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What Vista SP1 Means To You

An anonymous reader writes "Geek.com has an interview with Nick White, Microsoft's Vista Product Manager, covering the upcoming release of Vista SP1. The interview goes over some of the new features, how the change will affect admins, and how Microsoft decides if a change should be rolled out as an update or as part of the service pack. One of the most interesting questions asks whether people should feel that they have to wait until SP1 to upgrade to the operating system, a common practice with Windows users. White writes off this practice as no longer being necessary and notes how Windows Update has lessened the importance of the release of a service pack. Just the same, a News.com article explores the possibility that this update will finally begin driving users to Vista."

340 comments

  1. What Vista SP1 means to me by eln · · Score: 5, Funny

    Vista SP1 means fresh material to pick on Microsoft for. So now, instead of having a year of the same old "Vista sucks and is failing" articles on Slashdot day after day, we'll have fresh new material like "Vista SP1 sucks and is failing."

    1. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      What it means to me is enough freelance support work that I'll be able to afford a new Mac. On the downside, it's the IT equivalent of working with raw sewage.

    2. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by Shados · · Score: 1

      Ouch, several blue-screen/reboots per day? Vista seems to be a bit hit or miss, depending on what you install on it (especially drivers) and hardware...

      Ive used it since soon after release day, on multiple computers (many a few years old), and I have never, ever seen it crash or reboot. The occasional incompatible software, and crap like iTune/Quicktime that always mess up Windows bigtime (and at first the Vista compatibility was horrible for those), but aside that flawless.

      Now recently I got a new computer for work, and while it still never crash, the windows desktop crash a lot, but aside that its ok. From what I read/heard, it really tends to be something specific that causes problems... a crappy videocard or sound driver (which was all of em until recently, and then again), or a specific app...

      What sucks more than Vista ever will, is windows developer.

    3. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by S.O.B. · · Score: 1

      I for one welcome our raw sewage overlords.

      --
      Some of what I say is fact, some is conjecture, the rest I'm just blowing out my ass...you guess.
    4. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by DreadfulGrape · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm not discounting the possibility that there's just something in my self-built rig that Vista doesn't like. But I can't justify buying a new off-the-shelf Vista-certified PC, just to run Vista.

      I can always justify buying a new Mac, though :-)

      --
      sig has been sent away for a few small repairs...
    5. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by Columcille · · Score: 1

      "Vista SP1 means fresh material to pick on Microsoft for."

      Slashdotters ending sentences with prepositions means more material for a grammar Nazi* like me to pounce on and attack.

      (*Godwin's Law Wins Again!)

      --
      I love my sig.
    6. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by thebestnerd · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Vista Sp1 means " be a little more patient, Sp2 is just at the corner" sp1 : (S)o this is for those who have been waiting (P)atienly for (1) year sp2 : (S)o now (P)lease wait for another (2) years let us now hope that sp3 will not exist.. i guess id mean, " hopefully a new generation with the CRAPPY ( resources sucker ) OS saved!!!! "

    7. Re:What Vista SP1 means to me by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know. The same stale rhetoric we keep hearing on Slashdot about anything Microsoft. It gets so tiring to here the contributors and editors bitch and complain about an OS they've obviously never used. When I got my new laptop it came with Vista and I gotta say I love it. Is it a major revamp? No. But, it did keep me from installing Ubuntu which had been my plan. :)

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
  2. New features? by schwit1 · · Score: 1

    Didn't I just read in the Slashdot Vista news earlier "The service pack is said to improve performance and stability, not to add features."

    1. Re:New features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh noes! Call the Wambulance! Slashdot made an error in which it contradicted itself! The servers explode and spill hot grits all over Cowboy Neal!

    2. Re:New features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why this isn't a dupe

    3. Re:New features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Didn't I just read in the Slashdot Vista news earlier "The service pack is said to improve performance and stability, not to add features." Yes, very misleading. Performance and stability are the new features.
    4. Re:New features? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The servers explode and spill hot grits all over Cowboy Neal!

            Only in Soviet Russia. Here, it's the other way around. However I for one welcome our inaccurate duplicating slashdot...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re:New features? by kaiwai · · Score: 1

      My understanding was that when they said "no features" it means "no user visible features" - I am sure that since SP1 is based off Windows 2008 Server. There will be features that will be imported over from the server kernel that might help improve performance and reliability for Windows Vista, for example.

    6. Re:New features? by ILuvRamen · · Score: 1

      It's not even just a lack of features. It's downright not fixing things people hate! Is it gonna let me record from my sound card's stereo mixer to catch streaming music? NO! Is it gonna make my TV Tuner card work with it by magically creating a driver for it? NO! That's the vendor's problem. Is it gonna fix the networking problems between it and XP? No, that's not a bug, that's a feature! So basically the major reasons I didn't want to upgrade to Vista are all still there except now it's going to stop crashing and freezing a little? I'm not buying it just for that pathetic attempt.

      --
      Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
    7. Re:New features? by Windowser · · Score: 1

      Performance and stability are the new features.

      So the rumor is true then : Microsoft does copy Linux
      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
  3. it means by joeldg · · Score: 1

    I doubt it will "drive" users to vista saying previous service packs managed to drive users to buy iMac's and then MacBooks.

  4. What it means to me? by overshoot · · Score: 1
    You mean other than having to act sympathetic when cow-orkers gripe constantly?

    Hmmm -- nope. Nothing.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  5. What Vista SP1 Means to You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Unfortunately for Microsoft, Vista SP1 doesn't mean anything to the majority of computer users, and that trend is showing very little sign of changing. People that have been using Windows have been pretty happy with XP and Win2000. Surprising numbers of casual users still have '98. And increasing numbers of us are using something else entirely =)

    1. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by westlake · · Score: 4, Informative
      People that have been using Windows have been pretty happy with XP and Win2000. Surprising numbers of casual users still have '98. And increasing numbers of us are using something else entirely =)

      In round numbers, this is how the world looks to the web developer:

      Win XP 75%
      Unchanged since September 06

      W2K 6%
      Down 5% since September 06.
      W2K had little mass market exposure.

      Vista 4%
      Up from 0% in January 07
      It should be interesting to see how Vista fares in Back-To-School and Christmas sales. You will be much less of the warmed-over XP box and much more of the DX10 system realistically spec'd for Vista. To speak of Vista's "failure" in the marketplace is desperately premature, if not inane.

      OSX 4%
      Unchanged since January 05

      Linux 3%
      Unchanged since November 03
      However, the w3Schools stats suggest that Linux may be losing ground to the Mac and OSX.

      W98 1%
      Unchanged since August 06 OS Platform Statistics

    2. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In round numbers, this is how the world looks to the web developer:"

      I would think, in general, HTTP user agents would interest the web developer more that the hosting platform.

    3. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by c.r.o.c.o · · Score: 2, Informative

      I understand you're talking about round numbers, but Linux went from 2.6% to 3.4% since Nov 2003 and Mac went from 2.8% to 4% since Jan 2005. True, they are very small increases, however a good web developer cannot simply ignore 7.4% of their market. And I think the statistics you're quoting are not very relevant, because the browser dictates how the computer interacts with a site, not the OS.

      On the same site I found these statistics: http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.a sp

      The browser market is FAR more fragmented than the OS one, with every IE version and FF pretty much tied.

    4. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by BigBadBus · · Score: 1

      Have a look at my webstats for visiting OS's: http://www.paullee.com/computers/ - I'll be updating it in the next few days to take account of August's numbers, but theres no great change in the mumbers already there. What will be interesting is whether the Christmas period will perk up sales of Dell/Linux (I doubt it) and the post-Christmas period for Windows Vista SP 1 (slow uptake I guess)

    5. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by rapidweather · · Score: 1
      From the other statistics in the w3schools.com link


      Also surprised about Firefox's 34.5%, compared to 20.1% for IE7 and 36.9% for IE6.
      If it were not for the split between IE7 and IE6, which totals 57% between them, it would look like Firefox is doing really well.
      So, Firefox is 34.5% compared to 57% for the later versions of IE.
      Most of those Firefox installations are probably on Windows boxes, with IE available also.
      Linux users most likely use Firefox, but since their overall numbers are so low compared to the Windows installations, they don't add a lot to the Firefox total of 34.5%.
      The 1% of the OS totals for Windows 98 indicates to me that a lot of those boxes are still in use, but are dropping fast. Probably can't get on the internet anymore where they can be tracked. These boxes might be used as word processors, or game boxes, and not have to get on the internet, where 98's not safe anymore. There was a huge number of 98' machines at one time. They took Windows 95 off the list when it dropped below 0.1%.

    6. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

      I'd just like to point out that w3schools is an excellent site, but is biased in the direction of technically-minded people. In other words, those statistics aren't trustworthy in the least.

    7. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by davros-too · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Stats for a non-technical site with enough visitors to pick up meaningful statistics on less popular OS:

      All Mac variations 3.5%
      Linux 0.1%
      Symbian 0.01%
      Solaris 0.003%
      HP UX 0.001%
      BSD 0.0005%
      RISC OS 0.0002%
      CPM 0.0001% (still more than 100 hits per month)

      I thought this might be interesting as (a) a contrast to stats on OS usage derived from technically-oriented sites, and (b) just interesting to see some of the OS's still out there - I bet there's plenty of /.ers too young to remember CP/M.

      --
      In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice; in practice there is.
    8. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by westlake · · Score: 1
      I think the statistics you're quoting are not very relevant, because the browser dictates how the computer interacts with a site, not the OS.

      W3Schools also publishes stats on display resolution, color depth and so on.

      The web developer can't ignore the platform. If you are streaming media to a high-performance Vista Premium PC you need to know what its user expects in terms of sound and video.

    9. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by coryking · · Score: 1

      You just know that CPM guy is like one douchebag who changed his browser string. Hell, I've been temped to do exactly that (Say, Mozilla 4.0/Commodore PET 4048) just to throw off whoever checks their stats.

      My website seems to be about the same as others here. About 35% firefox and pretty much everything else IE excepting like 5% for opera. The very good news is that IE7 has now overtaken IE6 60% / 40%. Once IE6 gets to about 10% I'll dump trying to work around transparent PNGs... thank god!

    10. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check the user-agent for CPM, 100% probability it is Nutscrape. This is a Squid configuration.

    11. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      just remember when discussing this that w3schools primerally aims at web designers

      i'd imagine you will see far more older software and far less win2K (2K was really a buisness edition) in something aimed more at home users.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    12. Re:What Vista SP1 Means to You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh...
      I think Linux users are more than 3%...
      just because all my linux boxes results in "other" when I try those web-os-check.

      and what about that 7% left?
      are you sure it's all bsd, unix and other? if Linux is 3% i dubt it...

  6. Value proposition by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, with the service pack you're finally getting a stable product? Where's the value for all the money you're laying out? Pay hundreds of dollars, put up with anal probe product activation and wait almost a year for what you should have gotten in the first place.

    I'm sure that makes sense on some planet...just not this one.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Value proposition by cliffski · · Score: 3, Insightful

      if they didn't fix bugs you would whine. they are fixing them, and you whine. Does no distro of linux have any bugs right now?
      welcome to slashdot I guess *sigh*

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    2. Re:Value proposition by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think you need to stop looking at things as black and white. Its not "stable vs. unstable." Personally, I've not had a single Vista OS crash since I started using it. So its been very stable for me. I think that covers most Vista users actually.

      The presense of bugs or unstability in some computers does not mean its not a value to most; even those affected by the bugs may see value depending on the severity of the bugs. Some may be annoying, but taken as a whole, the product is of value to them.

      I'm not sure where you're going with your activation complaint; its seems to me to be the exact same thing that WinXP activation is, and it wasn't any more intrusive than XP.

    3. Re:Value proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it's psychology. A lot of people said they'd hold off until SP1 was released. Here comes SP1 over the horizon. So this means the annoyances are all fixed right? and everything's cool now right? So all the people who said they'd wait for stable-bugfix'd Vista will run out and get it... Not that anything is necessarily fixed, but if I were MS I'd put out SP1 ASAP without trying to look like we're panicking. Oh well I'll continue to sit on the sideline with my OSX and Linux and eat popcorn and watch the show...

    4. Re:Value proposition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like a similar argument could be made about Apple's hardware products. First gen Apple products, for all their innovations and anti-aliased fonts, tend to suck. Things start going right from second gen onward.

      Why they and Microsoft continue to do this is because putting out unstable new shite early and getting the early adopters (and all the problems it comes with) is better than appearing stagnant and slow.

    5. Re:Value proposition by coryking · · Score: 1

      Does no distro of linux have any bugs right now? Yes, but see, yeah.. see you can theoreticaly um, you know, fix those if you like wanted to. I mean, if you are like, you know, too lazy to learn codebase for the Linux kernel (I learned it in 3 days, it is easy, you guys in c# (i mean c flat, right guys!?) with your IDE's just slow it all down!!), it isn't my problem linux has bugs. M$ has a monopoly on the computer, so they dont have to fix bugs because otherwise, they couldn't charge $200 for a license (with evil activiation) instead of free like linux. I mean, they ram the OS down everybodies through (for $200) and keep our Free Linux systems under wraps!

      You use it, you owe it to the world to fix it yourself! YOu are an idiot if you can't patch kernel bugs in vim after two days. Hell my grandma just patched a bug in GIMP and was able to get back to doing production artwork for cereal boxes (they all use RGB down at the printer... CMYK is for PHB's and their brocure ware). Just yesterday, my four year old son fixed an SQL injection bug in Tux Racer. If my four year old son can fix that, you really are an idiot! .... did I get anywhere close?
    6. Re:Value proposition by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      Ha! Your son and your granny are chumps! I taught my dog to code, and now it can patch any bug in any program. If I find a bug, I just call my dog and it will fix it for a Bonio.

  7. Waiting for the SP by just_another_sean · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mr. White's assertions aside, IMHO, MS is releasing this service pack as early as possible to entice people into believing Vista is "ready". The practice in the industry to wait for the first few updates is to firmly entrenched for them to simply "write it off".

    And in my experience, lest my FOSS bias shine through, the idea of waiting for the first few updates goes for most software, not just Windows or other MS software.

    --
    Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    1. Re:Waiting for the SP by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      That doesn't just got for software. It goes for hardware in many cases, too.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    2. Re:Waiting for the SP by El+Lobo · · Score: 2, Interesting
      So if they deploy the SP later, then they have a lot of problems or just don't care for the users. If they deploy it early, they just want the people think the system is ready... So they can't win, can they?

      On the other hand if Apple deploy some patchs later, they are just getting sure that everything is fixed right, and if they deploy them early, then wow! they are just blazing fast to help their users! oh well....

      --
      It's time to realise that Abble's products are the biggest abomination these days. Just say NO to the dumb iAbble way!!
    3. Re:Waiting for the SP by UncleFluffy · · Score: 0, Troll

      So if they deploy the SP later, then they have a lot of problems or just don't care for the users. If they deploy it early, they just want the people think the system is ready... So they can't win, can they?

      Well, they could. There's always the option of not shipping broken code in the first place.

      --

      What would Lemmy do?

    4. Re:Waiting for the SP by Kjella · · Score: 1

      There are a few things that are certain:
      1. When doing major rewrites, you *will* cause regressions. At least if you don't have a budget where millions is petty cash.
      2. No matter how much testing you do, users will find ways to break it which you never imagined.

      I do seem to recall a few OSS releases where they basicly admitted "yes, we're releasing now even though we know it's not gold, but we need more testers". It's all down to the risk/reward ratio, there's always a bunch of power users who won't be "beta testers" - you can hear the stigma - but they're willing to test the latest bleeding edge release. If you're a big company and it's a support function, you're more risk-adverse with good reason. If you look at something like RHEL, SNES, Debian stable, Ubuntu LTS etc. they don't carry fresh releases either. Quite frankly, any business jumping to get on Vista right after release they're not quite sane, service pack or not.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:Waiting for the SP by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      ...the idea of waiting for the first few updates goes for most software, not just Windows...
      I've often said I wouldn't take the dot zero release of eternal life...
      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    6. Re:Waiting for the SP by El+Lobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmmm.. and ....who does that? Please enlight me, because i don't know any OS or even a single complex program that gets it's right without patch from day one.

      --
      It's time to realise that Abble's products are the biggest abomination these days. Just say NO to the dumb iAbble way!!
    7. Re:Waiting for the SP by Playdohead · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has a studied history in early announcements on future product availability. It's a part of their product and marketing philosophy. Customers want fabulous feature (X) available now or in the near future from competing product? Issue press release detailing feature (X)'s prominence in next release coming "real soon now". (Then deliver some two, three, or four release later) Here we have a case that is no different. Unwashed masses (and unwashed admins) waiting for a service pack? Issue press release detailing service pack coming "real soon now". Unwashed masses breath sigh of relief knowing Microsoft is on it! Unwashed sys admins know better...

    8. Re:Waiting for the SP by UncleFluffy · · Score: 1

      Please enlight me, because i don't know any OS or even a single complex program that gets it's right without patch from day one.

      Well:

      It's a matter of degree - although all code has bugs, some organisations tend to produce code that is far buggier (both in terms of quantity and seriousness of bugs.

      Code that is expected to have bugs is usually marked "beta". Shipping known-buggy code without marking it as "beta" is dishonest.

      Usually, beta testers are rewarded for their work. With Microsoft (and a lot of other companies, especially in the PC games field), people have to pay for the privilege.

      Different quality expectations apply to code that is given away for free ("here, I wrote this - it might be useful to you, grab a copy if you want it") and code that is sold ("you give me X, I will give you software that does Y" implies that the software actually does Y and not Z).

      Besides, if you look at your original post, you said "they can't win" - my response is that, if they could figure out how to ship non-buggy code, they would win - which is something I believe that a lot of people would agree to.

      --

      What would Lemmy do?

    9. Re:Waiting for the SP by cnettel · · Score: 1

      You don't pay to take part in the MS technical betas, and you could download the later Vista betas for free as well. You can pay to get physical discs, or as part of MSDN/TechNet, though, but that is something else. The betas are not the center of those programs.

    10. Re:Waiting for the SP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      El Lobo, have you been on a vacation? The trolls here are just not the same without your (+5 Insightful) anti-FOSS babble.

    11. Re:Waiting for the SP by UncleFluffy · · Score: 1

      My point is that Vista is, and pre-SP1 XP was, of a quality that would conventionally be referred to as a "beta", despite MS charging real money for them.

      --

      What would Lemmy do?

    12. Re:Waiting for the SP by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      I think that's the advantage of release early, release often. More bugs found earlier. Consistent, constant progress measurement. Lets you know just how many updates after which you really want to adopt a product.

    13. Re:Waiting for the SP by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      The next business practice will be "Wait for R2"...

    14. Re:Waiting for the SP by WhoBeDaPlaya · · Score: 1

      It's the RDF man ;)

  8. What Vista SP1 Means To Me... by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

    It means there is only one more service pack to go before I might consider thinking about adopting it.

    --
    Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    1. Re:What Vista SP1 Means To Me... by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      It means there is only one more service pack to go before I might consider thinking about adopting it. Yep, and then after that it will be time to upgrade again, er, I mean wait for the second service pack for their next OS to come out that is.
      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
  9. To me it's too little too late. by casualsax3 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    After flirting with Ubuntu on my laptop for about a year, and using Vista at home on my desktop for about 6 months I've had it, and I'll be switching the desktop to Linux as soon as I get some spare time.

    1. Re:To me it's too little too late. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      This will not be popular here but my experience was exactly the opposite. I was a happy Ubuntu user for the most part but never looked back after trying Vista. I like Vista and can't imagine switching any time soon.

      The couple games I play run great. Making and burning dvd movies could not be simpler. The media center is awesome. The voice recognition is amazing and saves me a lot of typing since I can just dictate to my computer now using a headset. The dvd making software, voice/speech abilites and media center all came with Vista! No messing with a bunch of different purchases to do things with my PC that should be easy now in 2007.

      My computer has only locked up one time with vista - that was during a vmware uninstall.

    2. Re:To me it's too little too late. by AaxelB · · Score: 1

      I'm not contesting the content of your comment at all, your testimony sounds solid, but whenever anybody in any year says anything like "It should be easy now in @YEAR" they just sound silly, especially in retrospect.

      "It's 1997! I shouldn't have to tie my own shoes anymore!"
      "It's 1905! Why am I still jerking myself off?"

    3. Re:To me it's too little too late. by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      No messing with a bunch of different purchases to do things with my PC that should be easy now in 2007. I know. I just *hate* having to 'purchase' things (free) by typing "apt-get install (application)". I have to do that all the time in Ubuntu. Frickin' Ubuntu purchases.
    4. Re:To me it's too little too late. by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      "It's 1997! I shouldn't have to tie my own shoes anymore!" Hey, speak for yourself, I don't tie my shoes. Velcro: the lazy man's shoe. ;)
      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
  10. BitLocker quote from article by Benanov · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From TFA:

    "If you're an administrator, then you definitely have a lot more to look forward to when it comes to SP1. One thing that caught my eye was the additional ability in BitLocker to encrypt extra local volumes. Many enterprises still partition their workstations and laptops into a C and D drive. Since users are usually instructed to use the D drive to store their data, this means data was at risk if the enterprise also used BitLocker as a security measure, since D couldn't be previously encrypted."

    Wait. Only C: could be locked? Full of fail.

    1. Re:BitLocker quote from article by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      Since BitLocker requires a computer with a TPM chip, I'm not surprised nobody noticed this.

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    2. Re:BitLocker quote from article by W2k · · Score: 1
      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
  11. From TFA: by khasim · · Score: 1

    That being said, the message for Windows Vista SP1 is don't expect new features, but some components do gain new functionality.

    So ... the new "functionality" will not be a new "feature".

    I guess we're going to have to re-write the old "it's not a bug, it's a feature".

    Meanwhile, we'll be seeing new bugs in the new "functionality" that is not a new "feature".
    1. Re:From TFA: by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      New features, my shiny pink ass. I want an operating system that runs Sonar and Premiere and Eve-Online, and runs them fast and with little hassle. I want an operating system that doesn't snoop on me or limit my ability to manipulate the data on my machine in any way I desire. I want an operating system that doesn't pretend to know what's good for me better than I do myself, and I want an operating system that uses my computing resources efficiently.

      In other words, I either want an updated XP Pro or OSX that will run on my own sweet hardware.

      In regards to Microsoft's "commitment to Service Pack 3", I've got a sick feeling that XP SP3 is going to try to basically bolt on most of the horrible shit in Vista onto my XP system. Microsoft's clearly pissed that we haven't embraced their wonderful new OS and they're going to try to shove it down our throats.

      I think what I really want is a third professional, commercial operating system that will run my software and light a fire under MS and Apple, perhaps convincing them that it's worthwhile to actually consider what their customers want. Their ability to make fat profits while ignoring customer satisfaction is not the way the "free market system" is supposed to work, and it speaks volumes about the disdain corporate America has for the rest of us.

      I make a living using software that runs on XP Pro. But I am so sick of having companies like Microsoft disregard the desires of "the market" and act like the monopoly they are that not using Vista has become as much a political act than it is a consumer decision.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    2. Re:From TFA: by mrraven · · Score: 1

      I am honestly surprised the Chinese haven't come up with an OS with the best features of OS X, Windows, and Linux based on BSD and stuck it on a 299 desktop computer with the power of a mac mini. Imagine how many of those they'd sell. I'd buy one...

      --
      Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
  12. What does it mean to me? by Archimonde · · Score: 1

    Maybe a massive bugfix so I can install and use it finally? Or is this just a small patch to an OS going down in history as a Windows ME Second edition

    --
    Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    1. Re:What does it mean to me? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      ME was rushed out the door to placate those that wanted a new windows but couldn't wait for Xp. There's no major shift here like going from DOS to NT was, and the next desktop OS is scheduled for a few years now... so I don't see this being the same as ME.

  13. Two SP1 stories in one day? by Arathon · · Score: 2, Informative

    This seems semi-ridiculous.

    But I'll say the same thing here that I did last time. Basically, the reason that SP1 isn't as big as deal as a "Service Pack" normally is, is that the two "main" updates that will provide a different end-user experience have already been released.

    The main "other" thing that SP1 will offer, which apparently wasn't confirmed by Nick White's post, is Paul Thurrott's statement (echoed by others, but which he has now stepped back from until he can get confirmation) that Vista SP1 will include a kernel update to 6.1. This would be the same kernel that will be in Windows Server 2008.

    1. Re:Two SP1 stories in one day? by everphilski · · Score: 0, Troll

      Despite being touted as "news for nerds" (which is a joke, half the articles aren't, but whatever) and the perennial hangout site of open-source nerds, said open-source nerds still, for some reason, still find the need to cling on every word that comes from Redmond. I don't know why. Might make an interesting doctoral dissertation for a sociology major or something.

      karma be damned!

    2. Re:Two SP1 stories in one day? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re:Two SP1 stories in one day? ***WARNING**** Maybe you were unaware, but /. is a MS-Shill

  14. put a gun to the ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Put a gun to the ball

    My friend Bastille.

    But that ball ain't a ball

    Irony can only forstall

    Knowing that which a clever little word trick cannot reveal.

  15. Yawn... Another MS advert in disguise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "One of the most interesting questions asks if whether people should feel like that have to wait until SP1 to upgrade to the operating system, "

    Interesting question? You seriously need a life.

    And what was the anticipated answer? "Speaking as the product Manager I seriously recommend you don't upgrade to it until we manage to fix it up."

    Wanna buy a bridge?

  16. ROFL by Abcd1234 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yeah, I know everyone I talk to has been saying the only reason they don't switch to Vista is because there's no service pack out for it. Yup, it definitely has nothing to do with shoddy driver support from 3rd party manufacturers, or things like UAC. It's definitely been the lack of a service pack.

    Honestly, is this seriously what passes of journalism these days??

    1. Re:ROFL by jayhawk88 · · Score: 1

      The practice of "waiting for the first SP", while perhaps somewhat of a misnomer in most cases, is well founded in the IT world (that deals with MS products anyway), so it's not exactly the dumbest question ever. Granted there are many other reasons not to switch to Vista yet (legacy application compatibility being chief among them), but I promise you there are quite a few IT shops out there who took the attitude of "Well we'll wait until SP1 and see" when it came to the question of moving the infrastructure to Vista.

    2. Re:ROFL by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, but I just don't buy it. People don't switch to Vista because of:

      1) hardware compatibility issues,
      2) software compatibility issues, and
      3) annoyances such as UAC, which negatively impact hinder the user experience (though, I do understand their utility).

      In a corporate setting, the first two are, without question, show stoppers, and the last is a burden for support staff. Further, XP *works* for most people, so there's little reason to switch. A service pack for Vista does nothing to address these issues (nor could it).

    3. Re:ROFL by R_Dorothy · · Score: 1

      ...there are quite a few IT shops out there who took the attitude of "Well we'll wait until SP1 and see" when it came to the question of moving the infrastructure to Vista.

      This is my experience of the attitude of bad IT shops. The ones I respect take the form follows function approach - if there is a compelling functional reason to upgrade then that will be the driver, not some arbitrary line in the sand. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

      --
      Stupid flounders!
    4. Re:ROFL by jayhawk88 · · Score: 1

      Note that I didn't say that SP1 would be the reason for a switch, only that a switch would only be considered after SP1. I would imagine most shops are like mine; when a new OS comes out we look at it, techs like me run it first as test machines then eventually as main machines, and eventually (read: when MS pretty much forces us) we move the campus to it, in the interests of keeping a standard desktop environment. Though actually we are probably going to take an "upgrade by attrition" approach this time around, because of Vista's insane hardware requirements.

    5. Re:ROFL by sootman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Q: Microsoft's biggest competition is...
      1) Linux
      2) Mac OS X
      3) Old MS products
      The correct answer is 'C'. I know a company that is *very* Microsoft-centric. Last year they were announcing ambitious plans to move to Vista as soon as possible. Not only are they still on XP, they evidently now have no plans to move to Vista. I guess a cold dose of reality was enough to bring them to their senses.

      MS is facing two problems with regard to Vista adoption: 1) Vista mostly sucks* and 2) XP is mostly OK. Either one would be an obstacle. Both together are nearly insurmountable.

      In the next 2-3 years, I predict...
      - most apps will work OK on Vista
      - driver issues will have been worked out
      - another service pack or two will shave off all the rough edges--they'll fix that networking/multimedia issue, they'll have better default settings so UAC isn't as annoying, etc.
      - OEM hardware with Vista will work pretty well

      Basically, they'll get past the current state of Vista having "no redeeming merits to overcome the compatibility headaches it causes." But I really do think that will take 2-3 years, and it'll be interesting to see what MS does in that time. I'm sure Vista will eventually be the dominant OS, but I think it'll take that long--which is too bad, because spam simply will not go away until the bulk of the boxes on the Internet are not insecure Windows systems. (Of course, if Mac OS X or Linux wins, that'll be fine too.) MS really screwed up, though. Once Vista was spiraling out of control, they should have pulled back and did what Apple did with OS X--release a whole new OS with the old OS in a VM. That way they could have had a relatively cruft-free OS with the old crufty stuff contained in a VM, rather than making the single largest collection of cruft ever.

      * where "mostly sucks" means "some things that used to work are now broken, and the things that are new and work aren't really that great."

      --
      Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    6. Re:ROFL by R_Dorothy · · Score: 1

      Note that my comment wasn't directed at you - why so defensive? ;-)

      Seriously though, it was directed at the people on here who give the appearance of genuinely holding the "don't trust a M$ OS until SP1" view. Fortunately I no longer have to support Microsoft systems (having cut my teeth on WFW3.11/NT3.51) and I have to say this attitude regarding SP1 being the first point at which a Microsoft OS magically becomes worth considering because of some long running historical precedent doesn't fit my recollection.

      Staying clear of being an early adopter, on the other hand, is nothing new and certainly not Microsoft - or even computing - specific.

      --
      Stupid flounders!
    7. Re:ROFL by weicco · · Score: 1

      What's so annoying in UAC? I haven't seen it for about three months now. I know it's lurking somewhere in my Vista since it asked me some admin password when I was doing admin stuff but now when I've installed every software I need I haven't seen it for a while. "Out of sight, out of mind" doesn't work these days?

      --
      You don't know what you don't know.
    8. Re:ROFL by DarkEmpath · · Score: 1

      What? You're kidding, aren't you?

      Annoyances such as UAC can be dealt with now, and any half competent support staffer already would have.

      Software compatibilities CAN be dealt with via updates, such as a service pack, and have many times in the past. This is one of the dumbest comments I've read on Slashdot from someone who can spell.

      Hardware compatibility issues on the other hand, take time. Drivers and support will come, eventually.

      One out of three. But keep trying.

    9. Re:ROFL by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      1) hardware compatibility issues,
      this can work the other way too, getting XP to work properly on a laptop that only ships with vista drivers can be rather difficult.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    10. Re:ROFL by krenaud · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I just don't buy it. People don't switch to Vista because of:

      1) hardware compatibility issues,
      2) software compatibility issues, and
      3) annoyances such as UAC, which negatively impact hinder the user experience (though, I do understand their utility). 4. Abysmal performance when copying files to/from network shares.
      5. CPU-hogging audio-subsystem
    11. Re:ROFL by Jarik_Tentsu · · Score: 1

      Though, XP SP1 was a positive change. I remember back when everyone was swearing by 2000 and wouldn't switch to XP...until SP1.

      So we can always be optimistic and hope for the best...o.O

      Maybe the increase in popularity will cause more drivers and more applications being written for it.

      ~Jarik

    12. Re:ROFL by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Well sure, but who would do that? :) In a corporate setting, you're far more likely to see either 1) businesses demanding XP preloaded on new hardware they purchase (we're already seeing companies like Dell backing away from their plans to remove XP from their preload options), or 2) a very gradual migration to Vista as hardware is cycled.

    13. Re:ROFL by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      I saw it happen at the university of manchester recently (where they really don't want vista to be used at the momemnt due to compatibility issues with various internal stuff). The machine in question was a sony vaio and the person doing the build eventually got everything except the modem and the fingerprint scanner to work under XP but he was struggling with it for quite some time (and this person was not a newbie he does machine builds all the time).

      At the university they have a site upgrade/downgrade license so normal practice is to buy the machine with the cheapest windows version the OEM offers and then install XP pro on it (images are used where a lot of identical machines are bought but often academics have thier own ideas about what machines they want ;) ). Unfortunately people sometimes forget to check hardware compatibility first ;).

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    14. Re:ROFL by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

      I am sorry, I couldn't read your whole comment. I was stuck looking for reason C on the quiz part.

      On a serious point, I did read the whole thing and agree.

  17. Bloat? by Thyamine · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wow, I didn't know you could remove bloat with a Service Pack.

    --
    I will shred my adversaries. Pull their eyes out just enough to turn them towards their mewing, mutilated faces. Illyria
    1. Re:Bloat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I didn't know you could remove bloat with a Service Pack. Did you not see the part in the last article about SP1 being a >1GB download and requiring >7GB of disk space?
    2. Re:Bloat? by Buelldozer · · Score: 1

      I believe that the service pack formats the drive and installs Ubuntu.

  18. What it means to me...... by Hanging+By+A+Thread · · Score: 1

    Hopefully by the time I'm forced into using Vista, SP1 and the other SP's will be included on the Vista disc.

  19. It means "XP" to me by langelgjm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'll tell you what it means to me - Windows XP 64-bit. I "upgraded" to Vista early in the summer, and I kept telling myself through all the headaches that I'd just wait it out until SP1. Now that that's not until next year, I've decided I'm no longer waiting. Instead, I'm switching to XP 64-bit, which appears to have a lot more driver support than the last time I tried it. There's no way I'm going to wait until Q1 2008 for a service pack that might fix my issues, especially if, according to Microsoft, service packs are less important now that Windows Update is widely used.

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    1. Re:It means "XP" to me by _xeno_ · · Score: 2

      There's no way I'm going to wait until Q1 2008 for a service pack that might fix my issues, especially if, according to Microsoft, service packs are less important now that Windows Update is widely used.

      Huh? Service packs are less important now. A service pack is essentially just a collection of patches. Before the Internet was widely used, these patches would be distributed on floppy and later CD. Now you can just download the patches immediately. These days, a service pack is just a large download, along with the CD option for people who don't want to download a giant collection of patches. (Or, if Vista SP1 is going to be as large as Microsoft seems to be suggesting, a DVD option.)

      It's not like Microsoft is not releasing bug fixes until Q1 2008, they're continuously releasing them through Windows Update. Vista has been improving as they release patches - although the one that effected me the most was the Intel microcode patch. Now games randomly crash back to the desktop instead of randomly blue-screening.

      If you've already paid for Windows Vista, you might as well keep using it. Microsoft isn't holding back on bug fixes - they're coming out (constantly) through Windows Update. Of course, if you're still using Windows XP, there's really no reason to upgrade unless you really like shiny things.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    2. Re:It means "XP" to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's sad that you got modded up, but at least the moderator was smart enough to use "underrated" to prevent from being M2ed for modding up crap.

      It's not like Microsoft is not releasing bug fixes until Q1 2008

      RTFA. That's exactly what's happening. Straight from the article, straight from Microsoft's product manager himself:

      SP1's purpose is not primarily as a feature-delivery vehicle but as a way to improve the user experience and enhance it in some areas.
       
      ... On the other hand, security may be a greater concern, and numerous I.T. professionals and system administrators have provided ideas for enhancing the security advances fundamental to Windows Vista. Among these was the ability to extend BitLocker encryption beyond the bootable volume to other partitions on your hard disk, as made possible by SP1.

       
      :headdesk:

      Yes, that's right, you'll have to wait until Q1 2008 to be able to encrypt more than one partition. Read the whitepaper they link to: it provides a nice list of the bug fixes you'll have to wait to get.

    3. Re:It means "XP" to me by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 2, Informative

      vista is better at 64 bit then xp is good luck finding drivers all of your hardware for xp 64bit.

    4. Re:It means "XP" to me by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      sorry dude but you're wrong.

      Vista 64 is far superior to XP 64, the driver support and 'stuff ups' are just too many, XP 64 was a failure and will remain so.
      It will never be properly supported and what support you have now, you can't count on in the future.

      Vista 64 however is going to get better, my estimation is within 36 months Vista 64 being virtually identical to Vista 32 in usability, the drivers will be good, stuff will be 'tweaked out' and fixed and it'll work - including those new games and apps which require 4 or more gb.

      I will not deny for a second, Vista itself is still total garbage, I really really dislike it and I much prefer XP but if you ARE going 64bit and simply need it, Vista is the better option.

      XP 64, like ME is one of those things most of us don't even remember exists.

    5. Re:It means "XP" to me by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 1

      Vista 64 however is going to get better, my estimation is within 36 months Vista 64 being virtually identical to Vista 32 in usability, the drivers will be good, stuff will be 'tweaked out' and fixed and it'll work - including those new games and apps which require 4 or more gb.

      36 months is 3 frigging years !!!

      Wow, even Debian64 went from non-existent to stable in about half that time, and Debian isn't known for the fastest release cycle. Oh, and all (18,000+) of the user applications got ported during that time, as well.

      Seems like you have pretty low expectations for MS...

      --
      A house divided against itself cannot stand.
    6. Re:It means "XP" to me by langelgjm · · Score: 1

      36 months is 3 frigging years !!!

      I think he meant to say 3 to 6 months, but left out the dash. Still, I've already waited about three months (and Vista has been out much longer than that), and the problems remain.

      --
      "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    7. Re:It means "XP" to me by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      This is slashdot, would a Microsoft apologist come here? I doubt it!

      No, I'm a realist.

      Vista 32 might be 'usable' in 18 months but then around that time we'll all be starting to genuinely need 64bit, hitting that wall - fortunately Vista 64 is there WAITING to be exploited, patched, bettered and you'll soon see us all using it.

      It's like the gamers who went from 98 to Win2k, the first part was hell, but eventually it was all good.

  20. Fuck you microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    White writes off this practice as no longer being necessary

          Sure, it's no longer necessary because the OS will STILL be a piece of shit after the service pack.

  21. For me it means... by bealzabobs_youruncle · · Score: 1

    I get to continue feeling happy about my Fedora box.

  22. To me, a Slashdot reader... by jkrise · · Score: 2, Interesting

    it means that we will have a flood of articles about Vista SP1, just like the initial flood of Vista articles. Seeing as there's now 2 articles already inside an hour.... I shudder to think how many we will see until March 2008.. or whenever SP1 comes out.

    What can someone be xpected to say about a mere Statement of Intent from Microsoft, about a Service Pack.... which right thinking people would expect a big comapny to release RIGJHT NOW and solve teething troubles faced by Vista users daily?

    The schedule for SP1 indicates MS is under zero pressure to deliver anything or do anything innovative. No point fantasizing about it.

    --
    If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
    1. Re:To me, a Slashdot reader... by fsmunoz · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I'm waiting for a "GPL violation found in Vista SP1 running of an Apple laptop" story. Should be fun.

    2. Re:To me, a Slashdot reader... by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      The schedule for SP1 indicates MS is under zero pressure to deliver anything or do anything innovative. No point fantasizing about it.
      The SP1 schedule doesn't indicate that at all. If anything, they are under a lot of pressure to deliver SP1, since so many people out there distrust recently released software, Windows especially. I would say that the schedule says that there is a lot of work to be done to make Vista attractive to potential consumers.
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  23. early? by Sadsfae · · Score: 0

    Isn't it a bit early for a SP1 compared to the release date of XP and it's first SP1? .. or Windows 2000 SP1?

    --
    Have a squat over at the hobo house.
    1. Re:early? by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      No, i would say, it is too late.
      They should have added SP1 to the initial release.

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
  24. Nothing by fishthegeek · · Score: 1

    Products that start their lives perceived as having a very high suck factor will end their lives with much the same perception. There is little that can be done once a products suck level (read: consumer perception) has been determined.

    --
    load "$",8,1
    1. Re:Nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Apparently it did, otherwise you wouldn't be rambling on about how cool you are to not use software from Microsoft.

  25. Re:It means they shipped a buggy product by El+Lobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you are saying that everybody ships unready products. These days everybody have patchs. Some calls it Service Packs, others call it updates, others just patchs, and finally other call it Leopard ;-)

    --
    It's time to realise that Abble's products are the biggest abomination these days. Just say NO to the dumb iAbble way!!
  26. one step closer to ... by boxlight · · Score: 2, Funny
    Vista SP1 will be one step closer to a Windows that's as good as Mac OS X.


    Just like Windows eventually caught up to Mac with Windows95 and then exceeded it with Windows 2000, Microsoft will once again catch up to Mac OS X with an eventual improved version of Vista that looks and feels as good.


    When that time comes Apple faithful will rant "Mac's had that for 5 years!" and it won't matter anymore. Apple had better get innovating the next major killer features fast, because Microsoft is always improving.

    1. Re:one step closer to ... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 2

      Vista SP1 will be one step closer to a Windows that's as good as Mac OS X. I don't know, for my money, Windows is (and has always been) BETTER than Mac OS. I guess I'm probably in the minority, but damn it, I don't want the OS of my choice to become like its competition, turning away from the things I liked about it.
      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:one step closer to ... by GnarlyDoug · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Next killer features from Apple are coming out in October. At the rate that Microsoft is 'innovating' it will take them five to ten years just to get the next major OS out, let alone catch up to OS X.

      For the record, I'm both an MCSD and MCSE and I was nearly an MCT as well. My Microsoft creds are among the best you will ever find. Let me now say that you don't know what you are talking about. It doesn't matter how many service packs Microsoft releases for Vista. The Windows API, the registry, security, and the underlying Windows architecture are all obsolete and in many places busted. They can't just 'fix' these problems because they are part of the whole Windows paradigm. Applications written to Windows rely on them and so Microsoft cannot change of fix them without totally breaking all the programs written for their operating systems. They can never catch up to OS X with Vista because Vista is not a solid enough foundation for them to do so with. You are not going to see history repeat itself. Microsoft is in deep trouble here because they let their Windows and Office code bases basically rot for ten years and now both are looking tired. This isn't something that can be fixed quickly. It will take Microsoft years to retool and get back on the right track, and time is no longer on their side.

    3. Re:one step closer to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a Mac hater until the day OS X came out.

    4. Re:one step closer to ... by Xtifr · · Score: 0

      > Just like Windows eventually caught up to Mac with Windows95

      Hahaha! Yeah, right! I'm no fan of the Mac, and seriously disliked the pre-OS/X systems, which lived in a horrid little incompatible world of their own, but the one thing the old Macs did offer was some serious advantages in UI design that neither MS nor anyone else has come close to matching, ever. Apple took a step backwards in UI cleanliness when they moved to OS/X, but they more than made up for it (IMO) with the improvements in compatibility and the elegance of the underlying architecture. Since it was a mild step backwards at the UI level, you could claim that MS somewhat caught up at that point, but it would be a completely misleading characterization of the events, since it had nothing to do with MS's actions.

      As for Vista, I haven't looked at it in any great depth yet, but what I have seen suggests that MS is falling into the same trap as a lot of Unix and Linux systems: thinking that surface gloss and "gee-whiz" eye-candy features are the same as actual user-interface improvements. MS is going to need some much more fundamental changes before they can be reasonably described as catching up with Apple in any meaningful sense.

    5. Re:one step closer to ... by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 0, Redundant

      What? This is an abomination! How did this get modded up?! Did the moderator actually read the comment? I guess he must've missed the part where the parent said windoze is better than Mac OSX! Flamebait! Troll! Offtopic! Redundant! :)

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    6. Re:one step closer to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually HATE the UI in Mac OS. Both classic and OS X. I just can't live with one menu bar for all my apps. It drives me up the wall. I have no idea how people find that easier to use? Maybe I've just been an OS/2, Windows, and Linux user for too long? lol

  27. when will people stop believing MS? by whoever57 · · Score: 1

    Seriously,
    Vista was supposed to be released in ?
    Vista was proclaimed as ready... oops

    How many times do people have to be fooled before they realise that the next release from MS will also be a disappointment?

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    1. Re:when will people stop believing MS? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      How many times do people have to be fooled before they realise that the next release from MS will also be a disappointment?

      Remember, we are talking about the same people who have come to accept system crashes as a fact of life.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    2. Re:when will people stop believing MS? by turgid · · Score: 1

      As long as all new PeeCees come with Windows installed, the Average Person will continue to believe that Microsoft Windows (and associated applications) is "the best."

      They've got 11 year old kids coming home from school extolling the virtues of Power Point and Dream Weaver.

      Microsoft has won. Game over.

    3. Re:when will people stop believing MS? by Just+because+I'm+an · · Score: 1
      Apparently they also have managed to get people to believe software not made by them... is made by them.

      Actually looking at this it seems they're making a good fist of doing the same with hardware.

    4. Re:when will people stop believing MS? by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Please, I haven't had crashes in XP for many years and the only crashes in Vista that I had was due to a faulty bios setting. it's been damn stable for the 9 weeks I've been using it.

      The only gripe I have is that they moved a lot of stuff around, but I'll get used to that, no biggy.

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
  28. A message from raw sewage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    On the downside, it's the IT equivalent of working with raw sewage.

    We, the raw sewage community, take umbrage with that remark.

    1. Re:A message from raw sewage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My family has had to go without umbrage for months, you insensitive clod!

  29. On the Issue of Windows Update by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Historically, Microsoft's service packs have brought bigger changes than mere patches. With XP, SP2 changed and added a lot of things despite having had Windows Update available for years.

  30. The "benefits to administrators" are interesting.. by Enleth · · Score: 0
    From TFA:

    Benefits of SP1 for administrators include the ability to use BitLocker Drive Encryption to encrypt extra local volumes besides just the C drive. Disk DeFragmenter has been enhanced to allow administrators the ability to control which volume the program defragments.

    The first "enhancement" is hardly one, rather a fix for a serious flaw, but that has been poited out by others. The second one, however. is really interesting - if I recall correctly, it was possible to select individual volumes for defragmentation since Windows 95 or so - is that their new marketing technique? Omit something ridiculously obvious, that has been there for ages, in the first version - just to claim having done more and more "enhancements" in the Service Packs?
    --
    This is Slashdot. Common sense is futile. You will be modded down.
  31. Massive drive space required by MSRedfox · · Score: 1

    For express and stand-alone deployment methods, Microsoft recommends the following:
    * A minimum of 7 GB free disk space on the system partition for x86-based operating systems and a minimum of 12 GB free disk space for x64-based operating systems.
    They say the drive space will only be used temporarily, and I know drive space is cheap these days. But what about people with laptops that are pushing their hard drives near the limit?
    1. Re:Massive drive space required by cnettel · · Score: 1
      There might be some (more or less) hidden option to avoid any kind of system restore checkpoint and uninstall possibility before going ahead. That should save a lot, but I wouldn't call it a wise gamble.

      Generally available system requirements for previous SPs have at least assumed that you go the "keep uninstall files" route, while also keeping local copies of all the new SP files, in addition to the actually installed copy.

    2. Re:Massive drive space required by MrDoh1 · · Score: 1

      It's my understanding that the size you are referring to is the size for the full redistributable for say an administrator of a large network. Download it once and install to all the Vista PCs, no matter there version, language, etc. For instance, it includes every language that Vista has in it.

      As an end-user or windows update download, it should be much, much smaller than that.

      --
      I am Homer of Borg. Resistance is Fut.. Mmmmmmmm, Donuts!
    3. Re:Massive drive space required by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      Then unless they can attach an external drive or mount a network drive, it sounds like they're out of luck. But that's missing the point. People with laptops aren't the ones who will be using the stand-alone deployment. Instead, they'll be using the windows update which will only require 50MB or so of space.

      I guess what I'm really saying is that if they care, they'll find a way.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
  32. What VIsta means to me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vista, a visa for the tourista!

  33. Re:It means they shipped a buggy product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like cars don't have recalls?

  34. Laptops are the key to Vista spread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The $500 dual core laptop with Vista home pro pre-installed is the most effective way to spread Vista - and that's exactly what's happening.
    It has started a huge shift from desktop computers to laptops, just check out your local stores. I picked up a decent HP dual core, 1 GB memory, 80GB HD, DVD-RW, firewire for my daughter to replace her aging desktop.

    Since Vista was pre-installed, everything works, of course. I would not want to switch over to Vista, but since it's included in the $500 laptop price, and it would cost me $160 to get an XP OEM plus my time, there is really no incentive to change it. I don't know how much HP paid for Vista, but with the $500 laptop price it felt like Vista was free.

    With this price drop I suspect mass migration to laptops - at least for home users and the spread of Vista.

    1. Re:Laptops are the key to Vista spread by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Since Vista was pre-installed, everything works, of course.

      I'm not really sure how you got from the first clause to the second. Vista now works on machines it's pre-installed on? That's great news for gamers and HD-video enthusiasts who've been lamenting the broken or DRM-crippled drivers on their high end systems.

      but since it's included in the $500 laptop price, and it would cost me $160 to get an XP OEM plus my time

      Or, get one with XP OEM pre-installed (so that everything works, of course) for a marginal cost of... nothing. Which is exactly what I'm in the process of doing right now, since I'm buying a laptop to run exactly one specific program and I don't want Vista's DRM-infected systems taking away resources that I want to allocate to that application.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Laptops are the key to Vista spread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not know how anyone can stand Vista on a cheap dual core laptop. What you want to get reasonably decent performance is a Core 2 Duo laptop or better, at 2 GHz or better. Although I suppose if you are just writing papers and such, a throw-away laptop or an old desktop will do.

      What does she do about the terrible video performance in Vista?

      It should be noted here that the mass migration to laptops started happening well before Vista even had a name, other than Longhorn and when-the-hell-is-it-going-to-be-out.

      I shudder to think how slow your daughter's laptop is going to be when she installs SP1 on it.

    3. Re:Laptops are the key to Vista spread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know how much HP paid for Vista, but with the $500 laptop price it felt like Vista was free.

      I think you have a typo. Shouldn't it read "I know know how much MS paid to get HP to only ship Vista"?
  35. Family by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

    Personally I feel bad for my sister who will have to use it. I'd recomend she use Ubuntu instead, but she lives in another country and I won't be able to help her, and she doesn't feel prepared to try it on her own. I guess she would probably manage just fine, but sadly she doesn't even want to give it a shot. Oh well...

  36. LoL (Re:one step closer to ...) by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

    one step down, 1,000 to go!

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  37. huh? by catbutt · · Score: 4, Funny

    One of the most interesting questions asks if whether people should feel like that have to wait until SP1 to upgrade to the operating system, a common practice with Windows users Who wrote that sentence? Miss South Carolina?
    1. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, Miss South Carolina is a beautiful, intelligent human being who feels deep embarrassment and shame after her public humiliation. She'll work hard to make sure you don't see a mistake like that from her again in her lifetime.

      Zonk, on the other hand...

  38. I got value for my buck. by Topherbyte · · Score: 0

    Thank you very much, Apple.

  39. Let me off this Merry-Go-Round by deweycheetham · · Score: 0

    Another patch, late as usual, that doesn't address the underlining architectural issues, and that should have been fix in the initial release. Oh, by the way, we get to play more of the "Which Build" you got game with service support.

    After 25 years of this: "Let me off this Merry-Go-Round"

    (I am not sure how to be more clear)

  40. Re:What it means to me? Nothing at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Love the nothing tag! Kudos to whomever it concerns! xD

  41. Vista SP1 Means ... by VincenzoRomano · · Score: 1

    ... that Microsoft should spend more money in bug fixing and for faster update release.
    None can be perfect, software can always contain bugs. But being dull and dumb with bugs and security holes is deliberate stupidity.

    --
    Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
    For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
  42. Re:Vista SP1 could spell the end of Linux by MightyMartian · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Yeah, we can all rewrite 30 years worth of shell scripts just so we can use one of the most bloated operating systems ever developed.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  43. Driving? by MenTaLguY · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know something's wrong when you're talking about driving people to use software rather than attracting them to it.

    --

    DNA just wants to be free...
    1. Re:Driving? by clickety6 · · Score: 1

      You know something's wrong when you're talking about driving people to use software rather than attracting them to it.

      Kinda like driving cattle to the slaughterhouse, ain't it?

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
  44. White says this ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "White writes off this practice as no longer being necessary and notes how Windows Update has lessened the importance of the release of a service pack."

    Within a week of problems with WGA validation (which Windows Update requires) and, just today, evidence of the apparently high popularity of Autopatcher because of the inadequacy of Microsoft's solutions. For offline users or those at the end of a narrow network pipe Windows Update is a huge pain in the butt (no, WSUS isn't an easy solution for most people, and it's a heck of a lot of hassle if all you want to do is take a CD to update a family member's machine out of town). The rarity of service packs that roll all those patches into one download is a problem. If Microsoft wanted to help its customers better it would always provide a *single* downloadable package representing all the patches to date from the last service pack. Apple provides this sort of thing in the form of "combo updates". What's so difficult about that? They should be checking that the various patches don't interfere with previous ones anyway.

  45. Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    M$... Windoze... M$... Windoze... [unsubstantiated blabber]... M$... Windoze [bad spelling]... M$... Windoze... [self-references]... M$... Windoze...

    I used to know a guy on a campus social sciences mailing list that could not discuss Islam or Islamic society without using the term "islamofascist". Every single time. And all his references were to blog entries he had written, most of which were plain wrong or simple misrepresented facts. It gets old after a while, but more importantly it's the equivalent to using "poopyhead" when talking about someone you don't like. It's impossible to have conversations of any sort with people like that.

    It's funny that you talk about Microsoft's credibility here, given that your slaughter of intelligent discourse also eliminates most of yours.

    I like Slashdot but lately it's becoming more and more like Digg.

    1. Re:Poopyhead by Soporific · · Score: 1

      Thank you...

      ~S

    2. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's funny that you talk about Microsoft's credibility here, given that your slaughter of intelligent discourse also eliminates most of yours. I don't think an AC has any business challenging someone else's credibility. If you're not afraid of the consequences your words will have on you, show us by posting with your account.
    3. Re:Poopyhead by Toonol · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So what the AC said, although obviously correct, should be ignored because we don't have a name attached?

    4. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I like how you said the AC is "obviously correct" without offering any evidence, just like how the AC claimed all sorts of things about Twitter without backing any of it. Literally none of it.

      One: Actions speak louder than words. The AC posted as AC intentionally, most likely because he/she/it is concerned that their credibility is already too crappy to be listened to or will be if they say things like... what they said.

      Two:

      M$... Windoze... M$... Windoze... [unsubstantiated blabber]... M$... Windoze [bad spelling]... M$... Windoze... [self-references]... M$... Windoze... What was "unsubstantial" about the "blabber" other than the AC's opinion? What does "bad spelling" have to do with insight and correct logic? Did the AC mention that the "self references" each refer to a reposting of someone else's article by Twitter? That is not a self reference!

      The only thing the AC was right about was that Twitter tends to use slurs like "M$" and "Windoze". While I agree that's retarded, it's not important if the rest of his post is valid.

      The AC never gave anything but his own opinion about Twitter. Nobody should listen to his opinion of someone else if he's too afraid to even identify himself. We should listen to logic if he posts it. He didn't, not a shred.
    5. Re:Poopyhead by FreeGamer · · Score: 0

      I like Slashdot but lately it's becoming more and more like Digg. Er... ruh-eally... the whole M$/windoze thing and similar immature rants have been on /. long before digg even existed. In fact, given the fact /. is a traditional Linux stronghold in terms of readership, it might even be accurate to suggest the whole M$/windoze bashing culture originated here.

      Or do you mean these days /.ers only make childish comments rather than posting goatse links (not seen that one for a few months altho I don't read the majority of comments) so have softened up to be more like digg commenters?
    6. Re:Poopyhead by westlake · · Score: 1
      I don't think an AC has any business challenging someone else's credibility. If you're not afraid of the consequences your words will have on you, show us by posting with your account.

      Almahtar (991773)
      "No journal entries." "E-mail not posted publicly."

      Explain to me what risk there is in posting under an alias that is nowhere linked to your real name or e-mail address.

    7. Re:Poopyhead by Wicko · · Score: 1

      I think the AC's point went straight over your head.

    8. Re:Poopyhead by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You must be new here. Twitter is like Trip Master Monkey on crack.

      They're both creeps.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    9. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Karma and credibility. You don't have to know who I am to know what I've said in the past and whether I have a reputation of being insightful or just badgering a specific user (like the AC was doing to Twitter).

      The AC was attacking a specific person and too cowardly to be quoted on it later or held accountable to the words.

      I have good karma because I tend to (not always, of course) choose my words carefully. This gives me credibility on slashdot. If Twitter is not credible then the majority of slashdot mods will be able to see that, he'll get consistently modded down, and he'll receive a negative karma "bonus" and his posts will not be visible to most people. The system does this automatically - if you have to go out of your way to try and enforce your opinion of someone then it's probably because most people don't agree with you so they mod him up. I would say that probably means you're wrong.

    10. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, been here a bit over a year. Anyway, it doesn't matter what individuals think of Twitter himself - they should let others judge his posts for themselves rather than trying to influence public opinion with their own. It just doesn't seem honest to me.

      And, aside, a lot of the time I think Twitter says some insightful stuff. I may not always agree with Twitter, but I think the moment people start targeting others and harassing them personally rather than the actual words they say it's a sign of immaturity and not really fair. I mean, if Twitter says something that is really insightful that person would disagree regardless, would be very vocal about it, and would probably provide no actual argument to Twitter's statements. Oh wait, that's what happened.

      I don't object in defense of Twitter per se, I object on the principle - the AC did nothing but an ad hominem attack. No attempt at logic, reason, or real debate was made.

      Think whatever you want of Twitter or anyone else here on /., even me, but if you're going to challenge their credibility with a blatant ad hominem attack, at least have the balls to do it on your own account.

    11. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Would you mind explaining then? All I saw was an ad hominem attack with no attempt to substantiate with any kind of reason or evidence. I may be missing something - no I mean it, I really may be missing something, and I'd love it if you tell me, seriously - but someone that does what the previous sentence described is the very definition of troll.

    12. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hate to break it to you, but the ACs comment is modded higher than Twitter's comment, or any of the replies.

      Second (as has been said here before) screening comments base on other users opinions (Mod points) is like having a fat acne-ridden thirty year old man who lives in his mothers basement screen your news for you.

      Third (and I think I speak for more than myself) I don't care who likes your posts and gives you "karma", if I think your post is retarded a high mod score won't change my opinion.

      The AC's point was that posting close-minded opinion is useless and that's exactly what Twitter posted here.
      The irony is how many people posted close-minded opinion in reply to the AC's post.

      Yes, I did post this as an anonymous coward. Eat me.

    13. Re:Poopyhead by Wicko · · Score: 1

      It's not just an attack on Twitter's post, rather a humorous poke at the kind of posts people make when they describe MS as M$ and Windows as Windoze. And it has a lot of truth to it, actually. It seems very common among people using that terminology. Might have a bit of an exaggeration but not too far from real, I think he was aiming for +1 Funny. The rest of it, well, yeah, that was a direct flame. Judging from Twitter's "Vista Failure Log", sounds like he's quite the troll. The whole thing is just a big flame towards Vista, and judging from his sig, it doesn't stop at that. I don't have specific examples, but I have seen plenty of posts by this guy, and its almost always flaming MS in some manner. If that isn't trolling I don't know what is. Also, a lot of the AC's post relies on previous postings by twitter, so it's more of a "I'm tired of hearing you're crap, so I'm going to make fun of you". When he says its impossible to argue with someone like who he described, he makes the point that it would be useless to strike up any normal kind of debate with Twitter. Getting kinda late so I'm not going to preview this, so if you still don't understand, too bad :P

    14. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hi Almantar

      I cannot speak for the original AC post that started this thread, but some of us post AC not because we "don't have the balls to do it on our own account" but rather because we don't have accounts are not interested in making them. I for one have never made an account because I think if I did I would end up wasting too much time posting here. As an AC however I make maybe 6-10 posts a week, and I'm fine with that. Moreover I have been doing so as an AC for about 6 years now.

      If that means nothing I say is credible or my opinion doesn't matter to you, that's fine. But really how is posting AC any different than posting under "Almantar"? Your login name doesn't tell me anything about you, and certainly doesn't make anything you say seem any more or less credible (at least to me). For all intents and purposes you seem just as anonymous as I.

      For interests sake I wanted to address your argument. What the original AC did was clearly an ad hominem attack, and did not refute any of Twitter's points, but I don't think it was meant to. He was not commenting so much on Twitters argument but rather on Twitter's style; he compared that style to the style of someone else he knew, and extrapolated that there can never be any intelligent discourse on a subject as long as Twitter persists in infantile name calling and outright lying. On this point I agree.

      Those of us that have been around Slashdot for a while have long ago tired of Twitter and his antics. You can write the most eloquent and insightful response to one of his posts, meticulously picking apart every one of his "points" and prove that they are lies/misrepresentations/fud, but it is just tilting at windmills. Believe me I used to try. He will never respond to logical rebuttals, and rather will simply pull one or two things you write out of context, preface them with something like "Another M$-shill Twitter-bashing AC writes.." and follow up with "How much does Bill pay you to respond to my spreading of the truth all day? Not enough!". It was humourous for a while. Then it was sad. Now it's just annoying.

      For what it's worth Twitter's real identity was figured out quite a while ago (you can check out the archives for posts that provide such information, if you wish to). I for one (as well as most Slashdot posters, I imagine) couldn't care less about what he does or who he is in real life, but it's interesting to note that Twitter has never worked at the enterprise level, has never programmed anything, and by his own admission hasn't used a MS product since the 90's. Yet he seems content to comment on all sorts of things he's never done and doesn't know anything about, often under the guise of being knowledgeable in the field. In my mind that is far worse than posting AC.

      Now whether you give a damn or not about what I, another anonymous coward, have written is up to you. I enjoyed writing this post, so I already gots mine :)

      Cheers

    15. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, still doesn't relate at all to the actual post Twitter made, but more to the AC's impression of Twitter in general. Maybe it's because you didn't doublecheck, but I still don't see any reason the AC's post should actually influence the particular post to which it responded. If the AC wishes to damage Twitter, they should pick their battles and attack posts that have flaws, and post what the flaws are and why they are flaws. It'd also help if they had the balls to do so under their own account, but that isn't necessary - just preferred. If they won't stand by their words long term, I don't see why I should listen to them.

      Anyway the whole "I'm tired of hearing your crap, so I'm going to make fun of you" thing... seems unfair to me. Just because you're tired of hearing their crap doesn't mean everyone else agrees with you. You can't decide that for them, but you can voice your opinion, sure. If you then choose to voice your opinion as an AC, you are in effect saying "I don't want you to listen to that guy, but I don't want you to have the option of choosing whether or not to listen to me since you don't know who I am" -- CHEAP move.

      I don't have a problem with you - you seem to actually think things through so I appreciate your discussing this with me. I have a problem with the AC - their actions seem quite hypocritical and underhanded.

    16. Re:Poopyhead by McFadden · · Score: 1

      The AC posted as AC intentionally, most likely because he/she/it is concerned that their credibility is already too crappy to be listened to...
      Seriously, I don't know how you have the nerve to use words like "unsubstantiated" when your ability to read the minds of other posters, and second-guess their intentions seems all the substantiation you need for your own views.
    17. Re:Poopyhead by Almahtar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Pardon my arrogance. Why else would they post as AC? Forgot their password and the password to their mail account?

      There are plenty of reasons to post as AC, but there are few to post blatant ad hominem attacks other than that your reputation simply doesn't stack up to your target's, or that you want to damage theirs but aren't willing to risk yours. Please enlighten me on any other reason a person would post an ad hominem attack as an AC.

    18. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It'd also help if they had the balls to do so under their own account, but that isn't necessary - just preferred. If they won't stand by their words long term, I don't see why I should listen to them.

      a) Not everyone has an account, or cares to create one.

      b) It takes no balls to post under a pseudonym that no-one can trace to you.

      c) By discounting the words of someone because of the name they post under, you are as hypocritical as you claim the AC is for ignoring the words of a poor speller. What does a fake name have to do with insight and correct logic?

    19. Re:Poopyhead by Cal+Paterson · · Score: 1

      For what it's worth Twitter's real identity was figured out quite a while ago (you can check out the archives for posts that provide such information, if you wish to). I for one (as well as most Slashdot posters, I imagine) couldn't care less about what he does or who he is in real life, but it's interesting to note that Twitter has never worked at the enterprise level, has never programmed anything, and by his own admission hasn't used a MS product since the 90's. Yet he seems content to comment on all sorts of things he's never done and doesn't know anything about, often under the guise of being knowledgeable in the field. In my mind that is far worse than posting AC.
      Interesting comment, but it'd be far more helpful if you'd actually linked to this referenced discussion. Because, without doing that, what you said is as much unsubstantiated crap as you allege twitter to be.
    20. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think posting Twitter's real name and webpage (which contains his job history and resume) is helpful. Moreover I think it's mean spirited. If you are really that interested you can (as was suggested) search through old slashdot postings. Every few months or so someone usually posts a similar "Heres the story behind Twitter"-type reply when he posts something especially eccentric.

    21. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because some of us /. readers/lurkers (been lurking here for over a year) dont have an acount?

      im not one to start bashing people myself, but for the one or two posts per month that i contribute to slashdot, i don't feel making an acount is worth the trouble/effort, so i just post AC whenever i do feel the need to say something.

      i quite apprieciate the ability to post without having an acount, since i tend to drown sometimes in the amount of different acounts i have on forums and all the different logins/passwords i have. and untill i feel that having a /. acount would be worth tracking another UID and password, i will continue to post AC

    22. Re:Poopyhead by Wicko · · Score: 1

      I can agree with you that hiding behind AC is a pathetic move and I usually ignore these posts when I'm moderating. But at the same time, knowing Twitter somewhat, I can't help but laugh at the AC's post. It may be unjust in this particular situation, but like I said, you kind of have to know Twitter's history. I don't expect you to agree with me, as we clearly have different impressions of Twitter. Sure, he can write some intelligent stuff, but more often than not it's usually for the purpose of trolling. The AC's post is what I would consider flamebait.

      I do like things about MS and Windows, so it bothers me that Twitter can't seem to say anything nice about either one. Yeah, they do stupid things, yeah they make mistakes, yeah they are greedy, but their software works contrary to what most people believe. I mean its more of a casual user's OS than anything else, although that isn't what it's marketed for. So I don't really understand why people expect it to be something else. But, that's another argument, somewhat offtopic.

      At any rate, I can agree with you about the entire AC concept and I don't understand why it even exists. I do appreciate that some people, like yourself, can also think things through, and don't resort to low brow tactics.

    23. Re:Poopyhead by Cal+Paterson · · Score: 1

      So, like you accuse him of doing, you are actually just making accusations without presenting any factual basis.

    24. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh*

      I recall seeing links to the discussions that you want being posted to Twitter threads *within the last week*. It would take all of 5 minutes for you to check his recent posting history and replies. If you were actually interested in a "factual basis", then you possess all the tools required to obtain it quickly. But it doesn't seem like thats what you're after at all.

      If all you want to do is win an argument, then mission accomplished - I will not post the link you request. Just because Twitter annoys the hell out of me does not mean I will "out" him online for others' amusement whenever he rants about microsoft or windows.

    25. Re:Poopyhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Karma has very little to do with credibility in an environment dominated by groupthink.

    26. Re:Poopyhead by xhrit · · Score: 1

      >I like Slashdot but lately it's becoming more and more like Digg.

      You mean slashdot was bought by Microsoft?

    27. Re:Poopyhead by McFadden · · Score: 1

      Please enlighten me on any other reason a person would post an ad hominem attack as an AC.
      I hardly see the need since you've just repeated the same "this is my opinion, and that's all that matters" bullshit as before. Substantiation may not be your thing, but clearly hypocrisy is.
  46. Time to dust off this old gem by Sczi · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Bah, I have had 100% software compatibility with Vista so far, and I'm even using x64 version. Yes, it's a new version, and yes, there's the possibility of incompatibilities to arise, but people need to quit being such crybabies having never even used it.

    Click it and weep, boys:

    http://thinktanktraining.com/vistax64

    Bill Gates, if you're reading this, hook me up with a laptop, and I'll tell everyone how much I like Vista, which is true, which is the only reason why I would extend this offer.

    Short list of reasons I like Vista:

    * The Aero Glass theme is very nice and very clean looking.
    * The start button enhancements are fantastic. I love the instant search box.
    * The sidebar is very well executed, and I especially like the default picture slideshow.
    * Runs great and fast for everyday use (ie, not multitasking WoW) on 1gig ram (2 is better).
    * Solid as a f'n rock, and I don't say that lightly.
    * "Poor" driver support is still easier than dealing with Linux, 95% automatic so far, and I'm actually fairly good with Linux.
    * Window-Tab.
    * Boots fast.

    Suck it, haters. Vista==100% satisfaction. And I'm not fanboy, I just believe in giving credit where credit is due, and frankly I think Vista is getting a raw deal. I'll never forgive you farkers for putting me in the position of having to defend Microsoft.

    -=-=-=-=-

    UPDATE:

    I added a new 8600gt video card ($112) and an extra 2 gigs of ram ($90 for 3gigs total) and a new AMD x2 2.2ghz chip ($65, up from a single core 1.8), and the machine just smokes. It boots fast, runs stable, etc. It now multitasks WoW like a dream with the game running at 1152x864 in a window.

    I've been doing some programming in vb.net 2005, and that is going swimmingly. I tried quake 4 (which is admittedly a little older, and it sucks) but it ran smoothly. My Vista x64 Business machine (that I'm typing on) still kicks tremendous quantities of butt daily. My Vista 32 laptop still hums along quietly, ripping dvd's to my wife's ipod, pumping music to the stereo, connecting to the net from anywhere via at&t's 3g (I hate at&t, but work provided it). The laptop also has full and proper power management. My other buddy here at work has vista on his desktop here, and he doesn't even click over to his old xp machine anymore.

    Overall rating: GOOD. Not great, not tremendous, not suck. GOOD. Wholly adequate with a strong hint of pleasant.

    My only complaint so far is with the UAC, which I actually quite like for myself, but I hate it when I'm on the phone with people and I tell them to do something, and they INSIST on reading the damn message. Look, jerky, I told you to run the damn program, so yes allow it, please. Alternately, you could click cancel, and we can sit here and think about what it would be like if you knew how to follow instructions. Ehh.. I guess the new search kind of sucks too.

    I'm with you on the marketing BS, though, like DX10 being vista only and DRM (not that it's bit me yet) and shenanigans like that. Microsoft is still evil, but when you exaggerate the problems and, in the same breath, push Linux, it comes across as desperate. Windows doesn't have to suck for Linux to be good too.

  47. Re:Performance is Black and White Issue. by plague3106 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stability and performance are not the same. I never said performance was not an issue, nor did I say stability was unimportant... so I really don't see your point.

    And please, enough with your stupid journal already. Its already been picked apart, and even the anti-MS crowd here is starting to see you for the nutjob you are.

  48. Absoluting Nothing! by Enrique1218 · · Score: 0

    Read the sig...

    --
    You don't have to be smart to use a Mac, you just have to be smart enough to buy one
    1. Re:Absoluting Nothing! by sqrt(2) · · Score: 1

      OSX might be an obvious choice for some people, and there are a lot of things I like about it, but it's too bad that Apple just doesn't want me as a customer. I'd definitely consider switching at least a few of my computers to OSX if it was possible to install it easily on systems I made myself. Until I can do this I'll just have to stick with operating systems made by companies who actually want my business (Canonical and MS).

      If OSX wasn't locked to proprietary and overpriced hardware with limited options it'd be the obvious choice for me to. Maybe apple will change one day, but I don't expect that. I actually like Vista, and Ubuntu is getting better and better very fast.

      --
      If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  49. Really? by repvik · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Well, I hope that SP1 can fix the incredibly stupid problem I'm having on my LAN. I can surf teh intarweb through my linux-based router just fine. I can ping my router. I can't actually connect to the router though, via http/ssh/ftp/samba. I can't connect to other devices on my network either. All of them responds to pings, but it's impossible to connect. WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH THE CODERS? How on earth can such a problem pass any kind of "quality control"?

    1. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That the newest Microsoft Feature of Vista, it's is so secure it doesn't talk to anything with industry standards that is not Microsoft.

      We have been blessed by the Mircosoft Gods, All Hail Microsoft.

    2. Re:Really? by cnettel · · Score: 1

      You don't happen to have some kind of zoning on your router, only allowing WAN/Internet traffic for unknown MACs? (Just asking because I hit something similar when visiting a friend with my XP laptop, and I was baffled on why I could connect to external sites, but not locally. It turned out to be a config issue on the router.)

    3. Re:Really? by repvik · · Score: 1

      Nope, unfortunately. I've also disabled the auto-window-size-thingy that Vista thinks is a cool idea. And even with antivirus/firewall removed/disabled, no joy. I can ping the devices just fine, but connecting is a no-go. Works fine with WinXP, Linux and OS/X. Vista just doesn't want to ;)

    4. Re:Really? by louarnkoz · · Score: 1

      Vista does not activate file sharing and discovery unless you say so. You are supposed to declare the network as a "home" network, where these things are permitted, by opposition to a public network like a Starbucks coffee shop, where you probably don't want file sharing turned on. Then, you are supposed to actually enable file sharing, etc. All that is done from the "network and sharing center", available by clicking on the "network" icon in the tray panel.

    5. Re:Really? by repvik · · Score: 1

      I can't connect to http/ftp/ssh locally. I've activated file sharing and discovery, the local network is "private". Doesn't help. ;)

  50. vista is for noobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok well since I use my Mac and love it, vista SP1 means i have to read all about you windoze users bitchin as usual about M$ shitty products and how the SP wont fix the problems and how screwed you are. Well that sux for you doesnt it :). I mean when Apple comes out w/ new versions of OSX i cant get down to my local store fast enough. You know no OS is perfect but OSX comes really close. Maybe you should crawl out from the rocks you've been under and actually try something else for a change, maybe something that just works like hmmmm say....Mac OSX. I mean if you dont like it you can always install some other third rate OS onto your very sexy Mac hardware including that bloated spaggetti mess of code that is Vista/longhorn. No confirm or deny FTW!!

  51. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by jeffasselin · · Score: 1, Informative

    Twitter, sometimes you talk sense, sometimes you sound like some kind of fundamentalist nutjob. This post made sense and was informative for people not following up on the last news.

    But people would take your posts a lot more seriously if you spelled Microsoft or its shorthand version MS properly. I don't like them myself, but there's no need for infantile name-throwing.

    --
    If he explores all forms and substances Straight homeward to their symbol-essences; He shall not die.
  52. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by jb.hl.com · · Score: 1, Insightful

    M$ has burnt a lot of what little credibility it had left with Vista. Apologies from editors are not going to do the trick as long as there is real fair and independent review of performance. Windoze users have waited seven years for an upgrade and they can easily afford to wait another to see if Vista has anything that warrents it's cost and restrictions.

    Coincidentally, I just sat down and used Windows Vista properly for the first time today. Clean installs, first in Parallels Desktop and then Boot Camp. And I utterly fail to see what it so objectionable about Vista. It's not earth shattering, no, but it's at least better than XP, if not as good as OS X. It's not that much slower than XP was on the same hardware, even with all the Aero stuff enabled. The UAC prompts...I had "one", on installing Apple's Boot Camp drivers (which, on the negative side, crashed the system.)

    This is my personal experience only, true, but as far as I'm concerned it's far from the sinking crater that you seem to think it is.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  53. It means absolutely nothing to me by mbone · · Score: 1

    And I like it like that.

  54. Making XP look good by xs650 · · Score: 1

    At least Vista cut down on the number of complaints about XP.

    Windows Vista, making XP look good for 7 months now.

  55. Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by Scot+Seese · · Score: 4, Informative

    I read this with a twinge of curiosity. Vista Home Ultimate came on the new Dell system I received a couple months ago. While the novelty of Vista's graphical enhancements wore off quickly, my irritation at a litany of Vista bugs did not. They include:

      - Two year old Netgear 802.11g wireless card being virtually impossible to install
      - Crackling, popping audio in World of Warcraft (and other games) from the built in audio that defied repeated attempts to fix via driver upgrades
      --- Disabled said audio in BIOS, inserted Creative Sound Blaster 5.1 digital PCI card. Guess what? VISTA INCOMPATIBLE. Creative. THE standard. in.com.patible with Vista's DRM-heavy digital device list. Back to crackling, popping on board audio. So annoying I resorted to playing WoW with no sound.
      - ATI HDTv Wonder PCI card installation - wasted time. Windows Media Center could not tune ANYTHING with any degree of quality when the same card + antenna did brilliantly on my old Win XP box. Furthermore, exhaustive forum searching reveals that Media Center actually cripples the driver for the HD tuner, making it so that you can tune OTA content, OR CATV content, but NOT BOTH. You have to install a hacked up driver from some shady 3rd party website to use the full functionality of your TV card. Again, the ATI product does not appear on Microsoft's DRM-heavy "approved digital device" list.
      - On board gigabit ethernet adapter's network configuration would randomly disappear and have to be reconfigured when the computer was hard rebooted for any reason, including power outages, or video lockups, leading us to..
      - NVidia GForce 7300 PCI Express card included with machine worked flawlessly as delivered, BUT after Microsofts last "patch Tuesday" a few weeks ago, the video would not 'wake up' after the machine had been put to sleep. The "sleep mode" suspend worked great until the last security patch.. It makes no sense to me either. After the patch, the video would not wake with the rest of the system, forcing a hard poweroff/restart, causing the network setting to disappear.. HALF the time.
      -

      So, two nights ago, after backing up, I took my freshly burned Ubuntu 7.04 cd, took a deep breath, and installed. I can get around in Linux, but I am by no means an expert. My installation was smooth. In less than 90 minutes, using Automatix, I had every plugin, driver, and application I could ever want to make my system perform properly. Nvidia OpenGL driver automatically configured, all video/flash plugins for Firefox, DVD playback, the whole 9 yards. Additionally, using the step-by step copy and paste instructions from the ubuntu website, I had Wine installed, and had configured it properly to run World of Warcraft.

        So here I sit. World of Warcraft runs smoothly. Audio is CRYSTAL CLEAR, my Soundblaster Live 5.1 card is supported, no popping, clicking audio. I play the game at 1680x1050 with almost all detail settings turned on at a very smooth framerate. I visit CNN.com and view all embedded video seamlessly, no plugin errors or other irritants. When I need to type papers for college, I have OpenOffice. Ipod works flawlessly with podcast management program.

    Why do I need Vista again?

    ------

    Make World of Warcraft work flawlessy in Ubuntu with Wine:
    https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WorldofWarcraft

    PC World's noob-friendly "Seven Post-Install Tips for Unbuntu 7.04" :
    http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,130923-page,1-c, linux/article.html

    --
    THIS SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
    1. Re:Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Crackling, popping audio in World of Warcraft (and other games) from the built in audio that defied repeated attempts to fix via driver upgrades

      Your network must be too fast.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      My installation was smooth. In less than 90 minutes, using Automatix,
      There is no reason to use automatix any more as it screws up your system when you want to upgrade. You can download flash, java and video codecs by going to add / remove programs and searching for them.
    3. Re:Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by Shados · · Score: 1

      Creative took -fo.re.ver- to come up with new drivers. And the ones they came out with sucked pretty bad and were in beta for even longer.

      That being said, Creative stopped being the "standard" after the Sound Blaster. Their cards (even on XP) single handledly make more games crash (results may vary) than Windows ME ever did. And thats sad.

    4. Re:Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by W2k · · Score: 2, Informative

      Each one of the issues you list are with drivers. In contrast, every piece of hardware in my system was supported out of the box. Was I just lucky? Maybe. But blaming Microsoft for poor third-party drivers is like blaming Linus Torvalds for security holes in Firefox on Linux.

      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    5. Re:Re-installed Ubuntu instead. My Vista problems: by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      I've seen plenty of reports of ubuntu upgrades failing from users who at least claim to never have used automatix and from what I can tell the recent automatix is a lot less naughty than the older versions.

      Ubuntu seems to preffer to play the blame game regarding upgrade failures and then tell users to reinstall than to actually help users find out what is wrong with thier systems.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  56. How About an iCar? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple had better get innovating the next major killer features

    Looks like Apple's got some innovative plans in the works . . .

    Should this come to pass, would we have to re-work the "If Microsoft built a car" jokes?

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  57. Insightful?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How, pray tell, is this comment insightful? All it essentially states is one user's experience which led him / her to a desire to switch to Linux. I strongly prefer Linux to Windows myself, but the fact that this was modded as "insightful" is absurd. There's a lot of complaining on /. about Mac fanboysm, but Linux fanboyism is just as - if not moreso - rampant as evidenced by the modding up of this post and other posts that essentially state "I like Linux" with more verboseness.

    No offense to the parent poster; your experience is valid and I appreciate you sharing it with us. However, there's nothing really insightful about it.

    1. Re:Insightful?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're new here aren't you? Yeah. Most moderators don't know what Insightful means... Sad, but true.

    2. Re:Insightful?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that's not a very insightful thing to say.

  58. It means MS is sponsoring slashdot by noddyxoi · · Score: 1

    two articles in a day about something that doesn't mean anything to anybody with a brain enough to avoid it, just means that slashdot is looking into MS for sponsorship, now that their stock (LNUX) has been downgraded...

    1. Re:It means MS is sponsoring slashdot by deweycheetham · · Score: 0

      Maybe Slashdot should start modding up peoples comments and granting Karma in stead of hammering them for honnest comments and forcing them to post as Anonymous Coward.

  59. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try copying a lot of files. Try installing a lot of applications quickly. Try installing Vista on a non-Apple box. I know we are supposed to think they are the same, but really the Mac boxes are very finely tweaked to get optimal performance. In particular, Apple made sure Vista runs very well on them. I use Windows XP Pro every day at work. I come home and use Mac OS X 10.4 on a variety of computers. I can tell you from my own experience, getting around Vista, finding things, trying to understanding the logical structure, failing, getting annoying dialog boxes repeatedly when doing normal system configuration -- I am a tech -- just gets on your nerves after a while. And Vista really is slower on the "equivalent" hardware PC boxes we set up. So I am happy with XP since I have to use it to be able to support our customers competently. I am happy with Mac OS X for very obvious reasons. Not least of which, I can fire up VirtualBox and play net games any time I want. I guess that is XP's one saving grace. The only thing I like about Vista, and consider an improvement, is the 3-D copy Microsoft did of expose.

  60. WAR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ab-so-lute-ly nuthin. Say it agin.

  61. Wintendos Vista for games only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I do anything important on my Linux box (including managing my investments online, storing copies of my statements, any hobby creative work, etc.). I also have my entire music collection on my Linux box. It is nice and secure and works very well and very affordably (and no unwanted spying on me or blackbox vendor-lock-in you-can't-do-that bullcrap software).

    I have my windoze machine for one reason and one reason only: games.

    I don't mind if M$ spies on my gaming machine...all they will see are my scores.

    I won't upgrade to Vista until Blizzard upgrades World of Warcrack to Vista.

  62. Yes.. SP1 will drive me to buy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft's upcoming release of a 650+ meg service pack of stablity, security, and usability patches will make me want to buy Vista.

    I really need the DRM infection. I want the "root-kit of the week" delivered by removable media. I really want to have WGA lock my computer down because it can't verify my installation. I want to have 10-25% of my availabe network bandwidth unavailable to communicate with their intelligence agency of choise. I want my 'secured' drives to be 100% readable by anyone with the back-door key to the government approved encryption scheme. I really want to get force-fed advertising that worms it's way through the buffer-overflow holes in the browser. I'm eagerly awaiting securely storing my private financial information on their secure servers. But the thing that I am really looking forwards to is coping with the worms, virii and trojans that will propogate through the monoculture like wildfire during the weeks it takes Microsoft to come out with a patch for that service that you can 'disable' but not 'turn off'.

    After seeing the disasters that were Windows XP SP1 & SP2, I have no faith in Microsoft's ability to come up with an operating system that is stable, responsive, secure and usable. They seem to only be able to come out with operating systems that possess two of those four attributes.

    I've been dual-booting Microsoft and Linux since MS-DOS 6.2 and 0.99.xx, but my current machine is the last one. The next desktop I build will be a Linux box, and only a Linux box.

  63. tags by brkello · · Score: 1

    Is anyone else getting sick of tags that "answer" the question asked in the subject? It's fine that Vista SP1 means nothing to you...but I really don't need to see it. Can we just ban people that add stupid tags?

    --
    Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    1. Re:tags by pohl · · Score: 1

      Is anyone else getting sick of posts that complain about snarky tags? It's fine that someone's tag offends you, but I really don't need to know about it. Can we just ban people that post stupid complaints? ...and people who post self-referential meta-complaint jokes too, while we're at it.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    2. Re:tags by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Is anyone else getting sick of tags that "answer" the question asked in the subject?
      Yes. I, for one, do not welcome our new frivolous-tagging overlords. I guess people discovered that tags were the perfect way of presenting their opinions so that they would be seen by everybody, and so no-one would be able to challenge their views. All it does is solidify the groupthink that is often prevalent in Slashdot discussions.
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    3. Re:tags by Nicolay77 · · Score: 1

      Of course yes.

      That's because it removes functionality of the tags.

      They should be used to add keywords that can be used in a future to do 'smart' searches of the articles.

      Instead they post opinions and frankly, that's what comments are for. Posting opinions in tags just corrupts the 'tagspace'.

      --
      We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
  64. Article misses the point entirely by eples · · Score: 1

    Windows XP SP2 is almost a completely different OS than what shipped in a shrink wrapped box in 2001. The article completely glosses over that point, and stresses the virtues of Windows Update. Which, if I recall correctly, existed before XP SP2. So... ?

    --
    I'm a 2000 man.
  65. They REALLY can't win ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So in one breath you complain that it took them 7 years to push out a buggy piece of shit ... and then in the very next breath, you'll suggest they should have waited 8 years to push out a slightly LESS buggy piece of shit ?

    If they ironed out every last bug and made a perfect piece of golden code, it would take them (OR ANYONE ELSE for that matter, a lifetime) ... but either way, you'd still be able to complain, so that's okay then.

  66. Vista in VMWare by gravy.jones · · Score: 0

    I've deployed Vista at home in a VMWare 5.5 virtual machine. It is the only way I can make sure my wife doesn't crater my XP machine. The day I saw her clicking at the internet fart button was the last straw. She has been banished to a virtual Vista with IE7 in protected mode.

    On another note, OpenOffice.Org 2.2.1 works pretty good with Vista.

    --
    Where's the 0xBEEF
  67. Don't be fooled by his mis-direction. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Don't be fooled by his attempt to confuse the issue. Microsoft Windows is EXPENSIVE, in my opinion, and becoming more so. We often have had to re-load Windows XP to remove system instability caused by sloppy coding and by system files modified by malware.

    It has been more than 2 years since WinXP service pack 2 was released (August 25, 2004), even though updating Windows XP from an SP2 CD requires downloading more than 170 Megabytes of files, a difficult problem when there is no internet connection or only a dial-up connection. The Windows XP updates of just last Patch Tuesday were more than 20 Megabytes.

    Microsoft seems to have delayed releasing an SP3 for Windows XP to try to discourage people from using their XP operating system. But the really major problems in Windows XP stopped only after the SP2 was released.

    We have had eight different kinds of problems with Microsoft update; Microsoft Update gets my vote for the buggiest Microsoft software, and that's a tough title to get. Other people have many, many different kinds of problems with Windows Update. See, for example, Windows Update Discussion Group.

    I'm guessing that tens or hundreds of millions of hours and billions of dollars are lost every year because of the sloppy coding in Windows XP. Steve Ballmer took Bill Gates' position as the Chief of Grief.

    Corporate Rule: Never use a new version of Windows until after the 2nd service pack has been released, and others have had a chance to see if there are problems. It is expensive in re-training costs to use a different operating system, so a company that has a virtual monopoly can abuse the customer by releasing unfinished and sloppy software, and still not lose most of its customers.

    Remember that the cost of Windows is much more than the cost of the OS itself for many reasons besides the high maintenance costs. Microsoft's biggest customers are the giant computer manufacturers, and they want to manipulate people to buy new computers. So, each new version of Microsoft Windows requires more powerful hardware. Those who use Windows are dragged through the adversarial business schemes of one of the most anti-customer large corporations in the world, in my opinion.

    Microsoft Windows maintenance is so expensive that people throw away their computers and buy new ones because the maintenance cost is so high. See, for example, the New York Times article, Corrupted PC's Find New Home in the Dumpster. (Free NYT registration required.)

    Many people depend for making a living on maintaining Microsoft Windows. Many of those people have no other way of making a living. They often try to confuse discussions of the maintenance costs of Windows and discussions of Microsoft's adversarial practices; don't be fooled by their misdirection.

    1. Re:Don't be fooled by his mis-direction. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We often have had to re-load Windows XP to remove system instability caused by sloppy coding and by system files modified by malware.

      Microsoft Windows maintenance is so expensive that people throw away their computers and buy new ones because the maintenance cost is so high. See, for example, the New York Times article, Corrupted PC's Find New Home in the Dumpster. (Free NYT registration required.) You (and others) obviously need to stop running in Administrator mode and stop running crappy software (like Quickbooks 2006 and earlier) that requires Admin mode to work properly (and were never certified to work with Windows XP). Your chances of getting bitten by malware is very small if you run in standard user mode. For every crappy app that wants to write to "Program Files" and restricted areas in the registry, there's a properly developed app available.
    2. Re:Don't be fooled by his mis-direction. by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      So Windows is like the Federal Government... it only survives by destroying the productivity of others.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  68. Pretty much by ^_^x · · Score: 1

    I have very very good luck with Windows - I grew up using MS-DOS and kind of kept up to date as things rolled out so I know enough ins and outs to keep it running well.

    Generally my installations are conflict-free, fast, stable (OS crashing... doesn't happen. Period. The odd app dies time to time.) no viruses, no exploits, etc... I had a trojan about ten years ago but that was the last one.

    Then again, I almost never install Windows before the first service pack. Win95 OSR1 was ok, OSR2 was so fast and stable for me. Win98 was a pig, then Win98 SE was a well-dressed pig (haha...) and by the end I didn't really want to get rid of it since I had it working... PRETTY well. NT, 2k... never used at home. WinXP/2003 have been amazing for me; I started at XP SP1, but 2003 was the original release. I never thought I'd see Windows run rock-solid for years, but here it is. I guess others aren't always so lucky but at work we have thousands of WinXP SP2 installations that work great.

    Will Windows Update lessen the need for major service packs? Did it in Win98? Did it in ME? Did it in XP? Not really... why should it be any different for Vista? I'll probably move to Vista eventually, but I don't think SP1 will even be enough - it sounds like there are a lot of dealbreakers in it and clearly I'm on the pro-Windows side of things. Also there isn't much incentive to move right now. The only thing I really want out of XP right now is better multiprocessor support. The security does suck, but I find running from behind a firewall/router with a bit of common sense in daily operation keeps it well safe enough.

    Vista is a nice set of ideas, but I think they need to just bite the bullet and "BeOS it," drop backwards compatibility ONCE, and rewrite from scratch for modern systems. Do it like MacOS X and include an older legacy supporting version with it. It's not a smooth migration, but the disruption would be worth having everything done right - assuming they actually do it right. Multiprocessor support to at least 64 CPUs. Throw away everything to do with networking. Burn it. Do it from square one. They have the money. They have more than capable coders. They might even have business systems analysts who understand how to manage it (MIGHT!) Then choosing the best OS wouldn't be so much about the lesser of the evils. (Don't start about Linux... It's fine in the right cases, but I don't have any use or time for the dozen distros/versions I've run over the last 10 years. I'll keep checking in periodically but it's just not a practical solution for me or any company I've worked for.)

    1. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista is a nice set of ideas, but I think they need to just bite the bullet and "BeOS it," drop backwards compatibility ONCE, and rewrite from scratch for modern systems. Do it like MacOS X and include an older legacy supporting version with it. It's not a smooth migration, but the disruption would be worth having everything done right - assuming they actually do it right. Multiprocessor support to at least 64 CPUs. Throw away everything to do with networking. Burn it. Do it from square one. They have the money. They have more than capable coders. They might even have business systems analysts who understand how to manage it (MIGHT!) Then choosing the best OS wouldn't be so much about the lesser of the evils.

      A coworker used to say "software that is designed to break will work perfectly." Vista is designed from the ground up to limit network access, to limit your ability to use media and to limit your ability to use it: it does these things perfectly. The fallout of the recent WGA failure was a clear demonstration of the effects of a design based around a "non-functional" default state. In the case of Vista, the only way that the software will remain functional is by continuous and expensive intervention. Any design that starts from this premise will, if functioning correctly, be slow, unstable and expensive to use. In my opinion, Vista and all subsequent MS operating systems will suffer from the consequences an American Corporatist approach of allowing well-heeled but operationally insignficant stakeholders to drive the program.

  69. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Pentavirate · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I agree. I happened to buy a computer the first week Vista came out. I honestly didn't even realize it had come out. My old computer went bad and I needed a new one fast. I honestly can't see where all the gripes are. I leave it on all the time. It never crashes on me. It's only rebooted a couple of times because of certain updates it's gotten that required it (I know I know, why should an update require a reboot blah blah blah). It's really run like a dream. I don't have particularly fast hardware. It wasn't an expensive computer. I got it for $750 at Staples. I've never noticed a slow down because of aero. I run as a standard user and not as admin and the only time I get prompted for UAC is when I install something or I make system changes which is as it should be. (I had an issue with an HP program that assumed running as admin to check for updated drivers every day. Luckily that program was finally updated and so is no longer an issue.)

    I mean honestly, what is the big problem? I keep reading articles and comments talking about how crappy Vista is and I just shake my head and say I don't get it. I don't know. I guess prejudices are hard to give up.

  70. CORRECTION: ... more than 3 years. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    CORRECTION: I should have said, "It has been more than 3 years since WinXP service pack 2 was released..."

  71. Re:Amazing. by Pentavirate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let me know nine months from now if Vista can actually do anything for you that XP, Mac or gnu/linux could not do faster

    My mother-in-law is a very unknowledgeable user. I bought her a computer a week after I bought mine and I set it up with Vista (came with XP but Vista had just been released so I got a free upgrade). My mother-in-law's biggest problem has always been her kids coming home to visit and downloading or installing crap. It's always been a challenge to lock her XP down. With Vista it's a piece of cake. She runs as a standard user and since she isn't a power user, she rarely has to be bothered by UAC. When she is, it's no big deal to enter the admin password. Now when I go to visit I don't have to spend hours cleaning off viruses and spyware. It all just works. She's never had an issue and I never have to fix something using the VNC server I installed on it like I used to with her XP.

    As for faster, it really doesn't have a speed problem. I've never noticed any speed issue and that's with Aero running. It's an HP that I paid $650 for and it included a monitor. Not exactly high-end hardware.

  72. SP == Sales Pack, not Service Pack by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1
    Sure the SP will fix some things, bu the primary reason to push it out is to invigorate sales.

    Nobody, not even utter fanboys, thought that pre-SP Vista would be worthwhile. MS know they have to release an SP to make people interested. It gives them a way to wipe the slate clean.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  73. What Vista SP1 means to me by DreadfulGrape · · Score: 1

    Not a god-damned thing.

    I had such a miserable experience running Vista for two weeks (on a fairly ballsy PC - AMD Athlon fx 4000 w/ 4 gb RAM, gamer-quality video card, etc.). Sorry, but you'd have to point a gun to my head to get me to do that again.

    This was the last Windows PC in my otherwise all-Mac house. Tomorrow I'm replacing it with a new Mac Mini Core2Duo. Probably just redeploy the PC as a home network server.

    If you love Vista, great, I'm not trying to piss on your parade. I will admit the Aero interface is very pretty. Hardly makes up for random blue-screen/reboots several times a day. Yes, this was a fresh install, not an upgrade version.

    This is just one man's experience......

    --
    sig has been sent away for a few small repairs...
  74. User agents... by Almahtar · · Score: 0

    I found I often needed to change my user agent in Firefox to report that I was using IE on Windows to use a particular site that "required it" (IE, developer didn't want to test it on other platforms but it worked just fine). I told it to report I was using Windows and IE when I was actually using Ubuntu and Firefox. There are a lot of times I forgot to change it back for months or more.

    I'm sure that OSX/Safari and OSX/Firefox people experience the same thing. Now there's now way for me to know the actual impact this would have on the numbers, but I'd like to point out that it could possibly be significant. May not even be 1%, may be higher - I know people that just change their user agent whenever they install on a box so they don't get annoyed by IE-only sites.

    1. Re:User agents... by westlake · · Score: 1
      I found I often needed to change my user agent in Firefox to report that I was using IE on Windows to use a particular site that "required it"

      That doesn't explain why anyone would bother changing the user agent to return IE 7 for Vista rather than a generic IE7 or IE6 for XP.

      How many people do you suppose know what a "user agent string" is or how to modify it safely?

      Most people hate and fear command lines and configuration files because they are afraid some obscure typographical error will lock up their system.

      That is why "IE Tab" becomes a popular extension in Firefox.

    2. Re:User agents... by Almahtar · · Score: 1

      That doesn't explain why anyone would bother changing the user agent to return IE 7 for Vista rather than a generic IE7 or IE6 for XP. I never claimed which particular version of Windows or IE people use for their agent string. Any combination that makes the site you visit happy works. I'm not trying to draw the distinction between which version of Windows or IE they choose to fake, just that there are a lot of OSX and Linux users that are forced to do so by non standards-compliant sites.

      How many people do you suppose know what a "user agent string" is or how to modify it safely? People that don't drink the MS koolaid - OSX users and Linux users as well as firefox users on Windows (Not many, mind - most of them just use IE Tab) tend to learn the trick pretty quickly because their banking site or whatever won't let them in. They ask around a bit, and get an answer. Word spreads quickly.
  75. Improvements by Xordan · · Score: 1

    Security improvements that will be in Windows Vista SP1 include:

            * Provides security software vendors a more secure way to communicate with Windows Security Center.
            * Includes application programming interfaces (APIs) by which third-party security and malicious software detection applications can work with kernel patch protection on x64 versions of Windows Vista. These APIs help ISVs develop software that extends the functionality of the Windows kernel on x64 computers without disabling or weakening the protection offered by kernel patch protection.
            * Improves the security of running RemoteApp programs and desktops by allowing Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) files to be signed. Customers can differentiate user experiences based on publisher identity.
            * Adds an Elliptical Curve Cryptography (ECC) pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) to the list of available PRNGs in Windows Vista.
            * Enhances BitLocker Drive Encryption (BDE) to offer an additional multifactor authentication method that combines a key protected by the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) with a Startup key stored on a USB storage device and a user-generated personal identification number (PIN).

    Reliability

    Windows Vista SP1 will include improvements that target some of the most common causes of crashes and hangs, giving users a more consistent experience. Many of these improvements will specifically address issues identified from the Windows Error Reporting tool. The following list describes some of the reliability improvements that Windows Vista SP1 will include:

            * Improved reliability and compatibility of Windows Vista when used with newer graphics cards in several specific scenarios and configurations.
            * Improved reliability when working with external displays on a laptop.
            * Improved Windows Vista reliability in networking configuration scenarios.
            * Improved reliability of systems that were upgraded from Windows XP to Windows Vista.
            * Increased compatibility with many printer drivers.
            * Increased reliability and performance of Windows Vista when entering sleep and resuming from sleep.

    Performance

    The following list describes some of the performance improvements that Windows Vista SP1 will include:

            * Improves the speed of copying and extracting files.
            * Improves the time to become active from Hibernate and Resume modes.
            * Improves the performance of domain-joined PCs when operating off the domain; in the current release version of Windows Vista, users would experience long delays when opening the File dialog box.
            * Improves performance of Windows® Internet Explorer® 7 in Windows Vista, reducing CPU utilization and speeding JavaScript parsing.
            * Improves battery life by reducing CPU utilization by not redrawing the screen as frequently, on certain computers.
            * Improves the logon experience by removing the occasional 10-second delay between pressing CTRL-ALT-DEL and the password prompt displaying.
            * Addresses an issue in the current version of Windows Vista that makes browsing network file shares consume significant bandwidth and not perform as fast as expected.

  76. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by ssstraub · · Score: 1

    I think if you put XP on that same computer, you'd be surprised at how much faster it is on identical hardware.

  77. Important Feature Upgrade. by crhylove · · Score: 1

    I'm not going to install Vista SP1 unless they make sure to add the feature of not totally sucking. Even then, Gutsy is just so pretty, I doubt I will bother.

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  78. Re:Amazing. by The+Great+Pretender · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Disclaimers:

    XP user at work

    Linux user at home

    Vista user at home

    Never had an issue with vista since I installed it right when it was first released. Runs well on my old Dell Domension 8300 box. Not crashed. Not slow when copying lots of files. I use it to serve all my MP3 (>250 Megs) throughout my house. I run NTI Shadow 3 in the background to backup My Docs, photos and music to my LACIE network drive. I run McAfee in the background and a bunch of other stuff. I'm not a tech-boy, I installed it myself and I use it for general home use. Honestly, I'm not seeing where the big issue is. It does it's job and that's all I ask it to do.

    --
    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
  79. This chart tells me ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is a trend of Google's search term for "Vista":
    http://google.ca/trends?q=vista

    Note how the curve peaks when Vista is released, then it drops, levels off, and now it's slowly moving up again. Of course, this doesn't directly mean anything at all, but it could mean a slow increase of recent interest in the OS. Or searches from frustrated users whom have recently purchased a computer with Vista included.

  80. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you spelled Microsoft or its shorthand version MS properly.
    Check his sig. He, in fact, does.

    Of course, his sig might very well be an abbreviation for MS. Junk, which incidentally, really was a crappy vintage 80s text based adult game. She had too much in the trunk for my liking.
  81. Re:Amazing. by FreeGamer · · Score: 1, Insightful
    This would read better:

    My mother-in-law is a very unknowledgeable user. I bought her a computer a week after I bought mine and I set it up with [Ubuntu] (came with XP but [Ubuntu Feisty] had just been released so I [downloaded it for free]). My mother-in-law's biggest problem has always been her kids coming home to visit and downloading or installing crap. It's always been a challenge to lock her XP down. With [Ubuntu] it's a piece of cake. She runs as a standard user and since she isn't a power user, she rarely has to be bothered by UAC. When she is, it's no big deal to enter the admin password. Now when I go to visit I don't have to spend hours cleaning off viruses and spyware. It all just works. She's never had an issue and I never have to fix something using the [SSH server it came with] like I used to with her XP [over VNC which I had to install]. Aaaah... better. :-)

    Actually, there's one key difference. This story is unfinished. There are two endings. One includes the phrase "malware and viruses" and the other doesn't. I'll let you wait for the virus/spyware world to catch up with Vista before you realise yours is the story with the bad ending. Then again, you can rewrite this story in a few years subbing Vista for XP, so bookmark this page and in a few years, when you come back to it, remember to thank me for saving you the effort to have to rewrite it.
  82. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by FreeGamer · · Score: 1

    Just because Vista is stable for you, doesn't mean it is for everybody. I know plenty of people - including myself - who had bad initial experiences with Vista. Sure, it's shiney, but that's as good as it got for me. I dunno, maybe trying to unzip an eclipse download isn't something an OS like Vista should have to handle... :rolleyes:

  83. Re:Amazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use it to serve all my MP3 (>250 Megs) throughout my house.
    Wow. That's about 3 albums, 4 at most. Go power user.

    I'm guessing you meant gigs... ;-)

  84. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by TheUnFounded · · Score: 3, Informative
    Install Vista on a laptop. Then try:
    1. saving a wireless connection with no SSID;
    2. hibernating;
    3. coming back from hibernation;
    4. re-establishing a wireless connection AFTER coming back from hibernation (assuming you managed to get that far);
    5. checking your battery consumption
    6. ???
    and then tell me there's nothing to complain about.
  85. Same old feature. Re:New features? by Erris · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Didn't I just read in the Slashdot Vista news earlier "The service pack is said to improve performance and stability, not to add features."

    M$ often gives out contradictory statements. Their business model is as new feature free as Windoze itself.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
  86. Staying in the car. by Trillan · · Score: 1

    They can drive me there, but they can't make me get out of the car. I'll stick with Mac OS X and Kubuntu for my day-to-day needs, and XP and its more reasonable license agreement for the stuff I need to do in Windows.

  87. Re:Same old feature. Re:New features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Losing your karma bonus sucks, doesn't it, Twitter?

  88. Windows Vista SP1 and you... by botkiller · · Score: 2, Funny

    Are you ready for that mouse driver to _maybe_ stop crashing your system?

    Yeah, we thought so. Well, tough luck, pointdexter.

    --
    brian botkiller "Condensing fact from the vapor of nuance" - Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash
  89. No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by Erris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To speak of Vista's "failure" in the marketplace is desperately premature, if not inane.

    A new OS or fork that fails to gain more than 4% of the user base in 9 months could only be considered a success in Redmond. We have already been through a Christmas and back to school sale. Why should next year be any different? M$ still thinks xbox and zune are competitive, so what do I know?

    If you want to talk about desperate, think about M$'s position. Release a brand new OS and a brand new Office suit and then see no difference to your bottom line. See banks, airlines, hardware stores and others deploy rival software, "where it counts". See vendors sell the same rival software. Their software is buggy because they opted for the great content lockdown instead of taking care of things that mattered.

    --
    DMCA, Hollings, Palladium. What might have sounded like paranoia is now common sense.
    1. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista HASN'T been through a xmas yet, it wasn't available to OEM's and retailers till End of January 07. was on MSDN in Nov 06 but that is only a tiny fraction of a fraction of users. So Vista has yet to see a christmas sales season and until it does only a fool would declare it a failure already.

    2. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by westlake · · Score: 1
      A new OS or fork that fails to gain more than 4% of the user base in 9 months could only be considered a success in Redmond.

      4% in nine months looks a hell of a lot better than the ten years it took Linux and the twenty-three years it took the Mac to reach and hold the same market share.

      We have already been through a Christmas and back to school sale

      Vista missed its Fall 06 target.

      OS upgrade vouchers for a warmed-over XP box do not have the same appeal to the upgrade-conscious buyer as an OEM install on a DX10 system with all the bells and whistles.

      Microsoft will have a new product out this fall in Windows Home Server.

      Release a brand new OS and a brand new Office suit and then see no difference to your bottom line.

      MIcrosoft saw a record $51 billion in revenues in its last fiscal year.

    3. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just a reminder that Erris is the sockpuppet account for that moronic "M$/Windoze" troll twitter.

    4. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      A new OS or fork that fails to gain more than 4% of the user base in 9 months could only be considered a success in Redmond.

      4% in nine months looks a hell of a lot better than the ten years it took Linux and the twenty-three years it took the Mac to reach and hold the same market share.

      You are mixing up market share and user base. The user base of Windows is over 90% of the market. The user base of Apple is about 4% of the market, that of Linux a little less.

      This 4% of the user base is in case of Windows almost the same as total market share - that's because they are a monopoly. However you could compare it to the uptake of OSX in the Apple user base - within that 4% of the market. Not the total market.

      The point: user base and market share are different things.

    5. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by dedazo · · Score: 1

      A new OS or fork that fails to gain more than 4% of the user base in 9 months

      Actually, it's 5.4% in 7 months - http://marketshare.hitslink.com/report.aspx?qprid= 2&qpmr=15&qpdt=1&qpct=3&qptimeframe=M&qpsp=102

      could only be considered a success in Redmond

      Alternatively, it could only be considered a failure here.

      so what do I know?

      Well, you can always make stuff up. Oh wait...

      --
      Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
    6. Re:No, you can talk about Vista's failure. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      M$ still thinks xbox and zune are competitive, so what do I know? I worked at Apple in the 90's, and after shipping a new machine they were polling around internally for what the Next Great Computer Product should be. I asked them how many owned and used their competitor's product. In a room of 15+ engineers and managers, only 2 hands went up (and a bunch of groans). After feature proposal were heard, I plunked a copy of Computer Shopper on the table (you remember, the ones that were about 2 inches thick!) and pointed out that their competitors were already shipping what they thought was going to be "new and innovative" (and for about $1000 less than they planned to sell it for).

      So the notion that M$ thinks XBox and Zune are competitive is nothing new to companies that are inwardly focused and ignoring what the Rest of Us want and are doing. In fairness, from what I hear, Apple today is very different than it was back then. Now Microsoft...
  90. So use TrueCrypt by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 2, Informative

    Runs on Linux and Windows, and doesn't need a TPM chip to operate. It'll create encrypted volumes from files, or work with raw devices, and also do "hidden volumes" in case you need plausible deniability - http://www.truecrypt.org/

    --
    Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
  91. Power Management by kaiwai · · Score: 1

    Another problem is this; all the atlernatives have terrible power management; for example, I tried Fedora 7, SLED 10 SP1, Solaris Express B70 (upgraded to B71) and all of them fail misserably to actually manage my power and enable me to use my computer off battery for longer than 1 hour.

    This is not a troll, I'd love to see more competition but I (along with others) aren't going to bend over backwards and sacrifice functionality for the sake of 'sticking it to the man'.

    1. Re:Power Management by jbengt · · Score: 1

      What laptop and battery do you have?
      I'm not saying power management is great on Linux, I've definitely had problems with sleeping and hibernating, but I'm using Fedora 6 (Fedora 7, which you say you've tried, is still in beta)on my old Dell Insprion with a Pentium M, speed stepping works fine, and I get 4 to 5 hours battery life, depending on what I'm doing (don't even try burning a DVD while on the battery). Compared to Fedora 3, XP seemed to get a little more battery life, but I don't notice a difference anymore.
      Never tried Vista, and I'm not going to at home, though at work they've started testing the apps we use for compatibility.

    2. Re:Power Management by jbengt · · Score: 1

      What laptop and battery do you have that you only get 1 hour ?

      I'm not saying power management is great on Linux, I've definitely had problems with sleeping and hibernating, but I'm using Fedora 6 on my old Dell Insprion with a Pentium M, speed stepping works fine, and I get 4 to 6 hours battery life, depending on what I'm doing (don't even try burning a DVD while on the battery). Compared to Fedora 3, XP seemed to get a little more battery life, but I don't notice a difference anymore.
      Never tried Vista, and I'm not going to at home, though at work they've started testing the apps we use for compatibility.

    3. Re:Power Management by kaiwai · · Score: 1
      What laptop and battery do you have? I'm not saying power management is great on Linux, I've definitely had problems with sleeping and hibernating, but I'm using Fedora 6 (Fedora 7, which you say you've tried, is still in beta)on my old Dell Insprion with a Pentium M, speed stepping works fine, and I get 4 to 5 hours battery life, depending on what I'm doing (don't even try burning a DVD while on the battery). Compared to Fedora 3, XP seemed to get a little more battery life, but I don't notice a difference anymore. Never tried Vista, and I'm not going to at home, though at work they've started testing the apps we use for compatibility.

      The laptop is a HP dv6209tx - the issue is basically down to this, _PSS symbols aren't being exported which means that the way *NIX tries to manage power, can't be done. This isn't just an issue with HP laptops, its also seen in Toshiba ones as well. The battery, its the standard one included with an HP laptop. With that being said, there is also the lack of MiniDisc/ATRAC support - I don't blame the opensource community for that, who I blame are the *NIX/UNIX vendors who have the resources to pay for the technology who refuse to do so.

  92. /. and moderations... by Hucko · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the comments I would propose that the traditional linux stronghold has been lost. Anyone making negative references to Microsoft products seems to be modded down and 'out yelled', whether the comments are on technical merits, anecdotal or opinionated, or derogatory.

    Of course derogatory for its own sake should be modded down. Technical conversations should be directly rebuffed unless they are obvious lies (it goes both ways Twitter...). Anecdotal; ymmv. Opinionated should be reasoned with technical basis in a civil manner. Unfortunately civility is a dying characteristic [that is an unsubstantiated opinion modders] in the world in general following chivalry.

    --
    Semi-automatic amateur armchair Australian philosopher; conjecture ready at any moment...
    1. Re:/. and moderations... by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Funny

      From the comments I would propose that the traditional linux stronghold has been lost. Anyone making negative references to Microsoft products seems to be modded down and 'out yelled', whether the comments are on technical merits, anecdotal or opinionated, or derogatory.

      You must be reading some other Slashdot.

      Here, pretty much any post that criticises Windows or Microsoft is a shoe-in for some sort of positive moderation, regardless of its accuracy or how (badly) it might be written. Anyone posting about Microsoft in a non-critical fashion - even if they do nothing more than correct factual errors in a neutral fashion - is considered "pro Microsoft", a "shill", an "Astroturfer" or similar. Technical arguments against Windows are few, far between and typically based on 10+ year old (outdated) information, if not on a completely different product (Windows 9x). Posters revel in their ignorance of Windows and other technology they don't like (eg: DRM) and see no problem whatsoever in basing rants against such topics upon that ignorance.

      Slashdot lost as a "traditional Linux stronghold" ? You must be joking. Slashdot has become the Fox News of the Linux world.

  93. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I mean honestly, what is the big problem? I keep reading articles and comments talking about how crappy Vista is and I just shake my head and say I don't get it. I don't know. I guess prejudices are hard to give up.

    It isn't just prejudice, but it does depend on how you use your machine.

    For example, it seems gamers are generally not Vista fans. There has been a history of abysmal performance, unreliable graphics drivers, networking/sound problems, and the like. Every major gaming review site I've checked in recent months has some tale of woe or other, and unlike the average moan on Slashdot, these are typically backed by hard data showing XP to be a more stable and/or better-performing platform. Even the DirectX 10 hype has mostly been debunked at this point — for example by getting "Vista-only" games to run just fine on XP.

    Laptop users seem to be another group with more than their fair share of grudges against Vista. That's a sizeable chunk of the business world who are upset.

    Then there's the home entertainment crowd, who take offence at all the artificial, DRM-related limitations imposed by Vista's futile attempts to "secure" content.

    And of course, the final kicker for geeks running Windows is... Well, what does Vista actually do that XP doesn't? (Or, for that matter, that a recent release of OS X or a modern Linux distro doesn't, if you're buying or building new kit and not tied to Windows?) There are plenty of technical concerns, and not a few ethical/trust ones, that argue against getting Vista, so what have Microsoft got that's more important? And the answer, from what I've seen so far myself and reading numerous comments and reviews by others, is pretty much nothing.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  94. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by coryking · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ick! XP is ugly and feels slow compared to Vista. There are so many little things you pick up, like there is finally an easy way to see the full path to running processes, once you try to support people using XP you just get frustrated! Vista is a huge improvement over XP.

    That doesn't mean there aren't bugs. Their new TCP/IP stack has all kinds of bugs. There is a bug (and I'm too lazy to find the KB on it) that fucks up how it sends ACK's to other devices. As it turns out, it will hang the MediaMVP in my bedroom. Some vendors software gets buggy too - Vista changed a lot of the API for explorer (the file one, dammit!) that seems to crash TortiseSVN every now and then (though explorer.exe is the one that does the crashing...)

    Given a little more time to mature, I suspect many people will look at this like XP vs 3.1. They really just look and act that much different.

  95. Re:Amazing. by coryking · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I cannot wait to get Vista on my folks computer. My mother seems to trash their computer all the time. However, she'll aways call me whenever XP gives a "Are you sure, Dave?" message. With UAC, she'll be calling me every time she tries to install yet another DVD duplicator or some weird ass media player.

  96. Re:Amazing. by coryking · · Score: 1

    I'm confused though. She just went to target and bought "Super Deluxe Pimpomediaplayer 2000" and it won't install. You mean, it wont run? Cory, this computer is messed up, can you come all the way over here and fix it sometime this week?

    No thanks.

    PS: Copilot.com is your friend. Saved me many trips fixing ye old parents computer.

  97. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by PhoenixAtlantios · · Score: 1

    Do you have a link or reference to any DirectX 10 game running on Windows XP? So far the "Vista Only" games that have been modified to work on XP have been using DirectX 9.0l, which isn't exactly all that much different from 9.0c as I understand it? I've seen it argued a lot that DirectX 10 has no significant changes that render it unusable on XP, but they're usually using Halo2 as the reference point and that's a 9.0l game.

  98. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by baldass_newbie · · Score: 1

    I'm just starting my second week with Vista 64 Business and while it's nice, very clean and impressive, the fact that:
    a.) I can't run Windows Update and
    b.) Can't view .wmv files
    are both downright frightening.
    I am working with MS Tech Support (email variety) on the Windows Update. The two day lag since the last communication is less than heartening.
    The first few days, the little annoyances were not enough to stop me from strongly considering Ultimate.
    Right now, I'm looking at those sexy iMacs and remembering when I was swearing that I would never invest in roll-your-own-hardware because of the lack of Linux driver support (*glares at ATI*) and how flaky Microsoft products are.
    I've had 5 hard crashes today alone. Yeah, maybe there's an update out there BUT I CAN'T GET AT IT!

    I want it to work. I really do. But come on.

    --
    The opposite of progress is congress
  99. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Or just try to use any version of Ciscos vpn software. Apparently the 5.0 version works *sometimes* and only on fresh installs of vista. I tried to verify it working on a fresh install of vista in a vm and it couldn't hold the vpn up for more than a few minutes at time. Back to XP I went...

  100. "New Features?" by bizitch · · Score: 1

    Is one of those new features - like - not bluescreening every time I add a new device?

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
  101. What vista means to me by Eric+Elliott · · Score: 1

    Nothing. Only one computer runs XP for 1 Windiz hardware. That hardware will not mutate to require Vista, so Vista has no meaning to me. Kubuntu & Suse for all other computer needs.

  102. What he's saying by dedazo · · Score: 1

    but really I think you are a liar.

    Yes, anyone who dares suggest that Vista is not the existencial nightmare you claim it is is a liar.

    --
    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
  103. Am I the only person... by koalapeck · · Score: 1

    ...in the entire world that is happy with my move to Windows Vista?

    Sure, there were some annoyances early on (all video card related), but these issues have all gone away. Once AMD released mature video drivers for my x1950pro, my machine has been running the way I expect it to (with no issues).

    Microsoft deserves a lot of the things people say about them, but I can't believe the number of people who don't have any real experience with Vista that chime in saying "ha, ha, Vista is crap."

    Admittedely I was nervous about going to Vista when I did (March of this year), but I was building a new computer at the time, and figured I may as well try it out. I could always go back to XP if Vista really was as bad as people were claiming.

  104. Re:64-bit Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would try 64-bit Linux before trying XP-64 or Vista-64. It has essentially equal driver support to the 32-bit version, since almost all drivers are built from source (and I know for sure the binary nvidia driver supports 64-bit; I think the ATI does too.)

              If I were going to go for it, I'd run Ubuntu. Basically the only difference in terms of compatibility from a 32-bit system is some kludging to get the (32-bit only) flash plugin going; I think either you install 32-bit firefox, or use some plugin shim. Unless you're running gentoo (where you do everything yourself pretty much) modern distros will smooth this over for you I think.

              I know it's a big change, but if you're serious about 64-bit computing that really is the way to go.

  105. SPs and rollups are needed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    White writes off this practice as no longer being necessary and notes how Windows Update has lessened the importance of the release of a service pack

    I, for one, cannot stand Microsoft's ignorance when it comes to rollups and Service Packs. Windows XP, slipstremed with Service Pack 2, still requires 80+ patches and at least 2 reboots to finish patching. At one point it looked like Microsoft was going to be releasing more rollups, which means less actual patches to apply. The "Internet Explorer Cumulative Security Patch" is a step in the right direction. At least you can be reasonably assured that if you patch yourself with said patch, IE is relatively up to date.

    One package that's been pissing me off lately is .NET 1.1. To get a stable .NET install, you need to first install .NET 1.1. Then you need to install 1.1.SP1, because there is no installer with SP1 slipstremed in. Then you have to install two seperate hotfixes. I'm sorry I don't have the KB numbers. That's FOUR installers (if you're using Windows update, 2 reboots) to get you up to the latest version.

    Message to Microsoft: we WANT rollups and service packs!!! Windows Update is a pain in the ass!!!!!

    If nothing else, I'd like to see a method of downloading all patches since SP2 into a single installer, so I could easily build an offline installer kit. Install XP with SP2 slipstremed, install the patch kit, done without a network connection (and saving HOURS of patch downloading time).

  106. Old news to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I installed sp1 back in September many, many, many times. My first attempts were not so great, because well I didn't know how to properly build sp1, and well the speed really sucked. After some bugs were fixed, ect... it was time to prove it was better than the install times of XP. All that delta compression along with the new dependency tree would ensure that the update was more efficient and more importantly it allows uninstall of the SP to actually work. Oh and for those of you who don't know, SP1 will be build 6001. As the last 4 bits of the build number actually refer to the SP level. The developers wanted it a multiple of 16 to prevent collisions, while the marketing team wanted it to be a multiple of 10 for well, marketing reasons. So for the last month or so build numbers were incremented by 80. Mind you Vista actually missed 6000 by about 2 builds. But they just pretended it was 6000 since it looks so nice.

  107. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by rtb61 · · Score: 1
    The one major problem of course is that MS is far more recognisable as http://www.msaustralia.org.au/, just as M$ is far more recognisable as microsoft, get over it already. For a start it differentiates if from the various Multiple Sclerosis Societies around the world and is aptly descriptive of M$'s behaviour, greedy is as greedy does (and I use MSN).

    Perhaps to make you happy M$ should sue the crap out of every charitable Multiple Sclerosis Society around the world so that M$ can take over the MS logo.

    Back to support pack 1 for vista getting people to willingly swap from stale piss to vista, perhaps vista support pack one is just stale piss(see I'm avoiding abbreviations) with the (FU)DRM removed and rebranded ;).

    People will only take M$'s post as seriously or more specifically as genuinely as M$ does about marketing the quality of the products it produces, or marketing about hiding product failures, or marketing about denying product faults, or marketing about products sales and those products being 'Sold Out' or, etc. etc. in fact it would be easier just to write M$=B$ and everybody knows what it means.

    So M$ is mocked and treated with contempt because that is the way that M$ treats their competitors and their customers.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  108. Obligatory... by maz2331 · · Score: 1

    I, for one, welcome our new SP1 overloards. (Not really, but it will generate a whole shitload of billable hours).

  109. We've all grown up by coryking · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've been doing slashdot since like 97 - right around senior year in high school. Back then I would have been a good little member of the cult of RMS, I would have been all "fuck the man" for software patents, I pirated software like hell (even had a really good warez server when comcast was beta testing cable modems) and I had gigs of mp3's.

    If I'm anything like other people on Slashdot, I'm now older and wiser. I am about to plunk down $1,600 on Photoshop/Dreamweaver. I bought and paid for all the software on all my computers including Visual Studio, Quickbooks and Office Pro. I own two Vista boxes, one XP box and a Mac laptop. I've got half a rack of linux gear in the Westin building, but I've grown too old to pull my hair out with it's stability and I'm moving the farm to FreeBSD. I cannot wait until my business grows to the size then I have to plunk down cash for a wicked cool "big iron" system.

    I've been through Slashdot and got bored. I went to kuro5hin before it died. I trolled with the best on adequacy before it died. I tried digg until it turned into youtube without video. It has been 10 years and despite everything, slashdot is still here going strong. As much as people diss slashdot, it is the only website of it's type that is still around. It may have new ajax tricks, but it is still the same as it was in 1997.

    So has the traditional Linux stronghold been lost, or has the general slashdot population just grown up, got jobs and now see linux for what it is? A tool just like any other tool. And that is okay.

    1. Re:We've all grown up by chthon · · Score: 1

      I too have grown up, but I discarded Microsoft once and for all already in 1991. I used OS/2 and later Linux. I have to use MS software on my job, and that is enough to keep using Linux at home. It is used by me, my wife and my father, and I use the current Debian stable distribution.

      I do not know about the current stability of Linux, it is stable enough for daily use (with daily power cycle to save electricity), but I do know that I once had 200 days of uptime on the machine I still use, but that was with RedHat 7.3, with 2.4 kernel.

    2. Re:We've all grown up by Jon+Erikson · · Score: 1

      You know what, Slashdot was the first forum I ever posted on, and still the only one I check every day, after seven years or so. And I've posted on a lot of forums over the years.

      --

      Jon Erikson, IT guru

  110. Is Vista SP1 called NT 6.1? by Myria · · Score: 1

    I heard that Vista SP1 was really just upgrading Vista users to a non-server version Win2008. Does this mean that the OS version number is changing to 6.1?

    I wish Microsoft had made XP SP2 upgrade everyone to Win2003 (NT 5.2).

    --
    "Screw Sun, cross-platform will never work. Let's move on and steal the Java language." - Visual J++ Product Manager
  111. Look Closer by idsofmarch · · Score: 1

    By rounding you managed to gloss over an interesting piece of data: OS X has increased from 2.8 ( Jan '05) to 4.0 (July '07) and Linux has increased from 2.7 (Jan '05) to 3.4 (July '07). This is a subtle change, to be sure, but nonetheless interesting.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  112. Re:Amazing. by The+Great+Pretender · · Score: 1

    That's Huey Lewis and the News, Phil Collins and Whitney Huston...all the music anyone would ever need

    --
    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
  113. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by paganizer · · Score: 1

    Bill! you made it to /. again? Dude, Dudette, whatever you are... there is no way it is possible for Vista to run faster on the same harder as XP. totally, completely impossible. it uses too great a percentage of the systems resources. The ONLY way it is going to be possible is to pull a win2k / XP trick, and get intel or AMD to release a CPU that is not completely compatible with Win2k/WinXP while releasing a Vista patch to make Vista compatible This worked great last time; the 64-bit CPU's came out, and MS used Win2k to develop the 64-bit patch...then refused to release it on win2k, only making a 64-bit version of XP possible. And, of course, all the games that say they won't install on Win2k, only XP or Vista. of course every single one of those games has been patched to run, and run better, on win2k. if your post was intended as Sarcasm, forgive me; I've been awake too long.

    --
    Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  114. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by mikeburke · · Score: 1

    A sure sign of any well balanced, fair and unbiased comment are when all citations 'backing it up' are links to the poster's blog.

  115. Don't do it - Server2003 is better than XP by dbIII · · Score: 1

    The 64 bit version of Server2003 was pretty good even in beta. Why use a home computer opertating system like XP when you can't even get better driver support than 2003?

    1. Re:Don't do it - Server2003 is better than XP by langelgjm · · Score: 1

      According to Wikipedia, XP x64 "uses the Windows Server 2003 Kernel, currently the most stable Windows platform availiable".

      --
      "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    2. Re:Don't do it - Server2003 is better than XP by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Exactly - why buy all the other garbage on XP when you could have something set up better that uses the same drivers for a little bit more? If you are a cheapskate like me you remain with win2k and various breeds of *nix.

    3. Re:Don't do it - Server2003 is better than XP by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      If you want to keep legal server is way more expensive than pro! IMO you would be pretty stupid to buy server unless you actually needed some of the extra features it offers.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  116. Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but does it run on Linux?

  117. Re:Amazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My mother-in-law is a very unknowledgeable user. I bought her a computer a week after I bought mine and I set it up with [Ubuntu] (came with XP but [Ubuntu Feisty]...
    Hey, this looks like an update I just did, with just a couple of differences:
    • The previous O/S was Win98 (XP update was tried, but it had failed leaving the rig unusable)
    • The HW was not recently bought, but 7 years old (320 MB RAM)
  118. Third commercial operating system by vdboor · · Score: 1

    I think what I really want is a third professional, commercial operating system that will run my software and light a fire under MS and Apple I believe they call that option Red Hat Enterprise Linux :P
    --
    The best way to accelerate a windows server is by 9.81 m/s2 ;-)
    1. Re:Third commercial operating system by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      believe they call that option Red Hat Enterprise Linux
      If I could only run my DAW software and audio and video editors on it, Red Hat would be perfect.

      My development machine is now running Ubuntu Studio, but it's still got a ways to go before I can be as productive as I can with Windows XP, Sonar, Wavelab, Cubase, Flash and Premiere. But someday...

      Plus, I'm having a little trouble with the USB and 1394 drivers for my outboard audio hardware (M-Audio and MOTU). I can get it to work, but not all the features.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  119. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by colourmyeyes · · Score: 2, Funny

    7. Profit!!!!

    --
    My grandmother used anecdotal evidence all the time, and she lived to be 120 years old.
  120. Re:Amazing. by fandrieu · · Score: 1

    All right Mr Bateman, please drop this axe you have here...

  121. Just another bell... by dp_wiz · · Score: 0

    ..to run `update-manger` and check for new ubuntu release.

  122. how much impact will Vista SP1 have on me? by neonsignal · · Score: 1

    have you any idea how much damage this bulldozer would suffer if I just let it roll right over you?

  123. Obvious waste of time. by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

    If what the AC said was obviously correct, it was a waste of time, as it was already obvious. Only stuff that are correct, but not obvious, is worth taking notice of.

  124. Name calling by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

    Picking on people for using name calling is both immature, and a clear sign that the speaker has no real counter-arguments.

    Name calling is imply a way to show lack of respect. It is obvious that the previous speaker had no respect for MS Windows, so calling it Windoze was entirely appropriate in that context.

  125. What Vista SP1 Means To You by zukinux · · Score: 1

    Nothing I will keep using my Slackware 12.0 :]
    and What does it mean to you Sir?

  126. Hell Desk... by ShadowNetworks · · Score: 1

    It means more painful calls at the Help Desk at the campus I work on.... on an OS we don't yet support... which means more headaches. Thanks M$ for forcing so many college students into buying a crappy done OS before the market was ready to handle it.

    --
    Give me a productive error over a boring, mundane and unproductive fact any day. ~Anon
  127. XP support till 2014 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what SP1 means to me, another 7 years of not using it

  128. There's only one service pack you need for Vista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and you can download it right here.

  129. Re:Amazing. by phooka.de · · Score: 1
    It's always been a challenge to lock her XP down. With Vista it's a piece of cake. [...]


    So you mean, Vista is now about as good in respect to this as OS X 10.1? Parental controls in OSX, set up quichly and easily. Plus, no known visrusses so far (in contrast to Vista) and no Internet Explorer installed, that could infect your machine.

  130. "more secure"??? by master_p · · Score: 1

    Security is one of those properties that either exists or not. Saying that something is "more secure" is saying something like "being a little pregnant"!!! you either have security and nobody can break in or you don't.

  131. To me it means that... by master_p · · Score: 1

    SP2 is on its way!!! (hurrah! I never dared to use a brand-new Microsoft product without at least SP2 out).

  132. Re:Amazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My 60 year old grandmother is a very unknowledgeable user. She has had a Win98 computer for the past 7 years. She and I went out and bought a new one, with Vista pre-installed. I set it up with Ubuntu (came with Vista, but Vista for her is like using a chisel to sharpen a pencil. Plus its crap.). My grandmother's biggest problem has always been the lack of support for Windows 98. It's always been a challenge to get hardware working on it. With Ubuntu it's a piece of cake. She runs as a standard user and since she isn't root, she rarely has to be bothered by a gksudo dialog box. When she is, it's no big deal to enter the root password. Now when I go to visit I don't have to spend hours fixing security holes because it no longer gets updates (and the viruses and spyware), and searching for programs that still support Win98. It all just works. She's never had an issue and I've never had to fix something using the ssh server I installed on it.

    As for faster, it really doesn't have a speed problem. I've never noticed any speed issue. It's an Acer that she paid NZD$700 for and it included a monitor. Not exactly high-end hardware, but it only just met Vista minimum requirements.

  133. Spokesman's doublespeak by Gotebe · · Score: 1

    Frankly, the world wasn't 100 percent ready for Windows Vista Frankly, Windows Vista wasn't 100 percent ready for the world. There, fixed that for him!
  134. What Vista SP1 means to me... by RancidMilk · · Score: 0

    One more to go.

  135. What Vista SP1 Means To You by squash_me_quickly · · Score: 1

    This means: At least 1 more year until SP2 comes out, only then Vista can be comsidered "released" ! Before that it's a "public beta version" The whole Internet is going to slow down as terrabytes of SP1 clog up the internet.

  136. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Pentavirate · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if that should be a metric. I installed it on XP and I could no longer browse the web ever. I had to rebuild the machine to fix it. Here where I work notbody uses Cisco VPN except in a virtual machine.

  137. Privilege Escalation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Privilege Escalation: There have been lots of privilege escalation vulnerabilities in Windows XP. Here is one, now fixed: Highly critical, System access, From remote.

  138. Re:What exactly are you saying? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    someone named plague, claims Vista is "stable" and blithers

    I guess if you don't have any real point you resort to name calling.

    Without stability you don't get performance of anykind. The fact remains that adding Vista to any computer is both a performance and stability hit with little to justify it.

    Which is your opinion only. Of course when someone that actually DOES tell you they are running Vista just fine, you dismiss it. Yet YOU don't run Vista, and think google hits are meaningful research.

    I'm happy for you if Vista does anything right and is worth your use, but really I think you are a liar. More reliable people than you have thrown in the towel on Vista.

    You consider them reliable because they agree with your viewpoint. I personally don't care if some editor at PC world has problems; he may, I never said there were no problems with Vista, just that those people are likely a minority.

    If you don't like it, don't click through. Stick your head in the sand while Steve and Bill throw chairs. I like my little list and there's something new to add to it almost every day.

    That's rich. I don't need to make up shill accounts and link to my journal to try and give myself credibility. Seems like you're the one with you head in the sand. I've seen your journal once.

    I bet it kills you that Vista will soon have more marketshare than Linux. Get a life already.

  139. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course it does. And of course vista a failure.
    In eight months it's only managed to fill up nearly twice the market share of ppc/intel macs combined, and upwards of 6x the share Linux has in the past 13 years, mostly at the expense of XP. source that isn't my blog

    Yep. It's funny how something that would be a triumphant victory for anyone else is classified as a resounding failure for Microsoft. Compare it to Linux, which is still behind Windows 98 in overall use. Must be fun to not be limited by reality...

  140. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Roxton · · Score: 1

    How 'bout I/O prioritization? How 'bout the fact that application views render independently, increasing the apparent responsiveness of switching between applications? How 'bout the fact that the explorer no longer hangs when the system is busy? Vista feels like a major improvement in application and explorer responsiveness, which makes a really big difference.

  141. Driving users to Vista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I sense that I'm being "driven" to Vista, a place I certainly don't want to go, I will jump out of the fuckin vehicle...

  142. Re:Amazing. by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

    Thank you so much for the copilot link, I often try to help my gf who lives about 10000km away.
    this will hopefully help a LOT :D

    --
    This is the sig that says NI (again)
  143. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by IdolizingStewie · · Score: 1

    I'd like to introduce you to this wonderful concept called context. If I'm on a health or charity site, I expect MS to refer to Multiple Sclerosis. If I'm on Slashdot or anywhere else talking computers, I expect MS to refer to Microsoft. Do you get confused too when people start talking about Java classes and think they're writing instructional material about an island in Indonesia?

  144. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by FuzyBaffy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't think you are right. I bought a nice crap of the line dual core HP laptop with Vista Core 550$ added 50$ ram to bring it to 1.5 gigs. Hibernate as well as wifi work wonderfully. Standby is nice. I didn't used to have it so when I close the lid my laptop goes into standby. It is so fast now that I left it that way. Hibernation works alright but it seems to take a MUCH longer time to go into Hibernation. Coming out of hibernation is extremely quick though.

    I thought I would hate Vista but it is alright when using the included programs. However a lot of my favorite programs like nero as well as many nice little things I run don't work right. Unless... you buy the upgrade. Same story as with XP but I really liked that upgrade and had no gripes with it whatsoever. I wasn't excited about XP but I loved it after I tried it out. Not really the same with Vista.

    Vista is Ok for people who don't game. Maybe your error was in not buying a HP.... If you game like me the performance hit for Vista is wayy to much for me to deal with. There aren't any real great reasons to upgrade to vista you can already skin XP and get Yahoo widgets for free!

  145. Re:Vista SP1 could spell the end of Linux by lordtoran · · Score: 1

    What moron modded the troll interesting?

    --
    Want to hear the voice of GOD? cat /boot/vmlinuz > /dev/dsp
  146. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by Tim+Browse · · Score: 1

    Twitter, sometimes you talk sense, sometimes you sound like some kind of fundamentalist nutjob.

    That's a common problem with fundamentalist nutjobs.

  147. Something for ALL A/C's... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You will dress only in attire specially sanctioned by M.I.B. special services. You'll conform to the identity we give you. Eat where we tell you. Live where we tell you. From now on, you'll have no identifying marks of any kind. You will not stand out in any way. Your entire image is crafted to leave no lasting memory with anyone you encounter. You are a rumor, recognizable only as deja vu, and dismissed just as quickly. You don't exist. You were never even born. Anonymity is your name, silence is your native tongue. You are no longer part of the system. You are above the system, over it, beyond it. We're "them." We're "they." We are the Men in Black." - Zed, to Agent J & Agent K from the film "MEN IN BLACK"... apk I think that about sums it up... lol!

    APK
  148. vista whining by hapbt · · Score: 1

    its impossible to get any kind of useful discussion about windows products when all you guys can do is post "it dont work right, it sucks!"
    first of all, more than half of you i know from experience have no clue at all what you're talking about, you don't know anything about the OS beyond what you see on your screen, read some review on CNET or something, and it dosen't recognize your scanner or something so it 'sucks'
    if you have nothing actually ABOUT the topic to contribute other than that you are an idiot who bought vista and dosen't like it, maybe you should just SHUT UP.
    also, if you're working in IT and all you can say is 'vista sucks' that basically tells me that you're an IT guy who really dosen't know his job very well (like 80% of them), and gets frustrated very easily dealing with these complex devices we call 'computers'.

  149. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by xhrit · · Score: 1

    >Given a little more time to mature, I suspect many people will look at this like XP vs 3.1. They really just look and act that much different.

    Or they will look at it like ME vs 98 - they really just look and act that much different. But one sucks so much more...

  150. THINK by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

    Means that I finally CAN THINK of using it in a VMWare container....

  151. but if you dont game by sharperguy · · Score: 1

    What's stopping you using a modern GNU/Linux distro (assuming hardware support)?

    It just gets me because a lot of people will tell you that GNU/Linux is great if you don't intend to play the latest games on it (ie, the ones that don't work in wine), but if you just want to browse the web, listen to music, chat to friends, edit images, whatever else you can do with the tons of Free Software available, then its great as long as your hardware is well supported.

    Also it means you lose all the overhead from vista, and you get improved security without the Treacherous Computing and DRM rubbish.

    --
    "sudo rm -rf your-face"
    1. Re:but if you dont game by FuzyBaffy · · Score: 1

      This laptop was for my sister she has trouble enough with windows. And she has a Tmob Dash which she needs to synch. There are many crappy little programs she uses which run on windows. Would probably be an option for me but I don't think she would be too happy. Can't wait for that ~199 acer to come out I will be putzing around in Linux on that. I in general love XP I haven't ever had any security problems with it. XP has gotten to the point where you can customize just about anything. Just about the only thing that MS could do to screw itself over was to make vista. I will be keeping XP for a long time.

  152. Heya, well met :) by Almahtar · · Score: 1

    I hope you come back to read my response, that's one of the reasons I signed up - I'd get e-mailed about responses.

    Anyway I don't judge people for simply posting anonymously. There are many that do so for privacy concerns (don't want to register - that's fine), some for the reasons you stated (I considered them myself before signing up - I may have decided wrongly).

    Now while most of this discussion has been about this post by the AC, please note that it started with my pointing out the invalidity (and irony) of an AC specifically calling someone else's credibility into question without presenting any rebuttal to his post or relevant subject matter.

    Now I'm not calling your review of Twitter's behavior into question, just stating I haven't seen it with my own two eyes yet. If it's possible he's changed since the events you're recalling he deserves a 2nd chance from those he hasn't wronged yet (like me). If he hasn't changed, I'll see it myself eventually.

    I appreciate your taking time to respond - it did occur to me that a few of the actual valid AC crowd would misconstrue what I was saying. This gave me a chance to (attempt to) clear that up - I don't mind ACs, I mind when people use AC posting to start a one-sided flame war. Look forward to your posting again, though I'm bummed I won't know who you are. :)

    1. Re:Heya, well met :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello again, Almahtar. Thanks for responding; I'm glad you appreciated my first reply.

      It is very sad that AC's are more often than not just trolls and jerks looking to rile people up. Being anonymous has an unfortunate tendency to make people act like assholes, it would seem. So on behalf of all the AC's that are actually here for interesting discussions (there are *at least* 2 or 3 of us, maybe more!) I thank you for not judging us all by our worst members.

      I agree with you that the original AC was being hypocritical by questioning Twitter's credibility without providing any proof for his accusations. However I would guess that he is simply like me and an old hand on slashdot. For those of us who have been reading Twitter posts for years, it is all too easy to accidentally assume that everyone is already familiar with his "style". On one hand I hope you continue to read Twitter's posts and eventually come to understand some of my and others' distain for him. But on the other hand I kinda wish no one would have to put up with his rants at all :)

      Of course I sincerely hope that Twitter does change, as you posit. I'm afraid I may have had far too much exposure to actually take him seriously even if that were the case, but I'll try to keep an open mind. After all Twitter does actually make insightful, non-insulting posts every now and then - usually when the subject is very (very) far removed from anything related to Microsoft. If he could somehow get away from his vehement blanket hatred of all things Microsoft (and in some case all non-free software in general), then I imagine he could be quite an asset to the Slashdot community. After so long though that may be a huge if!

      Thank you for responding even though you had no way of knowing that I would ever read it. Rest assured that after posting AC for so many years I've figured out a few tricks to keep track of discussions. Anyway now I'm going to return back into the dark shadows where I and my fellow AC's reside when we are not posting here. I'll be back of course - I plan to stick with /. for a while yet. Just look for posts by an AC that actually takes the time to spell check - there's a good chance that's me! ;)

      Cheers

  153. Wait till SP1? Wasn't that SP2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "wait until SP1 to upgrade to the operating system, a common practice with Windows users."

    Well historically speaking, the rule is actually to wait until SP2. MS changed the strategy only since XP/2003, to roll out the good stuff in SP1, in order to try and break the "wait until SP2" rule-of-thumb. I guess it's working, at least the author has forgotten.

  154. Re:Amazing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No viruses in OS X.
    May want to double-check that one...

  155. Why is parent modded "funny"? by pxc · · Score: 1

    Uh... guys? I don't think he was kidding.

  156. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    Here's a hint for you is it Micro Soft or is it Microsoft, if your arguing meaningless try Mcdonalds, /. is a lot more than just computers and M$, and you didn't even try for M$=B$.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  157. I'm getting good karma trashing Microsoft by symbolset · · Score: 1

    First, some news: osdn.com is down.

    And some on-topic comment: Vista SP1 means nothing to me because there's no way it can pass validation with the enterprise customers who might ask me to deploy it. Every member of my family that eager to install Vista has already had me roll it back.

    And now back to our regularly scheduled flamewar:

    It just has to be done carefully, pointed toward obvious flaws and with good humor. I will agree that the Microsoft fanbois seem to have mod points these days -- I'm getting clearly biased downmods all the time. They're still not beating the upmods, though, so I'm winding up with mods like the ones to this post:

    Starting Score: 1 point
    Moderation +4
    80% Funny
    20% Troll
    Extra 'Funny' Modifier +1 (Edit)
    Karma-Bonus Modifier +1 (Edit)
    Total Score: 5

    I wind up with five votes up, one down. I loose a karma point because funny doesn't count, but usually someone will choose "interesting" to work around this. I get to feel good because the people who liked it enough to burn a mod point outnumbered the people who diliked it that much (and fanbois with modpoints) by a margin of five to one.

    In all, I would say the system is working for me but not for twitter. Twitter's an easy target, and twitter posts a lot.

    YMMV.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  158. Re:What this means is that M$ is begging again. by IdolizingStewie · · Score: 1

    if your arguing meaningless try Mcdonalds I honestly can't parse that into English, so I'll have to skip that in my response.

    As for the rest of it, you are correct that Microsoft is one word, not two, but do you argue that America Online should be abbreviated AO or do you accept general usage there? Hell there's not even a dollar sign in Microsoft; at least there is an 's' beginning a syllable. Again, your statement is correct that Slashdot is more than just computers and Microsoft, however a quick Google search of the site turns up a grand total of one story ever regarding Multiple Sclerosis (two if we count the RIAA suing a lady who happens to have the disease) while there are three Microsoft stories on the front page alone. Regarding "M$=B$," I have no lost love for Microsoft either, but I prefer not to descend to that level. The fact that Microsoft plays dirty doesn't mean that everyone else has to as well.