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Microsoft's "Mojave Experiment" Teaser Site Goes Live

MojoKid writes "Earlier this week, Microsoft was reported to be arranging a kind of 'blind taste test' to get die-hard Windows XP users to try Vista. They were told that they were trying a new OS, called Mojave. The report went on to suggest that users liked the OS, though they were actually running Vista. Now it appears Microsoft has put up a teaser site, with plans to show the actual video footage next week. Though the footage should at least have some entertainment value, it would be a bit of a reach to expect that the test methodologies were real-world enough such that users had to deal with things like user account control, driver updates, and broad application compatibility."

16 of 464 comments (clear)

  1. Only Vista? by dword · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why didn't they give the users multiple flavors of the most colorful operating systems they never tried (Vista, OSX, Kubuntu, etc) and ask them which one they liked best?

    They gave them Vista and asked them if they liked it... That doesn't say much because nobody (most importantly THEY) knows if they'd like OSX more.

    1. Re:Only Vista? by 4D6963 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why didn't they give the users multiple flavors of the most colorful operating systems they never tried (Vista, OSX, Kubuntu, etc) and ask them which one they liked best?

      Why? Oh I don't know really.. Maybe because Microsoft doesn't want to publish something that says that users like Mac OS X best?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    2. Re:Only Vista? by Monoman · · Score: 5, Funny

      Great PR job. I KNEW the Iraqi Minister of Information would land on his feet somewhere.

      --
      Keep the Classic Slashdot.
  2. Seems desperate by Dice+Fivefold · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this is a bad move by Microsoft. It only makes them seem desperate. By making this viral campaign, they openly admit that vista so far has failed in the consumer market.

    This campaign really focus on the wrong issues. The main complaints over vista has never been that it isn't shiny and dazzling enough. The problems was that it makes older hardware painfully slow, the UAC annoyance, incompatible drivers etc. These are not things that a user notices in a 10 minute demo. This campaign shows nothing.

  3. Re:Hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    >They were probably running on top of the range hardware as well, a grahics card with 1GB of RAM, system with 4GB of RAM and a Quad core processor etc..

    Except that they were not. The linked site says they were running on HP dv2000 with 2Gb RAM.

  4. Re:makes you wonder by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Repeat the experiment with a "Vista Capable" set of hardware, the stuff MS is getting sued over.

  5. 10 minutes? by Lucas.Langa · · Score: 5, Funny

    So... it just finished booting up?

    --
    Build a tool even an idiot can use and only an idiot will want to use it. -S.O.B.
  6. Re:Vista isnt that bad really. by peragrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    yet my powerbook G4 from 2003 can run an OS with all the features of Aero, shadows, full screen , semi transparent menus etc just fine. You could install ubuntu with full compiz functionality on the same hardware as you have now.

    Aero shouldn't require a third of the resources that it does, and should run just fine on your laptop. The fact that it doesn't is indicative of Vista's poor design.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  7. Re:They have a point by SirSmiley · · Score: 5, Informative

    I recently installed vista ultimate 64 bit on my athlon 3800 dual core and upgraded to 4 gig of ram so i needed a 64 bit os to take full advantage...the 32 bit xp could only recognize 3.37 gig...im thinking of going back to xp and using the 3.37 gig because vista is definitely using more ram and the performance is actually worse. Bootup time is simply unacceptable, it is about three times longer than xp if not four. That is with a 32meg cache on a new 500 gig sata2 seagate barracuda v 11 drive. Running apps take on average 2-4 times longer to open

  8. Re:makes you wonder by erroneus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you suggesting that Microsoft would actually go through the trouble of "stacking the deck"? The very same Microsoft whose presentations are famous with the likes of Bill Gates plugging in a scanner and getting the BSOD in front of the whole planet? To suggest this would suggest that Microsoft has learned from their mistakes which I find unlikely. In order to learn from your mistakes, you have to first admit to yourself that you even MADE a mistake which is not something Microsoft is known for doing. In fact, this whole exercise is about trying to say "you guys are all just prejudiced against Vista! You never gave it a fair chance!" rather than admitting to themselves that Vista is a mistake and that cutting off WindowsXP is an even bigger one.

  9. Vista ... rocks? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, microsoft disguised vista as a good operating system... why don't they do that for EVERYONE?

    1. Re:Vista ... rocks? by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Funny

      Vista is like Chili and Whiskey. It might seem good when it's on the tongue, but your ass will be sore in the morning.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  10. Desperation? by ISurfTooMuch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This smacks of some desperation on Microsoft's part. I mean, if they have to avoid telling people they're using Vista, then they're acknowledging there's a negative perception of the OS out there.

    And this, IMHO, is what trips software makers up. If your product is perceived negatively, then you'd damn well better find out why and fix it. I've said this about OpenOffice for a while now. Is it slow? Maybe a little. Not terrible to me, but maybe a little, and there are certainly some people who think so. So try and work on that. The same goes for Vista. For better or worse, people don't like it, so find out why and address those issues. Don't just try to convince people that their opinions are wrong.

    The problem, of course, is that MS has invested tons of money in Vista. Whether it's a turkey or not, it's perceived that way, and MS realizes it, hence this site. But when people have made up their minds, it won't be easy to solve the problem simply by telling them they're wrong. Address their complaints instead, and you might convince them.

  11. Re:makes you wonder by JMandingo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I just did another downgrade from Vista to XP this week. A friend bought a brand new PC from Wal-Mart with Vista on it. He couldn't stand the fact that his 5-year-old machine at work running XP was more responsive than his brand new Vista box.

    He wanted the downgrade bad enough that he traded me several XBox games to do the work. That is saying something right there. When I asked him if he liked the features on Vista he looked at me quizzically and scratched his head.

    Never let bling interfere with usability. The "ooh, shiny" of fancy graphics and widgets lasts only a moment. On the other hand, usability issues will become increasingly frustrating over time.

    --
    Vonnegut was right: Of all the words of mice and men, the saddest are, "It might have been."
  12. I've never understood this.... by Joce640k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My (limited) Vista experience is on a laptop with Celeron CPU, 1Gb RAM and Intel graphics.

    It seemed to run just fine to me, Aero included.

    I wounldn't have Vista for other reasons but maybe Microsoft is right - people like you need to take a second look.

    --
    No sig today...
  13. I hate Vista, I have tried it. by Innomin8 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am one of those who falls into the "die hard XP" group.

    I DID try Vista. I gave it a fair dinkum go, and here's my story. I even sang it's praises for a short time (up until about point 4, which was less than 1 month in)

    - Bought Vista, and an extra 1GB of memory, as I knew I'd need it.

    - Installed Vista, installation and activation went smoothly.

    - Had pain with sound card drivers (Creative SB Audigy 2). Couldn't change between headphones / speakers without relaunching every application that played sound. Very annoying.

    - World of Warcraft (and other games) could not be run in Window mode without huge performance penalties. Found could alt-tab out of full screen with little of the normal delay you get when alt-tabbing out

    - Discovered leaving a full screen 3D app alt-tabbed for more than a few minutes resulted in that app being inaccessible, requiring process kill.

    - Decided to upgrade video card to get a performance boost. Vista required activation because I changed video cards. Couldn't be activated over the net, had to call Microsoft directly during business hours to get it turned back on. Ended up having to call from work and use remote desktop to enter the code supplied. WTF?

    - A few days later, decided to get a second identical video card to get better performance (yay SLI!) No activation needed this time thankfully.

    - Discovered Vista wouldn't run my video cards in SLI mode. Discovered BIOS update to fix this... installed it.

    - Discovered despite the fix, Vista still wasn't running anything in SLI mode.

    - Installed Ubuntu to dual-boot into. Discovered Ubuntu would quite happily run my video cards in SLI mode.

    - Spent several nights googling, and testing things to get SLI working

    - Formatted, re-installed Windows XP... no problems since.