate.
      (though your assumption that the 'screen black out' being due to the video card/ video driver is accurate, almost all cases of the screen black out were due to pre-release video drivers or video cards that are slow to do thing, or a system that is just totally overloaded - which i doubt your processor is)
    35. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Heard? I have the latest Vista builds. LIke I said, I use them at work for testings. Do I need to screen capture to prove it?

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    36. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by x-caiver · · Score: 1

      Your use of the latest Vista builds is irrelevant, I was not arguing about that. It is perfectly reasonable for me to assume that you are telling the truth, because there are many people that have pre-release Vista builds. I have no reason to not believe that you have used such a build.

      If you look back at my post you will see that I was informing you that your statement "...MS decided to declare RC1 a few builds ago..." was inaccurate. Which it is.

    37. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Oh, I thought you meant you didn't believe me that I didn't see RC1. Gotcha. Misunderstood, that's all.

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    38. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by x-caiver · · Score: 1

      It is the "RC1" part that I'm disagreeing with. You saw pre-release builds, yes. But you have not seen RC1 yet. While some of the current builds are okay, and some of them are tripe, the RC1 build should be much better. (by definition, since it would be a 'release candidate' and all)

    39. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      I just hope MS can improve their OS if they are still aiming end of this year for business and 2007 for consumers. Currently, I wouldn't want to use this OS at all. :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    40. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by x-caiver · · Score: 1

      Well, they're trying... Dev and test teams never want to release junk, and the extreme upper management (VPs, Gates, Ballmer, those type guys) never want to release junk either. Individual feature PMs never want their feature to suck when it is released either. Hopefully a 'positive mob mentatlity' forms, and everyone gets/stays on the same page, and doesn't let any stupid decisions be made!
      /i'm a lightweight, its 1:30, I'm going to bed... good luck with your testing

    41. Re:Agreed. My two cents... by antdude · · Score: 1

      Yep, I know that feeling. At my workplace, it is crunch mode month. We have to work this weekend (Sunday for me since I have to go to a wedding today). :(

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  20. "Or take IE 7. Please."

    --
    Respect the laws of physics, for the laws of physics have no respect for you.
  21. wow by dolson · · Score: 4, Funny

    So Vista isn't close to being ready. I'm sure that if it is pushed to shelves as scheduled, that nobody will buy it because it is so incomplete. And nobody will pirate it either. This will definitely be the Windows killer that we have been hoping for.

    Right.

    Microsoft can box up a petrified turd and people will still buy it.

  22. Of course it's not ready yet by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 4, Funny

    How could it be ready yet? They haven't perfected the DRM obviously, and you can't release an operating system that might allow someone to burn CDs with impunity, or use an evil analog video input device.

  23. Don't care by resmungo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The upgrade from 98 to XP was a no brainer because of how much more stable
    and quick XP was. Vista honestly has nothing I want. The longer they take
    the better since I heard that the next DirectX will be Vista only, probably
    just to piss me off when I can't play new games.

    1. Re:Don't care by steveo777 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      As long as Vista doesn't end up like Windows ME, I'll be happy. ME was the absolute worst Windows OS experience EVER. I'd rather run 3.1. Back when ME came out, I worked as a tech intern for a warehouse/distribution center. There was me and my boss. That was it for tech support there. He would by Dell workstations every few months when one of the PCs crapped out and I couldn't fix it with spare parts. It was 2001 and there were still a lot of Windows 95 and a few 3.1 machines still being used. The 3.1 machines were out in the warehouse and my boss didn't care what happened to them, or about the fact that I was out rebooting them three times a day.

      The thing that got me the most is that he was adament that windows NT, 98, 95, and ME were all more stable than 2000 which came on the new machines. I even set up tests where I left an NT, ME, and 2000 machine running with Office 97 running on each for three days. The NT machine was running like a slug, the ME machine BSODed after about 6 hours and two more times. In the end, he allowed 2000 on my machine, but the reality of it was that he was afraid to learn a new OS.

      --
      This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    2. Re:Don't care by lawpoop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm amazed at how much Microsoft gets away with. You'll be happy as long as Vista isn't totally broken? ME should never have seen the light of day. Why should anyone settle for this non-upgrade 'upgrade', when we have a perfectly functional version of Windows called XP?

      I'ts like we're living in Soviet Russia. "What can we do? Microsoft is on every computer... just eat your gruel and be happy that it wasn't posioned like the last batch..."

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    3. Re:Don't care by smchris · · Score: 1

      The upgrade from 98 to XP was a no brainer because of how much more stable
      and quick XP was.


      Maybe you could have run NT 4.0 all along -- but the thing with XP is that it let you run all, or most, of your Windows 98 _specific_ programs, right? That's what they got right in seamlessly rolling in added functionality to the NT line.

      In fact, that might have always been what Microsoft got right. When you got a new Apple, you probably traded in everything: new software with that new hardware and OS. But there was an obvious _marketing_ decision at Microsoft that OS transitions should be as transparent to the customer as possible. That old software should just install and run. I can remember discussion, probably on /. years ago, about how the developers of Windows 95 should have been given more credit than some people think. They put a horse's ass and pig's head on a dodo body and it actually flew. The fact that Windows 95 mixed and matched cooperative and preemptively multitasked 16 and 32-bit Win 3.1 and Win 95 programs as well as it did should have been an opportunity to praise the developers' ingenuity. Not because it was the best way to do things but because it was the best way to keep things simple for the user who puts an install disk in the drive and expects it to just work.

      I guess my question is: with Vista, is this pointedly _marketing_ paradigm crashing? Has backward compatibility, to the genuinely admirable goal of reducing customer confusion, finally made Vista so internally ungainly that they really should pull an Apple -- a new, clean Vista running exclusively Vista apps. Everything else running in some obvious virtualization. That might be a good thing -- whether it pisses off legacy users or not.

  24. IE7 horrors / hope ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Or take IE 7. Please. I use IE for one thing and one thing only: The magazine's Web portal requires IE to post articles, and because I post WinInfo articles every day, I need to use IE. Every day. In IE 7, the rich edit control that forms the basis of the third party ActiveX control we used to post article bodies not only doesn't work, it is actually deprecated in Vista so that it will never work, even if you manually install it."

    Good points: DIE IE-only ActiveX controls, DIE!

    Bad points: What a waste of years of effort on MS non-standard extensions.

    Nelson: Ha! Ha!

    The future: Think twice about relying on IE-only extensions for *anything* new. Use cross-browser standard interfaces only.

  25. To some, this is a lot of headache by whoisvaibhav · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I know someone who is developing software for the Vista platform. They are porting their product to the next step. For them, everytime there is an announcement of a delay in release of the platform, it is a cause for a quick meeting to re-assess the risk it poses to their plan.

  26. Hot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    "No. God no." "I could hear the screams"

    That's the hottest thing I've heard all day.

  27. casual gaming by minus_273 · · Score: 3, Funny

    " I especially like the way I can't delete certain items from the desktop (randomly, it seems, like a game)"

    I think we recently read about MS' new and improved casual games on Vista

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  28. It is RC1 now... by antdude · · Score: 1

    According to the recent build(s) (5487? and 5472), the bottom right said: Windows Vista(TM) RC1...

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:It is RC1 now... by RonnyJ · · Score: 2, Informative

      It isn't finalised as RC1 yet though - pre-Beta 2 builds also displayed 'Beta 2'.

  29. Strange... by squidsuk · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I don't experience any of these problems with Kubuntu.

    1. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have been trying patriotisim by having a kubuntu on my notebook. It was such a nightmare to run I revrted back to XP. it seems you are all about marketing the product that is halve done. go get a life

    2. Re:Strange... by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      I used linux as my main machine for about 3 years. I did look at Ubuntu and Kubuntu when they were first released. I also looked at maybe 7 other distros. Although I did not have the same problems with Ubuntu that I had with Vista or even XP, I had a greater share of other problems.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    3. Re:Strange... by squidsuk · · Score: 1

      I had been using Mepis for quite a while, and SuSE before that. I looked at Ubuntu/Kubuntu in earlier versions, but though I could see the potential I declined to go for it at that time; I have only now changed over to Kubuntu with the 6.06 Dapper Drake (Long Term Support) version, and all I can say is that to me it seems fantastic.

      Everything I need "just works", pretty much, the only minor hassle, as usual with Linux, was getting non-free formats (DVD, MP3, Flash, Java, etc) working - but then there's EasyUbuntu for that and it's not very difficult anyway, just a matter of following instructions. Otherwise, it looks great, works great, and seems to be every bit a finished release ready to be used.

      If Linux, with distributions like Kubuntu/Ubuntu/Xubuntu, carries on improving in usability, functionality, and reliability at the rate that has been happening then within a year or two there won't be anything to touch it. Vista will be doing well to be released at all by then, from what I can see!

    4. Re:Strange... by flynns · · Score: 1

      Try again. They're 100% better now. No, really, we're using Dapper Drake (Ubuntu 6.06) in a production environment here at work. LOVE.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
  30. That's all I gots to say about that.... by Mykid8yours · · Score: 3, Funny

    "...like most IT pros, its not about when the next OS will be released, it is about having the OS work."


    Yeah, you first have to release the patch to patch the patch that patched the patch before the patch. Once the patches are in place, you gotta patch those. Then the OS might work. If not, patch it again.

  31. Getting biz to upgrade by Danathar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You think it was hard to get biz to upgrade from win2k to winxp? Wait till Vista comes out. Even WITH Enterprise agreements (ala subscriptions) I don't think CIO's are going to deploy it for years.

    The average user is able to use exchange, word, excel and surf the web without constant crashes (unlike with win98). As far as many managers are concerned, if their PC's can do that then their employees OS's are just fine. Microsoft is going to have to have something REVOLUTIONARY to get them to upgrade, OR simply they'll have to end support for XP to force many buisnessess to upgrade.

    If even ONE app on the enterprise has to be retrofitted to work with Vista you can bet Vista will be the one put on the back burner, not the apps they have to fix.

    1. Re:Getting biz to upgrade by OneFix+at+Work · · Score: 1

      What about the rift this will cause on the business side...for years to come, employees will value their worth to the company by their ability to run Aero Glass on their desktop...

    2. Re:Getting biz to upgrade by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Microsoft aren't dumb, they've been dealing with this sort of problem for ages. It's not too difficult though ... most new machines will come with Vista by default. Thus pretty soon companies will be running mixed environments. So all Microsoft has to do is introduce "annoying incompatibilities" between XP and Vista (e.g. things like perhaps network delays to access XP machines over the network, or odd error messages that pop up ("Unknown is not accessible" etc.)), to "encourage" (i.e. bulldoze) users to eventually just upgrade as much as possible. They've been doing this sort of thing for years, works like a bomb.

    3. Re:Getting biz to upgrade by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      the other thing will be that MS will claim Vista is spyware-proof (or heavily insinuate it) and the PHBs will be clamouring to increase security and productivity by wiping over XP with a shiny new bulletproof vista install.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    4. Re:Getting biz to upgrade by Danathar · · Score: 1

      Don't be so sure. Bundling Vista with Home machines will cause people to use it at home but most large biz and some smaller ones don't use the pre-installed OS from the OEM factory (Dell, IBM, ect). They have their own custom image that they load onto the box after it gets delivered.

  32. oh so obligitory.... (1997 style) by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Works?

  33. Hey - he mentions Slashdot... by Bobby+Orr · · Score: 5, Funny

    And then there are the online pundits, many of whom are barely old enough to legally buy alcohol. These guys are classic. Let's just say that a lack of experience and a strongly worded opinion don't result in the most coherent of arguments and leave it at that.

    1. Re:Hey - he mentions Slashdot... by DCstewieG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Eh, that's more Digg. Yeesh, if someone can come up with an age filter for online comments, they will make billions. Slashdot: come for the story, stay for the comments. Digg: come for many more stories, stay for...don't stay.

  34. Is it ready for the Desktop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Retarded Voice): "Is it ready for the Desktop? Is it ready for the Desktop? Is it ready for the Desktop?"

    ...sorry.. couldn't resist and had to backfire at those linux-desktop-experts-who-use-windows...

  35. According to the article... by ENOENT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Vista SUCKS because 3rd party software that is documented to NOT WORK IN VISTA and even issues a pop-up to that effect, in fact, doesn't work in Vista Beta 2.

    And his company's website is run by evil trolls.

    And some unspecified prerelease of Office 2007 doesn't work exactly right.

    Therefore, Vista must suck.

    (OK, there were some valid complaints in there about Vista. But mostly not.)

    --
    That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
    1. Re:According to the article... by codemachine · · Score: 1

      You really have to wonder why someone would choose to do their daily work on a beta OS that doesn't run their software (heck, he needs a virtual machine just to run some of it). Talk about not choosing the right tool for the job.

  36. I've been using beta and haven't had any problems by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Been using the beta since it was released to the public and haven't had any problems at all with it. Seems pretty rock-solid to me already. I game with the latest game software, I've run all sorts of apps, I use my 360 as a media center extender. No crashes, no conflicts, no major troubles. The only problems I've had were with my video card's s-video output (think this is a problem with nvidia's driver, not with Vista itself) and with a freeware app called "pdf995" that I use for converting Word files to pdf.

    Just my personal experience.

    -Eric

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  37. New name for Windows Vista...Windows Vista Forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that name is a better fit.

  38. Re:Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rite U R

  39. Paul Thurrott may not be the end all expert but by postbigbang · · Score: 1

    If the release slips, we don't care.

    Really. We don't care: because it better freaking work when it arrives. Until then, do what needs to be done, Microsoft, lest thy name become Mudsoft.

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  40. Re:It is not RC1 yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real RC1 is slated for August 30th, 2006. The current builds say RC1 at the bottom, but that's just in prep for the August 30th release.

  41. So What? It's Beta! by stevemm81 · · Score: 1, Insightful
    In Windows Vista Beta 2, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4 would install but issue a warning when you ran it, noting that it was incompatible with Vista. You could ignore the warning and everything worked fine... Now, some key functionality simply doesn't work or, oddly, only partially works.


    So, software that openly declares itself to be incompatible with the new OS doesn't work.. And somehow it's even worse when it only works a little bit instead of crashing theatrically or outright refusing to install.

    use IE for one thing and one thing only: The magazine's Web portal requires IE to post articles, and because I post WinInfo articles every day, I need to use IE. Every day. In IE 7, the rich edit control that forms the basis of the third party ActiveX control we used to post article bodies not only doesn't work, it is actually deprecated in Vista so that it will never work, even if you manually install it.


    So, his employer created a bizarre, inflexible web application, and the one browser it's compatible with will soon no longer support it? Oh, no! God forbid he should have to use older versions, let alone non-beta browsers, for his nonstandard web apps.

    Why did I just waste four years making nice album art for music folders and custom folder art for photos?

    Damned if I know...

    But my favorite Windows Vista behavior--and believe you me, this was a tough contest--has to be the weird COM object errors I get while cutting and pasting between Paint and Word 2007.

    So when using his beta word processor on top of his beta OS, he found some bugs.. Stop the presses.

    I don't see why he's complaining. If all these problems were in a commercially released version of Vista, that would be a big problem, but he chose to use the beta version not only for occasional tooling around but for his primary OS. I'm sure it's frustrating that it doesn't work, but I can't really hold it against Microsoft. If he has all these problems with Vista, why not keep an XP machine, or at least an XP partition, around? In a few months these will either be show-stopping bugs or long-fixed, but until then, why does it even matter? Nobody, except apparently Paul, uses beta software for important tasks.

  42. The more Vista gets delayed... by linguae · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...the more time Apple has to add features and functionality to OS X (according to the WWDC 2005, Leopard should be released in December or January), and the more time the FOSS community has to improve its offerings (KDE and GNOME get better with each release, Linux distributions get easier to use, and FOSS software offerings get a bit more compelling).

    MS will still have a head start even if Vista is delayed another year, since Vista will be sold on all new machines, and not everybody is going to run out and buy a Mac or install Linux. However, more people are starting to learn about OS X and Apple's offerings (especially the fact that Apple switched to Intel, and the fact that they can still use Windows on those machines if they choose to, although OS X is really good; I showed my parents and siblings my MacBook and they got to use it for two days. They fell in love with it), and more people are starting to learn about FOSS. If Vista isn't all what it is cracked up to be, then Mac sales and Linux downloads would go up.

    As for me? I hope that Vista improves. Us Mac and *nix users have to use Windows boxes for work and for school, so it would be nice if we got to use a much improved version of Windows. But, after they have gutted out all of the features that I have desired (such as WinFS and the Monad shell), I'm not so enthusiastic about Vista. And, yes, I've got a chance from a friend to use the beta for a few hours. Vista's interface is pretty nice, IE 7 is a browser worth using, and I am fond of some of the new features. However, everything I can get in Vista in January I already have on my MacBook, and the gap may be larger, depending on what Steve Jobs reveals next week during the WWDC 2006.

    1. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by Yvan256 · · Score: 3, Funny
      If only there were a girl that was like this OS....

      You mean, a girl like this?
    2. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by MBCook · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No kidding. I switched last year and I expect OS X to be a little better. I was amazed what the difference was, and using XP often drives me nuts because of how much it misbehaves.

      Now I read about Vista being worse than XP, popping up "Enter administrator password" boxes all the time, etc. They already took out all the interesting Vista features (WinFS, for one).

      The fact is, when Tiger was previewed Apple had all those banners that said "Redmond, start your photocopiers". They obviously need new ones, because in that time they have not only not managed to copy most of the features, but Apple is about to release the NEXT set of great stuff at about the same time as MS's copy of Apple's last 3-5 years.

      If there is something everyone in the computer industry should pay attention to, it's the WWDC keynote on Monday. Vista has become a joke, and I don't expect much to change. Even if they can release it on time working perfectly with all the features they currently say it will have... it will be outdated and uninteresting.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    3. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple will continue to be irrelevant until they drop their insistence on product tying the OS to the hardware. For now, iPod Sheeple Syndrome will keep them in business, but eventually somebody will come out with The Next Big Thing and that revenue stream will dry up. At that point, the smart money is on Apple starting another downward slide, but continuing to open up their OS - until finally they get taken over or broken up, at which point the OS will be sold separately.

      That moment will be the best change Mac OS has of ever becoming a true competitor to Microsoft's Windows.

    4. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Argh, typo. That should say "continuing to *refuse* to open up their OS".

    5. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by linguae · · Score: 1

      You just reminded me of this comic strip.

      I didn't think of an iMac girl with I thought of the sig, I just thought of a dream girl with the perfect combination of beauty (Aqua) and brains (Unix). You know; what many geeks want.

    6. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by norman619 · · Score: 0, Troll

      LOL!!! If you want to be able to play the latest and most popular games guess which OS you better be running? Guess the percentage of Windows apps can be found for a Mac? If you guess 50 you are being way too optomistic. Fact is no matter how much nicer, prettier, or better another OS is you have to deal with reality. If I made the change howmany of my apps would I still be able to use? Fact is OS X is not a mainstream OS. It's a toy OS. I predict Linux will become a mainstream OS LONG before Apple's offering will. If OS X was all that and a bag of chips I would have jumped ship long ago. But since I pref to have an OS that is actually useful I stay with my current OS. The OS well over 90% of the developers out there code for. To change simply based on looks and feel is complete stupidity.

    7. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by linguae · · Score: 2, Insightful
      f you want to be able to play the latest and most popular games guess which OS you better be running?

      Duh. Windows. I admit that OS X isn't a gamer's platform. But guess what? Intel Macs can run Windows, too. You have the best of both worlds.

      If I made the change howmany of my apps would I still be able to use?

      I don't know; what apps do you use. I had no trouble switching over from Windows and FreeBSD to OS X. However, all of the apps that I use are either open source and/or have OS X equivalents.

      To change simply based on looks and feel is complete stupidity.

      OS X is more than just looks and feel. I didn't switch to OS X because of Aqua; if the only thing that OS X had to offer was Aqua, I would still be using Windows and FreeBSD right now. The reason why I switched to OS X is because it beats having to install BSD on a laptop, it does all of my Unix work (while still maintaining an easy-to-use interface; a feat that Linux/BSD still needs much work on), many proprietary packages are supported (Office, Photoshop, and the like), I don't have to struggle with either malware (unlike Windows) or hardware support (unlike Linux/BSD), and the actual machines have quite good hardware at a competitive price (I love this Core Duo, for example). I didn't switch to OS X just because it looks nice (although it is icing on the cake); I switched to OS X because it is nice.

      But if you feel better with Windows and Linux, then by all means use them. But don't diss Macs before you have some experience with them. OS X may be a "toy OS" (using your definition), but, gosh darn it, this is the best darn toy that I've used in my life.

    8. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1
      If you want to be able to play the latest and most popular games guess which OS you better be running?
      Y'know, I keep hearing this. So I figured I'd check it out.

      Here we have a list of the top selling games for the week ending July 15, 2006.

      #1. World of Warcraft -- Available for Mac.
      #2. Cars -- Available for Mac. See the little Mac logo on the screen?
      #3. The Sims 2 -- Available for Mac.

      #6. The Sims 2: Open For Business -- Currently in Beta.

      So the top three games are available for Mac and the fourth one is coming. And I ran across plenty of articles about how the other games are available via BootCamp, if you just gotta have the lesser popular games (ie, numbers 4-10). :^)

      Guess the percentage of Windows apps can be found for a Mac? If you guess 50 you are being way too optomistic
      You might be surprised at what software is available on Macintosh. As I've said before, I've had all sorts of people tell me that such and such wasn't available on the Mac, only to find out that it was available. Lots of companies don't publicize their Mac software--they publicize their software and everyone assumes that it runs under Windows (a safe bet) and that it doesn't run on a Mac.

      I'd also point out that if by "Windows apps," you mean a program created be a particular company, I'd agree. But if you look at categories, such as office productivity and such, you'll find there's plenty of software that does plenty of things. Where I've found this falls down is in external device support. I still have yet to find software that I connect to the dataport in my car and adjust the tuning. It does exist for Windows, but I can't use it on a Mac. So if you're thinking of using your PC to tune your car, you're right. Get a Windows machine. Don't waste your time with a Mac.
    9. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brains are overrated ;). Brains + beauty + mean = trouble.

      nice/kind and sexy, now that's hard to find :).

    10. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by mgblst · · Score: 1

      No, he means this girl!
       
      Just wait til you see the upgraded core duo twins...

    11. Re:The more Vista gets delayed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately those waiting for "Mac OS X" to save them from Vista are going to be disappointed, as Leopard's original design was scrapped and replaced by a Vista based system over the last few months. This isn't bad news though, Vista is an excellent operating system and most of the complaints actually have to do with the fact the improvements are causing problems for old programs used to the old way of doing things. This will be less of a problem with Mac OS X, whose simplicity means that older programs will very easily fit in with the new world.

      The real reason for the Vista delay is an event that occurred on so-called Red Tuesday, the day the delay was announced, which was written up by an Apple Insider in the famous MacRumors forums. I quote the post below in full. My comments are at the end.

      The board meeting

      So it's Tuesday morning at Apple. The boardroom is having another meeting about the future of the Macintosh. They're perusing the feedback over the unofficial port of Windows to the Mac, and considering the consequences. There's a whole bunch of things on the agenda. OS development is hard, and it's expensive. Their competitors, Sony and Lenevo, doesn't need to do it, and they're doing pretty well all in all. Plus, there's the whole break up plan. When Apple separates into Apple Macintosh Inc and iTunes Corp, how attractive will Apple Macintosh be as a take-over target? The whole move to Intel will be for naught if it hasn't made Dell and friends just a little more excited and comfortable they could fit the Macintosh into their lines.

      Apple has some little development projects on the boil and has for some time. To begin with, it's pretty much completely reimplemented the Carbon APIs under Windows. Indeed, that's how iTunes and Quicktime are implemented. But, interestingly, so are the Cocoa APIs. They're all there, Apple never stopped developing them, even after it nixed WebObjects for that platform. It's also in need of certain features that would help it with the future. Apple has no "managed code" environment - it supported Java to a certain extent, but Cocoa never was a perfect fit for that. Apple's progress with .NET, unofficially, under Windows and OS X, is coming along surprisingly well.

      As time has gone on, the notion of switching to Windows as the base platform really has gotten more and more plausable. There are still roadblocks, Apple needs Microsoft to provide them with a little more customizability of the UI. A switch to Windows without providing the essential Macintosh experience just wouldn't do. But, well, .NET, and Aero, are Microsoft's attempts to break with the past. Perhaps an OS built upon these APIs could, with Microsoft's help, look entirely like a Mac environment - with the right code, obviously. You don't want a Dell user flipping a registry switch and getting a Mac.

      It's clear that whatever happens, OS X is doomed. Postings by MacRumors alumni arguing that the porting of Windows to the Mac spells disaster are read out, and largely agreed with. But the question then is - does Apple continue to pour money into OS X, or could Gates and Ballmer be ameanable to making the modifications needed to make Windows Vista the next Macintosh OS?

      The phone call

      Jobs picks up the phone and calls Gates. There's a brief discussion, and then the phone's put down. A few minutes later, the phone rings. It's Ballmer, Gates, and Allchin.

      "We think we can do it, Steve" says Bill Gates. "I mean, this is a major thing for us. It's a coup, and I know you know we're thinking it. So we're going to help in any way we can."

      Allchin interjects: "Funnily enough, from our end, the code's largely there. We need a bit more time. WinFS needs some work - we'd put it on hold, but if you're going to want Spotlight on this OS, we'll need to finish it. Sticking menus at the top of the screen and reorderi

  43. This is just Vista hype by dtjohnson · · Score: 1

    These same kinds of negative articles also came out about XP at the beginning of its hype cycle. The 'Windows-beta-has-problems' articles all seem to be organized by the M$ hype machine to get people talking about the next Windows version. That's all. Next come the 'we-fixed-all-the-problems-and-now-its-ready' articles. Finally, come the 'Windows Vista is G-R-E-A-T!' articles on or just prior to the release day. Since M$ is cranking up the hype, we can be sure that Vista is now on track to be released.

  44. Vista by bml104 · · Score: 1

    If you hate Vista so much why do you waste your time talking about it? Are you using it or XP? I bet you are. It is like talking about the fat girl down the road and then going and banging her every night when your friends are not around.

    1. Re:Vista by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 1

      HEY, fat girls need loving too.

      --
      To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
  45. Let it take its own time by k1980pc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think Vista should be shipped only if it is really in a condition to be deployed to corporate environments. We /.ers may be happy with their *nixes and macs.I myself is on mac but I know my data including credit cards other stuff are with different corporates almost all of them which are on Windows. I've worked in multiple banks and I know most of the data is not safe enough from a determined cracker. I hope Vista don't come and make it easier for them.

  46. "No. God, no." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is also the answer to the question, "Should I buy Windows Vista when it comes out?"

    1. Re:"No. God, no." by dwayner79 · · Score: 1

      Or "Will it run on my current hardware?"

      --
      Religion and politics, without the flame. godgab.org
  47. Okay? by punkr0x · · Score: 1

    Maybe I'm not paying attention, but who is this Paul Thurrott? I'd rather read an article by someone who thinks Vista is ready (for what? He doesn't even say.), I'm sure it would make for a more interesting read.

    1. Re:Okay? by elysiuan · · Score: 1

      You know, READY FOR EVERYDAY USE. And noone will say that. Not even Microsoft. Because its not finished!! Paul Thorrot is Microsoft's biggest fanboy/lame blogger/half-assed tech journalist all rolled into a Katz-ian package.

  48. \Windows\System32\Drivers\PXHjpa64.sys by Hakubi_Washu · · Score: 1
    The reason Vista isn't ready for me?
    File: \Windows\System32\Drivers\PXHjpa64.sys
    Status: 0x0000428
    Info: The image hash cannot be found in the system catalogs. The image is likely corrupt or the victim of tampering.
    This error occured when booting (not to mention the usual destroyed MBR, etc.), in four fresh installs, after only a few minutes to hours of usage each. Probably a problem with the software I installed, and it's the 64Bit build of Beta 1. Still, Vista turned non-bootable faster than a botched 98 install :-/
    Out of curiousity: Does anyone know anything about this? Google doesn't turn up anything for "PXHjpa64.sys"... :-D
    1. Re:\Windows\System32\Drivers\PXHjpa64.sys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try only "pxhjpa64". There's only some links to a forum, but it looks like it turns up in the context of DVD burners. Not very enlightening.

      If you look up only "PXH", there's alot of fluff to sort through (it's an acronym used for many things, apparently), but it is mentioned in the context of bridges between PCI Express and regular PCI interfaces. One type is Intel's PXH, where the acronym apparently means "PCI-X hub".

      So, if that matches your hardware, I'd guess there might be something screwy with Vista's PCI Express / PCI-X / PCI support, or the behaviour of one or more of the devices on those buses, for your particular hardware setup.

      Anyway, some guesses.

    2. Re:\Windows\System32\Drivers\PXHjpa64.sys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, I see system filenames are still limited to 8.3 characters in Vista? Things are moving forward quickly...

    3. Re:\Windows\System32\Drivers\PXHjpa64.sys by Hakubi_Washu · · Score: 1

      It can't be PCI-X, as I still have an AGP-only board, but the "DVD burner"-thing might fit, I also use a NEC (albeit no DVD-RAM)... A little extreme, prohibiting the system to boot when the DVD-burner-driver is damaged, isn't it? Self-inflicted, no less (not as if I ever tried the burner under Vista yet...). Yeesh :-)
      Thanks for the help.

  49. Well, if they tried making it stable... by Milky88 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...instead of just adding eye-candy all the time. Seriously, it looks like Vista only features better graphics, and few necessary features. Looks like I'll stick with Gentoo through this one (not that I wouldn't otherwise, though).

  50. linux or windows? by edmicman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So which is more difficult for XP users to switch to? Linux or Vista?

    1. Re:linux or windows? by Yvan256 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or OS X? Because face it, some people just don't have the hardware required for Vista. If you're going to buy a new computer, might as well consider all the options. And a Core Duo Mac mini is perfect for most users (apart from gaming).

    2. Re:linux or windows? by OneFix+at+Work · · Score: 1

      Then again, if your machine can't run Vista then you obviously arent too interested in gaming...at least the kind that would require a Windows PC...

    3. Re:linux or windows? by Kenshin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who says we have to switch to anything? XP works fine.

      Even so, it's looking like a good time to get a Mac. I can have OSX, and continue to use XP.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    4. Re:linux or windows? by supermank17 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's easy, Vista.

      Now, that's not a strike at all against Linux... it just has a very different way of doing things than Windows. So, even with the annoyances and differences, it'll be easier for your average XP user to switch to Vista where most of their applications will work, and where it'll mostly act the same. It's ultimately more familiar still.

    5. Re:linux or windows? by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear, as they say, if it aint broke, don't fix it. (I do have a nagging feeling that there might be some individuals who might disagree with me regarding the 'ain't broke' bit! ;-)
      But you're right, no point in upgrading unless there's a compelling reason to do so, and XP is pretty much 'good enough' for most users - provided it's run in a responsible manner.

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    6. Re:linux or windows? by pogson · · Score: 1
      Famous last words:"XP works fine."

      Then Microsoft cuts support and five new zero-day bugs jump you and your machine daily for a few weeks. Microsoft's stock price is stagnant. They will cut support sooner rather than later to pump up revenue. (SARCASM) After all, Vista will be so secure, customers will demand to use it.(end_SARCASM)

      --
      A problem is an opportunity http://mrpogson.com
    7. Re:linux or windows? by iso · · Score: 1

      Linux.

      Gee, that was easy!

    8. Re:linux or windows? by DarrylKegger · · Score: 1

      Good point. If Microsoft screw this release up enough Linux might gain itself a bunch of disenfranchised windows users.

    9. Re:linux or windows? by newt0311 · · Score: 1

      Switch... What switch??? I am already on linux. why would I switch. At most, I may get one of the later betas to run in a VM just to see what it is like.

    10. Re:linux or windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly. Why hasnt anyone thought of blatantly ripping off the Windows GUI for a Linux distro? They did it to Apple without impunity, after all. It would sure as hell give people an easier time to switch.

    11. Re:linux or windows? by westlake · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So which is more difficult for XP users to switch to? Linux or Vista?

      Is this a trick question? To anyone but a Geek, migrating to the alternative OS has all the appeal of root canal.

      Even Walmart has given up on the idea that OEM Linux could become mass-market.

    12. Re:linux or windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Linux would be TERRIBLE for the average computer user. I mean, it is not even an option. Installing programs on XP is hard enough for some people (a girl once asked me to install iTunes for her). Installing programs on Linux? I use Linux occasionally and I mostly install perl modules, but it is something like:

      perl MakeFile.pl
      make
      make install
      make test

      And no, your sweet mother would never figure that out.

      Or maybe you could picture her searching google for some esoteric error message, modifying the code of some random file, doing her own troubleshooting, and actually getting something to work?

      And in any case, if you are thinking of switching to Linux, please just switch to OSX instead!

    13. Re:linux or windows? by init100 · · Score: 1

      Why hasnt anyone thought of blatantly ripping off the Windows GUI for a Linux distro?

      I think they have. It looks very much like a Windows desktop, although not using the Luna theme. And this was only after 10 seconds of searching, other Windows-lookalikes that look even closer may exist.

  51. Things that isn't working anymore on my Vista by pcontezini · · Score: 3, Informative

    Right know i'm building a list of the stuff that is really not working on my vista, and it gets bigger everyday:
    * Sound, since i've installed AC3 codec
    * Internet Explorer, god knows when it stopped working, the first thing i've done is install firefox, I think IE detected it and stopped working, it has some personality
    * Libjpeg in use with Gaim (nothing appers, ok I like gaim in windows, and it worked fine on XP)
    * Network access to other windows machines
    * The Bug reporter, that uses some IE functionality
    * The video's thumbnails freezes Explorer.exe (i've to set it to details on every folder before it loads thumbs)
    * Microsoft Visio with spell checking (type Andre freezes every time you try)
    * Emule is writing to a folder that doesn't exists (C:\program files\emule\incoming) but, when i try to open what i've downloaded from emule, it works misterously from the neverland! I still can't find the files.
    * Unzip anything, it moves the file inside the zip to the outside, and leaves the zip with 0 bytes (nice way to loose your files)

    And the list keep growing everyday, total of 2700 bugs send with the automatic bug report, and can't send manual errors because of the great broke bug report.

    1. Re:Things that isn't working anymore on my Vista by TomHandy · · Score: 1

      "Things that isn't working"? Sounds like you should add the grammar checker to your list.

    2. Re:Things that isn't working anymore on my Vista by bmajik · · Score: 1

      Emule is writing to a folder that doesn't exists (C:\program files\emule\incoming) but, when i try to open what i've downloaded from emule, it works misterously from the neverland! I still can't find the files.


      There's a chance that one of the virtualization features is doing this (but i am only vaguely aware of what that system does).

      Basically, program shouldn't write to system-wide file locations or registry hives (like Program files or HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE). But, many programs do this anyway.

      Vista introduces some "virtualization" of these assets so that old stupid software will still "work" but what happens under the covers gets redirected to user-specific locations.

      The vista task manager has a column on the Processes tab called "virtualization" - you can see if it is turned on for the Emule client. I suspect that it is. If i had to guess, i would say that the virtualization is mapping your emule files to somewhere outside of the program files directory transparently (to emule). If i had to make an even longer guess, the files are somewhere under your user dir (c:\users\username).. maybe under Local Settings ?

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  52. Folder Art by flathead_iv · · Score: 5, Funny
    Why did I just waste four years making nice album art for music folders and custom folder art for photos?


    Yes, why?

    1. Re:Folder Art by Jugalator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because the music of today is actually better off looked at than listened on? ;-)

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  53. Re:Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Winders is fer luzer

    I take you like Ubuntu cause you don't have to properly type commands on a command prompt in a more decent Linux distro?

    It seems you are the proof Ubuntu is userfriendly...

  54. Just Plain Bad by HermMunster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I signed up for the free download of the beta. After the download I installed it on one machine, a lesser of the many machines I have. Nonetheless it was a very capable machine. It was an AMD2500+ with an nforce2 board. It also had a 128mb 8x gforce 4 AGP card. Topping it off was an 80gig HDD with 1 gig of DDR 333 RAM. Oh, and it had a wireless card in it from ASUS.

    As you can see that machine is very capable by today's standards.

    I did a clean install without any other partitions. The install went well. After it booted up and I was able to work with it I noticed there was a driver for the video card but there was no AERO interface features. I searched and searched to see if I could find a spot to force it on. After some searching I found nothing.

    I also found that the wireless card was essentially non-functional. This was also very disappointing. I connected up a wire and installed the nvidia drivers that were available for Vista. I managed to get to the internet and do all the updates where Microsoft's online update finally found a driver for the wireless NIC. I installed that and rebooted. After booting the OS reports that the connection for this is limited or has no connection.

    I worked with it for a while. I looked and looked for video drivers that might provide me with the AERO interface. I also looked and looked for drivers and found none.

    Most of the chipset drivers I had to use were older XP drivers. It was a serious hassle trying to get and install vista drivers.

    I let that machine sit for some time but went back to it periodically to try to learn more about the interface. Networking sucked pretty bad. I couldn't find drivers for some devices. The lack of the AERO interface indicated that this was just XP with a new face. Sure there was IE 7.0 but I had given up on IE long ago in favor of Firefox. I looked at the configuration screens. Confusing but everything seemed to be there. One thing to note is that there were too many ways to get things done. There was a high percentage of features that didn't work and it was obvious that even the screens that did pop up for configuration often had the old XP graphics--indicating they were just altering existing code to work with Vista.

    I then received a copy of Vista in my AP subscription and as coincidence would have it I had just backed up and was whiping my main XP box which has a 64 bit 3200+, 1 gig of ram and gforce 6600GT, and a few hundred gigabytes of storage.

    I did the install and found that I had the AERO interface. I liked it. After using it for a while I downloaded the beta vista drivers from nvidia. I installed them and the system seemed fairly stable. I did notice huge clunkiness to accessing files and folders and determined that it was the promise SATA drivers. I moved my connectors to a different set of SATA ports off the mobo and the clunkiness went away.

    I used Vista for a few weeks and tried to test every piece of hardware--printers, cameras, networking, external harddrives (usb and eSATA). I tried the microphone. Tried burning CD/DVDs. Tried flashcard readers, etc. Most everything worked. The only issue I had was with the file access. Opening a drive could take 30 seconds. Opening a folder after that another 30 seconds, clicking back another 30 seconds. Closing and reopening. More 30 second intervals if it even opened them at all. It didn't matter if it was my IDE drivers, my SATA or eSATA. It was incredibly slow. Often times it would lock.

    No, Vista is FAR FAR from ready.

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    1. Re:Just Plain Bad by yeremein · · Score: 2, Informative

      It also had a 128mb 8x gforce 4 AGP card.

      You need DirectX9-class video hardware to use the Aero interface.

      Your GeForce4 is either DirectX8 (if it's a Ti series card) or DirectX7 (if it's an MX series card).

    2. Re:Just Plain Bad by hackstraw · · Score: 5, Insightful


      I can take the pain of a troll or flamebait mod, but from memory, this search for the killer driver, reboot, and settle for the disappointment is what Windows has been like since 95. It kills me when I'm having Linux issues that are oftentimes obscure and rare and I'm talking with people that come from Windows backgrounds, they say, "Did you download the latest drivers?" "Did you reboot?" I bite my tongue and think to myself, "Real operating systems come with drivers and don't need chronic reboots for them to run. Rebooting means, not running".

      Maybe I'm just getting old or spoiled by Macs, but is there an end in sight to the mantra of fetch driver and reboot and accept things as they are?

      I don't reboot my car, and don't chronically have to update it, and search the web to drive it. I don't have to screw around with my timed thermostat for my house, search the web, reboot, and screw with it. I don't have to do this with my DVR which is a computer and works well. I don't have to do this with my Mac either.

      IMNSHO, for average use, computers are black boxes that just work like microwaves, car stereos, cars, and everything else. They are not a religion or a cult, they are appliances that do stuff.

      I guess I am getting old, and I'll gladly take my sysadmin paycheck for monkeying with Linux, Solaris, BSD, and any other *NIX variant that gets the job done, but for general stuff, I'll just buy a computer that just works. No spyware, no viruses, no popups, none of that crap.

    3. Re:Just Plain Bad by kimvette · · Score: 1
      I guess I am getting old, and I'll gladly take my sysadmin paycheck for monkeying with Linux, Solaris, BSD, and any other *NIX variant that gets the job done, but for general stuff, I'll just buy a computer that just works. No spyware, no viruses, no popups, none of that crap.


      From that perspective, Windows is good for job security! ;)
      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    4. Re:Just Plain Bad by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      Was Division Bell the final cut, or is there more to come?

      Careful, careful, careful with that axe, Eugene....

    5. Re:Just Plain Bad by TheLink · · Score: 1

      That's bullshit.

      When you have 3rd party hardware you will often need drivers that don't come with the O/S.

      I had to download Nvidia's drivers to get gigabit LAN working properly for Linux on some motherboards (the Linux built-in drivers stop working on anything above light traffic).

      You don't have this on the Mac if you stick with Mac hardware.

      Add 3rd party hardware and you will have the same problems - crashes etc.

      This is because even the latest Linux and Mac kernels have the drivers running in kernel mode, so if a driver is crap the O/S can die in a major way, or get taken over.

      --
    6. Re:Just Plain Bad by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      I reboot my car several times a day. If I leave it running for 8 hours it has what I believe to be some sort of memory allocation error and crashes. Maybe it has a memory leak somwhere. I must say its expandability is quite limited. I wanted to increase its performance but then found out I didn't have an upgrade path, can't tell you how dissapointed I was. When I found out that it needed a patch, I was a confused by the lack of a USB port, and the $300+ maintanance fee for the man to plug in his cable to check an error message.

      P.S. if I had a penny for everytime I had to reboot a mac I'd be a very wealthy man. Something tells me we'll never be free of the "reboot" syndrome. People even reboot, it's theorized that sleep is nothing more than a process that allows 'system' data to be fixed and updated.

    7. Re:Just Plain Bad by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      When you have 3rd party hardware you will often need drivers that don't come with the O/S.

      Yes, I know this, and I had to choose whether or not to include this caveot in my post, but I left it out under the guise of saying "IMNSHO, for average use, computers are black boxes..."

      I have 3rd party hardware on my Mac, and it absolutely sucks. It reminds me of "the good old days" and that is not good. It breaks frequently between minor OS upgrades. Customer support is an oxymoron. All in all, the driver software is very immature and I feel very ripped off of the $6,000+ that is centered around said hardware and related software. But, I will also say that an average or even above average computer user does not invest over $6k on a computer system, and from my experience, neither will I until things have matured.

      Now, with "normal" stuff like graphics cards, network cards, and things that come with 95+% of computers there simply is no excuse for the search for the killer driver, reboot, and settle for less mantra. To me, a "desktop" or whatever kind of computer is simply undefined in 2006 without a working keyboard, pointer, monitor, sound, and basic IO like a CDROM, you know, the basic crap that comes with a basic computer in 2006. And in 2006 all of this junk should just work.

      I'm a Linux freak. I've used it for well over 10 years now and Linux basically pays for my food, place to live (and my Mac!) But Linux has a looong way to go to meet my recommendations for a "normal" person to use for normal computing tasks. Current and even future Windows offerings do not meet my standards either. When people know that "I'm a computer guy", and they start with Windows problems and advice and whatnot, I simply say that I am not an expert in that area of computing. Recently, I helped a "PC" user purchase hardware based on his needs and he said that he also needed Windows, and I said that I could help him with the hardware specs and found a killer system for him for a damn good price. I also clearly told him that I was doing the best I could under his desires, and that I could not help him with the software in any shape or form. What more could I do? Nada.

      I will say that things have gotten better in the Windows world since Windows 95 when I officially ditched Windows for my personal and over 95% of my professional computing experience, but there are many, many issues I have with the platform that makes me stand by my stance of "If your software needs are only available with the Windows platform, then use Windows, but do not ask me for help because I simply am not much help in that area of computing".

      Now, are OS X and Macs perfect? Hell no. But in my narrow minded point of view, there is no second place, and if you differ in opinion, thats more than fine by me. I've used Linux and Windows for years and I despised Macs up until a few years ago due to their "under the hood" inadequacies that were fixed with putting BSD under the hood. I believe Linux has a great under the hood and will probably gain a better polished UI in 10 or so years. Personally, I believe that Windows is ugly under underneath and from an "Aero" POV as well :)

    8. Re:Just Plain Bad by bruckie · · Score: 1
      Maybe I'm just getting old or spoiled by Macs, but is there an end in sight to the mantra of fetch driver and reboot and accept things as they are?

      I don't know about you, but I have to reboot my Mac every few of weeks for a security update, or even worse, a QuickTime(!) update. I reboot it about as much as I do my Win2k3 machine at work.

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
  55. Vista = the immitation of Mac OS X by mashihabong · · Score: 1

    Honestly, Linux now is even better than Vista.

  56. Re:Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! Ubuntu !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cp myahole upiehole

  57. you have to look at the big picture here... by spirit_fingers · · Score: 1

    So what if Vista isn't ready--finally we have a Windows OS that's VIRUS FREE!!

    Way to go, Microsoft!

  58. Why it matters this time around by Hairy1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So why does it matter that MS gets Vista out before Christmas? I'm betting that one of the big problems Microsoft faces is that its Software Assurance program was meant to deliver value, in that it ensured the right to upgrade. If I were an IT manager who had signed up for Software Assurance and paid out tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars, and got exactly sqat I'd probably be a little pissed. I'd probably be reluctant to sign up for another three years because even if MS to deliver Vista the older machines can't even run it, so you can't upgrade. You might also be a little worried that your entire business could be cut off at the knees if Microswoft ever decided to use Windows Genuine Advantage to disable PC's.

    1. Re:Why it matters this time around by dcam · · Score: 1

      It isn't like this hasn't happened before. This is exactly the same issue that occurred when vista slipped the first time. This would just be a case of "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool my twice, shame on me".

      --
      meh
  59. needs to get his head examined... by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    Mr Thurrot writes about using the Vista OS every day to do necessary tasks.

    Dude, this is a beta version. Put it on its own hard disk, play with it and do nothing of importance on it. Do your daily work on an stable OS release.

  60. My impressions from beta 2 by DrXym · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Like many I downloaded beta 2 expecting something which was feature complete and a good representation of what the final product would be. What a piece of shit beta 2 turned out to be. The broad strokes were okay (the theme is nice, some of the new apps are nice) but it just felt so flakey in every detail. UAC made life unbearable. The classic mode looks horrible with the new explorer. The new explorer looks horrible period (great idea to stick the menus *under* the toolbar btw). While not a bug, I also felt totally disappointed that MS *still* don't see fit to fix paintbrush, notepad, calc or any of the other basic apps to improve them to the point of usability. I don't think much of KDE, but I was yearning for it after the monstrosity that was Vista beta 2.

    I am not sure how Microsoft had the balls to call it a beta. I've used lots of MS betas and in the main they're quality products with a few bugs to iron out. Not this time around, this was alpha country. I've never seen such a lamentable effort. I knew within 30 minutes of playing around with it that there would be no release this year.

  61. Latest build is error free... by suggsjc · · Score: 3, Funny
    ...broke bug report
    Microsoft: We have received no errors from this last build...it must be ready to ship!
    --
    When I have a kid, I want to put him in one of those strollers for twins and then run around the mall looking frantic.
  62. Re:I've been using beta and haven't had any proble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is the WGA working ok?

  63. XP by HangingChad · · Score: 1, Informative

    I have only had 1 actual XP crash since it came up, and that was due to a fan dying on the graphics card causing it to overheat.

    I've got one lonely XP Pro box on my network and it is very stable and I manage to get a lot of productive work done on it. However, I don't surf the internet with it. The only time it gets to see the internet is behind a NAT'd firewall for updates, then cut off.

    I'd argue that if you spend a lot of time online with XP, you will have problems. I credit my XP box stability to the fact I do my surfing with Firefox and Linux.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:XP by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      I have my XP box behind a NAT, and use it on the net all the time.

      I have very few problems.

      I've been using XP since RC1, and have had only two real crashes. (One was due to bad memory, the other was caused by QuickTime.)

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    2. Re:XP by westlake · · Score: 1
      I'd argue that if you spend a lot of time online with XP, you will have problems

      I'd argue differently, after five years experience with XP at home.

      I've found Ad-Aware useful.

      Windows Defender, McAfee SiteAdvisor and my cable service's generic Internet Security package.

      The mix changes a little from year to year. But I've seen no significant problems. I haven't spend a dime on repairs or technical support, or found a compelling reason to re-format a drive or re-install Windows.

    3. Re:XP by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      It really depends on what you use it for. At my job we're all running XP boxen for development - doing distriuted builds, test-runs of the (very memory heavy and graphics intensive) software we develop, etc. Under stress like that, an XP box doesn't stay up for very long before it gets pretty unstable and very unresponsive. We find ourselves rebooting our machines every couple of days. It was more frequent than that until we all got about 2 GB of ram.

  64. I smell... by citizenklaw · · Score: 1

    *sniff* Bullshit. You mean to tell me this guy is using a MS beta on a production (read his personal / work) PC? Good God! How stupid must you be to do this? He couldn't at least get a spare PC to run the beta while preserving a clean XP install?

    I'm sorry Paul, but I smell a big pile of Bullshit. No self loving geek, IT guy, sysadmin et al. would *EVER* run a beta, let alone a Microsoft Beta, on a production machine. Heck, I wouldn't even let a beta of any kind touch my data.

    --
    the future is but past forgotten
  65. NAT == good by iamsolidsnk · · Score: 1

    I will only run computers behind a good hardware firewall before connecting to the internet. Anything else is just inviting the virus sillyness to your front door. Linksys routers with Linux firmwares are very good at filtering anonymous internet requests and redirects.

    --
    Here I am, here I remain.
  66. What Microsoft is missing about Vista by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    Where MS is really screwing themselves -- and us -- with Vista is having 6 frigging versions, and that's only in 32-bit!

    A single, uniform operating system for everyone is much desirable from both a customer, as well as a programming and maintenance, POV. There should just be one 64-bit Vista All edition going forward, and quit trying to upgrade machines that probably aren't up to it in the first place.

    This way all Vista application software could be 64-bit earlier. We're never going to get to a clean 64-bit world as long as MS is selling 32-bit Vista, and Apple is selling 32-bit IntelMacs!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:What Microsoft is missing about Vista by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      It's the money! Six versions = six price points. It doesn't matter that the five lesser ones are just crippled versions of the top one. Think of the poor bastard in a white box store trying to explain the differences to the average computer buyer. Or the average sales clerk at Circuit City or Office Depot doing the same...Ouch!

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  67. 'what's revolutionary about vista?' by maynard · · Score: 1

    How about pervasive pen interface support with good handwriting recognition, and pervasive speech recognition support and use within both the OS and Office 2007? I haven't bought a copy of Windows since win 3.0, but if they get those two features to work right I might just dump OS X and migrate to a Windows based tablet. This thing is simply too cool for words. heh.

    1. Re:'what's revolutionary about vista?' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pervasive speech recognition support ... that would be the "Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all" feature, yes? Tell me, how much does MS pay an astroturfer these days?

    2. Re:'what's revolutionary about vista?' by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      Microsoft Windows tablet XP already has Pervasive pen and speech input however it is a horrible piece of crap.

      it took me ten minutes to dictate this message and I have already trained the system for over an hour

      that pen input on the other hand is significantly better than the speech

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    3. Re:'what's revolutionary about vista?' by maynard · · Score: 1

      yeah. I've looked at XP/Tablet edition and I'm not too impressed. MS has a habit of releasing crap for a few releases and then doing it right. If they do it right in Vista I might buy. If not, well... perhaps I'll have to wait for Apple. The Linux "solutions" to pen input are even more of a joke than XP. So... I'm not expecting much from there. All I want is a useful slab based tablet. Who sells me the solution... I could care less.

    4. Re:'what's revolutionary about vista?' by Firehed · · Score: 1

      If I wanted to use a pen to input stuff, it would be to a pad of paper. I got a computer so I wouldn't have to keep hand-writing things. I can type much faster than I can either talk or write, and it neither makes me look insane or gives me hand cramps.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
  68. Don't just do something, stand there! by JonTurner · · Score: 1, Insightful
    IT head honchos at any large corp that uses Windows have probably been factoring the XP ---> Vista upgrade path into their plans for a year or three.
    These are the same worthless (so-called) Executives who fret and lose sleep over VB reaching end-of-life status. As if all their custom-built corporate applications which have run just fine for years will suddenly crash tomorrow because Microsoft no longer sells multi-thousand dollar Support Agreements. So instead of allow the apps to contine to work, unmolested, they spend millions porting them to .Net or some other "supported" technology. Huge investements w/no measurable business benefit. I blame it on two things 1)lack of understanding and 2)lack of vision. Unfortunately, there's plenty of both in the industry right now.

    Keep in mind, these are the same people who rush into Offshoring because "according to Gartner group, everyone else is doing it." I just hope they're still accountable when it all collapses around them a few more years from now and THEY are outsourced because they don't understand the industry.
  69. What planet are you from? (planet Microsoft?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have used XP on two machines (they have both crashed uncounted times).

    My friend (who develops software) have had the XP computer he uses at work crash dozens of times, in fact, a fresh XP install (needed because of a clients requirements for mill govt work) did the blue screen, but the embedded computers (all QNX) still chugging along, no crashes).

    And using XP for any sort of development? You have got to be joking...I bet if you were to even have an XP machine running (doing nothing), I bet any memory leaks would eventually kill it, or else an MS upgrade would kill it!

    And MS has the nerve to constantly run adds (on a Linux site of all things!) spouting fictional stories about some alternate universe where MS software is used by superior beings, and this from a company that has stolen superior open source software and embedded it into its own proprietary OS.
    Forget XP and vista, I am switching from my win98 box to Linux, I am sick and tired of this constant stream of very expensive, inferior products that you can't fix easily, cant upgrade or re-install easily, takes forever to support new devices.
    Did I mention that, for years MS and Intel have constantly (every 2 years), tried to re-define new, incompatible OS features and hardware interfaces that really means, you have to essentially throw out you existing OS, applications, and hardware.

    Thats great if you sell PC's (I used to work at a small PC manufacturer).

    If you have ever had to support somebody's PC and explain the ins and outs of why they have to buy a new OS/machine/application etc, then you may realize why we need open source software and a hardware platform not owned by MS and Intel and DRM.

    Not to mention why it has taken so long to get PC that boot up from flash (to save energy), not have huge OS's that are tide to drivers/browsers/god knows what, so as to dominate and lock people into that OS permanently.

    1. Re:What planet are you from? (planet Microsoft?) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sounds like you and your friend need to stop buying crappy hardware.

  70. Spam by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
    Restraunt customer: "I don't like patches. What do you have without any?"
    Waiter: "Well, we've got patch, patch, patch, bug, and patch. That's not got much patch in it"
    Vikings in the corner (singing): "Patch, patch, patch, patch, patch, (lovely patch!) patch, patch..."

    (Sincere aplogies to Mr. Python)

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  71. Re:Anecdotal evidence an argument does not make by vertinox · · Score: 3, Informative

    I have only had 1 actual XP crash since it came up, and that was due to a fan dying on the graphics card causing it to overheat. XP (Pro anyway, can't speak on Home), is extremely stable and it has been my primary development platform for several years.

    And how many XP boxes have you supported? Just because you have programmed on a box or two doesn't mean there are problems.

    Take it from a the peeps who do front tech support on the phones and at the corporate offices who have expirence problems from hundreds and possibly thousands of users on Windows XP... I can't remember these days since I've worked for so many tech houses)

    WINDOWS XP HAS ISSUES!

    And that is being kind. To be fair it is quite a great deal more stable than Win95, Win98, WinME, but there was some real growing pains between Win2000 and WinXp (so much so many corp IT houses still keep many boxes as Win2kPro)

    But have you ever expirenced a dead WinXp TCP/IP stack? Windows 2000 didn't seem to have much of a problem and if it did it could be repaired... May god help you if your WinXp stack went bad in 2001 because no one knew what the hell to do. These days... As long as you have google you can get a tool on a CD pretty quickly to fix this. Not to mention the blaster virus that hit windows before SP2. That got us pretty good.

    And supporting USB drivers and crappy firmware locks... Yes I have seen WinXP bluescreen multiple times on multiple computers in corporate environment.

    That said...

    Windows XP isn't that bad today (given the massive amounts of patches). It saved us a whole heck load of trouble since it has native CD burning software and PPPoE built in and the restore points often saved our butts all the time.

    Heck... A decent Dell with WinXP on it is quite stable and chances are you'll not see a bluescreen anytime soon.

    But don't you dare tell me that Windows XP never had problems when it came out... Because it did and caused many corporate IT desk, General helpdesks, and computers shop technicians a ton of grief!

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  72. I don't care what anyone says... by shoolz · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm still downgrading to Vista the second it's released.

  73. Don't care-for gameplay. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The longer they take the better since I heard that the next DirectX will be Vista only, probably
    just to piss me off when I can't play new games."

    Would that be the new games...with gameplay, or the one's...without gameplay?

  74. Let me tell microsoft! by TBBScorpion · · Score: 1

    See, the problem I am having with Windows Vista is that IE just stoped working... And IE is required to report the problems to MS. Firefox works though, but not for reporting problems. Any way, I guess I'll have to reinstall to tell them about it or find another machine not running Linux.

  75. Gotta try it by Venik · · Score: 1

    SunOS 5.5.1 is nice but I think it's time for me to move on. Lately I've been hearin' alot about this "windows" thing. I should probably give it a shot. Will it work on a Sparc 2?

    1. Re:Gotta try it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFL..I think if you can get it in those tubes then maybe, just maybe.

  76. Ready or not that will not matter by Znort · · Score: 0

    Upgrades will be forced by incompatibilities. I mean, if you wanted to keep revenues at least at current levels you would try, by any means, to keep the upgrade cycle running, right ? right. So why have your next Office suite have file formats that will only work on Vista ? I has worked before, why not again ??

    If that's not enough, well, try (in any order):
    - end support,
    - buggy updates,
    - free upgrades in schools, universities and any other state or federal owned organisation,
    - force websites to be compatible only with your browser,
    - give away your developper tools,
    - screw up open source projets,
    - subsidize a dying company to sue big open source supporters and make a big splash about it,
    - get involved in normalization commities and slow every process to a halt,
    - lobby representatives to outlaw open source projets,
    - buy at&t, bell south and any other telecom still in business and block any packet that doesn't come from your os,
    - get the army to invade any country that is shifting to open source because of national interest

    As you are very creative you will come up with some new way to get things going your way.

    Wait and see .... Wait and see ...

  77. It's not an Upgrade, it's a Bug Fix by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    When you buy Vista, just realize you're really going to need the .01 or .1 upgrade that ships within a few months.

    It won't really be an upgrade, more of a bug fix so it will actually function.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  78. Paul Thurrott is an IT pro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Calling Paul Thurrott an 'IT pro' is a bit like calling Dvorak a 'cutting edge techie'. It just doesn't fit.

    The guy's always running echoes of what the MS PR people email him. When Microsoft says Apple's not the competition (Google is), he dittoes that. Lately Microsoft has been LOWERING expectations of Vista - guess what Paul's position is?

    If all you do for IT these days is 'write' and 'play with betas' - like Paul - you get a different perspective (one that doesn't matter).
    REAL IT pros are not religious about a platform the way he is, and has to integrate all different platforms.
    REAL people in the workforce get the boot if they are even 1/2 as arrogant and abbrasive as the way Paul writes.
    People don't want to work with smug 'pros' who don't admit when they are wrong, and Paul is often wrong.

  79. Realize the WSJ says 50 pct of corporations by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    have absolutely no plans to install Windows Vista within six months of it's "release date".

    Not 5 percent.

    Not 10 percent.

    But 50 percent.

    So, slipping the release date won't really matter, as most corporations are wise enough, according to the Wall Street Journal (print edition), to put off upgrading as long as is reasonable.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Realize the WSJ says 50 pct of corporations by TheLink · · Score: 1

      And 50% are? That's a high percentage. Unless it includes test installs.

      But actually the main thing is the _preinstalls_. Are Dell, HP, etc going to preload Vista?

      The support calls would be "interesting" if they have too many versions of Vista for desktop users - there's already the aero vs classic.

      --
    2. Re:Realize the WSJ says 50 pct of corporations by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      well, it's just the facts, as stated in print in the Wall Street Journal.

      To me, that's a very very high rate of avoidance and non-adoption, and implies many corporations will be doing a wipe and XP install until they are certain all the bug releases are finished.

      There's no killer ap there, so it's not like it matters.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  80. HAHAHAHAHAHA!!! I'm an astroturfer? by maynard · · Score: 1

    yeah, right. Just too funny. lol!

    1. Re:HAHAHAHAHAHA!!! I'm an astroturfer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. You're not an astroturfer.

      You're just a twat.

  81. cant be assed by mashmorgan · · Score: 1

    to even read the rest of this as i have ubuntu in the toilet, which is where me me am sitting now with me warm knees laptop and shit to microsoft. USH slightly .. a there u go ... Wont be long, gnome is hard and fast.. and nice actualy.. big logs of it,

  82. Re:linux or vista? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    So which is more difficult for XP users to switch to? Linux or Vista?

    Based on everything I've been seeing, it's looking like switching to Linux will be easier than "upgrading" to Vista.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  83. I wonder.. by d_jedi · · Score: 1

    If Vista will become a case study for software engineers about what NOT to do..

    --
    I am the maverick of Slashdot
  84. Math- Even a Pentium could do it correctly? by level_headed_midwest · · Score: 1

    Not if it had the FDIV bug, it couldn't!

    --
    Just "gittin-r-done," day after day.
  85. taking as long as they want... by CarpetShark · · Score: 1, Funny

    "taking as long as they want" is what they do in the release/support phase.

  86. Not Linux... by MsGeek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...BSD.

    I suspect there is already a skunk works project uniting aspects of Vista with some sort of BSD kernel/userland as we speak. FreeBSD? NetBSD? OpenBSD? Who knows. However, the BSD licence would allow them to completely "Borg" their chosen version of BSD and keep everything closed up tight.

    BSD is a venerable OS at this point, proven stable and secure. Vista is in very scary shape right now if TFA is to be believed. If Microsoft released a "Windows" with BSD under the hood, they could in one stroke get rid of the earned perception that Windows is an insecure OS with stability issues.

    They could do worse. As in maintain the status quo.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    1. Re:Not Linux... by timeOday · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The difficulty with Windows is NOT in anything that BSD could provide... a scheduler, a network stack, a filesystem. In fact there's nothing really wrong with Micrsoft's NT kernel anyways. Microsoft's value (and at the same time, their bane) is in supporting all the PC hardware and software from thousands of companies over the last 15 years, and in providing a reasonable GUI to manage it all. What Microsoft calls an "OS" is not analogous to an entire Linux distro (with 1000s of user apps), but neither is it analogous to the classical definition of an OS as "whatever runs in priveliged mode, plus a little more." The real issues, I think, are in providing an integrated user experience between all the little apps and administration utilities that are part of Windows - from firewalling, to remote administration, to a flashy GUI, Internet Explorer, and on and on...

    2. Re:Not Linux... by Rufty · · Score: 1

      YES! Have a close look at the NT kernel, there's a lot of VMS in there. It's *very* well thought out. Windows' problem is not the kernel. Think of it as a sandwich. There's all the wholegrain malty goodeness of the kernel, there's the it'll-do, cheap white bread of the user interface. Then there's the DDE/NetDDE/OLE/OLE2/ActiveX/OCX/ALT/COM/DCOM/.NET + Win32/MFC/VB4..6... pain in between. Yep, folks, you heard it here first, windows is a skunk shit sandwich!

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    3. Re:Not Linux... by Kaktrot · · Score: 1

      Good God, I hope not. It irks me to no end that the BSD license doesn't require users of its source to play nice the way the original coders did. It's a damn stable platform to build from, and I think it's stupid of MS (though I'm grateful) that they don't just cherrypick BSD and Wine, and make the next Windows. Sorta how Apple did it. Those bastards.

      --
      BSD: The most efficient way of subsidizing the enemy.
    4. Re:Not Linux... by Mantrid42 · · Score: 1

      The problem (or opportunity, depending on your point of view), is that a switch to BSD under the hood would basically make everything that an advanced Windows user knows about managing and playing with the finer points of the OS useless. Thats a lot of knowledge down the drain.

    5. Re:Not Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The BSD license isn't without it's restrictions if you use it with tact. You can essentially fill your release with copyright notices and such in a way that makes it difficult for others to use without giving proper attribution to the original developers but, at the same time, the names of the original developers can't be used to promote the derived work.

      The second clause in the BSD license means any copyright notices in 'about boxes', embedded in binaries or source cannot be removed. Personally i'm comfortable letting developers stand on the shoulders of giants provided they don't try to take the credit for the hard work by those they stand upon.

      The GPL *can* be interpreted as saying 'OMGZ you used 120 lines of my code, give me the source to your 1 million lines of code project right now!'. Thats not fair is it, but then it's all in how you use the license with discretion.

      You can use licenses tactfully and interpret them differently, take the recent hot topic about derived distro's having to provide full source, instead of just patch sets for example. Some say thats just not practical or fair on people who can't support doing so and pisses on the little guy.

    6. Re:Not Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      with ketchup?

    7. Re:Not Linux... by Kaktrot · · Score: 1
      The BSD license, by itself, is indeed almost void of restrictions, which is the point of it. Huge bits of OSX are still under the BSD license, but they are also under the restrictions which Apple put on it. This use is allowed by the BDS license.


      You can essentially fill your release with copyright notices and such in a way that makes it difficult for others to use without giving proper attribution to the original developers

      You can force them to include a little text file that lists all the people who worked on the open-source bit?! Yawn. Don't get me wrong, developers should get the credit that they deserve, but it's a trivial matter to include the little license notice that the source came with. Apple had to do that anyway.

      The GPL *can* be interpreted as saying 'OMGZ you used 120 lines of my code, give me the source to your 1 million lines of code project right now!'. Thats not fair is it, but then it's all in how you use the license with discretion.

      The GPL *can* be interpreted to mean that you're required to use your laptop as a floatation device.

      It's simple: if you don't want to make a GPL program, don't use GPL code. The intent of the GPL isn't to trick people into using open code, then laugh maniacally as it eats their project.

      You can use licenses tactfully and interpret them differently

      The legal definition is what matters, that's what the license is for. If you mean that you can have different *opinions* on licenses, then yeah.

      ...take the recent hot topic about derived distro's having to provide full source, instead of just patch sets for example. Some say thats just not practical or fair on people who can't support doing so and pisses on the little guy.

      Some people say that, but it's really easy to make the code available. The distros have the code, by necessity. They can just burn the code laying around on their hard drives onto a DVD, mail it to you, and charge $5 for their time. Keep an .iso around for the next guy. Some can say that's not practical, but it's very little work next to compiling it all. The GPL doesn't require one to put the code into a tidy directory structure or anything, just lump it all into one directory, if you want, and send it out.

      People should stand on the shoulders of giants. But they should not stand on the shoulders of giants, and then deny anyone else to stand on their own. I believe that closed-source operating systems are bad for the public. They create lock-in, millions of inventions of the wheel, compatibility problems, and undue expense to the end user. Therefore, I object to an operating system under a license which allows it to be used as a springboard for a closed-source system which will just make OSS systems less relevant.

      --
      BSD: The most efficient way of subsidizing the enemy.
  87. Hasta la Vista baby.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, Vista will definitely be released before the year 2029; The Terminator clearly tells you this when he says "Hasta la Vista, baby".

    1. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by Darundal · · Score: 1

      Are you sure? No offense, but it seems to me like some of those terminators were running freaking ME, you think they would use that if they had access to Vista?

    2. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by Eternauta3k · · Score: 1

      Should we reach the conclusion that Vista is *gasp* worse than ME?
      NNNNOOOOOOOOOOooooooo...

      --
      Yeah. Would you choose a neurosurgeon who pokes around people's brains in his spare time? I wouldn't.
    3. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, thank you very much. I now have to explain to our sysadmin exactly why I spat coffee over the keyboard.

    4. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      O.O

      the mind... it boggles...

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    5. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by Snodgrass · · Score: 1

      Ah...except that "hasta" means "until" in Spanish, so they're _still_ waiting for it in 2029.

      And apparently it's such a meme that it's become part of the standard robotic vernacular.

      or something...

    6. Re:Hasta la Vista baby.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, thank you very much. I now have to explain to our sysadmin exactly why I spat coffee over the keyboard.

      No sweat, it happens all the time. Clean keyboards are in the dishwasher in the break room

      --your sysadmin

  88. Ready on time, this time? 2007- the Year of Linux by twitter · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Will it be ready in time? Actually, I think it could be.

    Flying pigs come to mind.

    It does not matter when they get it out, they are hosed. They have been making and breaking promisses for five years now. "Don't buy anything, our latest and greatest is just around the corner," is a song they've always sung but Vista is a new low. It will be a miracle if they get it out the door within six years, and it's going to be so broken no one is going to want it.

    Microsoft started work on their plans for "Longhorn" in May 2001, some months before the release of Windows XP.[3] It was originally expected to ship sometime late in 2003 as a minor step between Windows XP and "Blackcomb"

    2003, 2005, 2007, they keep putting it off by two years because, fortunately, they can't get their worst lock down to work though they have been trying for 15 years. The non free software development model has been out of steam for just as long. When they threw DRM into the mess, they nullified their driver advantage for a system that's never going to work right. They have made all the wrong promisses to all the wrong people and their customers, who buy iPods have noticed. The list of new features are a sad kind of echo to all the Linux networking and desktop productivity improvements that they have been saying don't matter. Under the hood, there's even less. The lockdown is a massive waste that's ruining them, not saving them.

    Their competition is running rings around them. Over the same time period, Debian has released two stable systems and is about to get in a third. Each has brought great improvements without adding too much confusion. The same software works everywhere, servers, desktops, laptops and hand held computers. Companies have been putting it in embedded devices and desktop penetration has been slow but steady. Apple has continued to rock on and is taking a sharp aim for Microsoft's bread and butter with new lower priced machines. In games, Xbox has been trounced. There is no place they are not taking a beating for their second rate offerings.

    The release of Vista will be the end of them and it will signal the rise of the free desktop. It's not going to work right and people are going to be pissed. There's enough Linux out there for it to fill the performance void.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  89. Performance Issues by prandal · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apart from another brain-dead UI design, it appears that Vista has some annoying performance issues, which my be one of the reasons Microsoft snapped up Sysinternals.

    Mark Russinovich's blog http://www.sysinternals.com/blog/ makes interesting reading.

  90. this guy is a joke by CDPatten · · Score: 1

    isn't this the same guy who couldn't figure out he was using a PIRATED windows xp serial?

  91. Re:Anecdotal evidence an argument does not make by cheater512 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Scratch that. My friend has a new Dell. It bluescreens all the time.

  92. One question... by Poromenos1 · · Score: 1

    Who's Paul Thurott? :(

    --
    Send email from the afterlife! Write your e-will at Dead Man's Switch.
  93. Re:Ready on time, this time? 2007- the Year of Lin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Apple has continued to rock on

    Interesting - you weren't saying that just a few days ago: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=192572&cid=158 22385

    In games, Xbox has been trounced.

    ROFL. "Trounced" by what? The PS3?

    has been out of steam for just as long

    Yeah, thousands of companies are not producing "closed source" software anymore. They've been put out of business by 37,000 pre-alpha "products" on SourceForge.

    The release of Vista

    I thought you said they wouldn't be able to release it?

    will signal the rise of the free desktop.

    Didn't you say in 2003 that 2004 would be the "rise of the free desktop"? Or was it 1999? 2002? 2000? 2001? Or 2005? I forget.

  94. Put a fork in it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I know is most of our MS server's have been replaced with Linux. Friends are now using Ubuntu, and Mac OSX is on a roll.
    MS is done. Put a fork in it! Sell your Ms stock.

  95. Hey if it works for 3D Realms... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    ...it oughtta work for Microsoft!

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  96. Re:Anecdotal evidence an argument does not make by SpiritGod21 · · Score: 1

    Which is why I fear the day our Dell machines start coming with Vista installed. My guess is that we'll keep installing XP for another few years and just not tell Microsoft >_> We don't have to stop supporting it until it's two versions old anyways, and at this rate, it'll be 2010 before that happens with XP.

  97. Maybe they're just waiting for OSX Leopard by gwhenning · · Score: 1

    so they can see what cool stuff to add. ;)

    1. Re:Maybe they're just waiting for OSX Leopard by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was thinking that alot of this talk is coming to a head just before WWDC. So I was thinking that, in two weeks, Microsoft will begin letting everyone know that Vista is being delayed due to "Beta Feedback."

      No, I doubt it will happen. But it would be funny if, right after WWDC, a "Vista Delay" became official. You'd hear the Mac Heads laughing from miles away...

  98. This is insightful?! by Svartalf · · Score: 3, Informative

    C'mon, I definitely know how to use Windows XP (Considering that I port games and other software to/from it for a living, I would have to)- it's unstable, rent with Spyware, Virii, Worms, and the lot because of bad design decisions. People don't bitch more because they've grown used to all the crap, weren't told the truth about things, and are amazed when they get told that other people using something else don't have a problem. Many assume that it's because we're technical and we're able to better avoid the problems. Nope. Your OS has issues- and when they're told the truth about all of it they're pissed as hell.

    As for the second, I doubt you will be allowed to get to define what "easy to use" is. It's not Windows.
    MacOS, maybe, but not Windows. I won't say that Linux is "easy to use" (It is, but that's a different
    discussion altogether...)- but that it's about as easy to use as Windows, it's just different than it in
    some ways and many find that "Different" is "Difficult", whether it is or not.

    Is any of your post "insightful" like the mods claim it to have been? Nope.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:This is insightful?! by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

      I definitely know how to use Windows XP (Considering that I port games and other software to/from it for a living, I would have to)- it's unstable, rent with Spyware, Virii, Worms, and the lot

      Really? Because I have been using XP since it came out, both at work and at home, and I have never had a virus, worm, or any kind of spyware. As for unstable, well I'm sat next to a windows machine that was last rebooted 4 months ago, and that was when we moved offices. Do I know how to use it better than you, or am I just lucky?

      You are kind of right about the easy to use thing though, it really does depend on what you're used to. For me, OSX would be the most difficult OS of the three, because I've never used it. I think both Linux and Windows have huge "ease of use" problems, but if you're used to them you can work around them.

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
    2. Re:This is insightful?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you patched? I guess not so that would mean a possibility someone could have hax0r3d into you machine durring the uptime. If your credit is totally destroyed by identity theft as a result of you using Windoze, don't come back crawling to slashdot for help. I agree with some of the posters here that Windoze is easier, but it is the electronic version of 'natural selection.' If you must use windoze, then you must obviously be stupid.

    3. Re:This is insightful?! by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

      Yes, very nice. How old are you ? 12? Run along and play, the grown ups are talking.

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
    4. Re:This is insightful?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      12 Must be your IQ level as it seems you run Micro$hit $pyware,except you forgot a '-' before the 12. If you want to increase your IQ level, here's how you can do it.

      Go find a cliff or a bridge somewhere, then take your entire fucktarded family. Have all of them jump off to their death, and after that jump to yours.
      You have a higher I.Q., and there will be a lot less stupid people in the gene pool.

    5. Re:This is insightful?! by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      I need only point to the exploits of the last year against Windows to illustrate that you were LUCKY
      not that XP was stable. The WMF exploit was something that MS was appraised of back in middle 90's-
      by myself when I was working with Document Imaging toolsets. I couldn't understand why they felt the
      need to allow a data file format to execute arbitrary code within itself then, and it didn't make sense
      now- and it ended up providing one of the worst security holes to date for Windows machines that existed
      even in the Vista beta, which purportedly was a re-write of everything (Riiight... You had to crib
      code from XP/2000 for that bug to have propagated to Vista...).

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  99. vista stickers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine if Vista gets delayed till 2008 in 2009 somehow.

    People who are buying computers now and don't know what Vista is will look at those "Windows Vista Capable" stickers on their comps in a few years and wonder what the heck Windows Vista was supposed to be.

    And those who _do_ know will look at those stickers on their comps in a few years and glower.

  100. Bye bye by Tooka+Barf · · Score: 1

    Hasta la Vista... and good riddance too!

    --
    Digressions, objections, delight in mockery, carefree mistrust are signs of health; everything unconditional belongs in
  101. I don't think that's where the GP poster was going by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    I think he was pointing at the seminal example of "vaporware" in the entire
    computer industry : Duke Nukem Forever. I think you'll find that 3D Realms
    has been at DNF for...well...forever now, and while the tantalizing tidbits
    that we've seen of THIS iteration of the game show promise, we still don't
    have a working demo of the game, let alone the title proper- yet. It's been
    MANY years now and it's still "Not Ready Yet."

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  102. Apparently none of you... by rickb928 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... were waiting for Windows 3.1.

    Or Windows 95.

    or Windows 98.

    or Windows NT 3.51

    or Windows 2000.

    How quickly we forget...

    This isn't long at all. Microsoft is re-inventing the wheel here, and it will take a while. and it will suck mightily in many areas for the first release and first service pack.

    Gang, I first ran Windows when it was called 'Windows'. And had a CPU board in the box. I thought I would grow senile before they fixed it. I was rewarded with Windows 2.0, which broke my favorite (ok, only) game. 3.0 was a joy, I need only reboot every few hours or so. 3.1 and then 3.11, and I need only reboot twice a night, while using a dialup ISP to run AOL. Admit it, you did too. Or IRC. Or USENET.

    I neglected OS/2 at this point. Just as well. Only my bank, my ATM, and my whacked buddy were running it. Who cared? It was almost like Windows. Almost.

    With 95, I bought the upgrade, installed it without trouble, and ran it without rebooting for *29* days! Woot! Then the first service pack came out. Never ran that long without rebooting again.

    Windows 'ME' we will let rest in peace. I never ran it save for testing and support. Poor blighters that got it pre-installed. We forget...

    The NT saga was just as painful. 3.0 stank. 3.1? 3.51 was tolerable compared to nothing. 4.0 finally rewarded us with a server that needed rebooting only once a week. My Novell servers sneered, and rightly so. And they lost. You think Microsoft has security trouble now? NT exposed the kernel like a pervert at the playground. Very bad. We forget...

    2000 at least delivered on the promises. After a service pack. We forget...

    I am in no hurry to buy Vista. I may even let it cook until SP1 is out. Besides, I got lots of other stuff to look at. Suse, Fedora, Ubuuntu, the list goes on...

    But carping about delays with Vista? Yeah, whatever. I hope you get it quickly. those who want it NOW, you deserve it quick. And dirty. Ewwww.

    We forget...

    rick

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    1. Re:Apparently none of you... by cagle_.25 · · Score: 1
      2000 at least delivered on the promises. After a service pack. We forget...
      After four service packs... Grr...
      --
      Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
    2. Re:Apparently none of you... by Eternauta3k · · Score: 1

      You forgot XP, so I assume you're with me in the group that stayed with 2000

      --
      Yeah. Would you choose a neurosurgeon who pokes around people's brains in his spare time? I wouldn't.
    3. Re:Apparently none of you... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      There was no NT 3.0 -- they started with NT 3.1 to match up with standard Windows 3.1.

      Did Windows 1.0 really come with a CPU board in the box or are you exaggerating for comic effect?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    4. Re:Apparently none of you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "You forgot XP, so I assume you're with me in the group that stayed with 2000"

      The large group that stayed with 2000, as in those of us who have a clue! ;)

      XP is a festering pile of dog shit... it is several steps backwards from 2000 in my opinion. And I am sure Vista will be many steps further backwards! If it ever sees the light of day...

      And M$ lies about the number of copies of XP deployed, they assume each license sold == an installed copy. WRONG! Since they have most large companies on this rip off "software assurance" program (which basically just assures M$ makes more money) they forced these companies to buy new XP licenses when XP came out. In order to stay in software assurance you are required to purchase the latest version of each M$ product you license as new versions of these products come out. In return you get discounts on the cost of these new licenses. If you refuse to purchase the new licenses your software assurance for that product expires, and next time you want to purchase an upgrade to a new version they will charge you the normal rip off rates. So in order to try and save money in the long run these large companies all bought XP licenses when it came out, even though they still run Windows 2000. And since you get downgrade rights with each license you can continue to deploy Windows 2000 in your organization even though you are buying new XP licneses. So there are a LARGE number of companies that still primarily run Windows 2000, even thought they where forced to buy all new XP licenses. Of course M$ wants you to think that XP is a success in the coporate world, so they go touting the number of licenses sold and try to make it sound like "everyone is switching to XP!". When in reality the majority of copies of XP deployed today are on home user systems and notebooks, both cases where you have no choice in the OS, XP is forced on you.

      Any one ever notice that M$ was able to force all the major computer vendors to put the same "insertnamehere Recommends Microsoft® Windows® XP Professional" tag on their web sites? In basically the same place using about the same font on every web site?!?!? If you don't beleive me or have not noticed this your self check it out! Browse for computers at some of the big OEMs sites and you will see what I mean. It was around the time that this happened, several years ago, that M$ forced all the major vendors to stop offering Windows 2000 as an option on new desktops and notebooks. This is why XP is "so successful" in the consumer sector and business notebook sector. It's because these people don't have a choice. Your average home user cannot install their own OS, and with a notebook you are typically locked into the exact version of the OS it shipped with. I know plenty of people who wanted to buy a new notebook but still wanted to run Win2K, but are refused that option. Of course if you know what you are doing, and generic Win2K drivers are available for all the chipsets in your notebook, you can pull this off your self. But it doesn't work in all cases and some features, such as sepcial function keys, don't exist in the generic drivers.

      These are the reasons why M$ can claim XP is a success. Lies about deployment numbers in coporate networks, and forcing the hands of all the major OEMs. But's it's all crap! I'll stick with Fedora Core and Win2K thank you very much!

    5. Re:Apparently none of you... by Saxerman · · Score: 1
      I accept your point that delays should be expected, and most are just bored with the hype engine trying to keep us interested rather than actually trying to say Vista is vaporware.

      However, your history lesson reminded me that I barely noticed when DOS came out since I came into computing from the Atari/Commodore wagon. Even though 3.11 I considered it a bad joke, and the painful migration to Win95 wasn't because it finally came out, but because Amiga support had vanished. And even the touted features of Vista (before they starting cutting them to greet deadlines as they went whooshing by) makes me think this has been a giant step backwards for computers and we're barely back to where we were.

      --

      A steaming cup of soykaf would be real wiz right now.

    6. Re:Apparently none of you... by rickb928 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, I didn't forget XP. I use it evet day at work and home. And I reserve my greatest scorn for it.
      I think XP is Microsoft's greatest failure to date. Period. I'd rather not mention it at all.

      Rick

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    7. Re:Apparently none of you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF?

      Or Windows 95. 1995

      or Windows 98. 1998, Windows Me 2000

      or Windows NT 3.51 1995

      or Windows 2000. 2000, XP 2001

      Between 1995 and 2001 Microsoft released six operating systems minimum. It's now 2006, 5 years without a desktop release. And a comic number of push-backs, rewrites and release delays. This story is about the disaster of the world's largest software maker bungling their core product. A cute little story about how far ahead of the OS curve you've historically been is as relevant as telling us about decorating your den or last weekend's BBQ.

    8. Re:Apparently none of you... by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      It was called a Mach board. Mine had 512K ram on it and I upgraded it to 1.5M total. With 512K it had to swap the cursor to dusk when I moved the mouse. Which also came in the box. A Bus Mouse.

      Look it up.

      Rick

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    9. Re:Apparently none of you... by Anivair · · Score: 2, Insightful

      umm . . . microsoft is NOT reinventing the wheel here.

      Microsoft is rather like a small child with a chemistry set here, who just discovered that baking soda and vinegar don't mix and they're trying to come up with a way to use it to power a car. not only does this not resemble reinventing the wheel, but it's barely a scrape foreward. Vista almost catches up to where other perating systems have been for quite a while. it's only origional if you've never been outside their garage.

    10. Re:Apparently none of you... by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. 3.1 was the first release. Had to be current with Windows 3.1, and of course OS/2 was at 2.1, so the number was important.

      I wonder. What was 3.0? My hair hurts.

      rick

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    11. Re:Apparently none of you... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Can you give a link? My Google-fu isn't up to it.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    12. Re:Apparently none of you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out Windows 286, which was just Windows 2.0 with a new name. ('cause ppl though Windows 2.0 was slow...)

    13. Re:Apparently none of you... by joss · · Score: 1

      w2003 is a great desktop OS.. after some tweaks. Much more stable than 2000 and much faster than XP. Expensive though...

      Its just a shame it doesnt run battlefield 1942, but apart from that, it rocks.

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    14. Re:Apparently none of you... by strikethree · · Score: 1

      With 95, I bought the upgrade, installed it without trouble, and ran it without rebooting for *29* days! Woot! Then the first service pack came out. Never ran that long without rebooting again.

      There were no "Service Packs" for non-NT based systems. Furthermore, I challenge your assertion that you could go 29 entire days without rebooting. Even if you let the machine just sit there, it would crash before 2 weeks passed.

      strike

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    15. Re:Apparently none of you... by Weedlekin · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Furthermore, I challenge your assertion that you could go 29 entire days without rebooting. Even if you let the machine just sit there, it would crash before 2 weeks passed."

      A lot depended on the hardware it was running on, or rather, the drivers for whatever hardware it was running on. I saw Win95 setups on apparently identical machines from the same manufacturer, and it was rock solid on some (until a less than entirely well-behaved app was launched, i.e. any Win95 app!), and fell over whenever somebody looked at it on others. Then one would discover that the "identical" machines were bought in batches three months apart, and the newer ones had a revised motherboard with a couple of apparently trivial chip changes, but the same drivers, and those drivers periodically decided that they didn't like something on the newer board. The manufacturer would thus update their drivers, and advise that the update be applied to all machines of that model, after which the previously unstable machines would be fine, and the ones that worked before started to misbehave.

      So while the majority of Win95 machines were indeed unstable, some lucky people with certain hardware / driver combinations were able to run it over extended periods without any problems. Note that these were not necessarily systems which shipped with it, as some of those were the worst offenders stability-wise (same with Win98, which initially seemed to have had even more stability problems than Win95).

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    16. Re:Apparently none of you... by x2A · · Score: 1

      "it's only origional if you've never been outside their garage"

      I think you misunderstand what the term "reinventing the wheel" means... it most definitely doesn't mean there's anything original (that would be plain "inventing", not "reinventing").

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    17. Re:Apparently none of you... by Eternauta3k · · Score: 1

      When I bought my PC (every part proudly chosen by me) they installed XP, although I assume it was either a pirate copy or OEM (because no one buys windows here). I got a CD with windows 2000 and installed it inmediately. I think it was worth the trouble.

      --
      Yeah. Would you choose a neurosurgeon who pokes around people's brains in his spare time? I wouldn't.
    18. Re:Apparently none of you... by ragnar · · Score: 0

      Am I the only astonished that you haven't gotten a Macintosh yet? I used to "be you", but I bailed on that crap after Windows 3.11 and never looked back.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    19. Re:Apparently none of you... by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      Was the first set of patches called a Service Release?

      Because I distinctly remember getting the first Win95 patches just about a month after I installed. And after that, it would not survive more than a few days' uptime.

      I did indeed run it without reboot for 28 days. Until the first patches. My system was a 386-DX40, Asus motherboard I think, 1M RAM, Paradise VGA card, and a USR Courier 28.8 modem, external. A Win95 upgrade from WfW3.11 with Trumpet Winsock. I also had a Novell 3.1 server at home, and thinnet.

      Another month later, I bought a book titled 'Internet CD' I think. The enclosed CD (Duh) had a Slackware distro, kernel 0.9-something. I upgraded my primary machine to a P-90, took the 386 and installed Slackware on it. Couldn't get the modem running on it, so I ran NetWare Connect on the server, which got me a dial-on-demand router and I had effortless Internet access via 28.8 to my ISP (who had a buncha Multitechs and a 56K sync line to *his* ISP). Woot. I thought I was the shits. AOL without a phone line!

      Then I discovered IRC. Many more wasted hours. And many more since.

      rick

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    20. Re:Apparently none of you... by x-caiver · · Score: 1

      I understand that you are not including service packs / minor revisions in your list, but you should include XP x64 at least. While it theoretically is "just XP but 64 bits" and technically is just "a service pack to windows server" it is much more then just a 'service pack' type upgrade. It was a desktop release out of the hardened Server 2003 codebase, with a ton of work put in to get x64 up and running.

  103. Eating Cake. by triso · · Score: 1
    Or take IE 7. Please. I use IE for one thing and one thing only: The magazine's Web portal requires IE to post articles, and because I post WinInfo articles every day, I need to use IE. Every day. In IE 7, the rich edit control that forms the basis of the third party ActiveX control we used to post article bodies not only doesn't work, it is actually deprecated in Vista so that it will never work, even if you manually install it. That means I will have to use an older version of IE, in a virtual machine, to post WinInfo articles for the foreseeable future. Stupid.

    All third-party ActiveX controls are gaping security holes just waiting to be exploited in Windows. Now that they are gone this guy misses them. Surely someone can whip up a OSS solution.
  104. Its all about the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its never about getting the thing to work with Microsoft, or even release dates. Its all about how much money they can make. Doesn't matter if the product kills babys if it makes money.

  105. don't use beta software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why is he complaining? it's beta quality, if you want to get work done use a stable system with stable software

  106. Is Paul Thurrott credible? by toadlife · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hell no.

    I've been a "Windows guy" (admin) for many years now, and I have a pretty decent understanding of how the NT line of Windows works - particularly the security model. Up until Vista started getting all of this pub, I had never heard of the "Windows expert", Paul Thurrott. After reading his first flaming of Vista, where he bashed it for prompting him to delete an icon the all users desktop, I knew why I had never heard of him; He doesn't know all that much about Windows. Thurrott is your classic "Mouse Click Selection Expert", Windows user. He knows where all the buttons are in Windows that "do stuff", but he has absolutely no clue what's going on under the hood.

    Most of his bashing of Vista has involved issues with UAC. This is an area (security) where his knowledge of Windows hovers right around zero. I really don't don't think he fully grasps how big an endeavor it is to switch over a user base of 500 million from an OS where everyone runs as "root" and takes those privileges for granted to an OS where everyone runs with a lower privileged token (and I bet Thurrott doesn't even know what a token in Windows is). Apple did it with OSX, but instead of fully supporting legacy apps, they damned the old OS/Apps to virtual machine hell.

    I managed to STFA (Skimmed the Fine Article), and sure enough Paul's big griped have to do with things that are totally out of Microsoft's control. Specifically, he bitched that his Photoshop Elements doesn't work, and he bitched that some (ActiveX laden??) website didn't work in IE7. I've run Vista on several different computers both at home and at work, and not had any problems that were not related to third party software or drivers.

    It very well could be that I, knowing quite a bit about Windows, don't perceive Vista as having huge problems, even though it does, so I won't declare Vista "ready". Thurrott on the other hand is hardly qualified to declare Vista "not ready", as his expectations of what an operating system should be able to do are unreasonable.

    --
    I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
  107. Obligatory response... by getwhipped · · Score: 1

    If this were open-source, you could file a bug report.

    --
    get whipped (you know you like it)
  108. Related news: one of Paul's mysteries solved by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

    from TFA : "Why ship Vista to enterprises with volume license agreements before shipping it to consumers? Businesses are not going to install Vista anyway. Why waste the effort?"

    Answer: this is a way of sorta-meeting the (latest) promised release date. Saving face, as it were. So that the fact that you're full of hot vaporware isn't as obvious.

    Just a guess

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  109. No checkers?! by JKConsult · · Score: 1

    Wtf? No internet checkers? That's the only good thing about XP.

  110. Re: Intersection of New OS vs. ReadyToBuy by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Combining a couple of threads, the problems that Microsoft risks with delays, is that they have to have something really ready to offer customers ready to upgrade.

    XP is an aging workhorse. I peeked at my family's Apple laptops, and *definitely* disliked the entire feel. For better or worse, I developed my computer knowledge on the dominant platform of the day. "Yes, I know it's flawed, but it's time for mercenary business choices."

    Now, All through the 95-98-2000-XP (after sufficiently repaired by SP's and driver updates) I was at least confident that each step improved on the last. Now I'm seeing many signals that Vista stands a real risk of failing mightily.

    I know full well Paul has mixed objectives, but I don't think he's setting up for a thunderous "Go Microsoft" campaign. I think it's the "Little Heat" approach of explaining delays that internal experts at Microsoft already know.

    A new OS shouldn't break everything alive. Paul's hinted three times that it very well might. This bad news is what directly leads to my decision to begin learning Linux in parallel to a Twilight Last-Of-Its-Breed XP machine as long as I can patch it together.

    As an Ex-AppleFanboy, and a grudging MS user, they should be SERIOUSLY concerned if users like me have made the decision *NOW* to skip Vista. I'm not gifted in hardline IT, so Linux has given me pause. But both with this Vista news and the passage of time for improvements, it's looking like my next venture.

    --TaoPhoenix

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  111. Laughing out Loud at the Apologist. by twitter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gaaa, look at all the excuse making and shine on. While the problems he's having are very funny from a man who so often uses the phrase, "just works" to describe things that don't, the double think involved is disturbing. What does it take to cure a fanboy?

    Businesses have never lined up to install a new Microsoft operating system. They always install new Windows versions gingerly and years after the fact. We're all familiar with the "wait for Service Pack 1 (SP1)" mantra that many enterprises extol.

    XP is on Service pack 2 but Windoze 2000 is still the most used "enterprise" desktop OS. Why? Because M$ has not added anything of value in six years. Conservative practices are not an adequate excuse here.

    beta testers never think any Windows version is ready: If we left the ship decision to testers, we'd still be testing Windows XP.

    The beta testers are right. With rooted Microsoft machines making up 80% of the world's spam, we can say that no version of their OS is ready, despite the newest being six years old.

    ... beta testers simply like their exclusive little clique to continue as long as possible

    I'm not sure what issue he has with this attitude. It takes non free software to create software elitism and it's all based on someone else calling the shots for you.

    And then there are the online pundits, many of whom are barely old enough to legally buy alcohol. These guys are classic. Let's just say that a lack of experience and a strongly worded opinion don't result in the most coherent of arguments and leave it at that.

    Once again, what a hypocrite.

    We might call Windows Vista a "train wreck" for simplicity's sake. But it's getting better. Seriously.

    Others have noticed he does this every release, shilling to get people ready to buy second rate.

    [bad GUI complaints] So you open Network from the Start Menu and wait ... and wait... and wait... while the damn thing finds all your networked PCs and servers. In XP, this process is instantaneous.

    Instantaneous? Microsoft's brain, dead Netbios broadcast based networking protocol has never been instantaneous, quick or reliable. They made it complex in a failed attempt to keep others from being able to work with it. It compares very poorly to something like sftp through konqueror, where you can use organized bookmark folders to very quickly, securely and reliably reach any computer on the your LAN or the whole freaking internet. It looks like the networking in Vista still sucks despite the all the .NET hype.

    Photoshop Elements 4 has literally gotten worse over time. Now, some key functionality simply doesn't work or, oddly, only partially works.

    Is that an apologist reflex reaction, or what? M$ changes, product_x stays the same, but product_x has "gotten worse over time". I know what he means, but the language is amazing. Why can't he just say that vista changes broke Photoshop? He knows that lots of other programs are going to be broken too and that, as usual, everyone will have to replace all of their software when they buy a new computer if they want to maintain their current functionality.

    As an aside, I wondered if GIMP would have the same problems. he does not seem to have ever tried or mentioned that program. How funny.

    In IE 7, the rich edit control that forms the basis of the third party ActiveX control we used to post article bodies not only doesn't work, it is actually deprecated in Vista so that it will never work, even if you manually install it. That means

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Laughing out Loud at the Apologist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good lord, that's a lot of text. Every single thing you "accuse" Thurrot of can be applied to you ("elitism", hypocrisy, etc) and the bulk of your infantile rant is the usual I hate 'M$' and so should you fare, so we won't go there. But when are you going to stop trolling?

  112. Hype Hype and more hype by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    The more "we" talk about it, the more FREE publicity M$ Veesta gets. All I need here is one Beta tester with +5 years in the field to suggest yea or nae...the rest of us fools are doing what another persone accused Paul of... Saying Vista is crap so he can then pounce when Vista is released and Hype it as Gold. There's much too much talk about uncertain quantities these days...even hoaxes are discussed into the ground. I say (even though I Beta test) That Vista doesn't exist ! It's a fake, a fraud, and that Beta download was a Hit and run between ME, XP and OS10 orchestrated by the NSA and FBI to have backdoors to all my porn files... There, I said it.

    --
    End of Line.
  113. Ninja anarchist library castles by mrraven · · Score: 1

    My meme along these lines in the ninja anarchist library castles. The basic idea is to set up a solar powered server with several terrabytes of storage and high powered wi-fi (remember we are talking Mad Max here so rules and regs re outtie). The basic idea is that if civilization crumbles that engineering knowledge, ethics, history, agriculture, art, etc, can be saved so we don't just have to start from scratch as ignorant peasants. As I said on my blog treefunk.net/forum/ it would cost about 3000 dollars and even if the end of the world doesn't happen it's still cool for the price of a beat to shit used car

    --
    Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
    1. Re:Ninja anarchist library castles by kfg · · Score: 1

      You might also want to throw in a few books, just for shits, giggles and when the power fails.

      And of course the end of culture isn't at all the same thing as the end of the world, the end of civilization, or even the end of high technology, although some people seem to think so.

      KFG

    2. Re:Ninja anarchist library castles by mrraven · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah books for when the power goes out completly, oops...

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  114. Is Vista ready? by NetSerf2000 · · Score: 1

    I doubt seriously that vista is really ready to be released as beta 3 let alone a RTM version. I just got myself a new AMD 64 machine... good graphics card, lots of ram and a sata 2 hdd. The company where I work is a part of the Microsoft Action Pack subscription program and we got the 32 bit and 64 bit versions of Vista beta 2 to have a look at. I thought that I would take home the 64 bit version and install it on my 64 bit machine... that was last night... it comes off the machine tonight and I install kubuntu AMD-64 instead to see how that compares. Vista installs everything by default. You do not get asked if you want to do a custom install. You get all the crap that comes with it and it took approximately 2 hours to finish the install. Then this morning when I fired it up properly for the first time to use it, it took about 20 minutes to go through the setup and get to the login prompt and then about 3 minutes for it to actually login. I think that it is going to take my machine about 5 minutes to get to the login prompt on the next restart and that IMHO is not good enough for something that is about to get released to the manufacturers in about 2 months. I dont blame the businesses who are turning around and saying that they arent going to be upgrading to vista for a long time, if at all. The cost of the hardware upgrades alone will be prohibitive especially to those companies who in the last 12 months have upgraded their desktop hardware. For the average user at home, they might as well just go out and buy a new computer just so they can run vista... or better yet, look for alternatives to that over-priced piece of garbage that Microsoft is calling an operating system. Microsoft Vista... just dont do it...

    --
    *** I had a .sig, but then I got a life ***
  115. WTF is wrong with people? by FFFish · · Score: 1

    Is it not obvious that Windows has become a joke of an OS? It's so crufty, so poorly-designed, so awful ... why in gods name would anyone even give a moment's consideration toward "upgrading" to Vista? It's just going to be the same old shit, a little stinkier than before, in a brand new bucket.

    Purchasing Windows these days is as stupid as purchasing a Ford Pinto. Sure, it has four wheels just like all the other OSes, but it's gonna crash and burn.

    --

    --
    Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
  116. Addendum: by kfg · · Score: 1

    Why spend time with wood and stone when you've got a bunch of metal already laying around?

    Obviously something went screwy in my brain between reading your post and responding to it.

    Still, the basic points remain I guess. My orginal post was made against a given scenario, that of Survivor Island and there is no "jump" to non-petrochemicals. That's thinking that derives from where we are now, not from where we'd be then.

    And do not confuse our culture with our technology. They aren't the same thing at all.

    KFG

  117. Does anyone really care? by wkcole · · Score: 2, Interesting

    No I don't mean about Vista, I mean about what Thurrott has to say. I've RTFA about a half-dozen times this year to his articles, and have become convinced that he's just not very bright. I don't get why his stuff gets linked to at all.

    Example from this time: the whine about IE7 and his employer's use of ActiveX. This is a problem of Microsoft's? I'm all for punishing them for their past sins, and ActiveX qualifies, but to use them doing the right thing to kill off dangerous controls in IE7 (which is what his description sounds like) as ammo in talking about Vista being broken is unfair, and worse: it's shallow. A deeper thinker might note that their choice to DTRT in IE7 will cause pain, but it really isn't part of a case for whether Vista is or is not ready.

    So is this guy capable of writing anything that isn't a waste of the reading time, or are the things /. links to indicative, and if so, what keeps him visible? Is he buying off editors? (j/k)

  118. They're going to pull a "Scotty" by Grail · · Score: 1

    You know how it goes - "I don' think she can take much more o' this capt'n!" Followed a couple of minutes later by "Oh, we just modulated the phase variance of the gobbledy gook."

    It's a PR job. It's like the plot of an action movie - you get to the chase and the gun fight where you actually worry that the protagonist might cop a bullet to the head, but then he miraculously manages to shoot three of his assailants with his last two bullets and goes on to save the world. Everyone cheers and worships the hero du jour.

    Microsoft Windows Vista will be on shelves before Christmas, with SP1 in January, SP2 in March, SP3 in May and a few dozen security updates sprinkled in for effect.

  119. What I want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...why this fuckhead has good karma.

    Slashdot is a pretty sad place if twits like this guy still have a Karma bonus to spend.

  120. waste of shareholder money by fredouil · · Score: 1

    the only thing people wanted is an SP3 for XP with a server2003 kernel, nothing more. what s a waste of shareholder money.

  121. This was hard... by rickb928 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Took me a good 15 minutes to find http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0 DE2DB143FF932A3575AC0A961948260

    And some enigmatic stuff here: http://www.gaby.de/ftp/pub/win3x/archive/softlib/1 997w3x.pdf

    And a cryptic reference to the Mach 10 and 20 here: http://support.microsoft.com/gp/lifeobsoleteproduc ts

    Other than that, there is not much info left out there.

    I think the Mach 10 was an 80186 with RAM and such on an 8-bit ISA card, probably an 8MHz or 12MHz part. The Mach 20 was a 80286, and cooler. Probably a 16MHz part. I think the Mach 10 would take 1.5MB RAM, as a heaping shovelful of 16- or 22-pin DRAM. The Mach 20 similar. Both had an InPort for Bus Mouse. I guess the Mach 20 could be had with or without the RAM expansion, and with or without an updated FDC to run 3.5" drives. I had an XT-Turbo at 8MHz that already handled 3.5" drives. Woot...

    Just a quick look, but it seems about the only thing there with less info on it out there is Modern Jazz.

    rick

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  122. Why not ask Vista if it's ready? by TummyX · · Score: 1

    Dear Aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all

    Oh

  123. What an annoying article by boof74 · · Score: 1

    I don't think I've read an article more annoying than this before. Usually I lap up anything negative about MS or Windows, but this article is plain stupid.

    Made all the worse by the authors need to talk up the quality of his opinion for the first 8 paragraphs.

    It's a beta. Of course it has annoying bugs. The final betas for 2000 and XP had annoying bugs - many in Explorer. I remember a lot of pain and suffering using the betas. It's something you put up with to be able to use the software before it's final release. An "expert" should know this.

    "So you open Network from the Start Menu and wait ... and wait... and wait... while the damn thing finds all your networked PCs and servers. In XP, this process is instantaneous."

    It's a beta and a new OS. And there's any number of reasons for that sort of behaviour. It's hardly a reason to suggest it's not ready to shit.

    "Here's a more insidious one. In Windows Vista Beta 2, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4 would install but issue a warning when you ran it, noting that it was incompatible with Vista."

    Is he seriously suggesting that because an app, not made by MS, that was released for XP, that reports that it is not compatible with Vista is becoming increasingly less compatible with Vista with each new beta, even though it has never been compatible with Vista is a reason for Vista not to be ready to ship?

    What complete nonsense. If there are issues with the product, Adobe will release a new version. They may charge for it. Good on them. That's what happens when you upgrade apps.

    "Or take IE 7. Please. I use IE for one thing and one thing only: The magazine's Web portal requires IE to post articles, and because I post WinInfo articles every day, I need to use IE. Every day. In IE 7, the rich edit control that forms the basis of the third party ActiveX control we used to post article bodies not only doesn't work, it is actually deprecated in Vista so that it will never work, even if you manually install it. That means I will have to use an older version of IE, in a virtual machine, to post WinInfo articles for the foreseeable future. Stupid."

    Thew only thing stupid here is the above comment. Use a proprietary ActiveX control and you expose yourself to compatiblity problems. That sort of stuff should be considered when making the decision to use the control.

    Somebody who had been working with Windows Betas for, heck, over 12 years, should know better.

    "And then there's that wonderful "Recent Items" entry on the Start Menu."

    Typical sort of problem you get in betas. It will work in the final release.

    "And why does the screen have to "pop" so violently when it switches between Aero and Windows Standard...(That application, by the way, is Virtual PC, which is required because of the IE issue mentioned previously. Auuuuugghhhhhh! It's a re-entrant annoyance!)"

    Because you are using a proprietary activex control. It happens. Get over it.

    "Why did I just waste four years making nice album art for music folders and custom folder art for photos? Microsoft changed folders completely in Windows Vista, and all that work just got flushed down the virtual toilet. (Microsoft calls this toilet the "Recycle Bin " as opposed to Apple's toilet, which was called "Mac OS 9.")"

    Don't know, but I agree you did waste your time.
    I don't recall a time when vista wasn't going to change the file system and potentially affect things like that. MS have been quite open about it. Somebody who had been working with Windows Vista for a long, long time should know that.

    The rest of the article are typical beta style bugs. They'll be fixed in a future release. You get that when you use betas.

    "Users are going to freak when their hardware and software doesn't work right. They're going to lose it when they can't do things that were easy in XP but impossible in Vista."

    The same was true moving from NT 3.51 to NT 4. And from NT 4 to Windows 2000. And from Windows 2000 to XP

  124. Sounds like ... by NuShrike · · Score: 1

    Windows is definitely not Vista ready yet. Did I read that right?

  125. MS needs to organize their programming experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem is with programmers' experience levels, which means it's a result of Microsoft organization and training. The code _must_ be developed with _all_ things considered the _first_ time. This includes things only veterans have the knowledge to protect from. Fatal exploits, limitations, workarounds and protections are learned from years of programming experience in a certain language, usually also by using the language for a specific niche such as graphic manipulation and/or with databases.

    I don't know how they're going to do it. I work as a one-man developer AND supporter of PHP applications and web sites and still find myself learning how to improve design and structure in my programs and web site(s) after 5 years at it. (As most coders know) Everything must be minimized and placed into reusable (and secure) modules. You've got to lay out your CSS, JavaScript, databases, functions, etc. as simply and minimalistically as possible. If you don't, when it comes time to add things you can easily lose track of structure, push toward your deadline without backtracking thoroughly enough, and end up creating a slow and bloated site or app.

    MS or any company wanting to take a chunk out of them needs to perfect the development model, bug reporting/suggestions -> developers -> all users, and offer fast, incrementing (stable, release candidate, etc), OPTIONAL updates to everyone.

    As in Windows and as in any program they need to patch the holes and then apply what they've learned. Microsoft is trying, and trying hard, to finish Vista, when they've barely covered the bugs in the last version. Maybe it will work... maybe it won't. They might have learned, but I doubt it... What they should do is offer a free "expires in 2 years" version (call it RC1) and let regular users try it out BEFORE spreading it around to corporations. A 1-888 helpline (FREE, or $20/mo subscription fee?) wouldn't hurt either.

  126. They bit off more than they could chew by Vulcann · · Score: 1

    On large projects it can take a week to write a single line, if that line is (say) a bugfix for an bizarre race condition emerging from the interaction of several components.

    The problem with Vista all along is that MS got embroiled into scope runoff. They thought they could deliver the world in terms of features. All the plans and designs started off with that intent in mind and by the time they actually realized they couldnt deliver on most counts they had already dug themselves into such a deep hole that now merely making the OS survive with all those dropped features is going to be an uphill task. I can probably expect Vista to be an OS with a lot more bloat than any of its predessors because a lot of code for [insert favourite 'intended' feature here] simply doesnt exist at this point but the code is probably halfway there. Given the usual intention MS has of "integrating" everything I wont be a bit surprised if they cant undo the damage so far. Now they have a mind numbingly complex system thats too heavy to fly and too complex to fix. They have to release just to save face.

    1. Re:They bit off more than they could chew by dpilot · · Score: 1

      I seem to remember almost those same words... years ago, before the release of Win2k.

      Not that I don't grant your point, but these days Win2k seems to get accolades as "the Best Windows ever!"

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    2. Re:They bit off more than they could chew by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      I'd bet big that Vista wont ever get that title. ;)

    3. Re:They bit off more than they could chew by dpilot · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't bet against you, either. Just because they pulled if off then doesn't mean they will now. Vista has a lot more baggage than Win2k, and a lot less focus. (Win2k was focused on business, not on everything)

      But there are some parallels.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  127. Code Negative by Judge_Fire · · Score: 1

    Obligatory Apple reference at Folklore.org.

    J

  128. not here by RMH101 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    we've about 65,000 desktops in Europe (same again in US, plus a chunk in Asia) and they're all going to Vista. We didn't move to XP as we still had perfectly adequate Win2K platform, supported by MS until 2010, so there was no real advantage moving to XP. Now's the time to look at our next generation as lifecycle for 2k's getting shorter - so we're going Vista. We're not alone in this - all the organisations who didn't really see the point in XP in a corporate setting when they already had Win2K will be in the same boat. If it's ready, then it's ready: putting it out on a corp volume licence implies they're satisfied it's up to enterprise-level stability. Going corp first implies their confidence that it *will* be ready is high. If it isn't, and they were to put out an unstable build on volume licencing then that'd be about it for MS...

    1. Re:not here by sc00ch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You've already decided to roll out an operating system that isn't finished or tested in your environment to 65,000 desktops? Thats a wise move... Whats your plan B?

    2. Re:not here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They must be nuts! Surely any rollout on this scale should at least wait until SP1 is out? I wish I knew what company this was so I could avoid doing business with them...

    3. Re:not here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. How can you roll out that many software upgrades without even knowing for sure the hardware specs required. I always thought the problem with Longhorn and now Vista was the assumptions made about hardware. If MSFT was smart this would be a release that ran on what will become legacy hardware.

      I'd like to know what people see as the business (economic) benefit derived from spending this much money on PC upgrades? Seems like there are plenty of more important things for IT to spend on.

    4. Re:not here by flynns · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are you telling me that after the Windows 95 + debacle, Windows 98 (and 98SE, or wait, what version is this?) Windows ME, the fun and good times we all had deploying XP SP2 (*strangles self*), that your company has honestly, seriously committed to deploy Vista acros 65,000x3 desktops? No, really, who do you work for, you poor, abused soul?
       
      ...putting it out on a corp volume licence implies they're satisfied it's up to enterprise-level stability.

      No, that means that they think people who are in charge of 195,000 computers will buy it, and the quality will not be sufficiently horrid to drive them all to get rid of their Windows desktops and servers. Because really, how bad would it have to be to make you consider switching to, say, Linux? Pretty damn horrible, yeah?

      So whatever that level is - as long as Windows is above that, they'll sell it to you. Have fun with that.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    5. Re:not here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess you work at Shell ;-)

    6. Re:not here by RMH101 · · Score: 1

      1) assumptions about hardware? It's already bloody obvious what hardware you'll need, and every big PC manufacturer's corporate desktop models will cover it as standard in the next line of desktops they put out, to whit a dx9 compliant onboard graphics card in the main. it'll run just fine on older stuff without Aero, I'd imagine
      2) You start planning enterprise rollouts some 2 years or so before implementation
      3) You'd love to know the business benefit? It's common bloody sense: it's OS lifecycle management. If you're using closed source OSs and apps then you *cannot continue to operate* on unsupported software. You'd get hit by any number of industry-specific requirements, SOx compliance etc. Same reason you need to keep moving on to the currently supported version of stuff like Oracle.

    7. Re:not here by RMH101 · · Score: 1

      No, but this kind of proves the point about this not being uncommon though!
      I know a lot of Shell SSI people (at least the ones not in Bangalore!) and they have a similar viewpoint...

  129. BSD isn't as stable as it likes to think by Viol8 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    At least FreeBSD anyway. Play around plugging in and pulling out UBS devices without unmounting them first while processes are still accessing them and see how long it takes for the kernel to crash. Believe me , it won't be long. The same trick also works for mounted floppy disks. Someone in BSD land seriously needs to revisit the kernel mount subsystem.

  130. King of the masochists by Abrax · · Score: 1

    At least he could use XP. This just shows how fucking stupid these people are. They have nothing to do all day so they use a fulty OS.

  131. Nothing to see here, move along. by dzfoo · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is just another sensationalist, seemingly-controversial, but shameless plug for a Microsoft product, in the good ol' style of John Dvorak. Let me summarize the article:

    Is Windows Vista ready? No, God no. But then, what is ready? Is anything ever ready? Does "readiness" matter? I don't think so, so my point is irrelevant. Go figure.

    Does Windows Vista suck? Absolutely. But what software doesn't? So then, Windows Vista is as good (or perhaps better) than any other sucky thing out there. See how Vista is starting to look good?

    Will Microsoft make their deadline? YES! But I honestly, truly, completely, reallyabsopositutely believe that Microsoft will make it right: every beta is actually better than the one before, see?


        Blah. Move along.
          -dZ.
    --
    Carol vs. Ghost
    ...Can you save Christmas?
  132. Definition of beta version by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 1

    A beta version has all the features that the final should have, has them in approximately the right spot, and is about bug-hunting.

    Playing with an OS is not working with it. It shows you nothing of how the OS behaves, and only allows you to give the most shallow of reviews (e.g. "Well, it started up fine, and it looked nice, and then I shut it down again."). Actually subjecting it to real-life use brings out problems.

  133. the sad thing is that .... by thephydes · · Score: 1

    Many consumers will be sucked into buying what is increasingly appearing to be an inferior product because the salespeople in computer stores dont know ( or care) any better, and they have sales targets to meet ...... and prolly XP will disappear from shelves anyway, so the only MS os available will be vista, good bad or indifferent. As a consumer that just wants the stuff I buy to work and work properly, it look like a good excuse to not "upgrade" and even to "switch" Actually I think that as long as a product works and works properly, most consumers will wait if they believe that the wait will deliver a superior product. Cheers

  134. Sounds like... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    Sounds like my general expierience when installing a Linux distro.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  135. not again... by Jussi+K.+Kojootti · · Score: 1
    Please moderators, don't do this. If you don't have a clue what installing software in a modern desktop linux distribution is like, don't moderate posts that talk about it.

    A clue that you could have spotted even without said experience: the guy compares installing itunes on Windows XP and installing perl modules in an unidentified Linux distro... Sound fair to you? ;)

    1. Re:not again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CRY MORE

  136. Sun is good enough to get started.. by xtal · · Score: 1

    With some shiney metal and a black pot, and some scrap pipe I can make a distillation apparatus. I can make a pretty good one if I can get some valves.

    With a distillation apparatus, I can make all manner of volatile organics.

    With volatile organics, I can make weapons and medicine.

    With volatile organics as a base I can make polymers.

    With volatile organics, I can make internal combustion work.

    With polymers, I can make plastics.

    Oil is not required; oil is primarily needed to support LARGE numbers of people as a energy source, and a convienent means to store energy for transportation.

    The biggest issue with restarting civiliation would be dealing with all the religious nut-cases and cults, as a plunge into a dark age is a major risk. Assuming you can deal with that, the rest is actually pretty easy. The problems would start if you had the generation with the skills - the scientists, the engineers - all die because a fanatical dark age appeared. Then, all bets are off.

    The big thing to come out of European Civilization was secular humanism. The rest follows.

    --
    ..don't panic
  137. Hurray for anecdotal evidence! by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
    I have only had ...

    Hurray for anecdotal evidence!

    Perhaps an explanation is that you perceive that platform to be more stable because the crashes cause a quiet re-boot, which is quickly (for you) forgotten.

    Anyway, since we're swapping anecdotes, my experience is that XP goes belly up about once a week. I can't remember the last time I haven't seen a public XP site (kiosks, public stations, displays, visible staff stations) without at least one machine noticiably hung. When I ask XP users how often they have an unplanned restart, it's usually several times a month. Sometimes it's more, depending on how much they use the machine. That does not meet my definition of stable.

    Perhaps it's 'more stable' simply through a re-definition of stable. When I hear Windows fanbois going an about how 'stable' XP is, rather than refuting directly I have started to ask that they explain what they mean by that. Generally they seem to mean 'more stable' as in 'more stable than NT 4.5'. When asked how it compares to Newtare or Solaris, they go on about how those don't count as they are in a whole other (better) class of 'stable'.

    But the blind XP bashing really needs to stop around here

    Cry me a river. /. is not 'anti-MS' just for something to do. Real, legitimate gripes about poor quality, over-priced products and predatory business practices cannot be dismissed simply as bashing. Enough problems from one company and you get the back side of brand recognition. The 'bashing' will stop when the products and behaviors improve, but to-date it looks like more of the same instead.

    Simply calling product 'stable' doesn't make it stable, nor does whinging about critique.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  138. I'll be buying it quick, student discount! by embracethenerdwithin · · Score: 1
    I will most likely be buying Vista very early on. Why would I do something so crazy? Student Discounts! I graduate in May and I want to get Vista Pro(or whatever is equiv) full version for 60 bucks. Just like I got XP pro full version for 60 bucks.


    I then plan on putting it in a drawer somewhere for quite some time though....

    Hey Microsoft hurry up and get this thing done before my student discount days are over. If I have to pay full price I think I'll be waiting a few years. During which time I will be getting more acquainted with Ubuntu.

    1. Re:I'll be buying it quick, student discount! by slashdotet · · Score: 1

      I will not be getting VISTA MS has yet to give me a reason on why i shoudl swicth. I don't plan on getting vista on my system untill its been ut for at least half a year or more.

      --
      ~ Diagonally Parked in a Parallel Universe ~
  139. Re: Intersection of New OS vs. ReadyToBuy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I peeked at my family's Apple laptops, and *definitely* disliked the entire feel. For better or worse, I developed my computer knowledge on the dominant platform of the day."

    "As an Ex-AppleFanboy, and a grudging MS user"

    These are contradictory statements; one or both must be a lie.

    And you are a poor quality liar to not be able to string a coherent fabrication together for even 11 lines of text.

  140. I suppose you've never got a virus either ... by rs232 · · Score: 1

    was .. Re:I've been using beta and haven't had any proble

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  141. fails the logic test .. Re:Vista? by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "It is the opinion of most of IT professionals I work with that 99% of Windows XP crashes are due to sub-par driver programming by non-Microsoft developers"

    You're kidding right? That would add up to a grand total of one. Search Google groups on 'Windows XP crash' results 192,000

    "To use customer calls as a source of evidence that Windows XP is unstable is rediculous"

    You mean it's evidence that it isn't unstable :)

    "80% of Windows users are more destructive .. people who install and use Linux systems are part of the other 20%"

    There is no causal relationship between the number of support calls and the quality of the users. Perhaps there are more XP support calls because it is a crap OS.

    "In response to the "GNU/Linus" servers you run: What evidence do you have that they are more stable?"

    Because he don't have to reinstall every three months or after a 'service pack' borked the system.

    "My experience has been if I install a package without knowing exactly how it will effect the system I'm going to have unexpected problems with stability. This is true for Windows and Linux systems alike."

    Not true I'm afraid. You're confusing 'Linus' with Windows. Apart from kernel or library updates an application only installs into its own directory. Uninstalling consists of removing the offending application. Totally removing an application under Windows is near impossible. With Linux it's also unneccessary to do the logout/shutdown/reboot shuffle.

    "the same logic I used before: If it requires more technical knowledge to install a package on a Linux system you will get fewer unexpected problems just because Windows-based applications have wizards"

    That is an illogical statement if you don't mind me saying so. Ease of use under Windows does not equate to harder to use under Linux. What happens if the Wizard fails, which it frequently does. Under SuSE click on Control Center (YaST), click on software, click install or uninstall.

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  142. Paul Thurrott is not even human by Geccie · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Thurrott isn't a Microsoft shill-
    It is a well known fact (by me - and someone named Steve) that Thurrott isn't even a human - he is an imaginary writer created by the M$ marketing department - just go to Getty images and search for Shill - you'll find 100's of pictures just like his. Post one of them on a website and pretend to be objective.

    and this isn't the first article of his which has been critical of Microsoft and Vista
    Did you read about his problems with WGA? A week later he remembered that it may not have been on the up and up when he bought it.

    As a shill, you sometimes need to pretend to be on the other side to maintain your credibility
  143. Yeah because projects scale entirely linearly... by blorg · · Score: 1

    ...with no coordination of those 2,000 coders required whatsoever.

    What scale? Its XP with 10 million lines of bloat added.
    Do the maths. 10 million lines devided by 2,000 coders = 5,000 lines each. Thats a puny project.

  144. Obligatory quote: by rehtonAesoohC · · Score: 1

    "She said turd!"

  145. Re: Intersection of New OS vs. ReadyToBuy by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Quite clearly not a lie if you allow for the passage of considerable time.
    The original Apples appeared/became sufficiently available about 1985. Our first one was a Mac 512K from about 1986. Opposite to compare with was DOS, and Apple won hands down.

    Thus began my Apple Fanboy period. It lasted all the way to 1998, though the last few years were spent stretching every last month out of a Classic II. That ended when the monitor caught fire. For the "official dates" of 1986-1994, Mac OS 5 through 8 had a clear progression, and I wasn't yet a power user.

    I received a Free(Beer) Win98 machine in 1998, so down the road I went. Win98, Win2k twice, and I waited until the completion of Sp2 to get into XP. Last Christmas, I looked at Father's 10.x Laptop, and definitely did not care for the standard OS10 look.

    Not a liar. Which is why you didn't append a name.

    The Preview Word is "remorse", which I do not feel.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  146. You insensitive clod... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..., I'm a gringo! Don't be a grammar/language/spelling nazi :)

  147. Laughing out Loud at the Zealot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  148. you're all fucking idiots by RMH101 · · Score: 1

    ...it'll be rolled out WHEN WE'RE READY, AND WHEN WE'VE QUALIFIED IT. it's not going out as soon as the corp isos are first released, for fuck's sake. I'm just saying we WILL move to Vista, rather than staying on 2000. Any fool who asks "how hard would it be to move to Linux" whilst assuming the answer is "not very" is an idiot.