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Is Vista a Trap?

logube writes "BBC has up an article about the trap of installing Vista in your existing desktop. Written by Tim Weber, a self-confessed 'sucker for technology,' this article is a good introduction to the pain and extra money required to get going with the newest version of Windows. See how you can spend an extra 130 british pounds, and still have no working webcam! Says Weber, 'It took me one day to get online. The detail is tedious and highly technical: reinstalling drivers and router firmware didn't work, but after many trial and error tweaks to Vista's TCP/IP settings, I had internet access. Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.'"

559 comments

  1. Does Vista have anything we need? by koan · · Score: 1, Troll

    Anyone using this malware? Does it have anything we need?

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by mastershake_phd · · Score: 5, Informative

      Directx 10. They could have put out an XP version. (of course that doesnt sell CDs) You will need DX10 for upcoming games. Security updates (there still must be holes). Besides that I say wait as long as you can.

    2. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Rycross · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nothing that you probably need. Its slightly better than XP. Not 5-years-of-development better, but slightly. For all the flack, FUD, and outright lies that Slashdotters fling about UAC, it actually is a good idea, and a step in the right direction for Windows.

    3. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Simon80 · · Score: 1

      I predict that eventually Wine will provide an alternate upgrade path to DX10 for people who don't want Vista. I could be wrong, but I really like the idea of being right. To be clear, I'm talking about people upgrading from XP to Linux, not running Wine in Cygwin on XP.

    4. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by DrDitto · · Score: 3, Informative
    5. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      I predict that eventually Wine will provide an alternate upgrade path to DX10 for people who don't want Vista. I could be wrong, but I really like the idea of being right. To be clear, I'm talking about people upgrading from XP to Linux, not running Wine in Cygwin on XP.

      Eventually. But when 5 years from now?

    6. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by wildBoar · · Score: 1

      I heard Vista was awful for games, so DX10 or not it seems to be a total waste of time.

    7. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by koan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't agree with "slightly better than XP" it seems to be a bloated resource hog that does nothing new (UAC? poorly implemented) the fancy GUI could be had on XP and the DX10 only on Vista is scam if I ever saw one.
      No it's bad news and should be avoided; only I know the tech junkies out there are going to fall for it.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    8. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by baadger · · Score: 1

      This is due to shit driver support, nothing more. Wait a year.

    9. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Rycross · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you actually used Vista? Your post history seems to suggest that you haven't.

    10. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by koan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Notice I said "need", all of the things listed there on wiki can be had on XP via 3rd party tweaks.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    11. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by rwven · · Score: 1

      Personally, I installed Vista in the first try with no problems at all. The hardest thing I had to do was put in my wireless encryption key.

      I think cases of people truly having a real headache with Vista are few and far between.

    12. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by @madeus · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm no longer running it because it wasn't very stable (read: Vista and things like Media Center were not stable from a clean install, not the third party software drivers were unstable), but it's pretty good for games, at least it seems like it will be when driver support is there.

      For example, I installed the Beta Nvidia drivers, which while giving me over all worse performance because of a lack of SLI support, did actually give a demonstrable and perceptible performance boost (as promised), even though the drivers were not file.

      DirectX 10 is the thing that's likely to get me to upgrade again to it, hopefully by the time it's 'mainstream' a service pack or two will be out.

    13. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by webheaded · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah seriously. I don't think the people that would buy Vista for DX10 are going to sit around for 5 years while Wine works on DX10. Wine is great and all, but that's really just not going to cut it. Like it or not, you are going to need Vista for DirectX10...there's no doubt about that.

      --
      "Those who would sacrifice essential liberties for a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - BenF
    14. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by koan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes unfortunately I tend to forget how different /. is when it comes to vague posts or ranting.
      I have used Vista, I do not like it, it's intrusive and annoying to me (yes I do want to run that exe), I personally don't care about eye candy, I am into performance which vista does not have unless you are running a state of the art proc, 4 gig's of RAM and a high end graphics card (which none have decent drivers as of yet)
      I'm not going to get into the DRM portion of Vista.
      You're a sucker to buy it and a fool to run it.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    15. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      For me Media Center was particularly unstable all the way through Vista RC1. Everything seemed to be fixed with RC2, so I assume the version for sale at the moment does well.

      Unless you care about startup time. With Vista RC2 running on a dual core Pentium machine with 2GB of RAM you might as well go have lunch after clicking the Media Center icon.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    16. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

      I heard Vista was awful for games, so DX10 or not it seems to be a total waste of time.

      Maybe, but some games coming out are going to be DX10 only. Its the only (popular among developers) game in town.

    17. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by SCPRedMage · · Score: 1

      I find it odd that you're having stability problems; I'm running Vista Ultimate x64, and haven't had a bit of instability problems. If it wasn't for the fact that I can't get SLI to work on my GeForce 7950GX2 (due to the driver issues you mentioned), I wouldn't even bother to boot back into XP for gaming.

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    18. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      You will need DX10 for upcoming games.

      Which games? Most PC games these days are cross-platform Xbox 360 ports (sadly), and the 360 doesn't run DirectX 10.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    19. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Vista feels like something that should have been out in 2003. As for UAC, it's a good idea but a bad implementation. It really is as annoying as people make it out to be, and I don't understand why it appears so often in comparison to OS X.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    20. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by slashbob22 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... I wouldn't even bother to boot back into XP for gaming
      Funny, that's the same thing I have to do from Linux.
      --
      Proof by very large bribes. QED.
    21. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by cortana · · Score: 1

      Windows Calendar?

      I'd *love* a program that reads/writes iCalendar files to web sites via WebDAV (though CalDAV would be better)...

    22. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Rycross · · Score: 2, Informative

      I didn't buy it. I get it via my MSDN subscription (through work). As far as being a fool for running, well lets just say my experience is nothing like yours. I actually like Vista. Its fast and responsive. I go days without seeing a UAC box, but its nice to know my account has user level priveledges instead of admin.

    23. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by SCPRedMage · · Score: 1

      Touché.

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    24. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not supporting DX9 makes no business sense. DX10-only games will be games by Microsoft, or games for which Microsoft paid the developer their expected DX9 profits to be DX10-only.

    25. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by __aawbkb6799 · · Score: 1

      people upgrading from XP to Linux nescio quid dicas.
    26. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    27. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      Well, the only DX-10 only game I've heard about is Halo2 - a 3(?) year old FPS from the first Xbox. Why bother.

      However, Microsoft has made it clear they intend to push the major developers (eg. EA) onto DX10 as fast as possible.

      Otherwise, why would gamers upgrade to Vista?

      Of course, the way things are right now, if Vista is truly the future of PC gaming, you might as well go buy a XBox 360 now. No stupid driver conflicts or unsuppported hardware, just pop in your game, and away you go. If you're more of a strategy or RPG gamer, chances are you won't need Vista - or DX10 - at all.

    28. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was reading an article recently where people were looking for ways to explain what the problems are with digital rights management technology to non technically minded people.

      Examples given tended to be along the lines of "I can't watch foreign released films, they were never released locally so I have no legal option, and I need this for my book report." and "You shouldn't have to pay for that song again, you already paid for it."

      These are, quite frankly, not the most pressing examples I could think of.

      Here's some examples you can show your mom and dad:

      1) Broadcast news will be all be digitally signed by the big media companies.

      The same technology used to cause your saved version of American Idol to self-destruct can be used after the fact to erase news right off your home electronics. It will also prevent it from being transferred to unprotected permanent media, or played back from any backup.

      2) Medical software and data will all be digitally signed by the rights owners.

      The same technology used to stop software piracy could be used after the fact to switch off hospitals and clinics that don't pay their bills. There is massive financial incentive to design this to happen automatically. Anyone who doubts the realism of this scenario need only look as far as the behavior of the existing drug companies.

      3) Company files will all be digitally signed.

      If you are being screwed over by your employer or any company you have business dealings with, they will be able to ensure that you don't make anyone else aware of it.

      Anyone who thinks this technology is about protecting Britney Spears from Bluebeard the Pirate is missing the point. This is about totalitarianism.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    29. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by JensenDied · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I need a calender on XP (when I was using it) I would goto the adjust date/time. Thats a calander to the second.
      Now if you wanted scheduling I just used Google calander for that, its much nicer being able to check whats going on or add things from where ever I am.

      --

      09:F9:11:02 - 9D:74:E3:5B - D8:41:56:C5 - 63:56:88:C0

    30. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Afrosheen · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's about time to give up on PC gaming, especially with the beauty, convenience and comfort of today's powerful consoles (both of them). Nothing compares to 5.1 Dolby TrueHD sound blasting from a nice surround system while you're seated on a comfortable couch in front of your high-def TV of choice. You get your shooters, online games, web surfing, etc.

        With Vista, MS gives us another reason to turn towards consoles as a smarter choice. It's currently an unnecessary upgrade that wraps your media in shackles with DRM and pesters you every 5 minutes to second guess whatever you want to do with it. Oh and it's expensive and won't look pretty unless you spend some $$$ on your computer.

        The days of Wintendo are numbered and I think Vista is a good reason to bring the curtain down.

    31. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I'd *love* a program that reads/writes iCalendar files to web sites via WebDAV (though CalDAV would be better)... Mozilla Sunbird can, and CalDAV support is planned (CalDAV isn't yet a finalised spec).
      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    32. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by bigdavesmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is it really a smart move for game makers to require Vista though? It seems like a lot of people aren't switching, not just ./ers, but in general. Won't it be smarter to keep going with DX9 and XP for quite some time, until you can be sure that the general audience of gamers has moved on?

      Just a thought.

    33. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by mr_shifty · · Score: 2, Funny

      OMG why do you hate America?

      --
      And the circle of life continues to spin, occasionally wobbling on its axis thanks to the weighty presence of dumb.
    34. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "...but its nice to know my account has user level priveledges[sic] instead of admin..."

      Awesome, welcome to 1975! You must be a really proud owner of a modern, prior art ripping operating system.

    35. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by throx · · Score: 1

      They could have put out an XP version. Not really, at least not without rewriting a bunch of the XP kernel to handle all the video hardware virtualization that Vista supports. Your argument is basically that they could have shipped the Vista kernel changes as a patch for XP, but then what's the incentive for them to ever make those changes in the first place? They could have shipped XP as a patch for Win2k, or Win2k as a patch for NT4, or etc. too...
      --

      Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

    36. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      FPSs, MMORPGs and RTSs all suck on consoles. Considering that I'm only interested in those genres and that online play with a fast control scheme (ie. keyboard and mouse) is a requirement for me to even consider playing, I think I'll stick with my PC.

    37. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by smaddox · · Score: 1

      PC gaming will never go away.

      First of all, developers like it more because its simple and doesn't change. (although the XBOX 360 is helping by keeping things very PC-like.)

      Second, and more importantly, the keyboard and mouse is a far superior input device for several genres. Until the consoles can come up with an input device to rival the KBAM, PC gaming wont go away. (And don't even talk to me about the Wiimote. Have you tried playing Red Steel? It's horrible compared to KBAM.)

    38. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fuck that! Why would I want to replace my nice, general-purpose, hackable PC with DRM-infested proprietary crap?

      (Note: I'm not going to be playing games on Vista, either.)

      --

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

    39. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Well, people will either have to pay for (or pirate; I don't see the proportion of paid-up software changing anytime soon) Vista, or give up the games. And I wouldn't bet on anyone giving up gaming.

      In the worst case, Microsoft could easily afford to pay game developers to write Vista-only games -- or, more likely, bully them into doing so. Because if the payware WINE forks improve sufficiently, Linux -- or FreeBSD, whose licence allows you to take without giving back; how about a game on a bootable DVD, even with its own OS? -- might turn out to be a more attractive option for those still tied to Windows.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    40. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call bullshit, that code is blacklisted and has been for years.

    41. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by sbrown123 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      >Not really, at least not without rewriting a bunch of the XP kernel to handle all the video hardware virtualization that Vista supports.

      I smell serious bullshit and techno babble with words like "hardware virtualization". Can I virtualize new hardware?! Oh, and kernel? Do you really think graphics have anything to do with the OS kernel?!!

    42. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      unless you are running a state of the art proc, 4 gig's of RAM and a high end graphics card (which none have decent drivers as of yet)
      And of course if you have that kind of hardware, ... I was going to say "even XP will look good". But then I remembered a brief recent exposure to the nice new 3D compositing stuff in the latest X.org servers. I don't think this much-vaunted eye-candy's worth much now. Back in the day when 65K color full-screen desktop wallpaper was a WOW! thing,.. sure. Now, it's just a new kind of shiny-shiny. Mebbe I'm getting old but it's like any other field of modern industrial design... cars, typography, packaging, you name it, in thirty years' time you'll be able to date a given cornflake box not because of the amazing new features that were just introduced, but from the design... the domain of what we used to call "shapemakers"... and try as they might, they're always five years behind the hardcore geeks when it comes to defining this year's look & feel of the concept "futuristic". Nah, Vista doesn't look much different from OSX or KDE or Gnome or even XP, come to that. Actually have you ever tried WindowMaker on a machine with a nice fast hi-res display? Pure perfection...

      You're a sucker to buy it and a fool to run it.

      Someone give that poster a gold star and quote him in a sig! Such wisdom will surely echo down the ages...

    43. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      If vista sales are not there, XP (and dx9) games will be the dominant target for at least 24 more months.

      By then the expensive pile of vista crap you can buy today will be a well patched, smooth running computer for about $400.

      So why by Vista now. I made a point of buying an XP machine (smooth running, well patched- handles the hardest zones of my mmorg like glass) so I wouldn't be stuck with Vista (3 of our guild members are in the vista trap right now. they are screwed.)

      Next OS will be linux anyway.

      I'm almost done with gaming on PC's. WII will be my first console and I bought a stand up console with Robotron:2044, Defender, Stargate, and others. Probably spend a half hour a day on it.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    44. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by VE3MTM · · Score: 1

      Right, graphics have absolutely nothing to do with the kernel... code in userspace just magically talks to the hardware. Either you're very pessimistic about process isolation in Windows, or you're seriously misinformed about how operating systems work.

      Yes, in Vista they're moving most of the driver code into userspace, but not all. At the very least (even in the exokernel model), there will be stubs in kernel space to proxy I/O reads and writes from user space to kernel space. So yes, graphics has plenty to do with the hardware.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 Whoops, silly middle mouse button...
    45. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's about time to give up on console gaming, especially with the beauty, convenience and comfort of today's powerful operating systems (all of them). Nothing compares to 5.1 Dolby TrueHD sound blasting from a nice surround system while you're seated on a comfortable couch in front of your high-def TV of choice. You get your shooters, online games, web surfing, etc.

    46. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by omeomi · · Score: 1

      Have to agree with you there...I think developers are going to be planning for DX9 compatibility for some time...

    47. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely and totaly disagree. UAC is broken by design. The average user is not savy enough to determain the correct answer between Continue and Cancel. Especially when . . .

      It's annoying and uninformative. End users will be trained to simply hit 'Continue' every time it pops up without thinking. You want to install malware? Just have UAC ask to elevate you. It even gives you a legal defense since they have to give you permission.

    48. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by causality · · Score: 0, Troll

      Before the idiot mods come out and mod you as "Troll" or "Flamebait", I want to point out that THIS IS OBVIOUSLY HUMOROUS.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    49. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by jwhyche · · Score: 0

      Of course she gave them something. I would imagine it was a credit card number and they gave her a working key. People seem to think its the software that is worth all the money, its not. I can download any version of windows from a number of sites in a few minutes. It's those keys is what mickysoft really charges for.

      --
      I read at +2. If your post doesn't reach that level I will not see or respond to it.
    50. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by will_die · · Score: 1

      The other one which user point to is Age of Conan a MMORPG. While they will have an DX9 version the graphics difference between the DX10 and DX9 is huge.

    51. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      The big question is if the bad driver support is Microsoft's fault or if all the vendors just cant be stuffed.

      From what I've heard its because of what Microsoft's done which makes it nearly impossible to make a stable driver.

    52. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by rbanffy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Because in Soviet America, America hates you.

      (sorry - couldn't resist)

    53. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by norman619 · · Score: 1

      NOTE: You will not be playing new games either...

    54. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Computers are far superior to consoles and they can also be hooked up to big tvs with surround sound.

      I agree with your point about how Windows is no longer the ideal gaming platform however.

    55. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by cheater512 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or even ditching DX completely and using OpenGL.

      Game companies arent stupid. They know people are trying other OS's.
      Google, id software, Epic and others have moved accordingly.
      I'm betting that other companies are considering it.

    56. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by causality · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I go days without seeing a UAC box, but its nice to know my account has user level priveledges instead of admin.

      So, it sounds like when they are done reimplementing UNIX, they might just have a fine operating system.
      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    57. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Afrosheen · · Score: 1

      Well we can agree to disagree because PC developers have developed the 'lets take 4 years to make a game' syndrome and I'm tired of running on the upgrade treadmill. My PS3 is close enough and looks fantastic without making a bunch of racket in my living room or taking up too much space in my entertainment center. Oh and it plays Blu-ray discs...how much would that cost to add to your PC? ;)

    58. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      >how about a game on a bootable DVD

      Long, long ago, in an Amiga universe far, far away, I used to bitch daily about Eurogames that couldn't run from my hard drive and HAD to be booted from floppies. I looked forward to the day I could launch everything from the hard drive.

      ~15 years later, the idea of booting games from discs (or better yet, booting the DVD in a VM whose hypervisor *I* can "trust" to keep the booted OS from reading or writing to anything besides a virtual filesystem sandboxed on one of my hard drives) actually looks good by comparison, thanks in no small part to companies whose games introduce kernel-level malware in the holy name of copy protection that'll still be around, causing problems, long after the original game on whose behalf it was installed is pitched aside and forgotten about (*cough* SafeDisc *cough*)

    59. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Pausanias · · Score: 1

      OK, well how long until someone comes up with software that modifies Direct X 10 or XP (or both) so that Direct X 10 can be installed and run on Windows XP? Or is there some kind of insurmountable barrier that prevents Direct X 10 from even theoretically running on XP?

    60. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by WiFiBro · · Score: 1

      o generatio incredula
      quamdiu apud vos ero
      quamdiu vos patiar

    61. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by cortana · · Score: 1

      I know, we are using it at the moment. But it sucks. It's buggy as hell, the interface for adding/removing/synchronising calendars if confusing and it's useless if you don't have an internet connection.

      More worryingly, it seems to be dead in the water. It's been in development for many, many years and progress has been very, very slow.

    62. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Bloke+down+the+pub · · Score: 1

      Eventually. But when 5 years from now?
      Excellent strategy - coinciding with the release of Duke Nukem Forever.
      --
      It's true I tell you, feller at work's next door neighbour read it in the paper.
    63. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by orkysoft · · Score: 1

      No, they're reinventing it poorly, because they do not understand it.

      --

      I suffer from attention surplus disorder.
    64. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by namekuseijin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not everyone who uses a computer is a moronic follower of the games industry. Some people actually use it for doing useful work rather than spending their lifes blasting things up at 60FPS. Such people do not need DX10 whatsoever.

      --
      I don't feel like it...
    65. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by sparkz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      http://www.dwheeler.com/blog/2007/01/07/#drm-nonse nse-hddvd

      Nuff Said.

      David Wheeler has got it all in a screenful. Why it doesn't do the content-providers any good, why it doesn't do the "consumer" any good, and why it's all a waste of time anyway.

      All written in clear English.

      One quote from the article: "I do not approve of piracy. I don't approve of murder, either, yet I approve of the sale of steak knives and cleaning supplies... and would oppose trying to halt their sales."

      --
      Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
    66. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Compholio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wine is great and all, but that's really just not going to cut it. Like it or not, you are going to need Vista for DirectX10...there's no doubt about that.
      "Rumor" is that DirectX 10 is very similar to DirectX 9, there has even been some discussion that Wine will make a Windows XP port of the DirectX 10 libraries (once they're done of course).
    67. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by aristotle-dude · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What new games? Given all the driver and compatibility issues, do you really think companies are going to release DirectX 10 only games any time soon? I think not.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    68. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by causality · · Score: 1

      They understand it well enough to know that it's "not invented here".

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    69. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If its that similar, someone will write a DX10 wrapper for DX9 apps/games.

      I thought DX10 had all kind of useless bollox in there like no sound hardware support and unified shaders.

    70. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are aware that you can use any USB keyboard+mouse with the PS2?
      So why would the bluetooth compatible consoles be any different?(only with bluetooth keybaords and mice rather than USB)

    71. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by gmb61 · · Score: 1

      At least with a PC we have choice of whether to add Blu-Ray or not, the PS3 gave you no choice.

    72. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Is performance really an issue right now? I mean, I'm running a 100 dollar video card, and I can play any game on the market at a pretty damned decent resolution with the shiny stuff turned on.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    73. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should lurk moar. Modern video cards can output to a video output, and modern sound cards are thrilled when they can output a digital signal. For example, I've got my computer hooked to my 6.1 rig right now. No drivers involved, just "Plug in here, plug in here, set your media unit to video 2, play away with 6.1 stereo and hdtv video"

      I'm not going to pretend I disagree with you, because I don't. I've got a PS2 and an XBox hooked up(I was going to school during the last console generation, so I've got a lot of gaming to catch up on), and honestly, on there I don't have to worry about whether some asshole in accounting put some spyware-like copy protection on the DVD, because I just put in the disk and go. I don't have to worry about losing the CD-Key and losing the ability to play a game I paid good money for because the company thinks I'm a thief, because you just put the disk in and go. I don't need to worry about whether the system specs quoted on the box are blatantly wrong (I'm looking at you, Oblivion!), because I just put the disk in and go. On the X-Box, I don't neccessarily even need to put the disk in. If I like the game a lot, I can rip it to the hard drive and play with faster load times(It's modded, but for apps, not for piracy), so it's just go.

      I just want to make sure you're knocking PC gaming for the right reasons.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    74. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      NOTE: Publishers develop games for where there is a market, and if the market isn't on Vista, new games won't be developed for Vista.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    75. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I have to call bullshit on the 'upgrade treadmill'. If you bought a top-of-the-line PC years ago, odds are the only thing you'd need to be ready to play just about anything is a 100 dollar video card. If you bought a top of the line Geforce 3 when the XBox came out, you would have been in good shape more or less until the 360 came out(Lower resolutions, perhaps, but nothing lower than your xbox would have to pull), and if you bought a 7800 or whatever last year, you'll probably be in good shape for quite a while yet. I'm not going to pretend that the silliness of the 8800 isn't going to add a layer of stuff you can't use, but let's face it, the PS3 vs. the XBox 360 will be the same.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    76. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Say what you want, I was there. I was in as much disbelief as you are. Why would I make some shit up like that?

    77. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by kklein · · Score: 1

      Up until a few weeks ago, I would have flamed you into oblivion for such heresy.

      But I recently bought an Xbox360, and I have an HDTV coming in soon, and I gotta say... This is the life. Sitting on the couch, no carpal tunnel, and I can still play online with my friends while using VOIP. Nice.

      That being said, things like BF2 will always need to stay on the PC, I think. They require too many kinds of controllers to litter your livingroom with. And too much horsepower.

      But for single player or co-op games, the console has come into its own.

    78. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Cokeisbomb · · Score: 1

      It's pretty obvious that upgrading to Vista is tough, and with its hardware demands, id be much more impressed with Microsoft if it was only available as an OEM install for now. That way the only computers running it were intended to.

    79. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      "FPSs, MMORPGs and RTSs all suck on consoles. Considering that I'm only interested in those genres and that online play with a fast control scheme (ie. keyboard and mouse) is a requirement for me to even consider playing, I think I'll stick with my PC."

      So, basically, everything?

      I disagree. I tend to be a PC gamer, but my PS2 has some damn fine games that work very well on it indeed. As for role-playing games, the PS2 was originally designed for a Japanese audience that likes little else (I live in Japan, and the people I know who are into gaming are all into role-playing on the PS2.)

      Of course, it really all comes down to your subjective taste in games and your gaming style (network play vs. in-the-same-room playing against friends.) I think that the advent of hi-def on game consoles is going to really help them overtake PCs for overall gaming value, for the above-mentioned reasons (the comfort of the couch, massive wide-screen TV screen sizes, and the social experience.)

      As for Vista, I've installed it with no issues whatsoever; the network connected just fine, drivers were all installed for me, and I had no need to upgrade my modest hardware (I scored a 3.0 overall on the Vista scale, due to needing a beefier video card.) I have also been able to play all of my games without a problem. I probably don't tax my PC the way a power gamer would, but games like HL2 work without a hitch.

      It does feel like a lackluster release, however, and I had to immediately turn off UAC (you can leave the warning shield icon on next to system-critical links if you want a heads-up, but Vista's new "security" is a total joke.) If it wasn't for needing an upgrade for a new computer I built, I wouldn't have bought it. Except for gaming, the computer also mostly runs in Linux.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    80. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent troll.

    81. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Recurve+Boy · · Score: 1

      "So, basically, everything?" Lame. There are also genres like RPG, racing, adventure, sports, simulation, fighting games (y'know, like Tekken), arcade (I will pretty much throw side scrollers, and stuff like mario in this one), puzzle. Ugh, off topic. Anyway, here's hoping that games will be XP compatible for several more years.

    82. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by renoX · · Score: 1

      >The same technology used to stop software piracy could be used after the fact to switch off hospitals and clinics that don't pay their bills.

      Only if these client X rent their software not buy it, or are too dumb to choose a software which cannot export data to a 'standard format' readable by other software.

      Choosing X==hospital is the same logic than 'thinks of the children': an appeal to emotion not logics, which is really low.

    83. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      So you're suppporting my argument that there are other reasons besides MMORPG and FPS to get a console. How is this lame? As for off-topic, I specifically went on to talk about my own Vista installation. You should try reading more than the first line of the comment before replying.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    84. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by name*censored* · · Score: 1
      Ah, but the thing is, DX10 is vista's only mustbuy point. Absolutely every feature advertised can be recreated on the application level on XP, or is available in another OS. Indexing search, meet "Google Desktop", 3 years your senior. BitLocker? I'd like to introduce you to Mr. Encrypted Folders. Hell, I've even seen some Vista UI themes for XP floating around. Even Vista's (in)famous "Aero" can be immitated to a certain degree with a fistful of bloated graphics card suites (not the exact same thing, since that would be copyright infringement, but the same functionality). DX10 is the only thing MS is using (apart from it's own momentum, which doesn't hold water when you give users 6 years to get well and truly settled in with XP) to force people to upgrade.

      Hell, if you think that all people are after in a computer is word processing/internet browsing, then just get (insert your favourite *nix distro here) installed on a low-end box, set (insert your favourite word processor here) and (your favourite browser) to open on login, bind all the "F1-12" keys to do various things (forward/back/stop/home/refresh/search/new/save/lo ad/format/print/play+pause), write your bindings on those keys (IBM Model M and/or sharpies) and onsell those boxes to the masses.
      --
      Commodore64_love: I don't comprehend people who're so frightened of death that they'll bankrupt themselves to stay alive
    85. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 1

      Game companies arent stupid. They know people are trying other OS's.
      Google, id software, Epic and others have moved accordingly.
      I'm betting that other companies are considering it.


      Nonsense. Id was using OpenGL back before Direct3D was any good.

    86. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      One could argue that we actually do not need DX10. Just keep developing for DX9 instead.
      Logically, it will probably be quite a while before any studios, besides those owned, bullied or bribed by Microsoft, start developing games that requires DX10 anyway.
      The userbase should be to small to be profitable.
      A mean, who the hell would buy a operating-system that cost as much, or more, than a current generation game-console, just o be able to play a game? (XB360, PS3 and Wii are now current generation, since they've been released)

      It's too bad that Mac and Linux are such small players in the gamer-world.
      Otherwise most studios would probably use OpenGL, since it's cross platform.

      Wonder if some creative hacker will be able to backport DX10 to XP. That would be a nice solution too...
      Best of two worlds. DX10 *and* hardware-accelerated sound. =)

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    87. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      I have used Vista, I do not like it, it's intrusive and annoying to me (yes I do want to run that exe), I personally don't care about eye candy, I am into performance which vista does not have unless you are running a state of the art proc, 4 gig's of RAM and a high end graphics card (which none have decent drivers as of yet) I'm not going to get into the DRM portion of Vista.

      For all the time Microsoft wasted on Vista, I can't believe all they did was throw more dialog boxes in front of applications. Where's the privilege separation? Where's the capability based access to personal files? What the hell were they doing for 5 years, anyway? The proper way to handle "untrusted" applications is to run them as a dummy user with no filesystem or network rights, essentially sandboxing them. Use the common file dialogs or something similar to grant rights to files that the user picks for them. It really wasn't beyond Microsoft to implement a proper capability system like this, but they seemed more interested in matching Apple's UI.

    88. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Think of the children is the most valid appeal to logic around. Translates to "consider what larger the consequences of this will be".

      "If they're too dumb, fuck em", now that's an appeal to emotion. Selfishness and pride, among others.

      Children are, after all, more important than freedom.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    89. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      That's correct-ish. DX10 does abandon support for DirectSound, the previous hardware acceleration standard for Windows sound. However they are doing so to embrace a more open standard OpenAL.

      But I guess we'll put that aside and bash Microsoft anyway because that's what we do here. Never mind the fact that that the slashdot community as a whole crys for open source and bashes MS for keeping their software closed source.

      Sometimes you have to abandon legacy to move on (not doing so is what is usually refered to as "code bloat". Perhaps you've heard of it?). This is just a bit more... abrupt than usual.

    90. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      You also need to bear in mind that the Amiga's OS was (mostly) in ROM, so not susceptible to being mucked about with by rogue software. In the worst case, you would have to hard-reset and reinstall everything from a write-protected floppy. The Amiga couldn't write to write-protected floppies. Some machines of the day actually implemented write-protect in software, and with a little persuasion would happily stomp all over a write-protected disk; a fact which was used to implement some particularly nasty copy-protection schemes and could have been used for even nastier viruses. The Amiga could, however, read the write-protect switch on an I/O port; if one of these schemes detected a write-protected disk, it would stop what it was doing and insist for you to unprotect the disk before continuing.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    91. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by JimDaGeek · · Score: 1

      So MS using OpenAL should be applauded? How long until they "extend" it in a non-open manner? What about the rest of DX10? Is it open? Nope. So any DX10 games will still only work MS Windows. No Mac or Linux support.

      Stop with the "MS is doing open stuff" until MS actually comes out with something that is open from end-to-end. Heck, IE supports open standards like HTML, CSS (to some extent), EMCA JavaScript, etc. However, it is the proprietary crap that MS throws on top that makes sites "IE-Only", like client-side VBVScript and the MS-Only conditional comments, etc.

      --
      General, you are listening to a machine! Do the world a favor and don't act like one.
    92. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by JimDaGeek · · Score: 1

      Or is there some kind of insurmountable barrier that prevents Direct X 10 from even theoretically running on XP?
      Yes, those barriers are called Microsoft Money(tm)(not the program), Microsoft Marketing(tm) and Microsoft Lawyers(tm). DX10 support in software only is junk, just like software-only support for OpenGL is junk. You need it in the hardware of the video cards. MS won't let NVidia or ATI/AMD put out drivers that work with non-Vista OS'es that have support for DX10. Period. I can guarantee it is part of the licensing deal. So even though DX10 could certainly run under Win2K or WinXP, MS just won't allow it. That is the whole _point_ of crappy proprietary stuff. The person holding the keys gets to call all the shots.

      In constrast, OpenGL 2.x can be used on just about any OS. If NVidia and ATI/AMD update their hardware to support OpenGL 2.x (like they have for more recent cards), the software drivers for any OS will know how to take advantage of the features in OpenGL 2.x.

      With proprietary junk like DX10, you get extreme limitations imposed by the "key holders". What MS says, goes WRT DirectX. Sadly, too many game companies bought into the DX bandwagon since they were generally making MS-Only games, they didn't care about an MS-Only gaming API.

      I wish the game companies came together and really pushed OpenGL so that the games would not be locked down to MS-Only.
      --
      General, you are listening to a machine! Do the world a favor and don't act like one.
    93. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      I was oplaying devil's advocate. But if you must know, I'd rather have something that's closed source with 95% market penetration than open with 1%. Once you have a disparity like that, openness is simply academic.

      If you'd really like to know a bit more about why DirectX is the gaming monolith that it is, I'd suggest starting with a book called Renegades of the Empire: How Three Software Warriors Started a Revolution Behind the Walls of Fortress Microsoft . It chronicles how three guys in MS worked on the DX project secretly and without approval. They did so, because if you'll recall, back in the earlier Windows days (Pre 9x and early Win95) all PC gaming was done in DOS. Windows was considered a terrible platform for gaming. Then when 95 came around, it had native OpenGL support. You may recall it shipped with a few OpenGL based screen savers that were in various versions of Windows for years. As far as I can tell, this is about as far as OpenGL was utilized when 95 came out. Windows 95 was STILL considered a bad choice for a gaming platform because of all the overhead, etc. So games still ran in DOS. I remember games of the era. Wing Commander 3 for instance. A 9x version didn't ship until years later...

      Then these three "renegades" decided that they needed to make Windows a platform which would be attractive for game developers. DirectX was their answer. Ease of development. Develop once for DX, and don't worry if the user has a Soundblaster, or Rolland, or AdLib or Herculees sound card. Let developers focus on a common interface. They did it in secret and by the time they let it loose upon the world, the executives at MS couldn't stop it. It was either embrace this thing that can only help Windows, or crush it and look bad in the process.

      Obviously they chose to embrace it. Years later we're ten versions into it, and elements (such as audio) have changed a lot.

      The point of this little story though is that developers were not embracing OpenGL. It was available to them. It was fully open. But they chose to ignore it, and developed games for DOS instead. Each game using it's own proprietary system for addressing memory, video, sound, etc.

      DirectX may be a closed standard, but it is a standard. Almost every PC game that ships uses it. It works as long as your hardware is fast enough. I don't care that I can't see the code that runs it. I can develop for it. Right now if I choose. A hobiest with almost no programming experience. I can pick up an SDK and get going.

      In every meaningful way, it's as good or better than the comparable open technologies that exist.

      You could play Tux racer and Doom 3. Or you could have FEAR, Half-Life Half-Life 2, Max Payne, Starcraft, WoW, Flight Simulator, SWAT 4, Black & White, Company of Heros, and dozens of other games that come out for DirectX, and hence, for Windows.

      If I want to play games (Among other things...) I choose Windows. I *do* want to play games, so I do choose Windows.

    94. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Bragi+Ragnarson · · Score: 1

      If I want to play games (Among other things...) I choose Windows. I *do* want to play games, so I do choose Windows.

      Playing on Windows is like using a pick-up truck to ride in Formula 1 race.

      Linux is for work, game console is for playing and "Windows for Dummies"

      --
      Bragi Ragnarson Lawful Good (I change the law when it's not good)
    95. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      I'll have to respectfully disagree. Windows is for work also. Linux is great as a hobiest OS, as it lets you play with the OS itself a great deal more than Windows does (and see the code, etc). Linux is also a wonderful, wonderful environment for a server, (Apache FTW!) but unofrtunatly it needs a good admin to truly shine.

      But what if I want to create an Office Doc? Collaborate with my coworkers on a powerpoint presentation? Whare a virtual whiteboard? All these things either require Windows, or are made a great deal simpler by having Windows by virtue of the fact that the world runs on Windows.

      Marketshare does so many things...

      It makes Windows a defacto standard.
      It means that since most the people I know use it, I can use the same programs they do. With Linux I can try WiNE and pray it works right, or hope that a Linux equivelent program is "compatable enough".
      It means that if I have a problem that I've never run into before, and I'm not that computer saavy, I can find help online or IRL easily. With Linux, there is a true community that rallys around the OS, and this is one advantage it seems to have. But there's also an stigma of elitism that surrounds it. It's not for novices and if you didn't try x,y,and recompiling z, I'm not going to help you, becuase you're clearly too dumb. (I realize this will vary from person to person though, but I've never failed to been shocked at the nature of Linux people who want to grow the marketshare simultaniously having that elitist attitude.)
      It means that if there's something I want to do with my computer that I never thought of before (something perhaps obscure but specific) I can hit google, or download.com or any number of sites online and have a reasonable chance of finding a program (or perhaps dozens of programs to choose from) that already does what I want. If I want to turn flash animations into animated gifs, BOOM, DONE! If I want a program that'll let me track the chemistry of my aquariums, I'll find that too. If what I want to do involves a new piece of hardware, that'll have Windows drivers. Mac maybe. Linux maybe, but definatly Windows drivers.

      So don't tell me Linux is for work. That's entirly subjective on what that work is. For a great many people, it would be nice to have their PC be flexible, so that if they do need to go get annother program or piece of hardware to add to what they already do, it'll be there for them, and won't be some terrible bugware sourceforge project that got a cool name, 2 months of effort put into it, and 1 update since 1998.

      Playing on Windows is like using a pick-up truck to ride in Formula 1 race.
      Your analogy sucks. Are you saying that because a pickup is a jack of all trades, but not a master of that particular one? Are you saying that because you think Windows is slow? I'm not sure I even follow. In any rate, thre is no better gaming platform. I'll extend your bad analogy:

      Playing on Windows is like using a pick-up truck to ride in Formula 1 race, when 99% of Formula 1 tracks are designed specificly for pick-up trucks. Playing on Linux is like trying to run a Formula 1 race in an experimental solar vehicle.

    96. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by amuro98 · · Score: 1

      Cue 'Grumpy Old Man':

      MMORPG graphics? Bah. In MY day, we didn't have no fancy grahpics in our MMORPGs. We just had text. And we LIKED it. We LOVED it!

      Seriously though, upgrading to Vista as a gamer is going to be expensive, especially when you consider the relatively high hardware requirements Vista has just to sit idle on your desktop!

      A Vista gamer rig is going to have 4GB of high-end RAM, a "DX10 Grahpics card" (because for some reason, "DX9" cards won't work?!?) and an overclocked Dual Core Extreme processor at 3Ghz+. And that's just what I'd call an mid-range system!

      Sure, in 3-4 years, that'll be $300 in BestBuy with a bad printer and tiny monitor. Maybe by then, there'll actually be enough games to justify such a huge upgrade cost.

    97. Re:Does Vista have anything we need? by Benaiah · · Score: 1

      I heard that if you run wine on cygwin in windows you create a time-space continuum paradox. Up will become down and the world will cease to exist. Uninstalling xp fixes this bug.

  2. this was expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    as this happened with xp-64, didn't it?

    also, by that logic, linux is a trap

    1. Re:this was expected by Kamots · · Score: 2, Informative

      Um... you're aware that there was a 64-bit flavor of winXP? That had all sorts of "fun" with drivers?

      I'd assume that's what the AC is talking about, but hey, that's just me.

    2. Re:this was expected by Smidge204 · · Score: 5, Funny

      also, by that logic, linux is a trap

      At least you get the satisfaction of spending a whole day (or more) putting the elaborate, Rube Goldberg-esque trap together yourself first.

      =Smidge=

    3. Re:this was expected by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      And you're aware that a 2GHz Pentium 4 didn't run 64bit code, right?

    4. Re:this was expected by gigne · · Score: 2, Informative

      Read The Fucking Article RTFA not RTFM.

      --
      Signature v3.0, now with 42% less memory usage.
    5. Re:this was expected by gigne · · Score: 1

      This is what I was getting at. The model that was available at the time had a 32bit processor. Sorry if I was than less than clear.

      --
      Signature v3.0, now with 42% less memory usage.
    6. Re:this was expected by bobcat7677 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Was" a 64bit version of XP? No, there *IS* a 64 bit version of XP and it works much better then Vista all around. Just about everyone has released drivers for 64bit xp/2003 now so all the "fun" with drivers there is a thing of the past. The fact that everyone has to go back and write all new drivers for 64 bit Vista because all the APIs have changed is one of the biggest reasons why Vista sucks for both consumers and hardware people. If Vista had support for all the 64 bit drivers that already existed out there, the Vista driver nightmare would have never happened. Microsoft seems to argue that they decided to change everything to improve the driver infrastructure, but the jury is still out on that one. If it makes the OS crash less, then maybe there is an arguement. But I have not seen improved stability in practice and all the driver programmers I have heard from say that writing drivers for Vista consists of nothing but hacks. Forcing them into bad programming practices and therefore unstable drivers.

    7. Re:this was expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And at least linux is a freely available, trap of your own choosing that you can walk away from without having to have stuck money into software

    8. Re:this was expected by irm · · Score: 1

      Linux doesn't purport to be a consumer product. Windows is difficult and intimidating to many. The easy factor is important for people like my mother who just wants to surf the web, use email, manage photographs, and use a word processor. But the easy factor is even more important to people like me: capable of slogging through the mess of an operating system, but uninterested and without the time to do so.

    9. Re:this was expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This new ethanol fuel is a damned trap too! My 2005 Subaru can't use it. Let's blame the ethanol producers!

    10. Re:this was expected by default+luser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh noes, I can't get Vista drivers for my SoundBlaster Live! card, even though the series is almost nine years old!

      It must be a conspiracy!

      Will you people stop acting so surprised that they don't make drivers for excesively old hardware? There's NO MONEY in that, so there's consequently NO DRIVERS. Does the article poster want to pay Creative to develop new drivers?

      Creative can't support everything, and they're always going to piss off someone. Just be happy they've delivered support for the Live! over SO MANY operating systems: Windows 95 / 98 / ME, NT / 2000 / XP. That's a good run, considering 2000 and XP weren't even out when the Live! was released.

      Are any of you whining because your brand-new X-Fi doesn't work on Windows 95? I don't think so. If you don't expect new cards to have drivers for all old OSes, you shouldn't expect old cards to have drivers for all new OSes. IF you want that kind of support, you need to go with Linux - and put-up with the usual support inconsistencies it brings.

      I'm actually impressed that the support for the Live! 24-bit and Audigy series is so forth-coming, as this card series is almost SIX YEARS old.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

    11. Re:this was expected by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      Typical M$ lie. There are no drivers for hardware that does not conform to the M$ (FU)DRM requirements of their Vista (P)OS. Can't get drivers for the hardware you bought this 'morning', well it is too old.

      I mean it is really just utterly false, like there need to be any improvements in sound technology, basically fuck M$ and the extra revenue the expect to make charging licence fees for all the hardware and software you buy.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    12. Re:this was expected by toddestan · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, people generally don't like throwing out perfectly good hardware just because support was dropped. People will accept it for something like a processor, as a new processor is going to be considerably better than that 5 year old one. But for something like a sound card, that old one is going to be just as good as a new one, and that new computer still has PCI slots, so why shouldn't I be able to use it? While I don't blame companies for not wanting to support hardware nearing a decade old, the fact that I'm having to buy a replacement because it's just been obsoleted will factor into what replacement I buy.

    13. Re:this was expected by halltk1983 · · Score: 1
      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    14. Re:this was expected by Bungie · · Score: 1

      I was actually impressed to by the speed at which Creative was able to deliver their Vista drivers for the Audigy. They are still in beta but I haven't had a single problem with them yet. They also are much better than the Audigy drivers for XP. Under XP every time I added a new PCI card, the Audigy drivers would break and need a reinstall. No such problems under Vista. The support is even there to put the cards into the extra speaker modes, and amazingly the setting doesn't reset itself for unknown reasons. Not bad considering when I bought the card XP was still in beta.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
    15. Re:this was expected by Raven42rac · · Score: 1

      Linux isn't able to remotely disable your hardware just because they don't have a lucrative agreement with the manufacturer. I mean if the drivers are out of date. I'm not keen on the idea of an OS manufacturer deliberately selling crippleware and telling you it's a feature.

      --
      I hate sigs.
    16. Re:this was expected by default+luser · · Score: 1

      The lie is strictly in your head.

      You don't have to upgrade anything. Your current Windows license will continue working, and will be valid so long as your computer continues to operate. Applications and games will continue to be made with support for XP for the next 3-5 years, which means your current conputer is still quite useful.

      If you buy a new computer today, unless you build it yourself, there will be a Vista-supported soundcard inside. Such is the way of the world.

      You want an incredibly long support cycle? I hope you're willing to pay for it - Creative's line of soundcards already cost way too much, and a huge chunk of that cost is estimated support. Patches, new features like Open-AL, and of course - new OS support are all paid-for by your original purchase price. Do you really find it hard to pay an extra $50-100 every 8 years to keep this support cycle running?

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

    17. Re:this was expected by default+luser · · Score: 1

      While I don't blame companies for not wanting to support hardware nearing a decade old, the fact that I'm having to buy a replacement because it's just been obsoleted will factor into what replacement I buy.

      And Creative doesn't care. Here's why:

      Once you've paid for your soundcard, Creative has your money. Once they have your money, they provide services for you as long as financially prudent. Creative may make an exception for a particularlly popular model (like the SB 16), but eventually they have burned through the money you paid, and cannot justify spending any more time on support.

      Look at it from Creative's shoes: if they drop support, you MAY buy another Creative card, depending on how good a value you think you got out of your last one, and the features of the current cards on the market. If they continue to support you with patches, you will NEVER buy a new card. I know which one I'd pick as my business model.

      If you don't think you're getting a good value in terms of support from Creative, then by all-means go buy from a competitor. I think if you took a critical look at the rest of the soundcard market, you'd find that the support is even crappier in most other companies, or the features aren't really there.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

    18. Re:this was expected by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      Yet another typical M$ lie, there is no such thing a depreciating support, support starts from the day you buy the product not some arbitrary time in the distant past. Does M$ discount the software as they discount you support, do you pay less for the software as it support period shrinks?

      There is plenty of hardware that you can buy today, that does not support M$ (FU)DRM and that will run fine on every other OS apart from that Vista (P)OS.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    19. Re:this was expected by default+luser · · Score: 1

      Yet another typical M$ lie, there is no such thing a depreciating support, support starts from the day you buy the product not some arbitrary time in the distant past.

      You are absolutely correct. And that is absolutely what I posted.

      You pay for your support cycle. This isn't some crazy ponzi-scheme like Social Security - you pay for your product, and you get the support you paid for. Support is, of course, expensive, so it does require a certain minimum number of sales to pay for it...that's what we call "risk" in the industry. You do your part, and if they can afford it, they do their part.

      And yes, support DOES begin from the moment you buy the card. Have you ever noticed how the price of the card DECREASES with time? Well, as the price of the card DECREASES, the amount of support you can pay for with that money also decreases. This means, if you buy a card on-release for $100, you can expect 7-8 years of support...but if you buy the same card for $50-75 after three years on the market, you expect 4-5 years of support.

      If you buy the card used, you inherit the support time remaining from the original purchaser.

      Does M$ discount the software as they discount you support, do you pay less for the software as it support period shrinks?

      No, they don't. But neither does Apple. Whatever the newest OS is, you pay full-price for that. You're not going to get a better price on XP or OS X 10.3 just because they're older versions, not unless dealers are trying to clear excess stock.

      But MS attempts to add value: they've encouraged OEMs to offer a Vista upgrade coupon with XP machines sold in the last 6-12 months. It gives people more value, because now they get the whole support lifetime of Vista with their purchase(plus the initial 6-12 months), if they care to upgrade.

      Even if you don't upgrade, you're guaranteed MS support through 2012.

      Why don't the prices come down? Because the prices are already cheap-as-hell! For an operating system that does SO much, you get Windows / OS X for VERY cheap. Very few people use programs that they bought 10 years ago, but there are still a sizeable minority of people who still use Windows 98, and that's 10 years old!

      Even if you only get 5 years out of your OS purchase, that's just $40 (XP) / $26(OS X) per-year if you buy retail, or $18 a year if you buy OEM XP. If you buy an OEM computer bundled with the OS, you get it for even cheaper, or if you can get an educational copy, the price comes down to a few dollars a year.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

  3. Frawless Victoly! by dr_dank · · Score: 4, Funny

    Focus your fire on that unsupported hardware!

    --
    Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    1. Re:Frawless Victoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You know, I wonder if that little piece of software allowing windows drivers to work on Linux could be adapted to make windows drivers work on Windows..........Anyone?

    2. Re:Frawless Victoly! by Zaatxe · · Score: 1, Funny

      Take off every 'Zig'!!
      You know what you doing.
      Move 'Zig'.
      For great justice.

      --
      So say we all
    3. Re:Frawless Victoly! by paeanblack · · Score: 1

      Focus your fire on that unsupported hardware!

      Or realize that jumping from a 2001 OS to 2007 OS will not be without issues...Linux, Mac, MS, whatever. Much has changed in that timeframe. A jump this big will never be smooth for the early adopters. OSX had its pains, and so did 2.6.

      The author's only reason to switch to Vista was because "it was there". Good call. People climbed Mt Everest because "it was there". The climbers that arrived ill-prepared had a very, very, bad day.

    4. Re:Frawless Victoly! by kavehkh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Focus your fire on that unsupported hardware! I have often heard: "The nice thing about Windows all drivers built-in/easily available so that it just works as opposed to Linux where you have to write your own drivers in some cases to get by?" Apparently, this is not true anymore... You should start writing your own drivers for Vista... but wait where is my Vista compatible compiler?

      By the way I am suffering day-to-day on a debian box in my office only because I don't have enough privileges to upgrade the kernel... I can feel your pain Vista users.
    5. Re:Frawless Victoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is such a cash cow for hardware developers. Simply by refusing to write drivers for old hardware, they now have a ton of cash coming in from people who are forced to upgrade. Kaching!

      It's not as if the old sound card "wouldn't work with Vista" or something... I mean, how far has sound card technology come in the last 20 years? Not very far, is how far.

    6. Re:Frawless Victoly! by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      You should start writing your own drivers for Vista... but wait where is my Vista compatible compiler?

      Right here. You'll also need to grab the Windows Driver Kit. Then you're all set.

      OK, well, you're all set if you're only using a 32 bit machine. If you have a 64 bit machine, you might want to consider giving up instead.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  4. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.
    I certainly hope he's not trying to blame that on Vista. That would mean it's Linux's fault winmodems don't work.
    1. Re:No. by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Microsoft isn't completely blameless here. If Microsoft had adopted the same strategy for drivers as the OpenBSD project has (accepting either fully open drivers or no drivers), then somebody (even Microsoft) could make the drivers work on Vista.

      This is yet another why open drivers built from publicly-available hardware documentation are better than binary-blob drivers.

    2. Re:No. by geekboybt · · Score: 1

      You mean it isn't?

      I kid, I kid!

    3. Re:No. by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points. This is probably the most important point in this thread.

    4. Re:No. by SCPRedMage · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How would they enforce it? If a company just puts out a binary driver, what's to stop the user from installing it? Can YOU think of a way?

      Sorry, but there is just NO way Microsoft could ever enforce that policy. Stop blaming Microsoft for corporations wanting to keep their drivers secret so that their competitors don't use them to improve their OWN drivers.

      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    5. Re:No. by Luscious868 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Microsoft isn't completely blameless here. If Microsoft had adopted the same strategy for drivers as the OpenBSD project has (accepting either fully open drivers or no drivers), then somebody (even Microsoft) could make the drivers work on Vista. This is yet another why open drivers built from publicly-available hardware documentation are better than binary-blob drivers.

      Pot. Kettle. Black. Microsoft isn't going to force vendors to open source their drivers when they so closely guard their own code. What's good for the gander is good for the goose and all that.

      You're point is well taken however. I don't see why hardware vendors don't release their source code. They can patent the hardware if it truly contains innovations and with software patents they could patent all or part of the driver if it's anything special and release the code under whatever license they deem appropriate.

      If I was evaluating two pieces of expensive hardware that performed equally well I'd take the piece with open source drivers over the piece that didn't have open source drivers even if it cost more just for insurance on the investment. You'd think that having open source drivers would be a point that high end hardware manufacturers, especially new ones, could compete on.

    6. Re:No. by multisync · · Score: 1, Troll

      How would they enforce it? If a company just puts out a binary driver, what's to stop the user from installing it? Can YOU think of a way?


      The usual coercion and strong-arm tactics should do the trick.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    7. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people need to grow up or wake up and realize that some drivers will *NEVER* be open source regardless of how much wishing and how much bugging of vendors goes on.

      At the end of the day people only care that their hardware works, not weather it is open source or the short sighted political views of those writing the software. If you hang on to those views you can expect to keep the pityfull market share that *BSD* currently enjoys.

      God knows the community isn't even close to developing comperable video drivers for modern 3d hardware, neither is any of the major players going to open source their driver stacks (In many cases they themselves are not even aloud to do this even if they wanted to)

      So what happens? Out of the box it doesn't work and the users end up with a big smile on their face because it doesn't work but at least they can be comforted by the fact that the developers share a political view that is directly responsible for it not working.

    8. Re:No. by P_11 · · Score: 1

      The problem with having drivers written for Vista by small hardware manufacturers is the complexity that MS has built into the new model. Video drivers can be 20 MILLION lines of code for each of 6 different modes. This is comparable to the size of the code for WIN NT, which was a lot of code when it came out. It seems that the five years of development was spent in finding ways to plug up the new larger hard drives.

    9. Re:No. by Zombywuf · · Score: 2, Funny

      That would be terrible, different companies effectively bouncing ideas off each other instead of wasting a huge amount of time and money desperately trying to keep their stuff secret. I mean, it could lead to customers getting the best possible drivers.

      --
      If you can read this you've gone too far.
    10. Re:No. by SCPRedMage · · Score: 1

      The usual coercion and strong-arm tactics should do the trick. Nice try, troll. If the drivers are distributed as source code, the user needs to compile it before using it. How can you stop corporations from doing just that and keeping the source to themselves?

      It's not a matter of "strong-arm tactics". It's a matter of technical abilities. The ONLY way they would EVER be able to force open-source drivers is if they force you to compile the driver EVERY TIME YOU INSTALL IT.

      If you want to pull an anti-M$ troll, at least ATTEMPT to be realistic about it.
      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    11. Re:No. by atmelinside · · Score: 1

      Yes, but these corporations can also improve their drivers learning from competitors. So, it's a benefit for customers and tie between corporations.

    12. Re:No. by Doctor+Memory · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't see why hardware vendors don't release their source code. They can patent the hardware if it truly contains innovations and with software patents they could patent all or part of the driver if it's anything special They're afraid that their competitors will learn what they're doing. If they've (let's say) implemented their vector lists using red-black tries or some other common data structure that isn't patentable, then that might give their competitors insight into some aspect of driver writing that they wouldn't have considered. Or take the example of a "unified driver" that appears to be designed to support some unannounced functions ("Hmmm, I wonder why they're storing the GPU context in an eight-entry table, it's not like you can put more than one GPU on a board....") And really experienced driver writers or GPU engineers can recognize hardware features for things like OpenGL acceleration or occluding shaders. So even if the hardware is patented, the competition can see what technologies or features they're targeting. And there's almost always more than one way to implement a feature....
      --
      Just junk food for thought...
    13. Re:No. by Sibko · · Score: 2, Funny

      Stop blaming Microsoft for corporations wanting to keep their drivers secret so that their competitors don't use them to improve their OWN drivers. Oh shit! I guess that means they'd have to make better and better drivers to stay ahead of the competition!
    14. Re:No. by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

      At the end of the day people only care that their hardware works,

      In this case, it's not working because the drivers and hardware documentation aren't open.

    15. Re:No. by multisync · · Score: 2, Funny

      Nice try, troll.


      Actually, it was a joke. If I was trolling, I would have used my "troll account."

      The ONLY way they would EVER be able to force open-source drivers is if they force you to compile the driver EVERY TIME YOU INSTALL IT.


      The shift key seems to be sticking on your keyboard. I'm guessing Slashdot isn't the only site you've visited today.

      If you want to pull an anti-M$ troll, at least ATTEMPT to be realistic about it.


      Sounds like someone needs to switch to decaf.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    16. Re:No. by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft would enforce it by making access to the source code a precondition for digitally signing any driver. You want to run your code on our system? Show us the source or go screw yourselves.

      I'm sure I've heard that line before somewhere, actually .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    17. Re:No. by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      What if there was a LAW demanding it? No driver source code = your product banned from sale.

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    18. Re:No. by ksalter · · Score: 1

      Wow, what a retort!

    19. Re:No. by JasonTik · · Score: 1

      It'd actually be pretty darn easy.

      This driver signing stuff they are doing anyhow? Just only sign binaries you compiled yourself from publicly available source.

    20. Re:No. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Yeah - brilliant idea, but a slight problem. No hardware acceleration for most video cards, and god knows what else. People use windows to use their computer, not to make a statement. It's a great idea, and it'd be brilliant if we had all the drivers we have now, but open. It just isn't going to happen, as the binary nature of drivers is required to conceal the licensed software that millions of dollars were pumped into developing.

    21. Re:No. by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

      Yeah - brilliant idea, but a slight problem. No hardware acceleration for most video cards, and god knows what else.

      Right. So you think if Microsoft had made open drivers a requirement for Windows, that NVIDIA would have just gone out of business? Brilliant!

  5. What is this guy an idiot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    WTF is wrong with this guy? It only took me 20 minutes to install Vista. It is without a doubt the best OS ever. Just another Microsoft bashing liberal SOB. And a Brit at that! Probably has blackish-yellow rotting teeth and breath that smells like dog crap.

  6. No mention of DRM by blind+biker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I read the article earlier today, and while I thought it was very well written, I couldn't help but feel disappointed that the single most loathable feature of Vista, wasn't even mentioned, not even in a perfunctory way.

    I know I am a minority, but for me Fair Use is a big issue. Sadly, Vista has completely opened the doors to DRM on the desktop. Well, not on mine.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    1. Re:No mention of DRM by LordEd · · Score: 1

      I know I am a minority, but for me Fair Use is a big issue. Sadly, the music industry has completely opened the doors to DRM on the desktop. Well, not on mine.

      There, i corrected it for you. Its just like iTunes. Apple doesn't want DRM (see recent articles), but in order to get the music industry to agree to sell music online, it is a necessary evil.

    2. Re:No mention of DRM by sjwest · · Score: 1

      Give him a chance he does not have sound, so

      1. no music
      2. no games
      3. no realplayer streaming
      4. no annoying flash
      5. no skype

      should we continue ?

    3. Re:No mention of DRM by blind+biker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thanks, but I don't need anyone correcting me with something that's wrong. Microsoft has full prerogative in deciding what their OS does with regards to DRM. No law mandates the use of DRM, so it's purely Microsoft's choice.

      Your "correction" is also wrong in another way: it's not just the music industry that has a stake in Vista's DRM - the movie industry is just as, if not more, interested in that "feature" of Vista.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    4. Re:No mention of DRM by CorSci81 · · Score: 1

      Most people wouldn't find numbers 3 and 4 to necessarily be bad...

    5. Re:No mention of DRM by brouski · · Score: 1

      I'd really like someone to explain this. What does Vista DRM do differently than XP that will keep me from enjoying my media?

      --
      Proud member of the American Non Sequitur Society. We might not make much sense, but boy do we love pizza!
    6. Re:No mention of DRM by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      Likewise it is purely your choice to install Vista or use any DRM'd file. While it may dismay you the reason why most 'Vista writeups' you read don't mention DRM is because most normals don't care about DRM.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    7. Re:No mention of DRM by Wah · · Score: 1

      It eats your babies.

      Maybe you enjoy that in an OS. Myself...not so much.

      --
      +&x
    8. Re:No mention of DRM by brouski · · Score: 2, Funny

      In point of fact, I think they're scrumptious.

      --
      Proud member of the American Non Sequitur Society. We might not make much sense, but boy do we love pizza!
    9. Re:No mention of DRM by psu_whammy · · Score: 1

      You're disappointed that they didn't even talk about DRM?

      Here's one good reason why not: THE COMPUTER DOES NOT WORK CORRECTLY. Upgrading with stuff he already owned, he quite simply couldn't, despite Windows telling him that practically everything would be compatible.

      Sound is a requirement before breaching the issue of unencumbered music. You may have different priorities... like getting in an unrelated jab at DRM.

    10. Re:No mention of DRM by SteveXE · · Score: 1

      Vista's DRM stole my kidney!

      I ran the beta's of Vista and now im running retail Vista Ultimate and I have never had a single problem with scary DRM built into Vista. Its just an excuse people are using to bash MS and its not really a very good one.

    11. Re:No mention of DRM by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      No realplayer streaming means you can't listen to BBC radio stations, and this is an article on the BBC site, so it is relevant.

    12. Re:No mention of DRM by Prof+Kayyos · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm afraid you are not in the minority my friend. Having just installed Vista last week, DRM concerns's are on the front burner for me. Yesterday a friend of a friend needed a self-recorded VHS tape of the Katrina hurricane's aftermath on his own neighborhood copied to a DVD. I connected his VHS player directly to the cable in of my "Vista approved" Hauppauge video I/O board and easily sucked the picture in via Windows Media Center as if it were a standard TV program (mpeg4). Guess what? I wasn't the owner of the recorded image! Vista DRM'd it as it's own and refused to let me modify it!! Well after breaking out my wink-wink, nudge-nudge, "file conversion program" I was able to get it into a format I could work with -- this was with a one hour tape and even on my AMD dual-core it still took a considerable amount of time to convert between various formats until the video was clean enough and Nero was happy to burn it to a DVD. No doubt that no matter what I plan on doing in the future concerning video files, I will not be naive enough to believe that an XP Media Center type of operation is going to work the same under Vista Media Center. If I have to do something that Microsoft might consider "illegal (??)" to change one of MY video files to a proper format to be burnt to a DVD then I think it's time to seriously consider jumping ship. What should have been perhaps a 3 hour background task turned into an embarassing 8 hour session of mostly experimentation until I got it right. Screw that !

    13. Re:No mention of DRM by SteveXE · · Score: 1

      Im not saying DRM isnt there but it hasnt effected me and when it does im sure ill get pissed off but there are always work arounds. I can also see MS shutting some of the DRM off due to customer complaints, they have done things like that in the past. There is no reason to wrap self recorded media in DRM so I feel your pain.

      But, for the majority of users (99%) the built in DRM will never be an issue. I've put video through Vista Media Center through my camcorder and I didnt have any problems editing or modifying it.

    14. Re:No mention of DRM by SScorpio · · Score: 3, Informative

      Media Center records all content into the .ms-dvr format which contains DRM. However, since you have Media Center you have either Home Premium or Ultimate; therefor you could use Windows DVD Maker which will capture the video without DRM. Media Center's video capture is for TV shows and some of them like sports broadcasts require DRM. If you use the wrong tool for the job it could see it not working how you except.

    15. Re:No mention of DRM by livewire98801 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft just isn't that easy to strongarm. The EU has been trying for how long now? If MS didn't want DRM at the OS level, they wouln't have done it. They are probably the only corporation in the world with the ability to tell MPAA and RIAA to suck it.

      --
      "He may be mad, but there's method in his madness. [...] It's what drives men mad, being methodical." G.K.Chesterton
    16. Re:No mention of DRM by norman619 · · Score: 1

      What do you expect? This is a brand new version of Windows. They haven't been hiding that fact. Vendors have said driver support isn't quite there yet. I have no sympathy for people who blindly upgrade to a new OS. You want to be sure there are good solid VISTA drivers available for your stuff. If you wait till AFTER you upgrade to find out your old components don't have Vista drivers available and the vendor says they will not be releasing any... It's called research. As a general rule you do not want to upgrade to a new Windows version until it's been out for at least a year. There is no real reason to jump to Vista at the moment. The early adopters just want to have the latest and greatest. The only group I see who would really want to make the leap would be gamers to play the coming crop of Direct X 10 games which will be Vista only. So again I don't get the boo hoo stories. It's your own fault if you upgrade to an OS w/o checking of your stuff will actually work with it.

    17. Re:No mention of DRM by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      Really? I got the BBC stuff working with Xine. But I do have to run it in the standalone player, despite installing the gxine plugin. Perhaps it's a file-association thing?

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    18. Re:No mention of DRM by LordEd · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has full prerogative in deciding what their OS does with regards to DRM.
      Lets break it down a bit:
      1. Normal users want to listen to music/watch movies on their computers
      2. Music/movie industry is releasing DRM encoded movies/music.

      Your (legal) choices:
      1. Add support for these items
      2. Do not add support for these items.

      Choice 1 means your customers are able to access a service. Choice 2 means they can't. When the average user goes to compare, they will see that Vista lets them play their media provided by **AA companies, while Linux does not.

      Just because an OS has a feature doesn't mean you have to use it. If you don't load DRMed media, you won't have to deal with it. If you don't use Vista/other compatible OS, you won't be able to play the media anyway. Then you'll have to go talk to the movie/music industry and tell them you can't access their stuff.
    19. Re:No mention of DRM by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      The problem with this isn't so much Vista as MS in general, and that's it's tools defaulting to a locked down setting on recording stuff, and THEY DON'T TELL YOU. Not that it would make much difference for most people, but the assumption that something you're recording is not your own stuff (while perhaps more likely to be copyrighted) seems insulting - more and more the OS is assuming I'm a criminal than an honest user - and I paid for this?

      Anyway, one reason why I just ignore all the MS built in tools, I figure they are likely to screw me, and have since XP, forget about Vista. I wish there was a way in the installer to tell XP to forget about crap like in Linux installers - can you do this in Vista? I'm getting Vista Ultimate via a retail bundle at a good price, but I don't have my computer as a media center - I only want the business stuff (mostly I browse the web and use Winamp for music) and the ability to very occasionally play games. I'd love to save space by dropping 10ft interface etc.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    20. Re:No mention of DRM by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps it's because his sound card doesn't work?

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    21. Re:No mention of DRM by Prof+Kayyos · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info SScorpio - I obviously made an easy task much harder through my ignorance. I'll try it again the right way!

    22. Re:No mention of DRM by SScorpio · · Score: 1

      You could in at least 2000 and forward. I never had experience doing this in 95 or 98 but it still might have been possible. You will need to create an unattended installation answer file. This file will allow you to selectively choose what feature you want to install. It was also the preferred way in XP to move the Documents and Settings folder to a different drive other than C without using registry hacks.

      You can read about doing this with Microsoft's guide at: http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsVista/en/libr ary/88f80cb7-d44f-47f7-a10d-e23dd53bc3fa1033.mspx? mfr=true and there is also a user forum where people are discussing this and you can ask questions if you need help at: http://www.msfn.org/board/index.php?showforum=149.

      Setting up an unattended installation isn't child's play. I recommend doing test installs in a Virtual Machine first to make sure everything is working as you selected. Do note that you will need to perform multiple installations before you get everything setup as you want. This is because you'll aways forget something and need to go back.

  7. Can't wait to see the 2nd part of the article by mstrcat · · Score: 1

    I'm waiting to see if the reporter writes a 2nd article, one titled, "Microsoft Cancelled my XP key and now I'm stuck." Of course with the BBC footing the bill for it, it's not likely that he'll be bothered by such tiny problems like a normal person doing an upgrade would be. Of all the reasons I won't be installing Vista for a long time, the fact that it's a one way trip is among the top 10. In general key activation, WGA, and all the associated crap means I won't be shelling out any money to Microsoft for a long time.

  8. Tag by jdavidb · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why do I get the feeling this was posted solely to let people use "itsatrap" as a tag?

    1. Re:Tag by DarkAudit · · Score: 1

      Followed by haha, defectivebydesign, and all the other 'We hate Microsquish' BS. FUD works both ways.

    2. Re:Tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    3. Re:Tag by Anti_Climax · · Score: 1

      They could just tag it with "Yes" instead

      (mine are off and it's not worth turning them on to see)

      --
      Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
  9. A Trap for Idiots by Dan_Bercell · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I knew my four-year-old PC might have trouble coping with Vista, not least because of its wheezing graphics card.
    When I bought it, my Dell Dimension 8200 was fairly state-of-the-art (a few stats for the experts: Pentium 4 processor running at 2GHz, 384MB of RAM, a 64MB graphics card, and a Creative SB Live audio card).
    Since then I had added memory (to 768MB), a second hard disk, extra USB ports and a Wifi card. I am not even going to bother reading anything else in the article. The first part of the article tells me everything that I need to know. 768MB of RAM / P4 2GHz... WTF did he expect?
    1. Re:A Trap for Idiots by kailoran · · Score: 1

      Getting the OS to run, maybe? P42GHz and 768MB of ram is a perfectly fine non-gaming machine, and any OS demanding more is retarded in my book. Anyway, even Vista should run - maybe not 100% smooth - on that setup.

    2. Re:A Trap for Idiots by anagama · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I am not even going to bother reading anything else in the article. The first part of the article tells me everything that I need to know. 768MB of RAM / P4 2GHz... WTF did he expect?
      I run Ubuntu on my desktop at home -- it's an Athlon XP 2200+ or thereabouts, 512mb ram, 128mb nvidia card. It's really old and I keep thinking I ought to upgrade it, but the fact is, it runs just fine. Even Beryl and all the eye candy is silky smooth. The hardware mentioned in the article to me, sounds like a decent machine. The only real issue is that MS couldn't write their software efficiently enough so it needs a really beefy machine.
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    3. Re:A Trap for Idiots by MBCook · · Score: 1

      What does any of that have to do with the problems he had? Oh, that's right, next to nothing. If you read the article it said that once he had things running it was nice but Vista still had a ton of problems. The only thing on that list that caused him problems was the SB Live which caused three "unidentified hardware" type errors. A search showed him that the card would never work under Vista (no drivers planned) so he got a new one. The graphics card he upgraded before the install because he knew that it was not enough.

      But he ran into problems with his PDA (running Windows Mobile), his web-cam (which the update advisor said would work fine), TCP/IP, etc.

      Try reading. You learn things. Like what his problems were, or that he fixed the problems with that configuration.

      You don't need a 3.x GHz dual core processor to run Vista. While he'd do better with a full gig, that computer (upgraded the way he did) should run Vista without a problem.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    4. Re:A Trap for Idiots by operagost · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Considering that Microsoft says a 1 GHz PC with 512 MB RAM will run Vista, he probably expected a working system.

      I think Vista uses more RAM to display a window than my OS/2 Warp system used to run half a dozen apps (I had 8 MB of RAM on an AMD 486/40).

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    5. Re:A Trap for Idiots by scottnews · · Score: 1

      Then he blames M$ for Creative's lack of support. Creative is terrible. They were part to blame with the VIA KT133 chipset compatibility problem as well. Instead of working with VIA, they dumped the blame on VIA, screw the customer. Windows 2000 is another. It took creative almost a year to release working drivers for many of their sound cards on Win2k.

    6. Re:A Trap for Idiots by stinkbomb · · Score: 1, Funny

      I concur. This guy has no one to blame but himself, since there's a link to the Vista upgrade adviser tool right on the Vista homepage. Why, if you're at all tech-savvy, would you perform a major OS upgrade without checking to see if it'll even run on your hardware? The answer: because you're an idiot.

    7. Re:A Trap for Idiots by MaestroRC · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Umm, at least a baseline support for that hardware? For a company so prided on backwards compatibility, Microsoft sure has given the finger hardcore to a lot of people when it comes to Vista.

      For comparison: I have an Apple iMac G3 400MHz with 768MB RAM and a 40GB disk happily running OS X 10.4. This machine also has a (nonupgradeable) 8MB ATI video card. Note that this computer, at this moment, is almost 8 years old, and runs Tiger like a champ. Sure, I don't get all the cool effects, but the key is I didn't have to do a damn thing to make it work, it just did, and it doesn't even attempt the effects it can't handle. I can browse the internet, use iTunes, type in Word, Excel, Pages or Keynote, check my email, and even watch DVD's. And you know what? It runs 10.4 FASTER than it runs 10.3. Given, it's still a bit slower than OS 9, but given the added capabilities of it and it still being useable in OS X, that's a pretty damn good trade-off.

      --
      I hate sigs...
    8. Re:A Trap for Idiots by SDF-7 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wow, completely missed the section of the article where he clearly says he *ran* said Upgrade adviser (which is what led to a Graphics card update among a few other things) but that he later still had problems with unsupported/non-functional hardware the adviser didn't give a peep about, huh? Give you a hint... second part of the article after "A blunt message"... starts with "But this was probably not enough, so I downloaded Microsoft's Vista Upgrade Advisor."

      Sheesh.

    9. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      You're telling me Vista needs 1GB of RAM and 3Ghz just to display windows on the screen and surf the web? OS X does much more on much less.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    10. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It helps that Apple controls the hardware it sells it's OS on. As for Windows, do you expect it to support each and every piece of hardware ever made for it for eternity? I mean, even the hardware manufacturers don't support the drivers / devices for that long.

      If Microsoft had to support a total of, say, 100 devices, it'd be a piece of cake. Try over 1 million driver packages written for Windows so far.

    11. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      You are so right. And I had a Speak and Spell that included a voice synthesizer, and that ran off 2 C cell batteries! Vista sure does suck! Microsoft is stupid!

    12. Re:A Trap for Idiots by MaestroRC · · Score: 1

      Except that, Vista appears to ship with LESS hardware support out of the box than even XP did. I would fully expect that hardware bought since XP was released and far before Vista was released should be supported out of the box in Vista, especially things such as sound and video cards from major manufacturers.

      The biggest problem is Microsoft wants total control over the driver stability and quality control, but yet wants nothing to do with the development of said drivers. This forces the device manufacturers to decide whether it's worth it to put in the extra effort to develop a driver that works, or deal with pissed off customers that can't use a 1-3 year old SOUND CARD in their computer with Vista, that worked perfectly fine in XP.

      --
      I hate sigs...
    13. Re:A Trap for Idiots by mrbcs · · Score: 1
      Look, I tried Vista on an AMD 2400+ with 512 ram and an Nvidia FX5200 and it worked just fine. Installed in less than half an hour and looked real pretty. No it didn't like my creative card or my 3 com net card either. Big friggin deal. It ran fine.

      I have tons of other issues why I won't be installing it for real on anything I have, but I wanted to see what all the fuss was and how much of a learning curve would be needed for the network settings. (I work for an isp and get stuck doing tech support sometimes)

      --
      I'm not anti-social, I'm anti-idiot.
    14. Re:A Trap for Idiots by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Uhh, considering that my laptop runs at 1.2GHz, has 1GB RAM and runs a fancy desktop with flying 3D windows and even more eye candy than Vista, I would think a 2GH machine should be fine...

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    15. Re:A Trap for Idiots by AlephNot · · Score: 1

      I very, VERY highly doubt that that machine originally came with 768MB of RAM. I'd be willing to bet cold hard cash that you upgraded it at some point, in which case, no it's not an 8-year-old machine: it's a {insert number of years ago that you added the RAM}-year-old machine.

      Granted, I love macs (typing this on a shiny new 24" IMac with a 2.33GHz core duo proc and 2GB of ram), but be real here.

      --
      "Feel a glory in so rolling / on the human heart a stone" --E. A. Poe, "The Bells"
    16. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Microsoft should just force everyone to use their hardware - that would make it so much easier to make sure vista supports everything....

    17. Re:A Trap for Idiots by nickyj · · Score: 1

      Most people will think it's Microsoft's fault that it doesn't work. Creative can make the most expensive card only work on Vista, so when you upgrade you have to buy that one, or else no fancy sound. Vista is a screwfest. Microsoft screws you when you upgrade with price/configuration/etc. Other companies screw you since they have to spend more to work in Vista, passing that cost on to you, the consumer. Everyone gets screwed except Microsoft. Guess what? If I can't use XP anymore, I guess I'll move back to a unix OS. I hear good things since I last had Linux on my machine. If my job requires me to have Vista at home, then they can buy it for me, cause I'm not doing it.

      --
      Causing Chaos Everywhere,
      Nik J.
      The strange world of a loner, in a populous city, drowning in society
    18. Re:A Trap for Idiots by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      I would like to see ms actually say if you have this computer: motherboard XXX, chip set NNN, controllers XXX, video card NNN, XXX amount of ram from this vender, DVD drive from XXX, and a XXX GB hard drive from NNN. Then if you have a bunch of problem you have a point. Ms is not selling hardware (beside the xbox) so it gives basic requirements.

      Apple has a very small hardware list that they support. They do not have to worry about a huge selection of different hardware being used with their computers. They are selling the hardware. They better test it all beforehand. Since Apple has said in their license that OSX can only be used on approved Apple branded hardware. I cannot legally run OSX on anything but an approved apple branded computer. If apple opened up its software for all to use, would everyone have a perfect install? Some people will have perfect error free installs to be sure. But I think there would be a large number of people blaming Apple and/or hardware vendors for OSX not working perfectly on their computer.

    19. Re:A Trap for Idiots by MaestroRC · · Score: 1

      Yes, I did upgrade the ram - with old memory laying around from a PC I no longer used (it was just normal PC100 SDRAM). And as for that, that memory is about 7 years old (came from a PC I got in 2000).

      Big thing to remember here though - the original iMacs were *built* to have the RAM upgraded (and that was about it, if you were lucky you can also put in an Airport card, since it's right next to the memory). You don't even have to take the case off or have a screwdriver, the memory slots are accessible via a coin-turn lock door on the bottom. Literally, power down roll it over, turn a coin, pop the memory in, close the door, and turn it back over and back on.

      Now, one thing I did upgrade that isn't a "normal" upgrade was the hard drive - it shipped with a 13GB one. While this is big enough to run Tiger, I figured I had the extra one (also from my PC) laying around and ready to put in.

      So the answer is, I am being real. For this iMac, Apple *expected* users to upgrade the ram, otherwise they wouldn't have made it so easy or have provided 2 slots. The point of the matter is, I can run a 1.5 year old operating system on an 8 year old computer with minimum upgrades, and have the video card, sound card, network, DVD-ROM, firewire, USB, external video port and more work out of the box with no additional drivers.

      --
      I hate sigs...
    20. Re:A Trap for Idiots by MaestroRC · · Score: 1

      Even though they have a very small hardware list to support (comparitively), they still provide the drivers for the older hardware with the new software, which is the point I'm trying to make here. For Vista, Microsoft gutted out a ton of drivers that shipped with XP, and in doing so alienated a LOT of relatively recent hardware, and to make matters worse, they didn't put in much effort to get drivers for hardware released since XP. If I had a relatively recent computer, say, purchased since XP was released, and it is hardware CAPABLE of running Vista (CPU, memory, disk), I would very much so expect for all of the hardware if it was all name-brand stuff (Creative, NVidia, ATI, etc) to work out of the box.

      The thing that makes it even more pointing at Microsoft, is that ATI, NVidia and Creative have all moved to unified drivers for their hardware, making the number of individual drivers to be verified for Windows to be much lower. The primary difference here (as you hinted at) is that Microsoft provides incredibly vague "requirements" for their software, in an attempt to make it less scary for the average consumer. What this results in, is that if a basic requirement of Vista is "Sound Card", and I have a 3 year old sound card that works fine (I mean really, at best they're hooked up to a mediocre set of computer speakers for most people), but yet it doesn't work in Vista. Who's fault is that? Is it Microsoft's for not clarifying the *actual* supported hardware, or is it the device manufacturer's for not providing drivers for the new operating system?

      --
      I hate sigs...
    21. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      M$ Please stop it. It just looks foolish.
    22. Re:A Trap for Idiots by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Yes, it would. That's what they're trying to do with the 360, in fact. Although that still doesn't address why Vista needs so much hardware just to display windows on the screen and surf the web.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    23. Re:A Trap for Idiots by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      For comparison: I have an Apple iMac G3 400MHz with 768MB RAM and a 40GB disk happily running OS X 10.4. This machine also has a (nonupgradeable) 8MB ATI video card. Note that this computer, at this moment, is almost 8 years old, and runs Tiger like a champ.

      No G4 runs OS X "like a champ". I have an iBook G4 that has probably 3 times the raw performance of your iMac and I'd describe 10.4 as "barely adequate" on it.

    24. Re:A Trap for Idiots by aedan · · Score: 1

      The original, 1998, iMacs were a bit more difficult to upgrade the memory and you couldn't add an AirPort card. One slot required you to unscrew the bottom of the case and remove the HD as I recall. The second slot was under a daughter card. I've done them both and that's why my mum's original iMac runs Tiger.

      My 2002 G4 800 iMac has picked up more RAM, AirPort, bigger HD and dual layer DVD burner. Even that only needed a screw driver, thermal paste and an hour or so.

  10. My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 5, Informative

    Burn the MSDN image, grab RAID drivers for my onboard RAID, put the drivers on my USB key, then boot the Vista install disk. Go through the usual setup with the drivers. Reboot. All hardware is auto-detected and drivers installed except for my Creative Audigy 2 sound card. Pull the drivers from their site and install. Update nVidia drivers while I'm at it. Works great, no problems.

    1. Re:My Vista Install by pcameron41 · · Score: 1

      Sounds a lot like my install except I was upgrading a Media Centre Edition XP box. Vista detected all of my hardware (including my tuners) perfectly. Install, reboot, watch TV.

    2. Re:My Vista Install by wellingj · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So how is installing Linux any harder?

    3. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Did I say installing Linux was any harder?

      Linux was pretty easy for me. Except I had to edit some config files in vi to toggle hardware mouse cursors because my cursor was invisible on install. Getting the proper nVidia drivers was a bitch for me though, mostly because I'm not very experienced with Linux and I couldn't seem to find any documentation about how to get a bash shell without x running.

      This was Fedora Core 5. But then again I'm pretty unlucky with Linux installs, so that wasn't a big deal for me. Next time I'm trying Ubuntu.

    4. Re:My Vista Install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in my experience ubuntu is REALLY easy.

    5. Re:My Vista Install by redtux1 · · Score: 1

      If you dont have X running you are in a bash shell after booting

    6. Re:My Vista Install by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And people survived trench warfare but that is no reason to throw a mustard gas party.

      The simple truth is that right now most people will get zero benefit from Vista. And for some people they will actually loose functionality that they currently have.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    7. Re:My Vista Install by pizpot · · Score: 1

      I installed ms-office as a lark in linux yesterday and it worked. Cut and paste even work right. Wierd.

    8. Re:My Vista Install by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      I stuck in my msdn CD, installed vista buisness, rebooted, everything worked, no need to install any drivers except for nvidia driver for games. I did that (I have a 7900GT 256meg). Logged into Wow, got graphical glitches (tearing, large pillars, etc) I thought it was the game, tried a few others, same issues on any high end game like C&C 3 demo, splinter cell 3, Oblivion, etc. New beta driver fixed some problems, still a ton more left to solve. Besides video driver issues, and the fact my video card fan now runs with constant noise (due to aero I belive) everything is rock solid. I still prefer linux however.

    9. Re:My Vista Install by David+Horn · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Ooh! Ooh! Let me tell you about my experience installing Linux (my Vista experience as easy as OP's).

      HP dv2000z laptop with AMD Turion 64 X2 CPU, 1GB RAM, Geforce 7200 graphics, based around an nForce chipset with Atheros WiFi. What didn't work when I tried to fire up an ubuntu Live CD?

      1) Accelerated graphics - didn't seem like it, slow and sluggish with painful redraws.
      2) Sound? What sound? Vista autodetected the Conexant HD sound card.
      3) Wifi? *Derisive laugh*. When was WiFi EVER worked properly on Linux?
      4) Card reader? Nope. Firewire? Nope.
      5) Power management? I didn't try to suspend or resume 'cos it was a Live CD, but it couldn't read the battery status.

      I know people will say that I could have faffed around with config files and compiled drivers and other bollocks, but I don't want to do that. I LIKE it when Windows grabs all my drivers off the internet. If I need to update the graphics driver, all I do is download one from nVidia and run the setup program.

      Why can't Linux be like that? I have no idea what you need to do to install drivers in Linux, and I don't want to be screwing around on the command line for it. This is why Linux has failed to take off in the home market, not because of Microsoft's monopoly but because it's a pain in the arse to make anything work how you want it.

      I should think my grandma could - just - manage to install Vista. All she has to do is drop the DVD in the drive and click "Next" a few times. Linux? Chances are she wouldn't even be able to get on the internet to find out how to make wireless work.

      *Watches karma come crashing down*

      --
      PocketGamer.org - For the gamer on the go!
    10. Re:My Vista Install by digidave · · Score: 1

      Your particular experience was very poor, but that's not indicative of other Ubuntu installs. I've heard of terrible experiences with many different versions both Windows and Linux.

      Ubuntu comes with more drivers than Windows. Major problems can exist if it does not come with the right drivers because manufacturers very rarely provide Linux drivers (just like the person who said he sound card didn't have Vista drivers... you're screwed). Accelerated video is not a major issue. Drivers are in the Ubuntu repositories so you shouldn't have to do anything other than check a box, hit apply, then maybe manually delete 'nv' or 'ati' and type 'nvidia' or 'fglrx', depending on your card. It's a bit confusing, but not unbearably so. There is a script called envy that automatically installs the nvidia driver and configures your system to use it.

      --
      The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
    11. Re:My Vista Install by PPGMD · · Score: 1
      Your particular experience was very poor, but that's not indicative of other Ubuntu installs. I've heard of terrible experiences with many different versions both Windows and Linux.

      Ding ding ding. You hit the nail on the head. Just because this yahoos expirence was poor doesn't mean that every one elses is. I was going to upgrade to Vista with my HTPC setup, the only problem is that both my sound card, and my DVD decoder software don't have Vista updates.

      The people that made my sound card said that they don't know when or if they are going to be supporting Vista. And my DVD decoder, well that depends on when nVidia decides to update it.

    12. Re:My Vista Install by kd5ujz · · Score: 1

      you might try typing "bash" at the command prompt.

      --
      -William
      God is everything science has yet to explain.
    13. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      How do you know that the article is indicitive of the experience that the average user will get from Vista? For every article that slashdot posts bitching about Vista, I know another guy who installs it and runs it with zero problems.

      By the same token, is it ok for people to complain about how broken Linux is because they can't get it to work on their hardware?

      What I'm saying is, the articles Slashdot posts aren't really indicitive of the realities of running Vista.

    14. Re:My Vista Install by Threni · · Score: 1

      > So how is installing Linux any harder?

      Because you'll have to throw your usb modem in the bin and buy a wireless one, and an ethernet card, and then fuck about for 2 hours online using another pc/internet connection trying to get your particular hardware working. On windows you just plug in the usb modem and get online.

    15. Re:My Vista Install by solios · · Score: 1

      ALSA.

      'nuff said.

    16. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Actually doing just that doesn't work because you have to make sure that x isn't running when you run the install script you get from nVidia.

      Anyway, that wasn't my point at all. I was just trying to point out that Linux is also pretty easy to install. In interest of full disclosure, I listed every single problem I had. So, two minor problems. Meaning Linux really isn't that hard.

      It took me about 30 minutes of research and trying out stuff to install it (like I said, I had a real hard time finding documentation that actually worked). As I understand it, if I had used Ubuntu I could have just clicked a check box, typed in nVidia, and hit go. Which is why I want to try that out next time.

    17. Re:My Vista Install by gharris · · Score: 1

      I had a similar problem with my Asus W3J laptop. The (K)Ubuntu Live CD didn't really detect a whole lot. But after the install, everything worked very well with almost no tweaking (I had to install the binary ATI driver to get better 3D, but that is expected).
      It seems that the Live CD environment is pretty basic.
      If you are only interested in a live cd, I suggest giving Knoppix a try. It has superb hardware support, and there is even a dvd edition that has everything you can imagine installed.

      Good luck!

      --Glenn

    18. Re:My Vista Install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Ultimate version of Vista comes with a MPEG2 decoder built in....

    19. Re:My Vista Install by David+Horn · · Score: 1

      https://launchpad.net/envy

      This one? Might give Linux another try then. ;)

      --
      PocketGamer.org - For the gamer on the go!
    20. Re:My Vista Install by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      put the drivers on my USB key, then boot the Vista install disk. Go through the usual setup with the drivers

      Now that, my friends, is the feature that we had to wait how many years for ? Yeah, we don't even remember. Other than that, no wonder a Vista install goes smooth if one has hardware that is supported, bah. Others, please meet what Linux people had to go through for years. And thing is, for many years now I could easier configure my new hardware under Linux than under Windows, how's that for another success story.
       

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    21. Re:My Vista Install by Sinbios · · Score: 1

      Oh I see. Linux didn't work well for him, so he's obviously a yahoo. Way to ad hominem it up. This obviously proves how great Linux is, right?

      --
      Anyone can "stand up for what they believe", but it takes a very brave individual to change what they believe. - Loundry
    22. Re:My Vista Install by nostriluu · · Score: 1

      We know, Linux doesn't support all new hardware well. It can't, without significant vendor cooperation. You have to research what will work well, which does suck.

      On the other hand, I had an older tv tuner card, that I couldn't get working under Windows. I tried several fresh installs of Windows, using different drivers for the tuner, and none would work. With Linux, it just worked. I've had this experience with other hardware as well (sound cards, etc). As well, there is the base fact you can scale Linux down to do tasks like a smart router, file server, media system, etc, you don't have this kind of choice with Windows.

      A lot of hardware is being abandoned with Vista, and this is being promoted as a feature by MS - Stimulate the economy! Quite irresponsible when most of that hardware would still serve its purpose perfectly well and e-waste is a known major problem.

    23. Re:My Vista Install by PPGMD · · Score: 1

      Actually I was refering to the person that this article is about with Vista. Ad Hominem, sometimes you got to call a spade a spade. Blaming Microsoft because Creative Labs (which has long since proven that they couldn't write a descent driver to save their lives) and other companies won't or can't update their drivers. You got to be kidding me, do we blame Linus when nVidia is slow to update their drivers for the newest kernel of Linux?

    24. Re:My Vista Install by AusIV · · Score: 1
      I have three computers, all running Ubuntu linux. My most recent came with Ubuntu installed, and works more smoothly than any windows PC I ever had. The other two I did the installs myself. One is a desktop with basic hardware, no problem getting it running.

      With Ubuntu Edgy Eft, both of my laptops have been able to connect to my wireless network from the Live CD, without any difficult configuration. Just start up wlassistant and go. One of my cards is intel, the other is broadcom. The Broadcom card doesn't get 802.11 g, just B. That's the only problem I've had with wireless.

      Both laptops are running Beryl, which did take some config file editing, but there are guides that tell you how to open the files and exactly what lines to edit. I understand that there are scripts to do this now. One is an ATI radeon X600 card, the other is an intel GMA.

      Card reader works out of the box in both laptops. I've never tried firewire, but it's identified in my hardware list.

      My girlfriend's laptop has better hardware support in Linux than it does in Windows. For whatever reason, her laptop quit charging it's battery a few months ago. I chalked this up to a bad mother board, and assumed it was irreparable. Last weekend, she decided she wanted to try out this "Linux" thing I've been raving about, and we were stunned to see the battery start charging when we booted up the Live CD. Now she's a happy Linux user too.

      What version of Ubuntu were you using? Wireless support on Dapper was a bit tricky, and my card reader took some work on dapper. Breezy badger before that was even less impressive. The hardware support for Ubuntu has come a long way in the year and a half since I started using it, but any more there's not much hardware that doesn't work out of the box, and Feisty looks even more promising.

    25. Re:My Vista Install by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "How do you know that the article is indicative of the experience that the average user will get from Vista? For every article that slashdot posts bitching about Vista, I know another guy who installs it and runs it with zero problems."
      Humm... And how many people is that? Ten maybe it is a small sample at best. I have read news stories about how easy it was to install Vista. So far in the media it is running close to 70-30 with 70% of the people having problems.
      That ratio is terrible. It should be closer to 99 to 1.
      I worked in support and I had to keep reminding people not to recommend things just because it worked for them. We took a few thousand calls a day so I explained to them that if there was a one in a thousand chance that their personal recommended thing would cause a big problem we would hear about it three times a day.

      That is the point of my comment. Most of the troops that fight in a war do not die. That doesn't mean that it is safe or even a good idea.

      I know of no one that has installed Vista with no problems. Most of the problems are related to drivers but they are still problems. A bigger question is why install Vista?
      It uses a lot more ram. I guess if you have a lot of ram that you have no use for currently installed in your system then it isn't an issue.
      It has driver issues so your current hardware may or may not work.
      It is pretty but I don't see that as a huge benift. Others might but not I.
      Now if you are a developer then yes you better have Vista installed. If you buy a new system you may have no choice but if it is pre installed you should have a good chance that the hardware you bought will work. I would hope that someone wouldn't sell a system with broken drivers.

      As far as I can tell Vista is a year too early in development or at least should allow NT/2000/XP drivers to be installed using some kind of capability layer if the user wants.

      As far as complaining about Linux. Well yes you can as long as you work out the grief vs cost ratio. If you paid nothing for Linux then well it is a lot more value for your money than Vista is.

      All kidding aside I have posted more than once about the stupid religious arguments preventing Linux binary drivers. The lack of a stable binary driver interface in Linux is a problem. Hardware manufactures can not include a binary driver in the package with the hardware because they will never know when the interface will change! Source code drivers while nice for people like me will not solve the grandma test. My mother would never feel good about ./configure, make, sudo make install.
      I will also state that I have had fewer problems installing Linux than Windows over the past few years. I may just be lucky or I may know what I am doing more than the average person but that is how it has worked out for me.

      But you pay for VISTA. Any problems are too many for a nothing but pretty, expensive update.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    26. Re:My Vista Install by Moofie · · Score: 1

      OK, by your argument, there should be an awful lot of articles out there about how great the Vista experience is. Can you point me to some?

      For one thing, as soon as you talk about upgrading the OS, you're outside of the realm of "the realities of running Vista" for most end users. And, from an experienced computer user's perspective, just getting the OS to boot is pretty irrelevant.

      Does Vista give me capabilities that I didn't have before? With the exception of the manufactured incompatibility of DirectX 10, the answer is "no".

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    27. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact, I don't recommend Vista. I didn't pay for it, and neither did the people I know. We're all developers with MSDN subscriptions. I've told at least three people, and posted at least twice on Slashdot that it is not worth paying the price for, and that people who really want to upgrade should wait until they get it pre-installed, or for SP1.

      I'm just trying to give some perspective. Because in situations like this, the feedback is very skewed towards complaints, mainly because people don't feel the need to relate their experiences when things work well. I'm just trying to give a reasonable counter-point. I'd imagine that the reality is a lot better than a 70-30 ratio, but there's no way to be sure without a formal study.

    28. Re:My Vista Install by zippthorne · · Score: 1
      To get a bash shell, at the prompt type

      bash
      or

      /bin/bash
      That's it. If you have bash, you'll get a bash shell. Of course, you're probably already in a bash shell as another poster mentioned, but you might be in one of the other, also very useful, shells. Unless you need to run a bash-specific shell script though, you probably don't need to be in bash specifically.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    29. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Yeah I typed that bad. I had no problem getting a bash shell. Its what I use as default. The problem was getting x to stop running so that the scripts would work. A lot of the stuff that I found documentation for didnt work (ctrl+alt+backspace, on bash shell type runlevel 3, etc). Like I said, I'm kinda a linux newbie.

    30. Re:My Vista Install by IKnwThePiecesFt · · Score: 1

      My girlfriend's laptop has better hardware support in Linux than it does in Windows. For whatever reason, her laptop quit charging it's battery a few months ago. I chalked this up to a bad mother board, and assumed it was irreparable. Last weekend, she decided she wanted to try out this "Linux" thing I've been raving about, and we were stunned to see the battery start charging when we booted up the Live CD. Now she's a happy Linux user too.

      I call bullshit. How could the OS possibly relate to the charging of the battery? In any laptop I've ever seen the battery will charge with the laptop powered off, so it obviously ignores what OS is sitting on the hard drive. If for some reason she has some freak of a laptop that requires the OS for battery charging, I wouldn't be blaming Windows if that shit doesn't work.

    31. Re:My Vista Install by intangible · · Score: 1

      Whose fault is it that the USB modem doesn't work?

      What if the USB modem doesn't work instantly when I plug it in my windows box? That's right, I download drivers from the manufacturer. Whose fault is it if the manufacturer doesn't have a downloadable driver for Linux? I think you know the answer.

    32. Re:My Vista Install by jimbogun · · Score: 1

      Zero Benefit? I think not. I got updated graphics for the free windows games and a couple of new games (Chess and Purple Palace). How can you deny these benefits???

    33. Re:My Vista Install by digidave · · Score: 1

      Yes. The actual home page is http://albertomilone.com/nvidia_scripts1.html

      I used it on my current Ubuntu setup at home and it worked flawlessly. It'd be a real treat if when the Ubuntu installer detected an nvidia card it would run that script upon first bootup. A similar script for ATI cards would be solve 95% of users' video card problems.

      --
      The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
    34. Re:My Vista Install by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Whose fault is it that the USB modem doesn't work?

      Whoever's released a modem and not made sure it works with the world's more popular operating system.

    35. Re:My Vista Install by rbanffy · · Score: 1

      Way to ad hominem it up.

      Well... Sometimes, an idiot is really an idiot.

    36. Re:My Vista Install by Gazzonyx · · Score: 1
      My advice if you're an enthuiast (sic?), install Slackware from ground up - by the time you have it all up and running as you'd like, you'll know oodles more about the workings of Linux since the Slackware installer (for better or worse, depending on your opinion) will NOT hold your hand, at all. Once you get it installed fully, you can use pine from the command line to get the email from Patrick V. telling you about package management (if you actually use packages, I always compile from source, but I'm a software development major...YMMV).

      You're going to break your first two installations (if not, you're not toying around enough), but you will learn more while breaking it than if you were breaking any other distro, IMHO. YMMV.

      --

      If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.

    37. Re:My Vista Install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "lose"

    38. Re:My Vista Install by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      I might guess that the reporting icon somehow got broke (I've seen it). So the battery would charge, but they weren't seeing the nice 1%,2%,etc charging...

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    39. Re:My Vista Install by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Ahh. I think I see your problem-ish. I haven't figured out how to turn off X in Ubuntu either. At least not easily. Every runlevel I've tried has X running (haven't tried runlevel 1 yet but I hate using single user mode. And obvously 6 would be useless.)

      I suppose I *could* edit the runlevels, but I don't have a need to, I was just poking around. Also, that's not exactly a newbie thing to do. It's not complicated, it's just that it's better to learn other things first before mucking around with configuration files if you can avoid it.

      Waht scripts were you trying to run that required X to not be running though? I'm curious.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    40. Re:My Vista Install by fonik · · Score: 1

      Well, you could always comment out one of the "Section ..." lines in xorg.conf and restart X with ctrl-alt-backspace. Then, when it tries to restart and gives the scary "oh shit your X is fucked" screen, you can be sure that it isn't running. :D

    41. Re:My Vista Install by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      Who the flip uses a USB modem?

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    42. Re:My Vista Install by dbcad7 · · Score: 1
      I see nothing wrong with calling him a yahoo. When I know that someone else can do something on their computer such as installing an OS, and I try it and it doesn't work for me.. I figure out why. If I was just to spout off how bad this must be because I couldn't do it then I would consider myself a Yahoo.

      My brother is a yahoo.. He tried and tried and tried to download and instll Linux... wrote me letters on how Linux sucks, and that every distro he tried wouldn't install.. The problem tuned out to be that he would download the ISO and just copy it to a CD, instead of burning it from an image... amazingly I was able to explain to him how ISO's work and for some reason Linux installed finally. So it gets frustrating when people have install problems and say how Linux sucks, when all it takes is a little knowledge and some research (which should be done before you attempt installation)

      I don't own a laptop, or have wireless.. but if I was suddenly to obtain such a machine, I would first do some googling to see what kind of install problems people had with my hardare, and their solutions... and anything I might need I would have downloaded prior to installing .. but that's just me trying to avoid being a yahoo.

      --
      waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
    43. Re:My Vista Install by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Who the flip uses a USB modem?

      Not Linux users. Doesn't bother me - I code for a living, and there's precious little work using Linux anyway.

    44. Re:My Vista Install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well no shit, sherlock. His point was that if you're using a graphical distro, there's no easily accessible documentation on how to exit X to install drivers. Init 3 doesn't always work.

    45. Re:My Vista Install by Rycross · · Score: 1

      nVidia's graphic driver install script. It requires x to be shut down. I managed it by editing some config file to set the default runlevel to 3 up on boot and reboot it. Not the easiest or most straightforward way but it got the job done.

    46. Re:My Vista Install by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "I'd imagine that the reality is a lot better than a 70-30 ratio, but there's no way to be sure without a formal study."
      I would guess that for installing as and upgrade it is probably closer to 10-90. It would depend on what you consider a successful update.
      For me I would have to say that 100% of your current hardware including printer, webcams, audio, scanners... would have to be fully supported as well as all of your current software running correctly with the standard settings.
      So far I have seen 0 installs that meet that standard.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    47. Re:My Vista Install by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Actually Jerry Pournelle seems to really like Vista. He used to write for BYTE since the days of CP/M.
      He has his own website at http://www.chaosmanorreviews.com/. I don't think anyone should buy Vista and frankly I think it needs a lot more work but he does seem to like it.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    48. Re:My Vista Install by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is "lose", dammit! L-O-S-E. Not, LOOSE! This isn't exactly rocket science. It is easier to figure out than installing either Vista *or* Linux. Come on, people!!

  11. throwing up my hands by gelfling · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Every time there is news like this the fanboys shout 'you shoulda known' and
    'get new hardware'. I have a better idea. Let's call Vista not an upgrade but a wholesale replacement of your computer and many of your applications. Most of your data will work in the new system but that's about it.

    No - Vista is barely less of an upgrade than switching from XP to a Mac.

    1. Re:throwing up my hands by mikelieman · · Score: 5, Funny

      So, it's like moving to Linux but with the additional pleasures of both paying $200.00 and still not getting any useful bundled applications?

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    2. Re:throwing up my hands by ivan256 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Except that Linux has had practically universal network and soundcard support for years. Even if the network hardware only has Windows 2000 binary drivers, you could load them with the NDIS module...

      It used to be that if you wanted all of your hardware to work, you ran Windows. Looks like the tables have turned.

    3. Re:throwing up my hands by adolf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes.

      Except, certain things in Vista still work better than under (say) Ubuntu, or a lot of other Linux distributions.

      Like, say, 802.11 configuration.

      Or perhaps, volume controls. I've given up on getting a proper working fucking volume control on my SB Live-equipped Ubuntu desktop machine.

      Or Bluetooth. Such pain and trauma to configure a Bluetooth mouse with Linux, but it was straight-forward with Vista.

      Or video drivers. Neither Vista nor XP has ever trashed my video drivers with an automatic update. Meanwhile, every time Ubuntu switches to a new nvidia-legacy driver, my desktop machine needs to be tickled again before X will work. (I know - I should just stick with the free nv driver, since there's no fucking games for Linux to make 3D worth caring about, anyway. But I like xscreensaver's GL hacks.)

      Vista's not perfect, though. It killed support for DirectSound3D and EAX, making games less enjoyable to play (for me, anyway). However, EAX never worked at all in Linux, so I guess I don't feel "trapped" anymore than I do with Linux.

    4. Re:throwing up my hands by omicronish · · Score: 5, Informative

      Every time there is news like this the fanboys shout 'you shoulda known' and 'get new hardware'. I have a better idea. Let's call Vista not an upgrade but a wholesale replacement of your computer and many of your applications. Most of your data will work in the new system but that's about it.

      No - Vista is barely less of an upgrade than switching from XP to a Mac.

      Sure, so what hardware and software did you have to replace?

      Amount I've had to spend in addition to purchasing Vista: $0. I built my AMD Athlon 2700+, 1 GB RAM, Radeon 9800 Pro in 2003 (hardly new). All my software and scenarios work, including:

      • Visual Studio 2005, including debugging without UAC prompts
      • Subversion, TortoiseSVN
      • Foxit Reader
      • Paint.NET
      • Nasa's World Wind
      • ffdshow, Xvid codecs
      • VLC
      • Civilization 1 (for Windows 3.1), 2, and 4 (I don't have 3), Quake 1 through 4, Guild Wars, Baldur's Gate 1 and 2, SimTower, SimCity 200, SimCity 4, Age of Empires 2, WarCraft 3, Diablo 1 and 2, and others. In fact, I don't recall a game that doesn't work.
      • I've captured video from my camcorder, edited it, and performed video encoding without problems. No DRM invovled.
      • I've ripped CDs at lossless rates (the builtin WMP supports WMA, WMA lossless, MP3 up to 320 kbps, and WAV), and burnt it. Again, no DRM involved.
      • Was able to watch DVDs on my 1920x1200 monitor.
      • Can access file shares on XP fine.
      • Printing to both local and networked printers work; while typing this I connected to my brother's XP machine downstairs and printed to his printer. Setup was a couple mouse clicks.

      I'd love to hear other people's experiences, but please include details.

    5. Re:throwing up my hands by edwardpickman · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. Linux lacks the annoying prompts and security. You get what you pay for...wait a minute, scratch that.

    6. Re:throwing up my hands by bendodge · · Score: 1

      Try Cube 2. It's still in development, but it's quite playable. (It's a pretty obvious open-source remake of Quake III.)

      --
      The government can't save you.
    7. Re:throwing up my hands by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Tell that to the Airport card in my iBook. ... ... ...

      You insensitive clod! (Sorry, had to.)

    8. Re:throwing up my hands by SCPRedMage · · Score: 1

      Vista's not perfect, though. It killed support for DirectSound3D and EAX, making games less enjoyable to play (for me, anyway). However, EAX never worked at all in Linux, so I guess I don't feel "trapped" anymore than I do with Linux. There IS still some hope for EAX. Creative has a piece of software currently in beta call Alchemy, that translates DirectSound calls to OpenAL calls. Unfortuneatly, it requires a card with native OpenAL support, so as far as Creative cards go, I don't think it runs on anything short of an X-Fi.

      Of course, I STILL want to know what M$ was thinking when they decided to kill the DirectSound HAL...
      --
      My sig can beat up your sig.
    9. Re:throwing up my hands by PitaBred · · Score: 4, Informative

      For every anecdote, there's a counter anecdote:

      802.11 works fine for me. Try network-manager/knetworkmanager. All clicky-clicky, and even better than XP's network support IMHO

      Volume controls? You mean like the Fn+F6/F7 on my laptop that actually change the volume of my machine? Automatically, with no configuration, in Linux, on my laptop?

      Bluetooth seems to work fine for me, too.

      Video drives, I just did apt-get install nvidia-glx, and they've worked since then. With Beryl, I get 3D screensavers, everything I could want.

    10. Re:throwing up my hands by jZnat · · Score: 1

      Just to let you know, Ubuntu Edgy perfectly detected my Macbook's (first-gen even) Airport card, so there's hope. I'd recommend trying out Ubuntu Feisty when that comes out next month and see if it works.

      Your problem is that you're on a PPC computer, and hardly anyone seems to care anymore sadly. I loved the G3 iBook due to its enormous battery life compared to EVERY other notebook I've ever tried.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    11. Re:throwing up my hands by sheldon · · Score: 1

      I had to replace my soundcard... Soundblaster PCI-512... bought an Audigy SE for $30 at bestbuy.

      Other than that, it worked fine with all of my other hardware(P4 3.0Ghz, 2 Gigs RAM, nVidia 7600GS), etc. I think at the time I installed there were no drivers for the built-in RAID of my D875PBZ motherboard, so I used software RAID.

      I play BF2, and do VS.NET 2005 development on it. It had drivers for my Lexmark E312. Worked fine with my router, DHCP server, DNS server, Active Directory domain, everything.

      It's not nearly as big of a deal as going from Win3.1 to 95 was, or from 95 to NT4, or NT4 to XP. Hell with NT4, we were waiting for some drivers a year after it's release.

    12. Re:throwing up my hands by adolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      802.11: Certain Linux software (which often likes to bind to specific interfaces and addresses) gets distraught when it doesn't have an IP address, or that address changes after the software is loaded. None of the X-oriented 802.11 configuration methods help the machine be network-connected at boot time. Windows, if it does suffer such a dependancy problem, at least has not bitten me yet because of it. Linux has.

      Volume controls: No, not at all like the hardware volume control on your laptop, which will work bloody anywhere. I mean just what I said: My SB Live does not have a functional volume control under Ubuntu. Click speaker icon. Adjust slider. Nothing changes. (Alternatively, I too can turn my brain off and discombobulate your words so that I can create a meaningless, out-of-context response: The volume up/down buttons on my IBM RapidAccess II keyboard don't adjust the volume on my SB Live equipped Ubuntu box, either.)

      Bluetooth: Really?

      Video: Yep. But nvidia-legacy is the driver I need for my GeForce 2. And Ubuntu breaks it at every opportunity.

      Ho-hum.

    13. Re:throwing up my hands by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

      In fact, I don't recall a game that doesn't work.

      The only one I've found so far was a version of Brian Lara Cricket. Working games include Oblivion, Psychonauts, Defcon, City of Heroes and Villains, Galactic Civilisations 2, Neverwinter Nights 1 and 2, SWAT 4, The Ship, World of Warcraft, all the new Sam and Max games, Operation Flashpoint, Z: Steel Soldiers, Jimmy White's Cueball, EVE Online, Sid Meier's Railroads!, Need for Speed Underground 2, Startopia...

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    14. Re:throwing up my hands by Carnildo · · Score: 1
      Emachines T2958, purchased about a year and a half ago.

      • The AC'97 sound card is not supported.
      • The LaserJet 2100 network printer does not work.
      • The memory card reader is not supported.
      • The video card can't handle any of the fancy graphics.
      • With only 512 MB of RAM, heavy use of virtual memory, so the system as a whole feels sluggish.
      • The upgrade process from WinXP SP1 wiped out my existing "Program Files" and "My Documents" directories.
      • The MetroWerks remote debugger only works under XP compatibility mode, and even then, it fails to launch the application to debug half the time.
      • Something's wrong with the network configuration, so I can't connect to the MacOS X fileserver.
      • Don't get me started on UAC and Microsoft's decree that all installers shall run as admin...
      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    15. Re:throwing up my hands by peter_gzowski · · Score: 1

      Can you tell me your tickling technique? I just updated the nvidia-legacy drivers, and I only get 800x600. The "nv" driver works fine at 1280x1024, but "nvidia" is always faster for me (even for 2D).

      --
      "Now gluttony and exploitation serves eight!" - TV's Frank
    16. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine.. Congrats. what about non-techie people want to upgrade? certainly they have to buy new system or pay for upgrades.. then buy new accessories

    17. Re:throwing up my hands by adolf · · Score: 1

      See? See everyone?

      This is what I'm talking about.

      [Unfortunately, the tickling I've had to due hasn't had anything to do with resolutions, but usually revolved around kernel module issues. So my experience with that problem won't help you much. You might look into setting a modeline in xorg.conf for 1280x1024 manually, and fine-tune it using something like xvidtune, and carefully increasing your range of allowed refresh timings for your monitor if X keeps being persistantly stupid.]

      Again: Everyone, look at this. This conversation should not be happening, but it is happening.

      A trap, indeed, but it's not called Vista.

    18. Re:throwing up my hands by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Works fine on my bronze powerbook G3, which I believe uses the same airport card...

      You just need to find yourself some firmware.

    19. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      802.11: Certain Linux software (which often likes to bind to specific interfaces and addresses) gets distraught when it doesn't have an IP address, or that address changes after the software is loaded. None of the X-oriented 802.11 configuration methods help the machine be network-connected at boot time. Windows, if it does suffer such a dependancy problem, at least has not bitten me yet because of it. Linux has.

      IP addresses - unless you're running servers, hardly a good idea with Wi-fi, this should be a non-issue. Worst case scenario, for dependencies you can't get rid of, use 127.0.0.1 or 0.0.0.0 as addresses to bind to.

      The more annoying part is dns - and it might be what bit you. Some programs use socket names that use the machine name (KDE comes to mind; X will also be picky if used with nolisten-tcp). Still, I thought the default Ubuntu option of having dhcp not change the hostname fixes that.

      Re: volume controls. This one looks strange. Anecdotic, but my sb-live never had any problems with alsa in a long time now - and I'm currently using ubuntu too. Are you sure your alsa configuration is correct? Also, have you tried setting the volume directly with alsamixer?

    20. Re:throwing up my hands by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Except that Linux has had practically universal network and soundcard support for years.

      *cough*ALSA*cough*Wireless*cough*

    21. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista is barely less of an upgrade than switching from XP to a Mac.

      "Barely less"? So... switching from XP to a Mac is only slightly more of an upgrade than switching to Vista? Is that what you meant to say? It just seems like a very odd statement.

      I'm not really convinced that there is a total ordering here anyway.

      Most of your data will work in the new system but that's about it.

      Did your computer come with Windows ME preinstalled?
    22. Re:throwing up my hands by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      This came up in another Slashdot thread a few days ago, but the problem basically sums to:

      1) Ubuntu can use the wireless card, but it requires downloading some file from the Internet.
      2) I can't get on the Internet because a plain Ubuntu install doesn't include the file and my laptop only has wifi Internet access.

      It's a nasty Catch-22 issue.

    23. Re:throwing up my hands by Grashnak · · Score: 1

      The video card can't handle any of the fancy graphics. With only 512 MB of RAM, heavy use of virtual memory, so the system as a whole feels sluggish. Dude, neither of these is a flaw with Vista. Having a crappy video card and 512 MB of RAM is a flaw with your computer, not with the OS, and even a minimal amount of research would have informed you that a computer with such modest hardware would not have a good experience with VISTA. Did you bother to read anything about it before you upgraded?
      --
      Life needs more saving throws.
    24. Re:throwing up my hands by adolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I can set the volume using alsa-mixer, sure, but that's not the point: I can also route air traffic, compute particle physics, and map oil fields using alsa-mixer on an emu10k1. It's beyond complicated with this chipset, to the point that it borders on pedantically stupid.

      Which is why I'd like to use the volume control on the Ubuntu desktop or taskbar or whatever-it-is. I think it may have worked at one point, but updates to something-or-other broke it. My situation is almost certainly complicated somewhat by the fact that I'm using the card's digital output for all audio, but that doesn't seem to present any particular complication to Certain Other operating systems.

      But it doesn't matter, really. I gave up on it long ago. I've lost enough hours to making desktop Linux work completely, only to have largely unwanted software updates hose up the whole thing.

      I don't even bother trying to run Linux on my laptop bare-metal anymore (the first time I closed the lid and the backlight stupidly stayed on, I could see where things were headed) though I do have a pretty functional install of Ubuntu working on VMWare under Vista.

      And I'm not about to abandon my Gentoo mail and off-site backup servers for anything. But desktop Linux pretty much blows, these days.

      I had a more consistant Linux desktop with Slackware and FVWM2, over a decade ago. One used to configure things, and they stayed configured: I used to tell people that the coolest part about Linux was that sometimes it was hard to make something work, but once you finally figured it out it would stay working indefinately.

      But that's not the case anymore. It shames me to say that Windows is less of a moving target than a typical Linux desktop.

      And all I wanted was a volume control.

    25. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      very similar config to yours... except I have a 2800+. I use noteworthy composer along with wingroove to write my music. have you tried any midi playback in vista? it is absolutely horrid. wingroove won't even install. on top of that I've had several random shutdowns. I think I'm going back to xp for a while. I agree with the comment above that ubuntu is not a practical replacemnt -- even if free

    26. Re:throwing up my hands by wumpus188 · · Score: 1

      You still got EBX, ECX and EDX. WTF are you complaining about?

    27. Re:throwing up my hands by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Ditto. Built my machine in 2005. 3800+, Nforce4 with RAID, Nvidia 7800, no issues.

    28. Re:throwing up my hands by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1
      You did what?
      • I've captured video from my camcorder, edited it, and performed video encoding without problems. No DRM invovled.
      • I've ripped CDs at lossless rates (the builtin WMP supports WMA, WMA lossless, MP3 up to 320 kbps, and WAV), and burnt it. Again, no DRM involved.
      • Was able to watch DVDs on my 1920x1200 monitor.

      You must have added a lot of software too, then. Mind letting us know what you used that works? I wasn't able to do any video editing at all, since Video Studio refused to run, and the "patch" that was supposed to make it work in Vista removed a bunch of features that I use.

      WMP told me I didn't have what I needed to play my DVDs, either.

      And my burning software - only about a year old - won't work on Vista. Although I can upgrade to Nero 7 (for $69), and they say it's compatible. The interface looks horrible, though.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    29. Re:throwing up my hands by norman619 · · Score: 1

      There is no reason you should upgrade to Vista. If your current system is doing you fine then why bother? There is nothing out that is a Vista exclusive which justifies the massive hardware upgrade many of your average users will have to do. Vista came at the same time I needed to upgrade my system so it's not big deal for me. I suggest you stay away from Vista for at least a year unless you want to play Direct X 10 games. Then you are looking at doing some hardware upgrades if not buying a whole new system. Why complain about not being able to own a MCLaren when your BMW does the job? Running Vista now will not gain you anything.

    30. Re:throwing up my hands by omicronish · · Score: 1

      You must have added a lot of software too, then. Mind letting us know what you used that works? I wasn't able to do any video editing at all, since Video Studio refused to run, and the "patch" that was supposed to make it work in Vista removed a bunch of features that I use.

      Actually, I just used Windows Movie Maker. I captured to uncompressed DV, performed some editing (spliced the video, added my own sound track), and then afterwards I was able to encode with WMM to WMV and an app I found on Doom9 to convert to H.264 (I can't remember the name at the moment, but it's OSS). I've been meaning to try out DVD-lab (excellent DVD authoring app), but from what I gather on their forums it works fine with Vista. Your WMP DVD issue is interesting since I've had no problems watching DVDs; what was the exact error?

      And my burning software - only about a year old - won't work on Vista. Although I can upgrade to Nero 7 (for $69), and they say it's compatible. The interface looks horrible, though.

      Nero is terribly bloated; I haven't used it for years. I use the freely available and simple ImgBurn, which, despite its name, can also create and burn CDs by providing files. I've heard that Daemon Tools works if you want to mount ISOs, but have not used it myself.

    31. Re:throwing up my hands by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      What is your point? Are you under the mistaken impression that you can't get almost every wireless adapter working under Linux? Or perhaps that something about ALSA means you're unlikely to have sound? Perhaps you are posting through a time warp from 2003?

    32. Re:throwing up my hands by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      And yes, my 14" G4 iBook frequently gets 5 hours+ battery life, plus it has one of the best wireless antennas of any laptop I've used. (From what I understand, Apple was the first company to use the wireless technique of wrapping an antenna around the monitor bezel, making for a much larger antenna than previous laptops.) It's a great piece of hardware. Used to get 6 hours out of it, but the battery isn't as new as it once was.

    33. Re:throwing up my hands by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Of course you can. The implication of the post, however, is that it's all some turnkey mechanism. "Hey look, amazing hardware support." is not the same as "Your Centrino 2200BG will work if you a) compile the driver, b) configure NDIS wrappers for it, and c) download the firmware from intel.com" (yes, I know it's not distributed for licensing reasons, no, that doesn't make it any better).

    34. Re:throwing up my hands by Ambassador+Kosh · · Score: 1

      Your soundblaster live problem sure sounds strange. I used one for many years before I go an audigy2 zs and I have never had problems with either under linux. I read that you can change the volumes with alsa-mixer so why wouldn't the regular volume controls work? I know with kde the default mixer (kmix) works just fine with alsa and oss and with it I can change main volume but also any of the individual volumes that alsa has found on my card. It would seem strange that other sound controls wouldn't work with alsa since that is standard but maybe whatever one you are using doesn't.

      --
      Computer modeling for biotech drug manufacturing is HARD! :)
    35. Re:throwing up my hands by rbanffy · · Score: 1

      You just gave me an idea...

      There could be a "Linux Upgrade Advisor" that could scan your hardware and settings and use this information to either generate a couple files that could be used when setting up Linux or be sent back to some sponsor who would map the hardware people are using Windows on and that would like to try Linux.

      There is already a Debian installer for Windows... That could be a nice feature to add.

    36. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Network Manager works fine out of the box for generic 802.11 connections. Even works for WPA/WPA2 connections (provided you know more details about the connection in question than you ever cared to know).

      But don't get me started on how difficult it is to hook up to the most basic of VPNs. Supposedly NM has support for VPNs, but I have yet to get it to work my corporate network. It's extremely annoying, and not anywhere near as plug-and-playable as Windows' built-in VPN connector.

    37. Re:throwing up my hands by AusIV · · Score: 1

      With Ubuntu Edgy, I haven't run into a wireless card that doesn't work from the LiveCD without downloading any additional drivers. I've used a Broadcom card, two different Intel cards, and a Linksys card with an Atheros chipset (madwifi drivers). There may be a few cards that Ubuntu doesn't recognize out of the box, but they're getting to be pretty rare.

    38. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For every anecdote, there's a counter anecdote:

      Yeah, a 50% success rate sounds about right for Linux compatibility with these things.

    39. Re:throwing up my hands by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1


      Except, certain things in Vista still work better than under (say) Ubuntu, or a lot of other Linux distributions.

      Like, say, 802.11 configuration.

      Have you used NetworkManager? 802.11b/g/a on my MacBook Pro running openSuSE 10.2 is automagic, and properly reconnects to all previously connected network without fail, unlike both OS X and Vista. NetworkManager > All Other OS network configuration daemons.


      Or perhaps, volume controls. I've given up on getting a proper working fucking volume control on my SB Live-equipped Ubuntu desktop machine.

      *shrug*. Perhaps Ubuntu sucks. I've never, ever had a problem with a volume control on a SuSE box, SB Live, Audigy, whatever.

      Or Bluetooth. Such pain and trauma to configure a Bluetooth mouse with Linux, but it was straight-forward with Vista.

      Once again, never had an issue on SuSE. Plug in bluetooth dongle. Put in batteries on keyboard. Push "connect" on keyboard. Push "connect" on dongle. Repeat for Mouse. Done.

      Not to mention that the Bluetooth control panel in YaST2 is pretty slick (much more configurable than OS X, which is much more configurable than Vista). And KDE's KBluetoothd with KIO support is awesome.

      Or video drivers. Neither Vista nor XP has ever trashed my video drivers with an automatic update. Meanwhile, every time Ubuntu switches to a new nvidia-legacy driver, my desktop machine needs to be tickled again before X will work. (I know - I should just stick with the free nv driver, since there's no fucking games for Linux to make 3D worth caring about, anyway. But I like xscreensaver's GL hacks.)

      Use a real distro, something that packages binary drivers with Kernel & Xorg updates. Like, SuSE. Both NVIDIA's and ATI's are automatically updated when you update your kernel or Xorg, as long as you stick with official packages. It just works, everytime.

      And in terms of games, I play Medieval Total War 2, World of Warcraft, Half Life 2, Doom 3, Unreal Tournament, Eve Online, and a panoply of other games. Wine & Cedega have both gotten quite good.

      Vista's not perfect, though. It killed support for DirectSound3D and EAX, making games less enjoyable to play (for me, anyway). However, EAX never worked at all in Linux, so I guess I don't feel "trapped" anymore than I do with Linux.

      This is valid, however, Creative has announced full EAX support in its next set of XiFi (or whatever the new card is called). OpenAL works properly in Linux (as it does in Windows Vista through 98), and being the new cross-platform solution, I suspect a lot more games will come out with OpenAL in the near future.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    40. Re:throwing up my hands by vsync64 · · Score: 1

      I had a more consistant Linux desktop with Slackware and FVWM2, over a decade ago. One used to configure things, and they stayed configured: I used to tell people that the coolest part about Linux was that sometimes it was hard to make something work, but once you finally figured it out it would stay working indefinately. But that's not the case anymore.
      So run Slackware and FVWM2.
      --
      TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
    41. Re:throwing up my hands by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Slow down there... Who said anything about all that stuff? All I said was you need the firmware. If you use a reasonably modern distribution, this should be a simple as putting the firmware file in the appropriate location on the disk. If you're using a Debian based distribution it is typically as easy as installing a package these days. I don't see that as any different or any more difficult than downloading a manufacturer's driver for your Windows box.

    42. Re:throwing up my hands by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Oops... I thought you were replying in the other thread I'm posting to in context of this story... You'll have to go read that thread for the firmware comment to make sense.

    43. Re:throwing up my hands by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > For every anecdote, there's a counter anecdote:

      Don't you mean "antidote"?

    44. Re:throwing up my hands by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1
      Well, in addition to Windows Movie Maker's other obvious lack of format flaws, it does not provide nearly enough editing options for me - my camcorder and component DVD Recorder can do more. Video Studio isn't a professional-level video editing tool, but it provides at least a modicum of capabilities - only on XP, though, not on Vista.

      None of the CD burning tools you mentioned will create gapless audio CDs, nor will anything else that will run on Vista for less than $100, other than Nero. Well, Roxio probably has something, but I won't even consider giving them any money, considering their behavior in the past.

      WMP told me "Cannot perform the requested action" when I tried to play a DVD. Did it work for you out-of-the-box? No go for me. I have a DVD player that came with my ATI card for XP, but it refuses to install under Vista.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    45. Re:throwing up my hands by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      Dude, neither of these is a flaw with Vista. Having a crappy video card and 512 MB of RAM is a flaw with your computer, not with the OS, and even a minimal amount of research would have informed you that a computer with such modest hardware would not have a good experience with VISTA. Did you bother to read anything about it before you upgraded?


      Twelve months ago, when the corporate higher-ups decided that we needed to test our software on the Vista release candidates to make sure that it would work, I was given the job of doing so. I determined that this was the machine best-suited to running Vista, and only one of two computers in the office capable of doing so. It's a fairly typical office computer, and more powerful than about 70% of the computers our software is currently running on.
      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
  12. Early Adopters by needacoolnickname · · Score: 1

    Really need to stop whining.

    If you are adept enough to try "many trial and error tweaks to Vista's TCP/IP settings" you are adept enough to do a little research before going out to get the newest thing.

    1. Re:Early Adopters by sheph · · Score: 1

      Ok, your comment makes sense while the OS is still in Beta, but we're talking about something that MS is pushing to Joe user now. I know that upgrades are rarely painless, and usually require the replacement of software, as well as hardware. However, for the unsuspecting schmoe who just likes to turn it on and have things work I can see how it might be just a tad frustrating when he finds out he needs a new video card, sound card, oh and while your at it a whole new system. If I'm a general home user, and I'm going to shell out $200 + for a new OS that's being billed as an "upgrade" I ought to be able to come home, load it, and be done. This is what MS could have focused on if they were that concerned about the end user experience instead of catering to the **PA with the DRM nonsense.

      --
      I don't believe in karma, I just call it like I see it.
  13. Starting to annoy... by HateBreeder · · Score: 0, Troll

    What's with all these anti-vista posts?

    No one forces you to use it.

    You can stay with that ol' linux box that doesn't have a single decent image-browser, dc++ client, office suite, ... etc.
    Not to mention decent looking fonts (anti-aliasing in linux is light-years away from cleartype - seen the major distros, xorg 7.1 w/latest kde - it's still crap)

    I don't mind paying for good 3rd party apps. just that they don't exist for linux.

    --
    Sigs are for the weak.
    1. Re:Starting to annoy... by Rycross · · Score: 1

      As far as office suites go, how is Open Office not good enough?

      What kind of 3rd party apps are you looking for? I haven't found Linux lacking in this regard, but then again I'm mostly using it as a server.

    2. Re:Starting to annoy... by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      If you don't mind paying a lot of the things you ask for will run under crossover.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    3. Re:Starting to annoy... by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      MOD PARENT UP. All this loathing seems to be jealousy by the Linux fanboys. -- Linux User at Work, Windows Vista User at Home

    4. Re:Starting to annoy... by Blob+Pet · · Score: 1

      You must be new here.

      --
      "...today consumers have been conditioned to think of beer when they see a bullfrog..."
    5. Re:Starting to annoy... by adewolf · · Score: 1

      What a load of FUD.

      --
      "The Brady Bunch is back...working homicide"
    6. Re:Starting to annoy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I buy drugs from you?

    7. Re:Starting to annoy... by oliverthered · · Score: 1
      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    8. Re:Starting to annoy... by Jewfro_Macabbi · · Score: 1

      That's the difference, you dont' mind paying, and you are windows user. I do mind paying, and thus am willing to learn "how" to use linux apps. Neither way is correct, or incorrect, simply different... Personally I have no issue with my fonts under linux, they look just fine. But then, I'm partial to monospace anyway...

    9. Re:Starting to annoy... by FunWithKnives · · Score: 4, Informative

      ... doesn't have a single decent image-browser ...

      Gwenview, Picasa...

      ... dc++ client ...

      Is in production. Check the CVS for latest builds.

      ... office suite ...

      I really don't understand why you included this. OpenOffice.org, KOffice, AbiWord; all more than comparable to MS Word.

      ... Not to mention decent looking fonts ...

      In Debian based distros, sudo apt-get install msttcorefonts. Rather simple. Other distros have packages of their own.

      In short, I'm under the impression that you haven't really tried to use a modern Linux distro for more than the five minutes it took you to stereotype it, say, "This sucks because it's not what I'm used to!", and go back to Windows.

      --
      "We may face a scorched and lifeless earth, but they're accountable to their shareholders first."
    10. Re:Starting to annoy... by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 1

      What's with all these anti-vista posts? No one forces you to use it.
      Here's why I don't like Vista: it's breaking my app.

      Because Microsoft mucked about so much with the audio drivers to get DRM working to their satisfaction, the sound in my game suffers from a 1-second delay on some Vista systems. Just today I got a note from a Vista user that after they upgraded their OS, text entry doesn't work in one particular part of the game. I understand there will be headaches in any upgrade cycle, but that doesn't mean I need to like it.

      Because I write software for multiple platforms, I need to use it. It simply isn't a realistic option for me to say that I don't support Vista. Vista, for me, means absolutely nothing more than more time and effort spent hunting down bizarre, OS-specific bugs and the expense of a testing environment.

      --

      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    11. Re:Starting to annoy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Vista Betas were around and available for more then a year, so my question is why didn't you know in advance that your app would have problems? I tested all my stuff and fixed any problems that came up, which were very minor...

    12. Re:Starting to annoy... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      No one forces you to use it.

      Nobody's forcing you to read it.

      And nobody said you're forced to use Vista. They're just posting opinions for those who are interested and want to discuss it.
      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    13. Re:Starting to annoy... by HateBreeder · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oh, give me a break.
      Gwenview - sucks completly compared to something like ACDsee. (90% of the other linux apps are mere rip-offs of ACDsee)
      Picasa - I like the windows version, didn't know they had a linux version. Okay! You win this point. but ... A single app in 2007. and we're just talking about image browsing.. not something fancy.

      Office - these MS-Office clones you mentioned are crap. why? because they can't inter-operate with the rest of the world flawlessly. I don't care that microsoft is to blame for closing the format... My professors sometimes send out home-work and papers in word or visio, or lecture notes in power-point... i need these to work! i don't wanna meddle around with things.

      and don't give me apt-get install msttcorefonts. In gentoo it's called microsoft true type fonts or something. its not the font that's bad .. i suspect it has to do with the X-Server. when rendering small fonts it just seems blurry. not as sharp and pretty as in windows.

      and if we're at it with X - until the composite extension came out, you couldn't even drag one window over the other without forcing a full repaint - Slow as hell! but composite is SO unstable it's barely usable.
      these kind of small things make you wanna give up.

      Not to mention the horrifying ordeal i had to go through just to set-up my legacy atheros card. madwifi-ng broke it. madwifi-old stopped compiling on kernels over 2.6.19... i manually patched the driver just to get basic things going.

      I am the parent. I am not a troll.

      I've been using gentoo for years. The only thing keeping me in linux is the ideology. philosophically, you can only trust open-source software. .. that and work. I'm a kernel driver developer.

      But i'm getting really frustrated with the utter lack of support for basic things..
      When you combine that with fanboys flaming vista... it's very annoying.
      First get BASIC things right with linux before you flame MS windows.

      --
      Sigs are for the weak.
    14. Re:Starting to annoy... by PitaBred · · Score: 1
      I'll rise to the troll for the parent with a quote:

      sound in my game suffers from a 1-second delay on some Vista systems
      Perhaps you can try reading next time, eh? Moron. He almost certainly DID test it, it's just something that occurs on some configurations, not all of them. Even Microsoft can't afford to have an instance of EVERY system configuration possible.
    15. Re:Starting to annoy... by FunWithKnives · · Score: 1

      ... A single app in 2007. and we're just talking about image browsing.. not something fancy ...

      By no means is there a single application that excels for image browsing. Personally, I prefer Gwenview, and don't see how it "sucks completely" at all, but c'est la vie, I suppose. Anyway, there are plenty more that work perfectly well:

      DigiKam, F-Spot, et cetera.

      ... My professors sometimes send out home-work and papers in word or visio ...

      I'm a student at USC, and I get homework, papers, and other things that are .doc, .vis, .ppt, et cetera. I also have to send assignments as email attachments, and so I have to make sure that they are compatible. I have never once had a problem switching between MS Office and OpenOffice.org. I do keep a small partition on one of my computers with Windows XP installed, just in case problems ever do crop up, but that isn't a fault of Linux or FLOSS. As you said, the lock-in is purely Microsoft's doing.

      ... when rendering small fonts it just seems blurry. not as sharp and pretty as in windows ...

      That is completely subjective. I don't notice much of a difference between modern fonts in Linux versus Windows TrueType. To each his own.

      ... Not to mention the horrifying ordeal i had to go through just to set-up my legacy atheros card ...

      I can't relate to your wifi issues either. I had a bit of trepidation concerning wireless when I installed Kubuntu 6.10 on my new laptop, just because of all of the horror stories that I've heard about wireless support in Linux. I was pleasantly surprised, though. Kubuntu automagically detected my internal wireless, and the only thing required of me was to type in the WEP key. Wireless support is getting very close to being ubiquitous in most distros now.

      I realize that you aren't a troll, and neither am I flaming Vista. On the contrary, I believe that Microsoft has finally done some things right with this version of Windows. UAC, no matter what the Slashbots may think, is a step in the right direction. "Protected Mode" for IE7 is another Good Thing (TM).

      Nonetheless, I still believe that the bad outweighs the good. Vista's DRM implementation, WGA and license restrictions, overpricing (in my opinion), the company's continued attempts at lock-in, proprietary code, disdain for open standards, and a host of other reasons keep me away from Windows.

      By the way, maybe you should test drive more "user-friendly" distros. Gentoo is great, and Portage rocks - only second to the original FreeBSD Ports system (again, in my opinion), but it doesn't have the "just works" mentality that K/X/Ubuntu, Fedora Core, Mandriva, and yes, even SuSE (for now) possess. That just isn't its MO.

      What it all boils down to is the nature of FLOSS, which is evolution - getting better and better over time. We've been witnessing it in Linux for the past fourteen years, and I am nothing but optimistic about the future.

      --
      "We may face a scorched and lifeless earth, but they're accountable to their shareholders first."
    16. Re:Starting to annoy... by e40 · · Score: 1

      I think this explains it pretty well:

      http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Schadenfreude

    17. Re:Starting to annoy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... when rendering small fonts it just seems blurry. not as sharp and pretty as in windows ...

      That is completely subjective. I don't notice much of a difference between modern fonts in Linux versus Windows TrueType. To each his own.

      From the screenshots that I've seen, Linux seems to turn on antialiasing at more font sizes. Windows uses the crisper, aliased versions at around 8-14 point. Of course there are also those patented hinting algorithms that most distros probably won't have enabled by default.
    18. Re:Starting to annoy... by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      In Debian based distros, sudo apt-get install msttcorefonts. Rather simple. Other distros have packages of their own.

      *devil's advocate*So I have to know the name of the package first, which could be different across the various distros. Then I have to know the command to run to install the package which again, is different across the various distros. Then I have to figure out the proper switch to use with the command (shouldn't be too hard once I know the command). Then I have to know what sudo does in order to get the package to actually install unless I can install it in my own home directory. By the way, how did you ever figure out that obvious name 'msttcorefonts'? Simple? Maybe if you were born with the knowledge (as all experts think they were) but to a newbie they are screwed; it could take a few hours to figure out all the parts to that command. To top it off it states that nice looking fonts aren't even installed by default like they are on Windows.*end devil's advocate*

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    19. Re:Starting to annoy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've enabled BDI for true type fonts in freetype.

  14. Re:Self-confessed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kinda gives "Karma Whore" a new meaning.

  15. Bastards by jernejk · · Score: 5, Funny

    Vista won't recognise my C64 tape drive either! Those MS bastards! It's a conspiracy, I tell you!

    1. Re:Bastards by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1

      Like almost everyone else on this thread; are you blaming that on Vista, or the fact your hardware manufacturer didn't get off their lazy ass to write compatible drivers? (Yes, I know Commodore hardware consists mainly of filing cabinets now . . .)

      It's not like there was no lead time from XP to Vista. My ASUS Crosshair M/B works wonderfully in XP-64, but not at all in Vista. There are no listed drivers for Vista right now on ASUS's site. Do I blame Microsoft for that? No.

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    2. Re:Bastards by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      And yet, my ancient yet still high quality and functional, never supported in Linux (much less past Win98) by HP flatbed scanner works completely plug-and-play on the most recent version of Ubuntu. Do I take this as a "freebie", or a flaw in the Windows ecosystem? I generally attribute it to the latter.

  16. Complaints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know that everyone reports iTunes not working with Vista, but I don't remember having any issues with it since Vista RC1.

    Other than than it appears that most of this guy's complaints are hardware related. Yes, the Upgrade Advisor gave him some erroneous info but I've never trusted software wizards before, Microsoft or not, and I'm surprised anyone else still does. It is like expecting a progress bar to actually report progress, or a "Time Remaining" estimate to be even close...a forlorn hope.

    I guess this guy just wanted to report on the process of upgrading a machine. If I wanted to warn people off of Vista I would ask them what they hated most about XP, and when they testified that it was the annoying messages the OS constantly wants them to look at, I'd tell them to imagine those messages being even more unrelenting. With the added ability to take control of your entire machine, stopping everything, every process, every thread, in its tracks until you answer.

    Those messages are Vista's biggest transgression, them and the seeming desire to confound everyone by burying useful controls deeper and deeper behind fluffy menus. Why on earth anyone thought it was a good idea to make a human being click through 10 different menus to enter a static IP I will never know.

    1. Re:Complaints by omicronish · · Score: 1

      I guess this guy just wanted to report on the process of upgrading a machine. If I wanted to warn people off of Vista I would ask them what they hated most about XP, and when they testified that it was the annoying messages the OS constantly wants them to look at, I'd tell them to imagine those messages being even more unrelenting. With the added ability to take control of your entire machine, stopping everything, every process, every thread, in its tracks until you answer.

      I've posted this before without many responses: I see a lot of UAC complaints on Slashdot but very little on details as to what the person is doing to garnish so many prompts. So here's my proposal to Slashdotters: If you've seen more than 5 UAC prompts in one day, what were you doing to cause them? Is it a scenario that most users (i.e. my parents) will encounter, or something relegated to some obscure realm such as debugging?

      If you're debugging an app installer or a networked service that requires admin privileges and accesses file shares, then sure UAC is a pain. So disable it. But from what I can tell, UAC prompts are not an issue for most users. Also, nitpick: The prompts don't stop everything; they merely put up a fullscreen UI that requires input before proceeding.

  17. never be the first to buy by mastershake_phd · · Score: 1

    Its going to take them a while to get the kinks out. Not to mention its going to be slower and some hardware might not have drivers. Besides DX10 I dont know why id buy this. And this PC isnt going to be able to run DX10.

    1. Re:never be the first to buy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its going to take them a while to get the kinks out.

      Because they haven't had enough time with all their delays? They've had years.

    2. Re:never be the first to buy by chromatic · · Score: 1

      Its going to take them a while to get the kinks out.

      What exactly were they doing for the past five years then?

    3. Re:never be the first to buy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the guy was running a 64MB videoboard, I seriously doubt that he was worried about gaming or DX10. I seriously doubt that his old board was even supporting DX8 and definately not 9. But, yes he will be able to run DX-10. He just won't be able to run the DX-10 features.

    4. Re:never be the first to buy by |Cozmo| · · Score: 1

      Developing Server 2003 and XP Service Pack 2. The amount of time actively spent working on Vista was actually a lot less than most people think. It is more like 2 years not 5.

    5. Re:never be the first to buy by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Putting the kinks in?

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    6. Re:never be the first to buy by T0mWil5on · · Score: 1

      What exactly were they doing for the past five years then?

      Putting the kinks in?

  18. Considering this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While using an UPGRADE; you have no recourse but to keep Vista. If it lacks stability or hardware support you cannot turn back to XP because you revoked your license when you installed the upgrade. You can buy a full version for $400 or if your in Europe; you can spend something like $800 USD.

  19. Please stop trolling by ivan256 · · Score: 1

    Vista runs fine in VMWare with less resources allocated to it than that. It isn't snappy, but it runs. Memory and processor specs have nothing to do with the fact that the supported hardware list, that is, the number of devices with available drivers, is smaller on Vista than on XP. Hell, as far as I can tell it's smaller than on Linux. Between the devices that are no longer supported vor one DRM reason or another, and the fact that manufacturers aren't interested in providing drivers for older devices, but would rather sell you a whole new device instead, Vista hardware support is a joke.

    This guy is talking about how his network and sound cards don't work. How does that have anything to do with his processor and memory? What does Microsoft think they're trying to pull with this? Are they really so convinced that they're untouchable that they think they can throw away one of the few things they had bragging rights over?

  20. And this is news how? by MarcoAtWork · · Score: 5, Informative

    win98 -> 2000, lots of problems with lack of drivers for older hardware
    2000 -> XP still problems with lack of drivers for older hardware (although maybe not as many)
    XP -> Vista well, what do you think?

    --
    -- the cake is a lie
    1. Re:And this is news how? by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Really, this is only an issue because MS is trying to drive sales, and keep the current desktop monopoly, by marketing Vista as an upgrade while technically defining it as a whole new OS. As a new OS, these problems are to be expected, while as a simple upgrade the problems are not acceptable. They are between a rock and a hard place. Admit it is a new OS and lose customers. Keep the fiction of upgrade, and have uphappy customers.

      There is also the issue of trying to run a new OS. Certainly, no one that is faint of heart should install Vista today, or even in the next year. The PC makes should not even be shipping Vista mandatory for the next six months. It is new, and customers should not be forced to buy it.

      This reminds me of trying to install any OS, especially in old hardware. I could never get a my build of Linux to install on my old Compaq, because I could never get the machine to recognize enough RAM. I had to do clean install of OS X on a pre-2000 machine because the installer crashed the machine. both of these were totally acceptable because I was installing a new OS on an old machine. The only news here is MS is not being honest with the product capabilities.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:And this is news how? by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Well, the difference here is that Vista completely changes the driver API.

      Going from Win98 to Win2k, yeah, there are going to be missing drivers because, guess what? Different kernel, different API! But not so going from NT4 to Win2k - NT4 drivers still worked in Win2k.

      Going from Win2k to WinXP? Well, it's still the same API - you can even still use your old NT4 drivers if you need them. (Excepting, of course, things like video drivers, because, you know, those thigns are fragile.)

      Going from WinXP to Vista? One or two drivers might work. Maybe. Sound drivers? The architecture changed. Completely. Video drivers? They're supposed to be in user space, so... New API!

      On the other hand, Linux has a similar problem: the driver API changes every couple releases - often! On the upshot, though, 95% of the drivers you will ever need are already part of the kernel source, so they just come along for the ride. That goes for sound and video drivers, too. But, anything that isn't strictly GPLed or that hasn't been stabilised for inclusion in mainline must be compiled separately. But given that you'll probably only ever need to install NVIDIA or ATi drivers, that doesn't seem like too big a loss....

      --
      grey wolf
      LET FORTRAN DIE!
    3. Re:And this is news how? by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

      So the article summation/tagging is: "IT's a TRAP", eh?

      Anywho...

      win98 -> 2000, lots of problems with lack of drivers for older hardware

      Odd that you got modded funny for something so true.

      What, to me, was most aggrivating was owning a Microsoft Sidewinder (had Logitec Wingman, great stick, but
      the hatswitch kept going Tango Uniform) and losing support moving to 2000 (and/or XP).

      That spoke volumes: thier own fscking Hardware not supported on their own fscking OS! Insult to injury
      was that the Wingman had updated drivers for 2k/xp (IIRC). I would not be suprised if the LW had Vista
      drivers/inf.

      But the big kick in the nuts, was the Sidewinder was supported *if* you had the USB version...here's the
      bitch of it: It was the same damn stick with a USB adaptor tossed in the box, and at a little higher
      price.

      So, when it came time for a little Descent3 and the best sticks available were the Logitec and Microsoft
      versions of the two. Decision was easy: Logitec, end of discussion.

      Mice, OTOH, I still prefer the old school two button + scroll non-laser/IR/whatever the heck it is.

      Reason: Try doing a 'flick shot' with a laser/ir mouse and you'll shoot your feet off every time.

      Funny, these mice are "older than 18 months" yet still supported.

      Uh-oh Vista users, I let the cat out of the bag, pretty soon you'll see "Unsupported mouse detected
      and disabled" UAC dialogue [Allow/Cancel?].

      It will take you back to the "Keyboard not detected, press F1 to continue" days.

      --
      Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
    4. Re:And this is news how? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      XP -> Vista well, what do you think?

      I think that, since they took so fricken long to release it, they should have put some more work into driver compatibility, or at least worked with hardware vendors to make sure most old devices would be supported out of the box. What do you think?

    5. Re:And this is news how? by maxume · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter a huge amount. XP would be a nightmare on most hardware that only had legacy NT support, and newer hardware, between Usb and built in ethernet is more 'complete' than it used to be. Even more so with Vista. There are random thingamabobs and whatsits that don't have modern drivers, but legacy video, sound, and network don't really matter that much. There are adapters for keyboards and stuff like that.

      Overall, if it actually works better, it will be worth it.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  21. How much is too much? by NeoPaladin394 · · Score: 2, Informative

    To a degree, the points made in TFA are to be expected. Heck, even a bunch of MS's own software is incompatible with Vista (big boys like .NET Framework 2.0 and SQL Server 2005, last I checked). There have been alot of changes, and it seems unrealistic to expect companies to roll out new drivers that are 100% right off the bat.

    That being said, there seems to have been a huge jump in paradigm from XP to Vista. Even though I know I'll be modded down for this, I like XP. I've installed the operating system with faulty RAM, and it STILL worked great after I replaced the chips. Its driver support is just awe inspiring, and about the only driver I have to manually set up on a fresh install is my sound and video card, and for the most part it was like this at release.

    Vista? You need up to date hardware and specific drivers. Not just 'decent' or 'good' hardware, but edging on unnecessary from the point of view of what I would expect my family to spend on a PC. A day just to get onto the internet? How many technical and monetary hoops are we expected to jump through? I've experienced similar problems with learning Linux and finding drivers, but in that case there were forums and community solutions. Vista leaves the users at the mercy of third party companies.

    I don't see myself going to Vista, in all honesty. Two steps forward, three steps back.

    1. Re:How much is too much? by Rycross · · Score: 1

      .Net Framework 2.0 works with Vista. Don't know about SQL Server, since I haven't installed that yet.

    2. Re:How much is too much? by NeoPaladin394 · · Score: 1

      Good to know! At one point I'd read that neither piece of software worked, but in retrospect that info is old. Thanks for the correction.

    3. Re:How much is too much? by omicronish · · Score: 1

      Heck, even a bunch of MS's own software is incompatible with Vista (big boys like .NET Framework 2.0 and SQL Server 2005, last I checked)

      Dude, Windows Vista includes .NET Framework 2.0. I've coded and debugged .NET 2.0 apps on Vista without issues; the incompatibilities listed aren't for the general usage cases.

    4. Re:How much is too much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      .NET 2.0 is fully-compatible. In actuality, Vista ships with .NET 3.0, which is the .NET 2.0 runtime with some new extra System libraries. They are 100% compatible.


      There are known compatibility problems with RTM SQL Server 2005 that are resolved by downloading the free, released SQL Server 2005 Service Pack 2. Oh, by the way, when you install SQL Server or start the service, Vista detects these problems from the application compatibility database and prompts the user that the service has a problem, along with telling you the solution to it, complete with download link to SQL Server 2005 SP2. Or you could wait for Windows Update to pick it up automatically.

    5. Re:How much is too much? by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      ---To a degree, the points made in TFA are to be expected. Heck, even a bunch of MS's own software is incompatible with Vista (big boys like .NET Framework 2.0 and SQL Server 2005, last I checked). There have been alot of changes, and it seems unrealistic to expect companies to roll out new drivers that are 100% right off the bat.

      About that driver issue: most companies are just writing off their previous hardware by not making any soft of effort. Even nVidia claimed to have a "100% DirectX 10 card", in which it was not. Creative is just saying 'too bad', and all the big box manufacturers dont support anything not done explicitly by them. Witness the multitudes of Dell equipment and printers that have no working drivers for any buy one specific MS OS. All these problems are hardware manufacturer "dont care"isms.

      ---That being said, there seems to have been a huge jump in paradigm from XP to Vista. Even though I know I'll be modded down for this, I like XP. I've installed the operating system with faulty RAM, and it STILL worked great after I replaced the chips. Its driver support is just awe inspiring, and about the only driver I have to manually set up on a fresh install is my sound and video card, and for the most part it was like this at release.

      Once, I was doing a consulting job in which the MS OS was crashing at weird intervals. After a good end-user explanation, I knew what to look for. The machine was one of the older types, so it had a nice insulating "scuzz" inside it. After taking it outside with my small air compressor, I proceeded to load up my trusty copy of Linux to check for basic hardware instabilities: heat, SMART gone awry, bad expansion cards, bad ram. Came down to it, I checked ram using Memtest86. Yep. Bad chip. And if I remember correctly, the error blocks were around 120M of the 126M module.

      I went back into Linux, with the sectors at hand. I use the badram option, and Linux doesnt crash anymore... It just doesnt use those blocks. I wonder if MS could even write that kind of functionality in their software.

      As a last note, my sound, ethernet, graphics, and other goodies almost always work properly on Linux (bootCDs). I also screen my hardware properly in that it has active drivers on Linux. No headaches there.

      ---Vista? You need up to date hardware and specific drivers. Not just 'decent' or 'good' hardware, but edging on unnecessary from the point of view of what I would expect my family to spend on a PC. A day just to get onto the internet? How many technical and monetary hoops are we expected to jump through? I've experienced similar problems with learning Linux and finding drivers, but in that case there were forums and community solutions. Vista leaves the users at the mercy of third party companies.

      It takes me 5 or so minutes to get on from an unfamiliar connection, and 30 seconds (negotiation of 802.11b and DHCP) if I know where im at. I've seen Windows a stunning on standard open wifi gateways at the "authenticating". Excuse me, but its open. Just associate (5 frames) and then call DHCP (3 seconds). But windows hides behind all sorts of lies. I dont like that.

      ---I don't see myself going to Vista, in all honesty. Two steps forward, three steps back.

      I wouldnt use it if it was free (and I dont mean in the Piratebay way either).

      --
  22. DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1, Informative

    Rule for Idiots: If you bought your computer earlier than 2006, then don't install Vista.

    1. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Yes, becase computers have fundamentally changed in the last four years.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    2. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Yes, becase computers have fundamentally changed in the last four years.

      Yes and No. General-purpose computers haven't "fundamentally" changed in 50 years. They are all von Neumann machines. On the other hand, the number of transistors on a desktop microprocessor has at least quadrupled in the last 4 years.

      I'm not gonna try installing Vista on a 80386 machine either.

    3. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 1

      And yet you wouldn't balk at someone for installing Linux on an 80386, as it would still have its uses.

      A lack of imagniation in design makes Vista unsatisfactory for older hardware, not progress. OS X manages to remain runnable on the same hardware release after release, and it ships with new features all the time. Sometimes it even performs better than its predecessor.

      Vista sucks on old machines because Microsoft wants it to.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    4. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Sure, the Linux kernel might still run on an 80386. The Windows Vista kernel might also run on an 80386. Find me a complete Linux distribution from 2006 that installs on a 80386 machine with a GUI.

      Get over it. I'm sick of all the whining about Vista. Buy Mac hardware or use Linux and just shut up.

    5. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're out of touch. Most Linux distros still manage this quite easily, especially the ones that aspire to a higher level of quality. Debian and Ubuntu can, to name two.

      I've bought Mac hardware. I dual boot Linux and XP on PC hardware. Kindly, I'll not get over Microsoft's habit of writing terrible software for the benefit of ending a debate that you began. Vista is software designed to sell PC's. It was not designed with the consumer's needs in mind, and there's no reason it needed to be. It's because of this attitude that computers somehow lose the ability to function properly simply because you need it to do new things.

      Computers are not old dogs. General purpose machines were designed in the hopes that they could learn new tricks. Your attitude perpetuates the belief that new functionality requires new hardware, which is exactly what will continue to drive down the quality of software in this world.

      Why is it bad to demand more? We're the consumers.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    6. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by femtoguy · · Score: 1

      So that's my problem. I am running my kitchen media access computer on a 2001ish 1GHz P3, and it is doing internet filtering, running mythtv, doing file service for my windows box, and being a jukebox and TV. AND it doesn't feel slow (well maybe a bit, but it is very usable). Since when is multi-gigahertz machine slow. I realize that the computer industry is addicted to the idea that we need to throw out all hardware every three years, but we don't have to agree.

    7. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      I don't think Ubuntu's installer will boot on a 386. Try it.

      There is no conspiracy. Microsoft is trying to make money for its shareholders, not the shareholders of Intel or AMD.

    8. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by jZnat · · Score: 1

      Uh, the 80386 came out almost 20 years ago, no fucking comparison to 4 years ago.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    9. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Right, you don't have to agree, and you don't have to buy Vista.

    10. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Ok, thanks for the arbitrary definition that a 20-year old PC is obsolete, but that a 4-6 year old PC should be considered a viable platform for development. You should make a law out of that.

    11. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 1

      https://help.ubuntu.com/6.10/ubuntu/installation-g uide/i386/index.html

      I don't have a 386 to test it on, but something tells me that, even if I did, you would just accuse me of making it up or something.

      Conspiracy? There's nothing consipiratorial going on here. Microsoft is exploiting laziness. They don't even make it a secret. They print on the box what you need to run it. They know that most people don't have sufficient hardware, and they know that enough people are lazy enough to just go buy another computer rather than demand the software be written better. Microsoft's not trying to make any money for Intel or AMD, they're just trying to save a buck by writing non-scalable software. They're not passing that savings on to us, either.

      Am I wasting my time trying to get my point across, or do you just get my point and choose to not engage me in a real debate? Can you just let me know if your mind is already made up, or if you're even aiming to change my perspective with the introduction of something other than one liners?

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    12. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Whatever. Of course Microsoft is gonna save money by not devoting to development to hardware that isn't sold anymore.

      But I'll admit, since I make a living researching processor design, I am happy to see Microsoft demand more powerful computers. Otherwise I won't have a job if people stop buying new machines.

    13. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. As a software engineer I get a little hot headed about design. Everyone has different interests.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    14. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Did you happen to read your own message subject? 2002 was the frame of reference.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    15. Re:DON'T INSTALL VISTA ON 2002 COMPUTER by T0mWil5on · · Score: 1

      And I think we're seeing a substantial number of people who won't.

      Microsoft has done a great favor for Apple and Linux, I'm afraid.

  23. See? Even Windows Users Benefit from Open Specs by ewhac · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.

    Interesting! Does this mean that we might start seeing Windows customers agitating for open hardware specs so that interested parties can pick up the ball dropped by the vendor and write their own drivers?

    ...Just like the Linux guys have been doing for the last <*cough*> years?

    Oh, wait. You have to be "certified" by Microsoft to write a usable Vista driver. Never mind...

    Schwab

  24. Re:Vista Again by BronsCon · · Score: 1

    How many Vista articles on /.
    I can't answer that directly. However, it has been said that no publicity is bad publicity.

    Of course, I don't entirely agree with that. It seems that the more we say Vista sucks, the more it sells and takes potential marketshare away from Linux, which we keep saying is so much better. Maybe people think we have no idea what the fuck we're talking about?

    I propose that we turn the tables. Let's start seeing articles about how goddamn great Vista is and how Linux sucks more eggs than the Easter Bunny's Dyson. Just for a month or so, let's try it and see what happens.

    And remember, in Redmond, your computer crashes Vista. Or is that Soviet Russia. I don't know anymore, my head hurts.
    --
    APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
  25. Router fimware??? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    DRTFA, because it's slashdotted, but how good can the reviewer be? Why on earth would Vista require new router firmware. The router doesn't care what it's connected to. It doesn't touch the OS of the computers connected to it. If you're installing a new OS, and as part of the process you THINK you need to update your router firmware, you've got bigger problems than a crappy OS--you're an idiot!

    1. Re:Router fimware??? WTF? by Mongoose · · Score: 1

      Actually, many people upgrading to Vista are reporting to have to change their router firmware to get it working. The reviewer isn't a moron... at least for upgrading router firmware. I have to admit it is funny that whatever changes they made to their stack fucked up basic networking. Just google some manufactures up and laugh your ass off. =)

      It's a fairly wide spread issue, which is sad.

    2. Re:Router fimware??? WTF? by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      Ohhh, not quite true. In 2004, the RealTeck 8192 drivers in XP worked fine with the RCN network. SP1 tweaked the minimum lease times for the test lease & it refused to work directly connected to the network - it worked fine connected through a router. So if they are tweaking the throughput parameters outside of what the router is requesting/expecting on the old firmware, then you might actually need to upgrade the firmware to connect to Vista properly. This wouldn't be the first time MS & it's drivers didn't follow a fallback standard.

    3. Re:Router fimware??? WTF? by killerdark · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm afraid you are WRONG. If you have a router running a Samba share (like me, Asus WL-500gP) You will find out that after upgrading you can no longer access that share. Microsoft decided to switch to NTLMv2 breaking support with all samba 2.x Linux devices (mostly routers and sans)out there. Then you have two solutions, either change the security setting of Vista downwards to be backwards compatible with NTLM or upgrade your firmware to support 3.23 or a higher version of Samba. Hence, you my friend appear to be the idiot here.

      --
      A tadpole is a pollywog
  26. The trap is this guy's stupidity by Bullfish · · Score: 1, Informative

    As others have said. Enough of this crap. We all know it will take vista a year or so before it is truly ready... but the drivers are not MS's doing. The hardware vendors want you to buy new stuff so they don't support the old. MS has given them the tools to make the drivers, they just don't want to do it.

    Frankly on a lot talk on this drivers issue is from people talking out of bopth sides of their mouth. People who blame the hardware manufacturers for a lack of Linux support seem to be the ones to blame MS for what is the hardware manufacturer's responsibility. You want to upgrade cause you like the tech, well go on-line and see if your old hardware is supported, and that includes printers and other peripherals. To not do so is just stupid. When I build a Linux box, I make sure the components are supported befire I buy them.

    This is the same as the PS3 stuff. I have a Wii, I like it a lot. I will never buy a PS3. But enough of that stuff too. It is killing the variety of stories available on this site.

    1. Re:The trap is this guy's stupidity by koan · · Score: 1

      Baloney M$ is doing the same thing with DX10 only on Vista forcing you to upgrade if you want to run it "they are all doing forced upgrades to the consumer", it's the new trend.
      Why should it take an OS that's released a "year or so" to be "ready" (whatever that means) they had over 5 to start with.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    2. Re:The trap is this guy's stupidity by Bullfish · · Score: 1

      Actually, the DX10 thing is no different than needing a DX9c card to get all the full visual glory of counterstrike or BF2 vs. a regular DX9 card. As the difference is in the instruction set, have you never wondered why video card manufacturers don't issue video bios updates to add the new instructions? It's because the manufacturer's want to sell you new cards. They could put in the software upgrade ability. So DX10 only comes on vista... DX10 games won't be common for quite a while and more vid card choices will arrive that don't cost 500 bucks. If you must troll, make your arguments plausible. If you are just stupid, I apologize.

  27. Vista is great! (in a way) by MartinG · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Okay, it's bad for the poor people who have to buy new hardware because they can't get vista drivers for their existing stuff.

    But it means a good load of ebay bargains for those of us running open source operating systems with support for just about everything built in.

    I haven't actually noticed the bargains happening much yet, but they will come. Just like last time shortly after Windows XP came out. Second hand USB stuff was going for next to nothing on ebay.

    --
    -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
    1. Re:Vista is great! (in a way) by sparkz · · Score: 1

      Good point. I hadn't thought of that.

      I can finally upgrade my graphics card from crap onboard Intel to a 2005/2006 spec gamer's card for next to nothing.

      Maybe I'll run Beryl ( for the day it'll take me to get bored of it ;-) )

      --
      Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
  28. Asking for trouble by eck011219 · · Score: 1

    Did we actually manage to Slashdot the BBC? I finally got to it, but boy, it was slow.

    Sounds to me like he's got quite a hodgepodge of hardware there, and it got more exotic and strange as he added things to deal with the problems he was having. So while it's not his fault that his machine evolved in that manner over the years, it's no surprise that a four-year-old machine with a bunch of random hardware added will have problems with a bleeding-edge OS.

    I guess the moral of the story is that if he wants it all to work together, a new machine might have been the better choice (and if my pounds-to-dollars conversion is right, not a much more expensive one). Too bad about his PDA, though.

    Frankly, if he's such a gadget geek, I think he probably could have (and in some ways, did) predict this result. We all want the latest toys, but this method of upgrading (all at once, he popped in a new video card and upgraded the system to a brand-new OS instead of a clean install in a few months after all the driver woes could be worked out) is rife with peril.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Asking for trouble by the_humeister · · Score: 1

      Did we actually manage to Slashdot the BBC? I finally got to it, but boy, it was slow.


      Probably. You know those series of tubes that cross the Atlantic can only hold so much...
  29. Whose Fault Again? by Zebra_X · · Score: 1

    "Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.'"

    I've been preaching this for a while now - Vista isn't at fault here - the hardware manufacturers are! Stick it to them - they have had 6 years to prepare for the launch. It's also been over a year and a half that Vista has been availble from MSDN and such.

    1. Re:Whose Fault Again? by Phrogman · · Score: 1

      Why should they support older hardware? They are in the business of selling *new* hardware. Simply not writing drivers for older hardware they sold to customers - hardware that admittedly might not be up to Vista compatibility requirements (but we will never know) - will enable them to sell more product. The computer hardware industry no doubt relies, at least in part, on MS OS upgrades to garner new sales for them. I can't see a compelling reason for a hardware manufacturer to write drivers for older hardware when they gain more by selling newer hardware and having to write fewer drivers as a result.

      I do wish they would consider letting the open source community write drivers for that older equipment itself, by publishing the source code for the older drivers and making all the spec details freely available. That way their older customers win, the users of alternative operating systems win etc, but I can't see them being interested in it because again, it won't foster new sales.

      --
      "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    2. Re:Whose Fault Again? by mhall119 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I've been preaching this for a while now - Vista isn't at fault here - the hardware manufacturers are! Stick it to them - they have had 6 years to prepare for the launch. It's also been over a year and a half that Vista has been availble from MSDN and such.


      It doesn't matter whose fault it is, Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista or the hardware vendor, the fact of the matter is that people expect their computers to "Just Work"(tm). All my grandma is going to know is that under Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista, her sound card doesn't work, but under Windows XP it did. Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista needs to support this hardware out of the box, and until it does, Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista will never be ready for the desktop.

      Seriously, you Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista fanboys need to stop living in denial and admit that Linux^H^H^H^H^HVista has some serious problems that make it unusable for most people.
      --
      http://www.mhall119.com
    3. Re:Whose Fault Again? by jZnat · · Score: 2

      So whose fault is it when Linux doesn't support your hardware?

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    4. Re:Whose Fault Again? by British · · Score: 1

      So whose fault is it when Linux doesn't support your hardware?

      Typically it's leaned on the fact Linux is open source, and assumes Joe Sixpack can code his or her own drivers from scratch. This doesn't always work.

  30. Yes, they force you to use it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you buy from Dell, HP, Gateway, the PC's simply have it. You might find a few models where XP is still available, but those will essentially be EOL type machines. The new ones will all have Vista. Like it or not.

    So yes, you are forced to buy.

    1. Re:Yes, they force you to use it by RockClimbingFool · · Score: 1

      If you buy a Vista box from any of those manufactures now, it runs just fine. This guy didn't bother to check hardware compatibility. He is a complete moron for trying to run Vista on hardware that is not supported. Period.

    2. Re:Yes, they force you to use it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually he did check compatibility. If you read the article you'd know that.

    3. Re:Yes, they force you to use it by Dog-Cow · · Score: 2, Informative

      He did check hardware compability. Using the Microsoft-provided tool to do so.

      So stop lying just so you can insult people. Perhaps slashdot needs a "-10 Blatent Liar" mod option.

  31. wait a minute... by revlayle · · Score: 3, Funny

    I can't even do an "oblig"!!! The article title already did :(

  32. Vista Gave Me Cancer :( by Dr+Kool,+PhD · · Score: 2, Funny

    Thanks to Windows Vista, I lost my job, my wife divorced me, my dog was brutally raped and murdered, I've been diagnosed with brain cancer, and I no longer find myself interested in sexual activity. I wish I had read the warnings on Slashdot prior to trying Vista. Thank you Slashdot for spreading the truth about the horrible contagion known as Windows Vista.

    1. Re:Vista Gave Me Cancer :( by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Thanks to Windows Vista, I lost my job,
      Sweet freedom!

      my wife divorced me,
      Sweet, intoxicating freedom!!

      I've been diagnosed with brain cancer,
      Now you can commit crimes and not be held accountable.

      and I no longer find myself interested in sexual activity.

      You are now officially a member of the /. community. Look for your geek card in the mail, two to four weeks from now.

      my dog was brutally raped and murdered,

      This is a hard one, but think about it. He could have lived to be 20 years old, and you would spend thousands of quids keeping him alive in the special care facility. At least he did not see the misery of the old age. And you did not become one of those pussies who spend a fortune on a triple bypass for their dog, while human kids keep dying because they cannot afford generic drugs. It is all for the best, chum, all for the best.

      Vista is the gods' gift to the mankind, is it not?

  33. 1 Day? by nbritton · · Score: 1, Informative

    1 Day? Windows is for suckers, buy a Mac.

    1. Re:1 Day? by Emetophobe · · Score: 1

      Can I build my own mac with parts that I scrounged myself? No? Then please STFU with the buy a mac bullshit. Some people actually like building their own computers, I'll admit the number is small compared to those who don't build their own, but atleast we have the option.

    2. Re:1 Day? by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you can configure a proxy server that removes all Mac advocacy? You don't see us, and we don't see your replies. Win-win.

      --

      Stop the brainwash

  34. Not really by phorm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Linux as a whole might take some blame if an older version worked with the hardware (say in kernel 2.4) , but a newer version (say kernel 2.6) didn't. This does happen on occasion, but it is generally fixed-up by either an OSS developer that wants to use the hardware, or the vendor (such as the Nvidia binaries).

    Remember, Vista is purported to be somewhat of an upgrade/improvement over XP. That means that people expect it to do what XP does, and more. It's still MS windows, just a newer, shinier, bulkier ones.

    So if your winmodem worked in 2.4.x and not in 2.6.x, you might have a legitimate gripe at linux. Generally such things come out in the next-version bugfixes, but issues do happen where a particular newer version does not like certain hardware, or the source-code for modules doesn't compile and no newer-version source is available. If there never was support for your winmodem in the first place (note, WINmodem is a good giveway that it's not non-windows friendly), then the blame rests somewhat on the manufacturer for not providing a driver, or at least specs for such. In the case of winmodems, the software pretty much is most of the product, so the manufacturers guard it fairly closely.

    1. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had a Winmodem (lucent chipset). It was working fine with 2.4.8, but when I upgraded to 2.4.12, it wasn't working anymore. I had to wait a few month before a new driver was available.

      In the case of Vista, no, it's not just an new XP. It's a new kernel and a lot of things have changed. It's a new operating system, not a simple upgrade to XP.

    2. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just glad we are all scientists here using scientific phrases like "what people expect"...

    3. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is about as good an argument as people saying that new console systems are just traps for money, or they should have to support all the old games... if you want to buy the old games there are hundreds of thousands of them, go to a used game store and buy them and quit yer whining. if you want the new features, dont expect them to have to support EVERYTHING they ever produced on a new system that they rebuilt from the ground up...

  35. Is tis guy really that unlucky? by Perseid · · Score: 1

    Or was I just lucky? I loaded the free beta on a new hard drive for a while to see what was what. Internet access just worked upon first bootup. My Audigy worked, though I may have had to install drivers, I don't remember. The only serious problem was that the NVidia drivers on my 7900GT were lacking. Switching resolutions had about a 1 in 3 chance of corrupting the screen, forcing a cold reboot. But that's certainly fixable. It's probably even fixed now.

    But did I like Vista? No, not really. It was very pretty. And Aero was kinda neat. But once you dive in a few screens you start to notice that most screens and control panel applets look exactly the same and do the exact same thing. There were nice things: The Recycle Bin works across network shares now. It correctly alphabetizes roman numerals. But as fas as any huge "OMG!" feature, no.

    That said, though, this article really seemed like FUD unless, as I said, I got lucky.

    1. Re:Is tis guy really that unlucky? by xx01dk · · Score: 1

      Or was I just lucky? I loaded the free beta on a new hard drive for a while to see what was what. Internet access just worked upon first bootup. My Audigy worked, though I may have had to install drivers, I don't remember. The only serious problem was that the NVidia drivers on my 7900GT were lacking. Switching resolutions had about a 1 in 3 chance of corrupting the screen, forcing a cold reboot. But that's certainly fixable. It's probably even fixed now.

      You just described my Ubuntu install of 6.10 a couple months ago. Exactly the same, down to needing 7900GT drivers.

      But did I like Vista? No, not really. It was very pretty. And Aero was kinda neat. But once you dive in a few screens you start to notice that most screens and control panel applets look exactly the same and do the exact same thing. There were nice things: The Recycle Bin works across network shares now. It correctly alphabetizes roman numerals. But as fas as any huge "OMG!" feature, no.

      That said, though, this article really seemed like FUD unless, as I said, I got lucky.


      You can install neat 3d desktop effects on Linux too, but again they kind of get old after a while (at least they did to me) and I didn't need them. I liked the OS in general but not well enough to give up my WinXP partition completely. And just like in Vista, some of your software will not work. In Ubuntu's (and Linux in general) for me this means games. Cedega and Wine are almost there but not quite. My point is, I got to play with and see new eye candy without any closed-source nonsense. It would be an adequate, maybe spiffy even, OS for general office and internet apps. And yes, I too considered myself lucky. :)

      In all fairness, at least you don't have to compile binaries or hack the command line to get some stuff to work in Vista... I think.

      --
      There is simply too much glass..
  36. Less of a "It's a Trap"... by terrahertz · · Score: 1

    ...and more like "as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced!"

    --
    Slashdot? Oh, I just read it for the articles.
  37. Don't install Ubuntu on a pre-1998 computer by Peter+Trepan · · Score: 1

    I just installed Ubuntu Edgy on a 400 MHz Gateway G6 with 256 megs of RAM. I had to go into the command line twice to get all the extra 1998 hardware working, and the responsiveness felt just a tad sub-optimal.

    Ubuntu Edgy is just a few months older than Vista. I wonder how Vista would have fared?

    --

    Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.

    1. Re:Don't install Ubuntu on a pre-1998 computer by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      I just installed Ubuntu Edgy on a 400 MHz Gateway G6 with 256 megs of RAM. I had to go into the command line twice to get all the extra 1998 hardware working, and the responsiveness felt just a tad sub-optimal. Ubuntu Edgy is just a few months older than Vista. I wonder how Vista would have fared?

      I'm pretty sure there is a new version of FreeDOS that is just a few months older than Vista. It would probably do quite well on my old 25MHz 80386 machine.

  38. Vista is a trap - For most gamers by Fuzzlekits · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since I know we have more of the CS, IT crowd than gamers here...

    Vista's problems have been mentioned, directly, But another massive issue is the way that Microsoft is beginning to work with game developers. First, it's the 'Games for Windows' tag, and treating the PC like a console in terms of branding. Second, the games for vista is going to slowly force pretty much every gamer on the planet to switch to vista, or try to. Granted, gamers tend to have the rigs that can handle it, at the bleeding edge... But, then there are many casual gamers who buy into the back end of the technology curve. I and many others have absolutely no desire to use vista, but in a year or so the number of playable games will begin to dwindle as titles come out for vista only.

    It's bad enough that my friend is punished for running windows 2000 on her gaming rig because many games intended for XP or Vista won't run on the system.

    The forced obsolescence thing is la real nightmare in that respect, and it's stupid that many bleeding edge games will be 'Vista/XBOX360 exclusive' titles, and that much of their user base, the reluctant windows users called Gamers, are being hooked into the new software.

    1. Re:Vista is a trap - For most gamers by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      And Microsoft knows that gamers are typically the "little Billy down the street that knows EVERYTHING about computers", so people take his advice that Vista is "AwsUm3!1", paying lots of cash, and then getting a barely functioning machine loaded down with shitware (and spyware once little Suzy and her Cometcursor/Weatherbug/shiny crapware infatuation get ahold of it). But they just assume this is how computers are supposed to function, and they just need to buy a faster one (according to Billy, that is).

  39. MOD Article Author Retard... by RockClimbingFool · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Honestly, who does an OS upgrade and not check for hardware compatibility?

    1. Re:MOD Article Author Retard... by vondo · · Score: 3, Informative

      People who run linux. If it ran on the last version, it is almost certain to run on the next. Unless it's 15 year old hardware. No, wait, most of that works too.

    2. Re:MOD Article Author Retard... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      linux... it is almost certain to run on the next. Unless it's 15 year old hardware.

            I'd say "especially" if it's 15 year old hardware ;)

            I wonder what Microsoft has to say about "Total Cost of Ownership" now...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    3. Re:MOD Article Author Retard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell that to my deleted tape drive subsystem you insensitive clod!!!11

  40. Because it didn't affect him? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've been running Vista at work for a few months now, since Beta 2, doing compatibility testing. I have thus far not managed to run in to its DRM. This is because I don't have any DRM'd media. It turns out there are not evil DRM gremlins hiding on my system, trying to steal my media. All the video I shoot and edit works fine, my OGG/FLAC collection works fine, etc. Yes, if I were to get an HD-DVD or Blu-ray drive and try to play movies I'm sure I'd have to contend with the DRM. Well, I'm not so there's not really a concern there.

    Basically to me Vista's DRM doesn't add any value, but it doesn't interfere with my work in any way. Thus I really just don't care. I don't see any way it it hurts my fair use. Please remember that the HD formats are encrypted anyhow, it's not like Vista does anything with that, and the decryption tools that have been released run fine on Vista. Maybe I'll encounter a problem with it at some point (that's why I'm testing it, to see what the problems with supporting it will be) but not yet.

    It seems to me that "DRM" has become a poorly defined scare word for many people. They throw it around without knowing what it really means, just that it is bad and that you should hate it. I agree that DRM is not a useful technology, but let's be straight about when it does and doesn't matter. Vista does not have DRM gremlins that try to eat your media. Your unDRM'd media does not stop working, the tools for creating it do not stop working. No, video output is not degraded, I get full resolution in everything I do (since all the media isn't DRM'd) despite lacking an HDCP monitor and video card.

    If it doesn't affect you, not likely to make it in to a "thing that didn't work for me" article, is it?

    1. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hope you chose the right combination of video card and monitor, as well as drivers, if you ever wanted to watch that HD-DVD on your box. Oh, your hardware is completely capable of playing that movie at full resolution, it just doesn't have the artificial limitations on a special interface? Go pay more and upgrade your perfectly functioning hardware.

    2. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Basically to me Vista's DRM doesn't add any value, but it doesn't interfere with my work in any way.

      It steals the performance of your computer to constantly check if you are a pirate. My audio software works great on XP, and is dog slow (along with everything else) on Vista. To say Vista is an 'upgrade' is like saying an IBM XT is an upgrade from a p4 3ghz.

      Anytime MS wants to lock up your machine, it can. Will that interfere in your work? Let's see how little you care when your activation fails for some esoteric reason, and you lose an hour, day, or week of work. Yeah, your tools and media might still be free of DRM, but you lose any advantage of that when you run an OS that you don't control - and doesn't trust *you*. How do you drive your car when your garage is locked up by someone else?

    3. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by sulfur_lad · · Score: 1

      Kudos the parent's observations, this doesn't affect me or my collection either. And if you want to watch a blu-ray disc down the road, I hope you bought a nice $1000 disc player. Oh wait! They got cheaper! Hope you bought a $600 player.

      If the studios (recording and movies) stop crapping on their customers, then the manufacturers of such technology can have permission stop crapping on us too. They are selling higher resolution / greater quality at the expense of freedom to use; and it's not just MS. That hardware he didn't buy that will support playing full resolution because of the built-in hooks has a manufacturer who's just as enabling as MS.

    4. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by bonefry · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you will change your mind once all media will be required by law to be DRM-encrypted.
      It already started to happen, and in case you missed it, here's a sample:
      Senators aim to restrict Net, satellite radio recording

      And I'm pretty sure that when all your freedoms will be gone you will blame everyone else but yourself ;)

    5. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      If he wants to play HD or BluRay DVDs then it's his own fault for choosing to to use a technology with a draconian DRM scheme that requires compliant hardware. Blaming Microsoft for allowing him the choice to do so is BS. Vista does not force DRM on anyone. You have the choice to not use those formats. If Apple or any other OS vendor wants to allow their users to choose to play protected HD or BluRay DVDs then they will have to implement the same DRM schemes to do so.

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    6. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by IKnwThePiecesFt · · Score: 1

      Last I checked HD-DVDs and BluRay won't even play in XP, so how does Vista's limited capability to play them factor in?

      Sounds like your argument should be in an HD-DVD thread, not a Vista thread.

    7. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by ksalter · · Score: 1

      And this will be Vista's fault how? What happens when the Linux distros have to incorporate DRM? Is this Vista's fault also?

    8. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by mark3748 · · Score: 1
      I have had no issues with anything I run on Vista, and I've been running it since around July, first beta 1, then 2, then in November, Final (Enterprise). All my hardware works (except the cheapy webcam that came with my compaq presario running Me, and I really don't care), nothing runs any slower than in XP, I've converted videos, music, worked with photos, all without any problems. No activation hassles, no DRM, no problems. In fact, it was easier to setup than XP.

      Now all of this may be because I'm using relatively new hardware with a business version of Vista, and I have no use for the "extras" that you get with home premium or ultimate. I originally installed it to check it out, see if it was worthwhile (much as I did with OS x86), but ended up seeing that it would be worthwhile as my main operating system...

      I'm not an MS fanboy or anything (I prefer Gentoo, but I can't get a lot of my games working right, so it stays on my non-gaming machines), but Vista, as far as I can tell, is not as bad as everyone seems to think. There are definatly some differences and a fairly steep learning curve, but once you get used to it, it's great. I had a hard time going from win 2000 to XP, but it all grows on you after a while. The same thing will happen in a few years with most people, it will get updated, maybe go through a service pack or two, and it will become as popular as XP is now. That or they'll switch to Linux or possibly Mac...

    9. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by makomk · · Score: 1

      And this will be Vista's fault how? What happens when the Linux distros have to incorporate DRM? Is this Vista's fault also?

      It'd be Vista's fault because it gives the media corporations the paranoid DRM they want in what will almost certainly become a widely-distributed consumer operating system (whatever its actual technical merits), thereby giving them a vast kickstart in terms of being able to force DRM on everyone.

    10. Re:Because it didn't affect him? by Bungie · · Score: 1

      y audio software works great on XP, and is dog slow (along with everything else) on Vista.

      Hmmm...Sound Recorder seems to be running pretty quick for me...

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
  41. That doesn't negate the point by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Which is that you will have problems with Vista. It may not be MS's fault, but the problems are real.

    As I have been saying all along, installing Vista this soon is foolish. It needs to get out of its infancy. Fortunatly for MS, they can get millions of Dell/Gateway customers will beta test for them.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:That doesn't negate the point by Zebra_X · · Score: 1

      Vista isn't beta, that's the point. It's ready to go.

      The hardware manufactures however have not done their job, so the "instabilities" are related to crappy code not created by Microsoft.

      Not every install is a nightmare. Mine went well. It takes a while though.

      http://amd4x4.blogspot.com/

  42. Come on guys! by dogbrt · · Score: 0

    Where is the 'defectivebydesign' tag?

  43. Vista is not ready for the desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think one of the many things keeping Vista from mass adoption is the driver support. They need things to "just work" no hacking around, reading forums, and manuals. I don't want to have to change my hardware to use Vista. Furthermore names like "Vista" and "WGA" while clever are not serious names that people will use for the desktop.

    For the more dense crowd this is a perfectly adaptable statement made by Microsoft clickarounds about Linux and should be taken as part humor.

  44. I feel your pain by hey! · · Score: 4, Funny

    It took me one day to get online. The detail is tedious and highly technical: reinstalling drivers and router firmware didn't work, but after many trial and error tweaks to Vista's TCP/IP settings, I had internet access.


    So, what you're saying it's kind of like installing an oddball wi-fi card on Linux. Except without the option of reading hundreds of pages of obscure documentation until you've transformed yourself into a mutant linux hotplugging guru.

    In a nutshell, the differnce between getting things working in Linux and Windows seems to be this. Linux is like being parachuted into the wilderness with a hammer, forge, and load of pig iron. Windows is like being parachuted into the wilderness with an impressive looking knife that snaps in two if you don't use it very, very carefully.
    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:I feel your pain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Linux is like being parachuted into the wilderness with a hammer, forge, and load of pig iron. Windows is like being parachuted into the wilderness with an impressive looking knife that snaps in two if you don't use it very, very carefully.

      And with Windows, the pig iron IS your parachute. Happy landings Wile E. Coyote!

    2. Re:I feel your pain by Adambomb · · Score: 1

      Along with an EULA that states Knife may not be interoperable with Pig Iron Chute.

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    3. Re:I feel your pain by jrumney · · Score: 1

      You forgot to mention that in the wilderness is a 20 volume set of the entire knowledge handed down by the blacksmiths guild over centuries of experience, and a telephone on which you can phone the expensive support line for your knife, only to be told after 20 minutes on hold that "you shouldn't have done that".

  45. Re:Self-confessed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    every time i buy a new or different i car i fully expect it to compy with the road, even tho that roads is nearly 100 years old

  46. For Non-Geeks by CristalShandaLear · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So is this about right for typical end users such as myself?

    - wait at least one year after a new release of operating system

    - if you can't do it yourself, pay someone else to evaluate your existing pc to see if an upgrade is possible and if it is possible, to make sure you get exactly what you need

    - make sure the person you pay for evaluation has no stake in selling you a new pc

    - if an upgrade is not possible, secure your old system as much as humanly possible and ride it until using the old system is no longer possible, plausible or just plain insane (like one of my friends using Windows 95 until last week and my cousin switched her over to Ubuntu)

    - when all else dies by a new pc

    - find something useful to do with your old pc (donate it, etc.)

    1. Re:For Non-Geeks by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, for a basic user, the answer is to buy a new PC. An upgrade is usually not desirable. At that point you can sell the old one, hand it down, whatever. Besides, PCs are getting cheaper all the time. As time marches on, the cost drops and the power rises. Even compusa is selling a (acer, admittedly) core duo laptop with a dvd burner and a gig of ram for $600 (after online rebate of course.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  47. "The shiny new Vista disk..." by openaddy · · Score: 1
    "...was sitting on my desk"

    Is the Vista delivered on floppies? Did he mean "disc" or do the British spell "Digital Versatile Disc" differently from the people ruled by a king who can't pronounce "nuclear"? (Oh, I'm so mean.. He's just folksy! :P )

  48. IT'S A TRAP by insomnyuk · · Score: 2, Funny
    1. Re:IT'S A TRAP by hahiss · · Score: 1

      I was waiting for the obligatory Admiral Ackbar reference.

      Wait, is this FARK?

      --
      "Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." - H.L. Mencken
    2. Re:IT'S A TRAP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just don't go to itsatrap.com *shudders*

  49. Not a trap, a trick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Its a trick, get an axe." -- Army of Darkness

  50. Vista is not a server OS you idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why should SQL Server work on Vista? SQL Server is meant for server OSs like Win2003. It's not a compatibility issue. Comment on what you know about and stop making shit up you clueless fucking moron.

  51. PEBKAC? by lostboy2 · · Score: 4, Informative
    I've never seen or used Vista, or the author's system, and I may just be a little grumpy this morning. But, based on his descriptions, the author sounds like someone who thinks he knows more about computers than he really does.

    From the article:

    Now here is the dirty little secret of all the expensive PC helpers out there. Upgrading hardware is really easy... it's usually just a case of carefully lifting out the old and slotting in the new piece of kit.
    Uhm, no it isn't, not really. As the author later discovers (but still doesn't realize), getting hardware to work often involves hardware, drivers and OS (and sometimes other software). While we all wish it were that easy, us "expensive PC helpers" have the skills to deal with those cases when it isn't.

    For example:

    ...even after a full day of tinkering with various network wizards
    Wizards? This suggests that the author does not know how to get to the properties of whatever network protocol (I'm assuming TCP/IP) he's using and configure them directly.

    But which mysterious "PCI input device" was lacking a driver? And what was the "unknown device" flagged up by Vista?
    You can find out by following the instructions at
    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/298837.

    I'm not defending Vista, but I also bristle when people devalue and disrespect people in IT/IS. We make things look easy because we're good at what we do. :P

    1. Re:PEBKAC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you very much for that post. I'm just a coward with no karma, unfortunately, but I applaud you for this post.

      -From one "expensive PC helper" to another

    2. Re:PEBKAC? by night_flyer · · Score: 1

      tack on the fact that somewhere in the last few years we have gone from AGP to PCI-e, RAM has gone from DDR to DDR2 and IDE drives are going the way of the dodo in favor of SATA, and processors have changed slots and are now 64 bit instead of 32. you dont just upgrade your machine at that point... you replace

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    3. Re:PEBKAC? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "We make things look easy because we're good at what we do."

      Indeed. Sometimes what is "easy" for me is nearly impossible for someone else, because I just happen to have the knowledge and skills necessary to quickly and deftly solve problems, and/or wade through screens of useless babel to get to the meat of whatever I'm trying to do. Next, next, next, I agree, yes, next, finish; I make that look easy because I've done it eight hundred times, but the poor soul who's never seen it before is baffled by the questions (don't mention actually reading the EULA).

      As I tell customers, my job is easy, if you know what you're doing. Otherwise, don't attempt this at home.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    4. Re:PEBKAC? by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      This kind of comment always makes me nervious. I have dealt with incompetent administrators and developers all through my career. The ones who think this stuff is really hard, and that clicking through an installer means they know what they are doing, almost always have learned by rote how to accomplish some simple tasks, and don't understand the computer or the OS. Really... My two year old can install software. If a two year old can do it, it is not something that qualifies as a significant skill.

      Now, you might be one of the really good administrators, as there are good administrators out there, but saying that clicking through an install wizard and refering to it as "having the knowledge and skills necessary to quickly and deftly solve problems", does not instill a whole lot of confidence.

    5. Re:PEBKAC? by tftp · · Score: 1
      saying that clicking through an install wizard and refering to it as "having the knowledge and skills necessary to quickly and deftly solve problems", does not instill a whole lot of confidence.

      So how do you bypass the legalese when installing .msi-packaged 3rd party software on Windows?

    6. Re:PEBKAC? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Okay, I qualified my answer by giving an example, extreme for sure, but none the less ..... an example. My example was designed to be more or less obvious, even to people who don't know a config file from a complier. However, I've had people comment when I quickly click through 8 screens of mostly meaningless questions and such just to get something installed, who were intimidated by that same process. Some of us actually still work with people who barely can use computers (Hi Mom).

      I don't think of myself as some sort of uber guru, just a guy who's first job was programming visicalc on an Apple II+. But I also know I've forgotten more than most of the newbies know. I also know the newbies minds aren't filled with archaic DOS commands and whose skill sets seem to surpass my own until they find a problem they've never seen before. Its funny when they can't troubleshoot their way out of a paper bag, but they sure can run circles around me in Windows Vista (when it actually works).

      I do understand your sentiment. I also think you over reacted a bit without knowing who I am.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    7. Re:PEBKAC? by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      It may have been an example, but your example with the recommendation that a computer owner should not try to do it themselves made you sound like Nick Burns. Of course trying to bolster your image by dropping 8-bit computer names doesn't help.

      I don't see where I over reacted. You made a Nick Burns style condescending remark about computer users. Your remark bragged about having the skill set of my 2 year old son, and stated that users should not try to match this skill. I just called you on it. The fact that these users expect the pages of jargon to mean something is not their failing. It is yours, when the first time you talk to them, you don't tell them that is is meaningless, and they can click through it. By not doing that, you are again reenforcing the Nick Burns image, by relying on smoke and mirrors to keep yourself looking smart.

    8. Re:PEBKAC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just being an ass, quit whining.

    9. Re:PEBKAC? by nanoakron · · Score: 1

      >>...even after a full day of tinkering with various network wizards

      Wizards? This suggests that the author does not know how to get to the properties of whatever network protocol (I'm assuming TCP/IP) he's using and configure them directly.

      Yes yes, of course that's what grandma and grandpa would do as well. You fucking douche.

    10. Re:PEBKAC? by wfberg · · Score: 1

      You can find out by following the instructions at
      http://support.microsoft.com/kb/298837


      Holy crap. You should be able to pull up that information right from the device manager, really. Bad microsoft for not making it as accesible as, say UnknownDevices does. Why that KnowledgeBase article doesn't just point you to the freeware tool is any one's guess.

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    11. Re:PEBKAC? by lostboy2 · · Score: 1

      Yes yes, of course that's what grandma and grandpa would do as well.
      Sure. I'm not denegrating people for not knowing how to configure TCP/IP without a wizard.

      My point is that if the author is going to say that installing hardware is "really easy" and that it's a "dirty little secret" of those of us "expensive PC helpers" (i.e., that we're all scam artists and not worthy of our wages/salaries), then he'd better be able to back up that statement. He was not able to, thus my comment.

      You fucking douche.
      Wow. That was totally unnecessary and inappropriate.
    12. Re:PEBKAC? by lostboy2 · · Score: 1

      Sure -- I'm not defending Microsoft. My point is that managing computers (including upgrading hardware) is not as easy as the author suggests.

      If the author is going to say that installing hardware is "really easy" and that it's a "dirty little secret" of those of us "expensive PC helpers" (i.e., that we're all scam artists and not worthy of our wages/salaries), then he'd better be able to back up that statement. He was not able to, thus my comment.

  52. Conditioned Response by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not sure what lies you've been reading about UAC, but it conditions users to always say "Yes" to security prompts. This is a very terrible idea and in this situation the criticism is well deserved.
    "You are about to open the Control Panel -- allow or deny?"
    "You are about to open the Program Files folder -- allow or deny?"
    "You are about to modify user preferences -- allow or deny?
    "You are about to open attachment pzxyTrojan.exe -- allow or deny?"
    Allow.. allow.. allow.. allow.. allow..

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    1. Re:Conditioned Response by Rycross · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The only lies I've read about UAC are the ones I've read on Slashdot. I actually use Vista, and so do a lot of friends and coworkers, so I have direct experience with UAC. Basically put, your "administrator" account runs as a user. Things that require admin priveledges require you to click the UAC prompt to promote your account to Administrator temporarily. It does show up if you're opening the control panel or writing to areas like program files or windows system directory. It also shows up if your ACLs on the filesystem don't allow you access, or if you're installing programs.

      Once all my programs were installed, I would go days without seeing a UAC prompt. It hardly conditions you unless you're doing something wrong.

    2. Re:Conditioned Response by omicronish · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not sure what lies you've been reading about UAC, but it conditions users to always say "Yes" to security prompts. This is a very terrible idea and in this situation the criticism is well deserved. "You are about to open the Control Panel -- allow or deny?" "You are about to open the Program Files folder -- allow or deny?" "You are about to modify user preferences -- allow or deny? "You are about to open attachment pzxyTrojan.exe -- allow or deny?" Allow.. allow.. allow.. allow.. allow..

      All lies; you've never used Vista, have you? I can open Control Panel, Program Files, modify my user settings, and open attachments all without UAC prompts.

      Please, if you have a valid annoying UAC experience, post it, and with details. I've run Vista for months and can go for days without a prompt. The legitimate bad experiences I've heard have all involved scenarios that most users will never encounter, such as debugging a networked service that requires admin privileges and access to network shares, in which case you can simply disable UAC. The most a regular user will ever see of UAC is when they install an app, and please don't claim most people do this every day.

    3. Re:Conditioned Response by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      From the post above yours:

      [UAC] does show up if you're opening the control panel...

      And then immediately after reading that, I read your post:

      I can open Control Panel ... without UAC prompts.

      Now that's confusing. I don't know who to believe! Fortunately for me, I don't actually care one iota about Vista pre-SP1.

  53. 30 Day Trial by Ilium · · Score: 1

    I tried Vista Ultimate as a 30 day trial on a separate partition. I didn't do much research or anything driver related, I just ran the compatibility test and installed it. The only thing that didn't work properly was my sound... poor generic MS written driver that lacked 5.1 surround sound anything and no support from manufacturer. After about 5 days of use, well, the USB ports on my motherboard failed. I'm sure it wasn't a Vista caused problem but maybe it was. After booting up my XP partition and the USB ports still not working, I went out and got a new mobo for $45. I could have bought a PCI USB hub but the mobo was only an extra $15. Of course, after swapping mobos NEITHER of my windows installations worked. After reinstalling everything and diving into Vista for my full 30 day trial, I came to the conclusion that Vista is a piece of crap and I am soooo glad I didn't pay anything for it. There is not a single feature in there that a normal computer user would find more useful than in XP. All the average user would have to talk about is the fancy GUI, they couldn't tell you anything else special about it. My suggestion: Don't pay for Vista unless you get it when you buy a new computer.

  54. Re:Self-confessed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apples and oranges.

  55. XP over 98 had similar headaches by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Installing Windows XP over 98/ME was an even bigger nightmare.

    Installing 98 over 95, ME over 98/95, XP over 2000, or 2000 over an earlier release wasn't always a picnic either.

    Personally, I wish Vista came with safe disk-repartitioning software and recommended users shrink their XP partition and install Vista clean in a new partition.

    Or, in the alternative, that it could be "rooted" in a subdirectory, so you had c:\vista\windows, c:\vista\Documents and Settings, c:\vista\Program Files, etc. Obviously this wouldn't work with every single file but if done right it would eliminate a lot of confusion and it would leave the XP installation intact and bootable.

    In either case, it should include free migration/copy software to copy software installations from the XP environment to the Vista environment, and optionally copy all users and their files and registry settings. With enough smarts, registry settings and files that contain directory information can be modified to point to the "new" copies of the files.

    Of course, this kind of sophisticated, one-time-use software won't ever be free on Windows, it's just too complicated and error-prone to give away. However, the disk-repartitioning software already exists and should've been part of Vista's installer.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:XP over 98 had similar headaches by omicronish · · Score: 1

      Or, in the alternative, that it could be "rooted" in a subdirectory, so you had c:\vista\windows, c:\vista\Documents and Settings, c:\vista\Program Files, etc. Obviously this wouldn't work with every single file but if done right it would eliminate a lot of confusion and it would leave the XP installation intact and bootable.

      Vista upgrading is, in fact, similar to that. Upgrading will rename your old Windows and Program Files directory to something else, and Vista clean installs on the partition. Afterwards your old settings and apps are "migrated" over to your new installation. The XP installation isn't intact and bootable, but I believe you can uninstall Vista to restore it. Also, the installer can perform primitive partitioning, including extending and shrinking partitions (but not moving them around).

  56. This isn't all Vista's fault by bjdevil66 · · Score: 1

    I'm no fan of Vista and I'll be staying with XP for as long as possible because the upgrade just isn't that great.

    However, some of what he's complaining about is more the 3rd party hardware sellers' fault than Microsoft's fault. They want you to throw away that 3-4 year old printer or sound card and buy their latest products, and they want to save on labor costs, so they don't write the drivers for their older stuff. I hit this wall with an HP printer - an LaserJet/Inkjet 820CSE - and XP. I had to throw out much of the functionality of the printer (two-sided printing, etc.) just to get the printer to work because HP offered no XP drivers. HP said, "We don't support XP for this printer." "Why not?" "I'm sorry, but we just don't. We can't keep up with all the printers we've made." We all know they could keep up, but it wouldn't make as much $$$$$ for them.

  57. Here's my appraoch to new Windows versions by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 2

    1. Wait for SP1
    2. Wait for SP2 ...
    N. Wait for SPN
    N+1. New version of Windows, GOTO 1

    Wonder if that GOTO will give any of the old timers nostalgia attacks

  58. Vista-tan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I saw the article title and I instantly thought of the alternate meaning for "trap". Maybe we should start referring to Vista-tan as Vista-kun now.

    As an amusing sidenote the captcha for this post was "trapped".

  59. Life imitates tags by shmert · · Score: 2, Funny

    Why do I have the feeling that this whole story was written so that for once the "itsatrap" tag guy could be relevant?

    --
    You drank my drink, you drunk!
  60. Re:MOD Post Author Retard... by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Informative

    Honestly, who does an OS upgrade and not check for hardware compatibility?

          If you RTFA, you'll see that he a) used a Microsoft app that checks your system for Vista compatibility before installing; b) replaced his incompatible hardware before the install with hardware stated to work with Vista by the manufacturer.

          Short of having someone lend him the hardware to try it out with Vista, I don't really see what else he could have done to avoid problems...

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  61. creative soundcards by eneville · · Score: 1

    sound blaster cards should all be compatible with the age old soundblaster drivers. the emu10k1 (sblive) is compatible with adlib and sb16. there should be no reason why the sb16 drivers cannot be applied for this audio card. if vista doesnt support sb cards then they're really shooting themselves in the foot as it's probably the most standard of things out there.

    1. Re:creative soundcards by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Last I checked the sb16 compatibility was done entirely in the driver, in software.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:creative soundcards by eneville · · Score: 1

      Last I checked the sb16 compatibility was done entirely in the driver, in software. maybe you're correct. *but* the emu10k1 should really have a driver in vista, really. if the emu10k1 is dropped, has sb16 been dropped also?
  62. Reputation for dificult installation.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't marketing wonderful? For all of these years we have been told how hard it is to install the competitions operating system. Drivers wouldn't work, hardware wasn't supported and so on.... Wait a minute, weren't they talking about linux?

    Maybe, M$ has decided to enhance their operating system by matching their competitors (percived) installation experience.

    Funny, my last linux install took 45 minutes and everything on my computer just worked when I finished.

    Can I leave the rabbit hole now?

  63. Olbig. SW reference by blake3737 · · Score: 1

    It's a........trap.

  64. Airport is supported by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both the bcm43xx chipset and the orinoco chipsets are supported natively. Broadcom won't allow redistribution of the firmware for bcm43xx, but wireless isn't a problem on Apple notebooks any more.

  65. I lost sound with XP! by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 1
    My computer got completely hosed up after an automatic update from Microsoft, which could not be removed. The computer guy reinstalled the whole thing from scratch - now I have no audio.

    And I didn't even have to pay for Vista to do this!

    --
    It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
  66. Not 6 Billion dollars better either. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sudo is a good idea. UAC is sudo implemented on a system not designed for it. So the idea of UAC itself isn't bad, but the problem is that Windows requires too many admin interventions to make it anything more than a "click allow to get this window out out of your face" dialog.

    Acceptance of a security technology is based on the convenience it provides. In this case, the technology is so inconvenient that it might as well be disabled by default.

  67. Memories. by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it doesn't affect you, not likely to make it in to a "thing that didn't work for me" article, is it? Reading that article brought back memories of Windows 98 and NT4. Like many other people at the time I was irritated by the instability of 98 and decided to install NT4 because I had heard it was more stable than 'old bluescreen'. I quickly found out that while the stability definitely was a lot better under NT4 (at least it was on my mini tower, other people's milage may have varied) there weren't any NT4 drivers for half the other stuff I had bought including my scanner, printer, modem and network card and many games also didn't get along all that well with NT4 so... after a couple of weeks of trying to get the thing to work.... no more NT4. Eventually Microsoft spat out Windows 2000 (aka. NT5) which was nothing to cheer over but at least it combined the promised increase in stability with broader hardware support. Unfortunately for MS, by then I was at Uni and running Linux.... It seems to me that this story will repeat it self for a lot of users for the first 6-12 months of Vista's life. Even if an average user buys a brand new PC with Vista pre-installed a lot of their old peripherals won't work and will require replacing and they can''t just go and buy any gizmo that takes their fancy and hook it up to their Vista box. After a year or so it probably won't matter any more, frugal computer users will stick with XP because they see no reason to shellout the extra cash. The broad masses will, however, take the hidden cost of the upgrade and use Vista while a handful of technologically adventurous Windows users will decide to try one of the two alternatives instead of Vista.
    --
    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
  68. enough vista bashing surely? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    90% of slashdot seems to be vista bashing these days. I got mine pre-installed on a new machine, and I'm pretty impressed with it.
    Time to wake up and smell the coffe. People still prefer windows to linux guys.

  69. Re:Self-confessed by GeePrime · · Score: 0

    That's like saying you expect your computer to comply with the internet. If you truly want to use a car analogy, it's like buying a new car and expecting your after market stereo to work on it. Will it? probably, but you will likely need an install kit as automakers often use the same deck size. You will likely need a wiring harness as well, as the auto maker's don't seem to comply there, either. Then there is some really wild stuff, a friend of mine had to get a $150 data adapter for his car stereo, otherwise, his interior lights/dinging when you leave keys ignition or lights on/etc...would all cease to work. Or, you could buy a new sub-compact car and expect the off-road bumpers from your pickup truck, or your 35" tall tires to fit. It's not gonna happen, unless you are one heck of a hillbilly.

  70. fark.com said it best... by mad.frog · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates claims Vista will "wow" its users. As in, "Wow, does this suck" or "Wow, WTF happened to all my data?"

  71. I don't get it. by Nirvelli · · Score: 1

    Maybe I just got lucky, but I installed Vista on my Laptop, and had full hardware functionality within a day: Sound worked, 3D games worked, even my printer worked. It wasn't very good at managing power use, though.

  72. The author is a fanboy and says what you do. by twitter · · Score: 1

    the fanboys shout 'you shoulda known' and 'get new hardware'. Let's call Vista not an upgrade but a wholesale replacement of your computer and many of your applications. Most of your data will work in the new system but that's about it.

    The BBC author concludes the same thing, and that's what sucks. He says to wait and get Vista pre-installed. Doing that won't fix his webcam or his pocket PC. Those and his old computer, which is twice as nice as anything I have, will become more toxic waste. What has he gotten that he did not have? Nothing but a prettier interface and a false promise of better security. Upgrading non free software is like that, difficult, costly and unnecessary. Replacing everything only marginally decreases your difficulty because you then have to purchase, install and relearn the new interfaces for all the programs that actually do your work and play. When you are through with that, you can begin the long and non transferable process of making your desktop comfortable and retrieving the old data that your masters allow you to keep. The fanboy part of this equation is thinking you need non free software to begin with. The author's conclusion is basically, M$ at any cost.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:The author is a fanboy and says what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you completely missed the point.

    2. Re:The author is a fanboy and says what you do. by Macthorpe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Everybody cheer, it's Pick Apart the Zealot time!

      Everyone sitting comfortably?

      The BBC author concludes the same thing, and that's what sucks. He says to wait and get Vista pre-installed. Doing that won't fix his webcam or his pocket PC.

      No, but you missed the point. He says Vista isn't worth it for him right now, but will be if he upgrades. Revel in the small victory that may offer you, but don't misinterpret it. Regardless, support will come and soon, if he's willing to wait and he chose a good manufacturer.

      Those and his old computer, which is twice as nice as anything I have, will become more toxic waste.

      Because now that he's not using Vista his computer automatically melts down?

      What has he gotten that he did not have? Nothing but a prettier interface and a false promise of better security. Upgrading non free software is like that, difficult, costly and unnecessary.

      Seeing as you've never bothered to check, you wouldn't have a clue what Vista has that's new anyway, and I'm not here to educate you. Needless to say, tell the people upgrading Ubuntu on this thread that repeatedly lose time and effort to fixing the problems it causes on each update how 'difficult' and 'costly' upgrading is. Time is money, and no update to XP ever broke my video card.

      Replacing everything only marginally decreases your difficulty because you then have to purchase, install and relearn the new interfaces for all the programs that actually do your work and play.

      We had this conversation before and you failed to provide a good answer - have any of the window managers for Linux remained identical for the last 12 years? How about the last 10? The last 7? Didn't think so.

      When you are through with that, you can begin the long and non transferable process of making your desktop comfortable and retrieving the old data that your masters allow you to keep.

      Care to provide a source that says data automagically disappears when you upgrade if MS decides you can't use it? I'll finish that for you: you can't, because it doesn't. More bullshit (shock and disgust everyone).

      The fanboy part of this equation is thinking you need non free software to begin with. The author's conclusion is basically, M$ at any cost.

      No, it's not. The authors conclusion apparently sailed over your head as easily as all the other reasons to use Windows over Linux do. Nobody 'needs' non-free software in the same nobody 'needs' free software. Shockingly, it's a matter of preference.

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
  73. Vista caused my harddrives to fail! by sheldon · · Score: 1

    I had two of these 4 year old 80 gig drives. I slapped on in a USB case and brought it into work, and the other was a backup drive on my Vista desktop at home.

    Well, a month after i installed Vista the drives failed! Both of them. The one at work, connected to my XP laptop, and the one at home as a backup drive.

    It's obviously Vista's fault. I read somewhere on /. that Vista is the suck, and it causes all sorts of problems. It must have transmitted a spike or something through the internets to get at the other drive just to make sure it failed. I'm sure of it! Vista is a giant conspiracy to force us to replace hardware! /snark

  74. tricky question by MK_CSGuy · · Score: 1

    Is Vista a Trap?

    geez... I wonder what the slashdot crowd thinks.

    Seriously though, good thing it's not on Ask Slashdot ;)

  75. Obligatory by spazmolytic666 · · Score: 0

    Admiral Akbar: It's a trap!

    Oh wait this is fark....

    --
    Help! I've fallen in a karma hole and I can't get up!
  76. Installation Pains by turgid · · Score: 1

    Never mind. Imagine how much more difficult and costly it would have been if he'd been installing Linux. I mean, he'd have had to buy all new hardware, since Linux doesn't have many drivers, and Linux is so expensive for Red Hat.

  77. Yes it is, because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..the shields are still up.

  78. Tell the truth now...... by DreadSi · · Score: 1

    Perfect - First you bitch about what's wrong with windows, then you complain when they change things. Of course it's perfectly reasonable to expect mere mortals to create an operating system that is compatable with about a bazillion different peripherals before it's released. Let's just agree that you will never have anything positive to say about Microsoft and leave it at that, shall we?

  79. Cost of new technology by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

    Sometimes the cost of new technology is letting go of old technology. This isn't necessarily a bad thing. Take a look at Apple's leap from OS 9 to OS X. Cut loose the shit and move on to something worth having. Problem is, in my opinion, Windows XP is pretty good to begin with. I'm not really willing to turn loose of a fully functioning OS and hardware for a few system enhancements and several hundred dollars in new unnecessary hardware. I can't imagine what it'd be like for an enterprise installment of thousands of Vista workstations. Microsoft themselves have even got to be hurting from that upgrade.

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  80. Simple Solution: Don't Activate Right Away. by Prototerm · · Score: 1

    Granted I did a clean install of Vista, rather than an upgrade, but I've already been running Vista for more than 30 days without activating it. With a simple DOS command, you can run Vista for up to 120 days without activating it (slmgr -rearm). I figure I'm gonna wait a while before I shoot myself in *that* foot by activating! I imagine the author of the article did the same thing.

    What's really funny is that right now, Linux may support more PC hardware than Vista. Time to share the pain, Mr. Gates!

    --
    "My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right." --Senator Carl Schurz (1872)
  81. overstated complaints on Vista by air+monkey · · Score: 1

    I started using vista @ beta 2. I stopped using it after a couple days - poor video card drivers, etc.
    I'm waiting for my free copy of Ultimate in the mail - thx microsoft!!

    Internet connectivity is AWESOME. I use wireless, and it can be a pain to find a driver on a fresh install without having a cd around. Vista has many wireless card drivers built in - no bloated software to install and INSTANT internet connectivity.

    Everyone complaining about UAC - I dont get it. You can disable it when you are setting up your computer. After that, it is rare to see it in everyday use. And it may just stop that program from installing in the background that ends up making your squeaky clean install muddy.

    DRM - never had any problems - dont have DRM-infested files.

    Interface looks great, too. Speed is not a problem (Core2 w/ 2GB RAM, x1900xt)

  82. It's a little bit Microsoft's fault by drewness · · Score: 1

    I certainly hope he's not trying to blame that on Vista. That would mean it's Linux's fault winmodems don't work. He downloaded Microsoft's Vista Upgrade Advisor while he was still running XP. It told him he needed a new video card, to download the newest driver for his wifi card, and to update his antivirus software, but everything else was fine.

    He upgrades to Vista and his webcam and soundcard don't work. In his situation, I'd be a bit miffed too.
  83. What about My 1541 Floppy Drive? by Prototerm · · Score: 1

    How the heck does Microsoft expect me to keep my coffee hot without it, huh?

    --
    "My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right." --Senator Carl Schurz (1872)
  84. Which version of Vista? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which version of Vista are you running? You state you are running Vista at work. So I assume it is not the bottom version that most consumers would get when buying a new system. Would you run into any problems if you were using the bottom version?

    You shoot and edit video on Vista. Would a bottom version Vista have issues with any of that?

    I would like to know.

  85. Re:Vista Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, if slagging MS is the best way to promote linux, linux will never be more than a niche operating system (for the desktop)

  86. The british are coming!! The british are coming!! by billcopc · · Score: 1

    The big problem with the author is he's british... well that and he's trying to install a brand new OS on obsolete hardware. His machine was hot stuff about six years ago. He's on the same page as people who loaded Windows XP on a K6 333, or Windows 95 on a 25mhz 386SX. Yeah it's gonna suck, because the machine sucks! There's no sense in supporting ancient hardware, at least not from a business standpoint.

    There's also the brands involved.. He doesn't say what his graphics card was, but anyone who's had the misfortune of owning a Sound Blaster in the last decade has dealt with the homicidal wrath of Creative Inc. They're really good at selling overpriced DACs, but they equally suck at writing stable drivers for the damned things. What's even better is this guy has a Dell OEM Sound Blaster... anyone who's ever touched those things knows they're different. They have exactly one difference: the device ID. Why'd they change it ? Some retarded form of lock-in I guess, because it's a nightmare getting them to work anywhere else. Anywhere except Linux that is :) It would be a trivial matter of adding the Dell ID to the standard drivers, literally a one-line fix, but they don't.

    Performance-wise, his PC even after upgrades is still puny. A Willamette P4, 768mb of PC-133, and a hard drive that probably sucked the day it was born. I could also write a horrible review of Vista if I tried hard enough to find an ancient PC like his. Or I could run it on a well-specced year-old system like an Athlon 64 or an Intel Core and get rather excellent results.

    Don't read me wrong, I don't use Vista because... well... I don't care about the eye-candy! Really there's not much more about it. Vista is to XP what Beryl is to kwin. But if I wanted Vista, I would have no problems running it on my current machine (I've tried the MSDN betas, they ran fine). The problems are all these broke-ass tinkerers who like to "play" with computers. They don't have any real use for a PC other than downloading music and lounge on Myspace and Lavalife. They don't have a budget so their machines are a patchwork of whatever they bought off of Craigslist. I don't call that a serious computer user.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  87. Worse than XP (for now) by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remember, Microsoft said exactly the same thing about XP and 2000 that they do about Vista, and that they have about every single version of Windows except pehaps 1.0: "Faster, more secure, more personalized, better than ever before!"

    And we say exactly the same thing we've always said: "Bloated, incompatible, too invasive, look at that WGA!" XP has the same privacy issues, 2000 had worse (if possible) compatibility issues.

    But around SP1 or SP2, XP became livable, arguably better than 2000. And probably around SP1, 2000 became stable enough, and was obviously a HUGE upgrade compared to 98 -- so huge that if they hadn't done it when they did, Linux probably would've taken over.

    So, we're going to have the same thing happen here. I predict that in roughly 2 years, around SP1 or SP2, Vista will actually be better than XP. But it isn't yet -- too much stuff isn't compatible, and the "beta" was a laugh; if you buy it now, you are their gamma testers.

    Smart people stick with XP, and let the rest of the world test and debug Vista for us.

    Me? I'll keep dual-booting XP and Linux (Ubuntu here, Gentoo at home).

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Worse than XP (for now) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. The only question is whether it will take one service pack or two before Vista becomes usable.

  88. Stop the FUD! by StinkyGeek · · Score: 3, Informative

    About being certified by MS...I'm not sure where you are getting your information from, but it is wrong.

    Want to develop drivers for Vista, Server 2003, XP, W2k, and possibly older MS platforms? Hit the download button from here http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/devtools/ddk/default .mspx/.

    Want a kernel debugger and access to the O/S symbol files? Try here http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/devtools/debugging/d efault.mspx.

    Need some know-how on passing the Windows logo requirements? Try here http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/whql/WHQLdwn.mspx

    How about 64-bit Vista drivers? Well, those have to be digitally signed. Try here for more info http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/platform/64bi t/kmsigning.mspx

    Total cost to you: Zero. Well, that certificate for signing the 64-bit drivers costs money, but that's not going to MS.

    I understand the general /. attitude towards most things MS, but at least try to get the facts straight before you spread FUD around.

    --
    Stay hopeful that the Crystalline Amoeba poops your car out soon
    1. Re:Stop the FUD! by Bullfish · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmmm... the others seem to be busy. Let me take a crack at this.

      You are a hateful M$ shill. Unsupplied hardware drivers are the manufacturer's fault only if you are talking about Linux. Otherwise, it is M$'s fault. Unless, of course, you are talking about Apple. Then, the pre-approved hardware only aspect is a glorious thing brought down from the mountain by the apostle Jobs. All else are heathens who shall burn in hell.

      You are trying to stop the spread of linux and apple. You are a bad person. You eat babies and beat the homeless.

      Is that okay? Sorry, I am new at this. I wanted to say something about your parentage and driving habits too, but I have to go let the dog out.

    2. Re:Stop the FUD! by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      ---Total cost to you: Zero. Well, that certificate for signing the 64-bit drivers costs money, but that's not going to MS.

      Thats not true. They could add their own CERT authority and grant signing for free.

      Why do they trust the cert authorities? It almost sounds if they want to stratify out the free software guys from the "we buy the 2000$ power pack" guys.

      And to iterate between a different OS....

      Want to develop drivers for Linux? goto Kernel.org

      Want a kernel debugger and access to the O/S symbol files? We give source. Kernel.org

      Need some know-how on passing the Linux logo requirements? We dont have steennkin logo requirements.

      How about 64-bit Linux drivers? As long as it compiles. kernel.org . No certs or such inane requirements. If you can code for the kernel, you can do it.

      Total cost to you: Zero.

      There are somethings money cant buy, but for everything else there's Microsoft.

      --
  89. No Vista in my crib... by corecaptain · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just got this alert/email from my ISP - ATT&T...

    "AT&T and Yahoo! have been working closely with Microsoft to update our familiar software applications to support the Vista operating system, including AT&T Yahoo! Instant Messenger, AT&T Yahoo! Photos, the AT&T Yahoo! Portal, and our Web-based e-mail service.

    In this spirit, our teams will continue to work to deliver compatibility with other familiar applications which will be temporarily impacted for customers who upgrade to Vista, such as the AT&T Yahoo! Tool Bar, AT&T Yahoo! Browser and the AT&T Yahoo! Online Protection Suite. While our teams remain dedicated to restoring your ability to manage and customize the online protection suite on a Vista PC, we encourage you to learn more about the embedded Windows Security Center, part of the Vista operating system and similar to the AT&T Yahoo! Online Protection Suite, to help keep your PC up to date with the latest security patches and alerts."

    TEMPORARY IMPACT...

    RESTORING YOUR ABILITY ...

    WTF????

    Why is my internet service being impacted by an upgrade to my OS?

    1. Re:No Vista in my crib... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      It isn't. None of those affected applications have anything to do with your internet service, those are just the crappy pack-ins that come on the ISP's CD. Your internet service works just as well without any of them installed.

  90. Does he know what he's doing? by mdsharpe · · Score: 1
    This article is just as inexplicably Vista-bashing as almost everything the BBC has to say about Vista. But this is the bit that gets me most:

    The detail is tedious and highly technical: reinstalling drivers and router firmware didn't work, but after many trial and error tweaks to Vista's TCP/IP settings, I had internet access. So he had to tweak Vista's TCP/IP settings to get on the internet? Exactly how is this Vista's fault? I cannot think of any explanation for this other than that he has a wrongly configured network, or doesn't know how the network is configured. Either way, he would have the same issues with any OS.
  91. He hasn't raelized the entire trap yet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So I can either throw away my Axim and invest another £200 or £300 (for a PDA and webcam), or roll back to XP and wave Vista goodbye.

    No, you can't go back! Thanks to Microsoft, your XP key has been invalidated by upgrading to Vista, so rolling back to what was working is not an option. Open up your wallet, BBC boy!

  92. Vista? (Insert Sideshow Bob shudder here) by jpellino · · Score: 1

    I'm decompressing from a week with XP alone.
    My iBook's hard drive gradually went kaput.
    While arranging the repair, I ran an Ubuntu LiveCD on it and a flash drive.
    Wow, even when not in a bind.

    While it was on its round trip to Apple, I had to make do with another portable.
    Toshiba Portege 2000, 512, XP Pro - should be decent, so here goes:

    Spend an entire afternoon getting it to do what I need, which is pretty modest:
    - Install a real browser (fFox) and a real mail app (tBird),
    - and office (OOo), iTunes and Picasa.
    - Protect it from the hordes (Grisoft).
    - Add a few conveniences and an actual calculator from this century (Yahoo Widgets)
    - Print on the three printers I use at work and home (2 trips to HP, one to Canon).
    Are we there yet? Nope:
    - Dial down XP so it performs faster than my other possible backup, my trusty PowerBook 1400/266 running OS9.

    For a week I felt like Ginger Rogers - doing everything backwards in high heels.
    The iBook is back, and once again I feel like Fred Astaire.

    10 minutes in the comfy chair outside the Apple store and I had user, web, mail & docs back in play thanks to .mac
    Another 20 minutes back in the office, and music/photos/movies were restored from an external drive.
    Half a day to get the XP usable, half an hour for the Mac.

    My new found order of preference for an out of the box OS?
    OSX, Ubuntu and a distant third, XP Pro.
    I'm not sure I'm up to wrestling with Vista.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  93. Re:Self-confessed by snarfbot · · Score: 0

    or say you bought aftermarket headers exhaust and intake for your good old 96 mustang gt. then a few years later you bought a brand new 2005 gt, although the engines are the same, all those little addons wont work.

    they just arent backwards compatable

    much better analogy.

  94. Long again! by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

    I humbry lepolt youl ellol in sperring. It shourd be: "Frawress Victoly". Prease be mole calefur in the futule!

    --
    Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
  95. Yeah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And my install went something like this:

    - grab MSDN image for Vista x64, burn DVD
    - put in new Dell 860 server's DVD drive, turn power on
    - Install starts, input key
    - "Windows Installer has performed an illegal operation and must be shut down."
    - Go to Microsoft, get lame "support" that claims "oh your DVD is faulty, burn another." (I did, it doesn't work.)
    - Tell my boss the delay is caused by Microsoft installer crapping itself.

  96. DEAR LOARD JEBUS! by yesthatmcgurk · · Score: 1

    Please save me from these idiotic FUD articles on /.!!!!

  97. Creative by AndrewNeo · · Score: 1

    Sucks for him. My internet, both wired and wireless, and both my sound cards worked right away in Vista. Funny thing is, Creative doesn't even have drivers for XP for my sound card anymore.. But Vista has them built right in.

  98. OK, I know it's not quite the same... by jbarr · · Score: 1

    ...but I had Vista running on a VMWare virtual machine in under 30 minutes on my laptop. Connecting to the Internet was a snap. OK, so it was a clean install, it was on a VM, so the hardware issues weren't that complex, and I didn't put it through rigorous paces, but really, is it as diffucult as people make it out to be?

    --
    My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
  99. Re:Does PC Gaming have anything we need? by InsertCleverUsername · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > It's about time to give up on PC gaming, especially with the beauty, convenience and
    > comfort of today's powerful consoles (both of them).

    When I can mod my games and load new/free content as easily as I can on the PC, I'll buy a console again. (Anybody got an ETA on that?) Other than that, the ease of use, bang-for-the-buck, and robustness of consoles makes them the obvious choice.

    --
    Ask me about my sig!
  100. Re:Does PC Gaming have anything we need? by JoelMartinez · · Score: 1
  101. About WorldWind by Whatsmynickname · · Score: 1

    You have NASA's WorldWind installed under Vista?

    What did you do when the installer wanted to load DirectX 9.0c? Did you install 9.0c over top of Vista's 10? If so, what happened? What version of DirectX are you running now under Vista (please check)...

    Installing WorldWind under Vista is a big unknown for me because DirectX v10 does not have managed DirectX, but do you lose DirectX10 functionality if you install DirectX v9.0c on top of it (which _does_ have the managed .NET DirectX interface)????

    If you lose v10 functionality, then once a f__king again, Microsoft does the old bait and switch API deal, where people get hooked on a shiny new Microsoft API, and then MS abandons the API for something else. Managed DirectX is an example of this, and Vista makes the problem even worse by not supporting this now legacy API. This leaves developers holding the bag of Microsoft dumped crap again and again. I'm getting sick of it

    1. Re:About WorldWind by omicronish · · Score: 1

      What did you do when the installer wanted to load DirectX 9.0c? Did you install 9.0c over top of Vista's 10? If so, what happened? What version of DirectX are you running now under Vista (please check)...

      Installing WorldWind under Vista is a big unknown for me because DirectX v10 does not have managed DirectX, but do you lose DirectX10 functionality if you install DirectX v9.0c on top of it (which _does_ have the managed .NET DirectX interface)????

      It didn't ask me to install DX 9.0c. However, Civ 4 does require it, and installing DX 9.0c on Vista seems to have no problems. I don't have a DX 10 card so I don't know if any DX 10 features are missing, but I highly doubt it since managed DX is likely just a wrapper around unmanaged DX, in which case it's probably only the collection of managed assemblies in C:\windows\Microsoft.NET\DirectX for Managed Code. Furthermore, dxdiag says I have DX 10.

      If you lose v10 functionality, then once a f__king again, Microsoft does the old bait and switch API deal, where people get hooked on a shiny new Microsoft API, and then MS abandons the API for something else. Managed DirectX is an example of this, and Vista makes the problem even worse by not supporting this now legacy API. This leaves developers holding the bag of Microsoft dumped crap again and again. I'm getting sick of it

      Then stay with managed DX. Not supporting doesn't mean it doesn't work. What you're really complaining about is the lack of language bindings, .NET bindings in your case, for new APIs. Well, guess what, that's a problem for pretty much all languages aside from C++ on Windows. If the lack of managed DX10 really bothers you, then write your own wrapper around it using C++/CLI.

    2. Re:About WorldWind by gmb61 · · Score: 1

      Vista has it's own version of DirectX 9 (I think it's something like 9.0i or 9.0l) in addition to DirectX10 to maintain backward compatibility.

  102. Re:Does PC Gaming have anything we need? by Afrosheen · · Score: 1

    X360 games allow for modification (at Microsoft's discretion) and due to the online nature of both of the new consoles, patching games and adding mods are as simple as downloading a file. Some PS3 games (like Ridge Racer 7) have downloadable special races and Blast Factor has a multiplayer online pack.

    With hard drives and online capabilities in these consoles, the lines between consoles and PCs blur even further. It's up to the vendors and developers as to which directions you as a consumer can take, which is limiting, but at least you know the stuff will work as expected.

  103. MOD PARENT UP by Evilest+Doer · · Score: 1

    The nice thing about Windows all drivers built-in/easily available so that it just works as opposed to Linux where you have to write your own drivers in some cases to get by?" Apparently, this is not true anymore
    This is exactly the point I was going to make. The only real thing keeping common users from going to Linux is that it can be a pain in the ass for non-tech savvy people. But, with Vista like this, why should *anyone*, even AOL users, use Micro$haft anymore?
    --
    I feel like death on a soda cracker.
  104. lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    /gg bitches

  105. Compatibility? by evilviper · · Score: 1

    As long as you make sure the new hardware fits into the slots that come with your computer and does not overburden its power supply, it's usually just a case of carefully lifting out the old and slotting in the new piece of kit.

    He should tell that to ATI... My 8500DV won't power-up in my VIA system, but it works in my SIS system. Ditto for an NVidia PCI videocard. No rhyme, no reason, just screwed.

    Many problems with RAM and CPU upgrades... Most people can't figure out setting hard drive/CD/DVD jumpers...

    So, yeah, I guess if there's anything else in your system left, upgrading it won't be very hard. Otherwise, consult your local geek before you start, and risk doing serious damage.

    I had read somewhere that a Vista installation would take 20 minutes. Not if you upgrade from XP.

    Everyone should know by now that Microsoft has NEVER been able to handle upgrades worth a damn. Though I know of many that have tried, I haven't seen a single successful upgrade from any version of Windows, to any other.

    Once online, Creative's website told me that my sound card was a write-off. No Vista support would be forthcoming.

    Am I crazy? Did I miss something? Or is the rest of the world perhaps stupid? From Windows 2000 and on, backwards driver backwards compatibility was built-in, and it's not unusually for Windows to select (by default) a driver for a different Windows version, before the one you would expect (signed/unsigned issues). Has Vista stopped this? I can't imagine there would be any problems with something as simple as soundcard drivers.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  106. Re:MOD Post Author Retard... by norman619 · · Score: 1

    Try actually checking the vendor sites to varify? I guess you also believe the nice time estimate windows gives you for file download time too...

  107. Idiots by chrismgtis · · Score: 0

    We really have some complete morons writing articles about Vista out there. It never ceases to amaze me. Especially the ones that have problems with Vista. I installed it in no more time than it took to install XP, was immediately connected to the Internet after installing Nforce drivers (onboard ethernet), starting installing all the software I wanted, was on the Internet, using instant messaging, emailing, doing whatever the hell I wanted with no problems.

    Best way to describe people that can't get on the Internet with Vista? Stupid and should be barred from technology.

    1. Re:Idiots by in5ane · · Score: 1

      This is unfortunately harsh, but kinda true. I installed Vista retail on a brand new self-built machine, worked perfectly bar the 'beta' 8800gtx drivers, which still worked fine for me. The install was faster than XP as well.

      That said, idiots should be allowed to use computers as well, just not write articles. A bad workman always blames his Windows :)

  108. Media by kippers · · Score: 1

    Vista has certainly trapped a media hype.

  109. Of course it is! Users need to diversify by user_ecs · · Score: 1

    Improve security - buy alternatives

    Stop feeding the monopoly. A competitive environment is good for all users. A mono culture is bad for security. The major PC OEMs will drag their feet becuase they are looking to save pennys even if it costs computer users hundreds of extra dollars in the long run

    SUSE preloaded
    http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7778908329.html

    eComStation preloaded
    http://www.curtissystemssoftware.com/preloads.htm

  110. Point one by fitten · · Score: 1

    Don't you know? You're always supposed to wait for the x.1 version before you buy Microsoft stuff. The first version is hurried and the x.1 version has lots of bug fixes (not that all are fixed or new ones introduced, but it's always better than the x.0 version if you have to use it).

  111. In Short by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vista hardware support seems to be Linux-Style: if it ain't supported, hope that someone can back-hack it.

    Of course, the cool thing about Linux, is that not many expect to be actually paid for porting an old device to a new kernel.

  112. Re:but is does't have to be that way by user_ecs · · Score: 1


    Computer users have to use their purchasing power.
    Improve security - buy alternatives

    Stop feeding the monopoly. A competitive environment is good for all users. A mono culture is bad for security. The major PC OEMs will drag their feet becuase they are looking to save pennies even if it costs computer users hundreds of extra dollars in the long run

    SUSE preloaded
    http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7778908329.html

    eComStation preloaded
    http://www.curtissystemssoftware.com/preloads.htm

  113. dx10 by deviceb · · Score: 1

    For myself the only thing that warrants a move to Vista is DX10 of course. -but with all the nonsense surrounding vista, it seems that microshaft would bite the bullet & release dx10 for XP. -or suffer more loss. Otherwise i think even the nubs will be switching to mac or even linux if things stay as they are.
    i think at this point everybody here agrees vista is a pain ATM..

    --
    Kill your TV
  114. Pocket PC 2002 isn't supported? by argent · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has decided that Vista will work only with Pocket PC 2003 and higher.

    *boggle*

    Just...

    *boggle*

    I guess microsoft has finally decided they've knocked Palm down far enough they can quit coddling their Pocket PC customers and go back to business as usual.

  115. Moving Day by Keith+Russell · · Score: 1

    I kept thinking the same thing as I read this:

    The same problems would exist if he had switched platforms entirely.

    Take this passage, which was written in the context of XP-to-Vista:

    Replacing everything only marginally decreases your difficulty because you then have to purchase, install and relearn the new interfaces for all the programs that actually do your work and play. When you are through with that, you can begin the long and non transferable process of making your desktop comfortable and retrieving the old data that your masters allow you to keep.

    Now consider moving from XP to Mac OS X, or Fedora, or Ubuntu, or Suse. You'd still have to acquire and install your apps, transfer %USERPROFILE% to ~/, and re-learn the "floor plan" of your new environment.

    Anything above and beyond an in-place upgrade is going to require some heavy lifting.

    --
    This sig intentionally left blank.
  116. ...not so good by skuzzlebutt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My wife bought a new HP running vista a couple of weeks ago; she loves it for the most part: media center, dvr capability, all shiny and pretty. However, the lack of hardware support is maddening; her new quickcam wouldn't work on vista (conflicted with the hauppage tuner card), but miraculously the microsoft lifecam worked fine...hm. Funny, HP doesn't even have drivers for the current-model officejet we bought with the HP PC...sigh. Also, I got a bsod this AM trying to do something really tricky, like look at a .jpg. The allow/cancel popup really is maddening, though...the apple commercials got it right. There are some programs that require 4 or 5 confirmations.

    --
    My debut novel AMITY now available: http://jeremydbrooks.c
  117. do your homework by sopuer · · Score: 1

    Before you install ANY new OS, you should gather all the drivers for your machine BEFORE you install. Use your common sense and do your homework, and you wouldn't have had any of these problems.

  118. Re:but is does't have to be that way by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    And what software would they run on those "alternatives"? Not all the stuff they can run on Windows that's for sure. It's not consumer inertia that keeps Windows at no.1, it's because the no.2 et al cannot run a large proportion of the software and hardware that the users want to use. This isn't the fault of the "alternatives" but there isn't a lot that can be done. Unless you're trying to claim that users are so stupid as to never consider realistic alternatives.

  119. Re:MOD Post Author Retard... by Dunbal · · Score: 2, Informative

    with hardware stated to work with Vista by the manufacturer.

          Not only do you not read the article, it seems you don't read people's posts either. Why do you bother then?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  120. Product upgrade or Software upgrade? by Technician · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Due to the issues I have had in the past with upgrades, I don't bother to do just software upgrades. Here are my reasons;

    That old hardware was fine for running some stuff. An upgrade to just the software leaves the system in an unstable state with not all features hardware or software supported in most cases. Most of my systems are running the original OS on them with the exceptions where the usefullness of the new applications outweighed the loss of the old applications. For example, upgrading from Windows 98 and 2K to Ubuntu is a great move. I lose the upgrade patch cycle, endless security upgrades and AV upgrades and instead get a stable machine for web applications.

    I still have my Windows 95 laptop. It is useless for online use and is a sitting duck. It still makes a great MIDI workstation sitting on my synth. It has no USB. It is at it's maximum capacity of EDO memory at 72 Megs. Upgrading the software would be a bad mistake.

    More modern hardware gets Linux upgrades. It is relatively pain free. It provides stability and security with lots of new features. I don't have to spend a lot of money to find out if it won't work and needs a hardware upgrade to get it going. Too bad Vista does not have a free Live CD for testing old hardware.

    I'll get a new purchased OS when it comes on the new hardware. Then it is up to the vendor to make sure everything is working and compatible. It saves a lot of headaches. I have not seen any reason to spend the money at this time.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
    1. Re:Product upgrade or Software upgrade? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because you should trust dell, hp, or e-machines when it comes to building you a high quality reliable computer.

      In reality, they just haven't had enough time to write spyware and crap for vista to bloat up the newly sold systems.

    2. Re:Product upgrade or Software upgrade? by Technician · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because you should trust dell, hp, or e-machines when it comes to building you a high quality reliable computer.

      I can often buy a pre-assembled box with XP installed much cheaper than I can build my own box with a legal copy of XP. When I do, most of the time all the hardware works. What most often is a problem is removing all the demo trial crap they installed.

      Many times it is cheaper to buy a pre-assembled box and wipe the free included OS and all the crud and it is still cheaper than building your own.

      If you don't need Windows for Turbo Tax or other MS only critical application, then it is often times cheaper to build your own do you don't have to throw away things like motherboards, WiFi cards, and modems that are Windows only.

      If you want to use the all in one scanner, fax, printer they try to include in your order, remember, there are only Windows drivers for it.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
  121. throwing up my hands so high that I can't count by sparkz · · Score: 1

    Sure, research would tell you that 512Mb and a crappy graphics card is inadequate for Vista, but it's quite enough for any other modern OS.

    Maybe I'm just some old fart, but why on earth should I *need* more? Windows 98 required 32Mb RAM to run apps, browse the net, email, etc, without being too sluggish. Vista now needs (32*32=1024) 1Gb, 32 times the RAM, to do basically the same job. Do you do 32 times more work? Are you 32 times more productive? No, of course not.

    My crappy 2.8GHz 512Mb box (plain Ubuntu, since you ask, and no tweaking; what Joe Public gets out of the box is fine) works as a desktop PC (granted, usually only two users at a time, but that's twice the simultaneous users a typical Windows PC would have), database, webserver, and more, without ever breaking into a sweat. Granted, I don't play games, but it sounds like the OP wasn't complaining about app performance, but the ability of the OS itself to cope with such a config (presumably without running any services on top of that).

    Man got to the moon with 20Kb RAM. If an OS needs 1Gb just to exist, that's got to be a pointer to a fundamental design issue.

    I've got a 128Mb 433MHz Celeron box, which runs Xubuntu quite happily, also. So it seems that I could run 8 of those for the RAM needed for a single workable Vista install.

    None of this points to Vista being a bloated steaming PoS? Are you sure? If it worked 2, 5, 10 years ago, why shouldn't it work now? The only significant change in the life of the PC was the 80386 CPU; other than that difference, I've got an IBM XT upstairs with 256Kb RAM. It can do word-processing and other office-based functions.

    There is no arms race.

    "My PC is bigger" is a concession to badly-written software, not an advertisement for it.

    --
    Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
    1. Re:throwing up my hands so high that I can't count by dreamchaser · · Score: 1

      You do not need more. His response was to someone who willingly upgraded to Vista. He didn't say you HAD to upgrade, just that doing so on a substandard machine was ill advised.

      Besides, the OP actually admitted to buying an emachine! That was his first mistake.

    2. Re:throwing up my hands so high that I can't count by sparkz · · Score: 1

      Willingly upgraded, sure. But to deride a 512Mb PC as being effectively obsolete? That makes no sense.

      Vista is a GUI upgrade at the expense of RAM and graphical processing power.

      PLEASE, somebody tell me I'm wrong.

      --
      Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
  122. Wanting Things to Fail..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All this semi-FUD reminds me of the O.J. Simpson trial. Remember that day, when they brought out the gloves found at the scene and asked O.J. to try to put the gloves on to see if they would fit? We all remember what happened next: O.J. looked like a blain-damaged dog, trying to put the gloves on over his splayed fingers and very quickly giving up.

    If we want anything to fail, we'll make sure it does. It's the way things go.

  123. Microsoft has decided by bl8n8r · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft has decided that Vista will work only with..." This is the core of the entire problem.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
  124. i like by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    how the words are HTML and not an image

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  125. As an added bonus... by gillbates · · Score: 1

    I can show the moderators what a sense of humor is! Come on, folks - you take yourselves too seriously...

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  126. Whine whine whine by notaprguy · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but you can criticize Microsoft for a lot of things but compatibility isn't one of them. If anything their obsessiveness with backwards compat is what has caused them so many problems. It's one of the downsides of being the dominant provider of operating systems - everyone has software and hardware for your platform. Now they have a new OS which has a significantly improved driver model - but still supports huge numbers of "legacy" devices - and this guy is abusing them because his silly porn-cam doesn't work?

  127. hrmph by Danzigism · · Score: 1
    first and foremost, i've always been a huge OSS and Un*x fan.. i use it on a daily basis.. once did some sys admining for a couple years.. and I stand by it through and through.. I run both Linux and FreeBSD at home, along with a bunch of other super old crappy computers that I plan to hang on to because I'm a technology pack rat.. i work for a small IT consulting company now, and work primarily with Windows of every flavor..

    i'm just getting pretty sick and tired of hearing people vista complaints.. haha.. i mean, if your computer sucks ass, then why try installing Vista? i've experienced this situation from several clients.. they think they're computer is capable of vista, and of course it's no where near close, and they waste $200+.. it takes some simple information gathering to determine whether or not your computer is capable of it.. and if it is, and Vista still fucks off on you, than there's something wrong with your computer, and it simply shouldn't be running Vista.. done.. end of story..

    despite the things Vista has copied off of OSX, the OS still works.. and I might add that it works quite well on a computer that is meant for it.. we all know how MS plays the game by now.. new OS, new computer, or upgrades..

    this shit has gotten so much negative news coverage it amazes me that people haven't figured it out yet..

    --
    *plays the Apogee theme song music*
  128. Vista, the Trap. by johnsmit90210 · · Score: 1

    I was talking to a friend of mine the other day about the aspects of this problem.

    I hope someone reads this, and takes away the basic reality of what's happening.

    Microsoft has between 60 and 70 thousand employees. Who enjoy great benefits including salary. They receive between 45 to 60 thousand job applications per month. Many people who work there are quite excited and satisfied to have a great job working with a company that makes between 13 and 14 billion dollars in profit annually.

    So enjoy the simplicity of what I have to say. The Microsoft Windows operating system was introduced almost 15 years ago and has enjoyed 10 or so versions since that time w/ numerous subversions and revisions. Microsoft is a huge infrastructure company with tens of thousands of partners who contribute global solutions that seemingly could meld together to revolutionize the world over.

    So how is it, given all these attributes and experience can a company who mainly specialize in a single core product spend an entire 5 years to release a product that only works on half of all PCs? A product that has people screaming incompatibility, refund, and not to mention curses in disgust at their wasted money and disappointment. Where have peoples minds gone? And why can't people tally the obvious facts of the matter?

    Why do the local news consumer revenge reporters go after Joe Sixpack down the road for ripping off some poor ol' lady, when Microsoft is stealing money on a daily basis with software that doesn't work and sports a 'no refund policy'. How can it be that the minimum requirements are met or exceeded, but the performance is far below stellar, whereby you actually pay again (for an upgrade) to have an improved 'Vista Experience'.

    Truly, Neanderthals would be able to see the strange injustice in these matters.

    "When you rob someone legally.. ..without risk, without sticking your neck out, that's immoral."
    -Sean Connery from 'Family Business'

  129. Re:This does it for me! by g-san · · Score: 1

    Paint features updated toolbar icons and default color palette. Also, unlimited undo levels and a crop function have been added.

    I am totally psyched!

  130. Firefly by neminem · · Score: 1

    Who cares about Ackbar? When I hear the word "trap", I think Firefly:
    Wash: "Inara...nice to see her again."

    Zoe: (beat) "So...trap?"

    Mal: "Trap."

    Zoe: "We goin' in?"

    Mal: "Ain't but a few hours out."

    Wash: (confused) "Yeah, but...remember the part where it's a trap?"

  131. keyboard and mouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tried installing Vista on my laptop ... otherwise it has everything necessary to run vista but it doesn't have a vista sticker...

    And guess what ... mouse and keyboard work during the install and during the first few seconds when the OS is run ... BUT after 10 seconds vista forgets where my LAPTOP-s keyboard and mouse are and they stop functioning .... so I had to use usb keyboard and mouse to do anything ...

    The manufacturer of the keyboard and mouse has the drivers ... but fujitsu doesn't provide support for vista for this laptop so I can't get those drivers anywhere...

    Meaning the stupidest thing ... I have a laptop with vista installed but keyboard and mouse don't work ... wohoo ... back to XP ...

  132. Re:Tagline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Secession is the right of all sentient beings."

    Tell that to Mr Colbert.

    There was a little problem with that theory in the 1860s.

  133. Deceptive trading by MS - false descriptions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't agree with you. MS is hard at work creating the impression that it takes not that much more in the way of resources to run Vista - which seems untrue on the basis of all I've read so far (which is a perfect match for what happened at about any version transition of Windows, only W95 to W98 was reasonable).

    The Microsoft provided Vista analyser told him to go ahead if he replaced a few things. He did, and still had problems as the problems with his internet connection and sound card were not flagged until it was too late - for most end users they would have already gone past the point where they could recover their old setup so they would be stuck with the problem.

    In the UK this means that, in principle, the product was misrepresented which is (AFIAK, IANAL) an offence known by UK trading standards as 'deceptive trading' - i.e. stating qualities/conditions a product doesn't have in order to sell it. IMHO he's 100% entitled to file a formal complaint, and I hope everyone else who's been suckered this way will do so too.

    I don't care about the OS so much if it wasn't for the eternal repeat of misery for innocent end users who get suckered in by all the promises and hype surrounding the product. It's easy for us to say that they shouldn't, but they walk into a glitzy computer shop with an (not unreasonable) expectation that they'll be sold a usable product. I think the definition of "usable" has yet again taken a almighty stretch in the case of upgrades - no news there.

  134. Somebody set up us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the bomb