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University of Penn. Recommends Against Vista SP1

At least one university liberal enough to accept the deeply flawed and mostly rejected Vista OS is recommending faculty and students stay away from SP1. "University of Pennsylvania tech staffers are advising faculty and students not to upgrade their computers to the new service pack for Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system. The school's Information Systems & Computing department said it will support Vista SP1 on new systems where it's pre-installed, but added that it 'strongly recommends that all other users adopt a "wait and see" attitude,' according to a newly published department bulletin." And CIO magazine doesn't quite go so far as to call on Microsoft to throw away Vista, but it does ask its readers to weigh in on that topic.

21 of 286 comments (clear)

  1. Wait and See by 26199 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't that the standard advice for any major upgrade on any operating system ever?...

    1. Re:Wait and See by techno-vampire · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nice operating systems don't go down.

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    2. Re:Wait and See by The+Ultimate+Fartkno · · Score: 5, Funny

      Leave it to a slashdotter to confuse operating systems and girls.

    3. Re:Wait and See by Culture20 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I've used finger in an operating system, does that count?

  2. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  3. Huh? by The+Ancients · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As has been said above; this was going to happen. I know of companies running OS X, companies running Linux servers, who all adopt the wait-and-see approach. I'm not that impressed with Vista either, but I don't think I've ever seen an update to an operating system in which all users had total confidence in the manufacturer and OS enough to all update, no questions asked.

    Yes, I agree there are certain aspects of Vista which deserve to be slated, but this is more process related than product related.

    1. Re:Huh? by webmaster404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know of companies running OS X, companies running Linux servers, who all adopt the wait-and-see approach.

      Yes, but companies need much much more stability then college students. Most OS X upgrades are just fine and only usually break apps that modify the OS a lot, the same could be said though with adding random repositories to Ubuntu/Debian and the OS will break sometimes on installing the next version. But generally, I wouldn't recommend a Ubuntu user not upgrade to 8.04 when it comes out, nor would I recommend a Mac user not going to Leopard. However it seems that Vista SP1 is bad enough to warrent students not to upgrade, now that is saying something.
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    2. Re:Huh? by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That hasn't always been the case. There are still people who happily swallow anything dished out by Apple. And truly, Microsoft once had a fan base that had people standing in line for Windows 9X for days! Actually, as OS updates go, people have been begging for Vista SP1 because Vista in its original form was abysmal for many users... the people had been hoping that SP1 would provide what the original release failed to deliver. For some people SP1 actually made things worse.

      And while CIO doesn't come out and say "Microsoft, dump Vista!" they 'explore the idea' in such a way that it's pretty much what they are saying without using expletives and they certainly seem to be recommending it.

      What I find amusing is that force ONCE my predictions on something have come true. Before Vista was released, I believed it would be as popular as WindowsME. Well, I wasn't entirely correct--I think WindowsME had a stronger following. But as far as OS successes go, Vista ranks right in ME's neighborhood.

      In the past, the next version of Windows might have been hailed as a 'triumphant come back' or some such thing... WindowsME did not cause the public to doubt Microsoft in the slightest. They just counted WindowsME to mean "Windows MistakE." But Microsoft has saved its real mistake for Vista. Vista has been FORCED onto a public through OEM channels resulting in a public that actually refused to buy hardware based on the fact that there was no WindowsXP option quite frequently. Microsoft back-peddled by allowing "downgrade rights" but I'm not sure how many people actually got that memo because the practice of avoiding machines "sold with Vista" is still going on.

      Microsoft may choose not to listen to its users, but they're damned stupid for not listening to their OEMs. Apple's popularity is only growing because of it and while there may be some out there, I have yet to actually hear about people switching back from Mac once they've committed to the move.

    3. Re:Huh? by Z_A_Commando · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I happen to be a college student who upgraded to Vista SP1 on Tuesday when it showed up on my Windows Update. I have had no problems whatsoever in the past 5 or so days since the upgrade and my machine hasn't been shut down since the upgrade. Your response appears to be more conjecture and, dare I say, fear mongering. If you haven't upgraded to SP1, which I suspect you haven't, then please stop making the entire OS sound absolutely horrible. The wait and see attitude works fine, just don't make it sound like you should never upgrade. Why would Penn's IT department, which provides end-user support for students and staff, advocate upgrading? They have to support many more boneheaded users across a much wider array of systems than any corporate IT staff ever will. The number of unknowns and unresolved issues at the release of any patch, however large, is the reason for the wait and see attitude. They would much rather have someone else deal with problems as a result of the upgrade than deal with it themselves. That's the main reason for "wait and see". Allow someone else to iron out the problems, and hopefully it's Microsoft and whoever made the application that's broken. So there's nothing new here, just more fodder for people to say Vista is such a bad OS without ever using it for more than 10 minutes at Best Buy.

  4. Why stop here? by PhasmatisApparatus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why not take it a step further and recommend against Vista?

  5. I throw Vista away all the time by Radi-0-head · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have been a die-hard Microsoft user since MS-DOS on my ancient Heathkit XT clone. I currently use XP Pro and XP Media Center. I refuse to install Vista, as I enjoy a certain degree of control over my operating system. I still, by habit, use command lines in a DOS window to do things that Windows can do via the GUI. I guess I'm showing my age...

    This experience comes at a cost, namely supporting machines for my family and friends. Never mind what the media and professionals say about Vista, but when my friends and family BEG me to remove Vista and replace it with XP, you know something is bad wrong with this operating system.

    These days, if someone is buying a new machine, and all they do is email, browsing, pictures and the like, I will always recommend a Mac. I don't have to support the damn thing - it just works. If they're intent on a PC or need one for certain software, I send them to the Dell Outlet where you can still get a fantastic Core 2 Duo Optiplex with a 3-year warranty and XP for a few hundred bucks.

    If by chance I'm forced into Vista, I too am moving to Mac. Times change. Microsoft fucked up. I never thought I'd be advocating Macs, ever.

  6. Re:woot by webmaster404 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I dont see the difference between this OS and XP

    Except for say UAC, all the DRM and the fact that the thing runs slower on more powerful hardware then XP?

    Of course if all you read is slashdot you would also think that NT is just a unix wannabe

    It employs many design concepts from *Nix that weren't present in 9X so in a way it is very similar to Unix. Now granted there are only a finite way of solving problems present in Windows 9X so making it more Unix like is one of the ways to make it more secure.

    2000 an expensive upgrade for those who already have 95 and dont need it

    2000 probably won't run on the same hardware that 95 ran on, so yes they don't need what they can't run.

    and that XP is just 2000 with fisher price colors

    It is, it is basically Windows 2K with a shiny theme on it much like how Vista is like XP with a bunch of crap thrown on it and a shiny GUI.

    A bit off topic, but I can't help replying to such blatant lies.
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  7. Penn State is not the University of Pennsylvania by tietack · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know it's important only to alumni and friends of these schools, but Penn State (Twitter's Firehose title) is different from the University of Pennsylvania.

  8. Re:Liberal? by RonnyJ · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It's a stupid statement anyway, demonstrating an obvious anti-Vista viewpoint - what exactly is meant by "one university liberal enough to accept ... Vista"?

    The university would offer advice and support for the students own computers - any reasonable university is going to be "liberal enough" to let people use their own machines!

  9. The Slashdot Trifecta by westlake · · Score: 4, Funny
    1 It bashes Vista

    2 It's a post from Twitter.

    3 It got the green light from kdawson.

  10. Re:Don't do it! by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The MS logic seems to be "Let's make a pretty stable OS, and then let's release a really crummy one". XP was pretty good. I had no problems with XP. I liked XP. Then Vista comes out and nothing seems to work right. I've been using Vista on a few boxes for a year now, and wonder "What's the point? Why would anyone want Vista? A more fancy UI and some nifty media enhancements? Sorry, it just doesn't make sense".

    Vista seems to be Windows ME part 2. A really crapy OS to replace a somewhat stable one. I don't see how a service pack could make things any worse.

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  11. Wait a sec. by T23M · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Weren't we supposed to "wait and see" UNTIL SP1 came out?

  12. Uh, not Penn State by Tickenest · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's saying "Penn State" in a couple of places on Slashdot, but this story is from the University of Pennsylvania, which is not the same school. Penn State is in Happy Valley, PA, while the University of Pennsylvania is in Philadelphia, PA.

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  13. Vista is it the new Microsoft Bob ? by EEPROMS · · Score: 4, Informative

    Im the company IT guy and recently one of our female staffers purchased a brand new dual core Compaq laptop to replace her ageing P4 model. What she found is two of the USB ports refuse to work and her wireless modem would not work even though they were all certified by Microsoft. She took it to an IT "Windows" specialist and and he was stumped and said the laptop must be faulty. Out of curiosity I had a look at the machine booted up both my XP live and Ubuntu Live CD and everything worked. The fix was simple just install XP and recommend she find a new Windows support shop. PS on a side note she said the new laptop running Vista was way slower than her old machine running XP.

  14. Re:Does anyone actually use Vista? by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Let me guess.. you just browse and never really use it.

    I used it from pre-launch until a few months ago.

    1. Recursive file copy is broken - it'll copy a few files then crap out without an error.
    2. Network file copy is broken - it has a max transfer rate of 2k/sec on a gigabit network (XP on the same hardware can saturate it).
    3. Network settings worked for a couple of months then broke, giving 'permission denied' for every screen so you couldn't even tell if the cable was plugged in.
    4. It would just reboot, randomly, with no warning. On known good hardware with 100% WHQL drivers.
    5. The base OS uses 700mb minimum. On a 1.5GB machine that leaves too little for a decent development environment, so the whole thing slowed to a crawl with both the prefetch *and* swapping to disk driving the hard disk to distraction.
    6. The DNS handling is utterly broken - if you try to connect to a local machine more often than not it'd pick something random on the internet and try to connect to that. You have to use FQDN all the time otherwise it's a major security problem (vista is currently banned at our company for precisely this reason).
    7. On a laptop it fails to impress. Because it's hitting the hard drive 24/7 the battery life is less than 1/3 of what XP can manage on the same hardware.
    8. Sometimes it would just forget its users... literally forgot they existed. You had to boot into safe mode and recover.

    Those are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.

  15. Re:Don't do it! by ozmanjusri · · Score: 4, Insightful
    now badly written 3rd party software breaks. And you guys blame Microsoft.

    That's not why we blame Microsoft.

    We blame Microsoft for making it irritating, DRM infested and slow when they fixed the security issues.

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