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Windows 7 "Not Much Faster" Than Vista

PLSQL Guy writes "Tests of the Windows 7 Release Candidate in a PC World Test Center found that while Windows 7 was slightly faster on our WorldBench 6 suite, the differences may be barely noticeable to users. The PCs tested were slightly faster when running Windows 7, but in no case was the overall improvement greater than 5 percent, considered to be a threshold for when an actual performance change is noticeable to the average user. One of the major complaints about Windows Vista was the fact that it was consistently slower than Windows XP. If Windows 7 can't significantly improve that situation, what chance does it have to convince people to move away from Windows XP?"

37 of 821 comments (clear)

  1. A pretty good one, actually by Gorm+the+DBA · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Once vendors start including it on the box by default at build time, people will adopt it.

    It's too much hassle to switch back *for the average user*.

    Yes, the Slashdot crowd will rollback, but for Joe "I just wanna check e-mail and look at my porn on the Intraweb", whatever comes on the box at purchase time will be the OS he uses...and that's a majority of the market right now.

    1. Re:A pretty good one, actually by Gorm+the+DBA · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Yeah...right...

      "Okay Joe, here's your options, you can take this box home for $699, plug it in, turn it on and it will work reasonably well...*OR* you can use your old PC to download one of 1000 linux variants, all with different advantages and disadvantages, copy it over to this new box, spend hours installing and tweaking it, with no guarantee it will work with this hardware, and then it will work....reasonably well.

      which way is Joe gonna go?

    2. Re:A pretty good one, actually by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Where does Joe get his Ubuntu Live CD?

      Windows can't burn ISOs out of the box (or XP can't) and he likely doesn't know what a "ISO" is anyway.

    3. Re:A pretty good one, actually by wh1pp3t · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I propose all the people pushing Joe to use Linux sign a registry to be a public technical support contact (no, forums are not a substitute).

      As a Solaris and Redhat sysadmin, I love all things *nix, but have to concede it is still not ready for prime time.

    4. Re:A pretty good one, actually by I'mTheEvilTwin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      you forgot the part about telling Joe that none of his old programs or games will work anymore. Now he is going to have to search out FOSS apps that may or may not be complete. Don't even start on the "it will run under Wine" argument because who is going to set that up for him? For that matter, who is going to tell him about it in the first place?

      --
      -- This sig is in Spanish when you are not looking
    5. Re:A pretty good one, actually by smallfries · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So you're not arguing that Joe would be better served with Anything-But-Windows-OS just that the current market makes it hard for him to get?

      Almost as if there is a hole in the marketplace for selling a pre-installed linux system to the average Joe. One that would handle web browsing and email out of the box, but $100 cheaper...

      --
      Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
    6. Re:A pretty good one, actually by DrLang21 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have actually been impressed with Ubuntu. I never dared try linux prior to Ubuntu 8.10 due to the fact that I didn't want a hassle. However, for my purposes, Ubuntu has been great. It's not at all ready for the average Joe. it could be ready for several specialized tasks like professional art, 3D-CAD, and video games if the software producers actually released a friendly install for linux. My biggest complaint with Windows Vista is not so much the computing performance, but the GUI ergonomics. It's the most interface inefficient piece of crap I have used since Windows 3.1

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  2. So stability doesn't mean anythign anymore? by FlickieStrife · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've never had a problem at all with Vista's speed, it was the stability and incompatibility with many software packages that made it not really worth the money, seeing that in Win 7 XP mode is available and that it (even the beta) is much more stable than vista, i have to call shenanigans on whoever made the comment.

  3. What? by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The question isn't whether 7 is faster, it's whether it's faster on shitty hardware. Vista has run pretty well since SP1 by most accounts, but only if you have big iron to run it on. Windows 7 is allegedly dramatically faster on limited systems, you know, the kind with less than a gigabyte of RAM. (My teenage self sitting at a Sun 4/260 with 24 MB of RAM would be fucking speechless, though.)

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:What? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      my dear little poo

      Okay, NEVER AGAIN. Thank you.

      Back on topic: I feel that Vista is the fall that comes after pride. Microsoft thought that everyone would just play along again. They were wrong. There are real alternatives today. With that said, OSX and Vista both have smoother animations than Compiz, and Xgl is dead, long live AIGLX.

      I did have Compiz+Xgl working on Ubuntu once, I forget if it was Hardy or Intrepid. It was awesomely fast. I look forward to having that experience again someday. (For example, the Magic Lamp transition was actually fluid, no joke. I have a Quadro 2700M in 8 bit mode and it's not fluid here. I miss Xgl.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  4. It certainly seems faster to me.... by Tomsk70 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...but then we haven't had to deal with the needless bloatware that all the manufacturers love to install - *that* will be the test.

    You know the drill....needless print engine? check. Unasked for toolbar/ systray icon? Check. Several services running for a single device (Creative, ATI, et all)? Check...

  5. Fact Vs Fiction by eldavojohn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fact #1: Microsoft's strategy when it comes to software sales: sexy > stable > performance.
    Myth #1: Windows is only getting faster and better.
    Fact #2: MS Marketing's job is to convince you that Myth #1 is true while at the same time maintaining sex appeal.
    Fact #3: Windows 7 is still Windows.

    --
    My work here is dung.
  6. history... by bartok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I still use Win2k because it is faster and uses much less memory than XP than anything MS has released after it, yet the vast majority of people changed to newer versions. The same could be said of every Windows release before that. I don't see why it would be different this time around.

  7. Windows 98 FTW by not+already+in+use · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Shouldn't it be expected that Vista/7 would run slower than XP which was initially developed during a time when hardware was much slower? It's not bloat, it's taking advantage of current hardware to implement new technologies. Go throw Ubuntu on a computer from 2001 and then go cry about how Linux has gotten slower. What the hell is the difference? Get off my lawn?

    --
    Similes are like metaphors
  8. the concept is "fast enough" by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    a lot of these changes in speed are not noticeable. not many users care about the difference between 10ms and 100ms (unless it stacks of course). so vista is slower because when you hover over a placeholder in the taskbar, you get a little graphical popup of the window in question. do users like this? do they not? what is the trade off in speed? if it is on the order of 90ms, no one is really going to care, regardless of the marginal usability increases

    to reverse the argument, look at the popularity of netbooks: a laptop with a cellphone's processor. this is acceptable to most because they aren't playing the latest fps or running photoshop, they are just reading email and web surfing, and the price differential makes it worthwhile. not that windows 7 won't be more expensive than a free os, i'm just dismantling the notion that the average user cares that much about speed at all

    we are at an age where "fast enough and cheaper" is more important than "fastest". and yes, windows 7 is trying its darndest to compete on those principles in the netbook arena. stop poopooing windows 7's speed and start focusing on the gains that free os is making in the netbook arena, and focus on leveraging and extending those gains while microsoft scrambles to stay relevant

    kind of like how the wii stole the thunder from the monster processing power of playstation 3: most people don't care about some redhead's hyperrealistic flowing hair. they just want a little pubhouse dartboard-and-foosball level time wasting light hearted fun. slower (and cheaper) is the new frontier nowadays. speed just isn't that big of a deal anymore. speed is a 1990s era concern of guys pouring liquid nitrogen on their processor

    get over it. "fast enough" has been achieved. speed is only the concern now of a small minority of power users

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the concept is "fast enough" by averner · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "fast enough" has been achieved. speed is only the concern now of a small minority of power users

      Vista was not "fast enough", due to being marketed for laptops with 512 MB RAM that couldn't handle it. Windows 7 is "fast enough", due to 3 years of improving hardware, even if it wasn't any faster than Vista. I'm betting Vista could have done very well if it was released this year or even last year, and only on systems with 2+ GB RAM.

      --
      Member of the 7 Digit UID Club
  9. Re:What else did we expect? by not+already+in+use · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Vista SP3 PLUS Marketing hype PLUS Lipstick on a Pig... doesn't make it much faster.

    You're absolutely right. The thing is though, Vista is a good operating system that is plagued by a stigma that is largely persisted by technology sites that, by default and in some sort of nerd conformance insist that all Microsoft products are garbage, an opinion formed with disregard to objectivity. By rebranding Windows Vista as Windows 7 and getting some tech sites to view it in a positive light, the layperson who holds any nerds technology opinion as inherent truth will be more apt to try and view it in a positive light as well.

    --
    Similes are like metaphors
  10. Nonsense Metric by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First, if you want to talk about benchmarking tests speed, actually there's actually very little difference at all now between Vista and XP.

    That leads us to "general user responsiveness" benchmarks...a user clicks something; how long before Windows finishes to do what the user said. Well, that's a more tricky one, but given a system has 2Gb RAM+ and has been used for a while Vista & Windows 7 will easily out-perform XP given how SuperFetch doesn't exist in XP. Any less and, well, who knows.

    Finally, TFA linked suggesting Vista is slow is (unsurprisingly) dated Dec 27, 2006; probably not the most relevant material nowadays.

    --
    throw new NoSignatureException();
  11. Vista is actually good now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we stop using articles from 2006 that say that Vista isn't quick. Vista was sluggish when it came out, and I had bought it only to remove it a week or two later and go back to XP.

    Over the years Vista has been updated and actually works great - I like having it instead of XP and so would most Vista bashers if they actually used it.

    XP was hated for a long time over Windows 98 and no one would upgrade, they somehow XP became everyone's favorite version of Windows.

    What MS should be doing - and I have no idea why they didn't this time - is bail on the 32 bit OS - especially since it's the largest limit on RAM and file size. Your OS is limiting the hardware, and that' just idiotic. If you need a 32 bit OS - stick with Windows XP - if you want a 64 bit OS, use Windows 7.

    1. Re:Vista is actually good now... by HerculesMO · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They can't.

      Netbooks use 32 bit processors, and Microsoft isn't going to cede that market to Linux, so there will be a variant of Windows as long as there are 32 bit processors around to install them on.

      --
      The price is always right if someone else is paying.
  12. UI Responsiveness vs Process Performance. by Datasage · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The issue with Vista had nothing to do with process performance, for the most part, burning a CD or running a batch operation in Photoshop, generally took the same amount of time in both XP and Vista.

    The issue had to do with UI performance, for example, the time it takes for a menu to appear when a user requests it or how quickly a folder populates with file. Unfortunately, most benchmarks don't test that.

    --
    In America we are imprisoned by our fear of them.
  13. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by aliquis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The whole story is lame so I voted it down.

    Some things can become much faster, such as user interfaces, parsing databases or whatever depending on implementation, some things can not.

    If all your benchmark does is x number of multiplications how the fuck would the OS make that faster?

    So "omg only 5% increase" don't say shit, one can't expect to get a new machine just by changing OS, the hardware components got the speed they have anyway.

    Not that I know what the benchmark in question actually benchmarks but it's fucking stupid to draw conclusions from a benchmark (even worse a single one) anyway.

    Also Vista and Windows 7 does more than XP do, some of these things may be worth it (such as security features) even though it makes things slower.

    Last benchmarks I saw of the BSDs and two Linux versions wasn't in OpenBSDs favour either ..

  14. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by poetmatt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    geting faster from beta to release and/or not having any significant increase from vista to 7 = 2 things. 1: why would anyone from vista give a crap to switch, and 2: that it's basically vista. They're just trying to sell vista twice since it already failed once.

    All of this is basically not compelling for the average user, meaning people won't have interest to buy this. It has been admitted in the past that 7 is built off of vista in the first place instead of starting from scratch and fixing stuff as they should have done.

  15. Tfa missing something...... by gadget+junkie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the TFA misses the REAL issue, which is:

    1.check the improvement between Win7 and Vista;
    2.check both against Windows XP.

    After all, what's the problem with Microsoft making available the Best and Fastest Operating System it can produce?

    Remember: in all the corporations, this issue is very real. MS is trying to make me pay for a new operating system, which is slower than the previous one, and that requires bigger hardware. Where's the value here? Yes, they can go on buying the producers of XP addons and quietly retire their products... but that won't produce customer satisfaction.

    --
    "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
  16. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by bigman2003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    More important to me is the perspective of the change.

    Vista came out directly after XP. So there were a lot of machines being upgraded from XP to Vista. OR, there were a lot of machines being sold that could *barely* run Vista. Either way, Vista was slow.

    The fact that Windows 7 is not a lot SLOWER than Vista, is a move in the right direction. Had Windows 7 followed the normal trend, it would be 20% (or a lot more) slower. But it isn't.

    Remember, XP runs a lot slower than most of the preceeding operating systems- it just seems really fast now...after new hardware and a lot of updates.

    --
    No reason to lie.
  17. Re:Windows 7 vs. XP by rliden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Speak for yourself. I don't know who this "most of us" are you're speaking for but I'm not in that.

    I'm happy with the Win 7 RC. It performs just as well as the beta and is stable for me. There have been a few small improvements and it feels pretty polished to me.

    --
    Don't think of it as a flame, more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage.
  18. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by Runaway1956 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to tell this story one more time. When XP was a new thing, I installed it on an AMD K6-3 running at 450 mhz, and tweaked it like a madman. Soon thereafter, the wife bought a new Compaq with a 1ghz Athlon. My machine was faster, subjectively speaking.

    Benchmarks be damned - it is the user's experience that counts. It matters little how fast that Ghz machine can crunch numbers, if it makes me wait a second or two for a menu to pop up. The first time a user has to wait on ANYTHING, he is irritated.

    I can, and will, verify that Win7 is a huge improvement over Vista. I might even agree that Win7 is a small improvement over WinXP. I did some moderate tweaking on Win7, and afterwards, I saw no difference in speed or usability. Again, these are SUBJECTIVE measurements. I simply don't CARE what a benchmark might say, if and when my subjective experience is contrary to that benchmark.

    (I can't say that I've ever used a computer on a bench, anyway. I have an office chair that I sit on mostly.)

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  19. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by twidarkling · · Score: 5, Insightful

    what does the average user do? By a PC that they don't really need?

    Uh... yes? Have you *looked* at PCs lately? That's the only thing that drives pre-built system sales. The average user has no clue how to maintain their system, it starts falling apart, they buy a new one that costs about the same as their old one did new. Then, they either run their old programs, or upgrade if they won't run on the new OS. The average computer user doesn't need multi-core systems and DDR3 RAM. They run a web browser, email client, and IM client. Maybe watch a movie. A system from 5 years ago can do that easily, and older ones could still probably do that.

    --
    Canada: The US's more awesome sibling.
  20. My gripes have never been about speed by zerofoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes Vista was "slow" when it came out, and still feels a bit sluggish even with a dual quad-core machine with 10k rpm disks and 4GB of ram - but that isn't my gripe.

    My concerns are with the bone-headed DESIGN decisions Microsoft made with Vista.

    Managing a network connection in Vista is unnecessarily complicated. Why do I need to go into that damn network and sharing center to get to my network cards or to choose a wireless network? Why the hell do I need a diagram of my computer, my house, and the globe to explain how my computer is connected to my network and the internet? I connected the damn thing - there is no need to draw me a picture of how it all works.

    Does renaming "add/remove programs" to "programs and features" really make me that much more productive? It takes me an extra second or two EVERY time I go between XP and Vista and the change added NO value.

    Transparent menus - WHY? I want to look at the text in the menu, not at what is behind the menu. God forbid you have something behind the menu that is the same color as the text.

    I could go on and on about how slow network file transfers were when Vista shipped, or how many drivers and programs made Vista crash, or just flat-out didn't work, but I won't. Those are bugs, and in time, they are fixed and the problems go away.

    Bad design decisions, unfortunately, are not as easy to fix as a bug. The first step in fixing a bad design decision is to admit that the designer made a mistake. Microsoft is too arrogant to ever admit they made a mistake, so the bad design decisions live on.

    Until Microsoft takes usability seriously, I suspect Windows 7 will still irritate me and many other users. I will try it when it comes out, and try to keep an open mind, but disappointment seems to be the Microsoft way these days.

    -ted

  21. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >>>Windows 7 is basically vista. They're just trying to sell vista twice since it already failed once.

    Question of the decade: Can Microsoft survive two "mistake editions"? They survived M.e because they were able to discontinue it after just one year and replace with with NT 5.1 (XP). But can Microsoft successfully survive two bad OSes, Vista and Win7, back-to-back?

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  22. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by dave562 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The perception that I have gotten is that they are trying to make Vista right with Win7. Vista is the Windows Me of the 21st century. Vista sucked. I had to put up with it when I worked on some of my friends' computers, but I never installed it on any of my own hardware. We never installed it at work.

    I have used Windows 7 and it works a lot better than Vista. I don't have to disable Aero to get a responsive UI. I don't have a bunch of pop-ups bothering me when I am making changes to the system. They have added some neat enhancements to the UI also. I like the fact that I can hover my mouse over a group of open programs (like Word documents for example), and the UI will bring up small copies of them that I can browse through without actually having to go all the way into the program. It makes finding what I'm working on more convenient. I'm sure that they "stole" the idea from OSX, or KDE or whatever. I don't care where it comes from or who invented it first, it's a productivity enhancer and I'm glad to see it in Win7.

    I would never have rolled out Vista on my network. I might think about rolling out Win7. I probably won't because most of my clients are running integrated video and I haven't done any testing on those. However I'm confident that the OS itself will work and do what it needs to do... unlike Vista.

  23. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by JebusIsLord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've been evaluating the Win7 RC here at work for a week now, and I can tell yo that I am pretty excited for this release.

    Vista suffered from being a major architecture overhaul with few bullet-point features. Windows 7 adds those features, many of which take advantage of the underlying changes from Vista.

    XP mode looks to me like it will help us transition our existing (2000+) deployment packages to Win7 slowly, rather than requiring a complete re-certification process. (I'm not 100 on this yet, but so far so good).

    Vista improved OS deployment via the WIM format significantly, and Windows 7 adds all sorts of usability tweaks that I think are highly inspired by the iPhone and gestures. It also adds codecs, while stripping out useless cruft like Windows Mail and DVD creator.

    Discussing the speed of it in relation to XP is sort of disingenuous... it runs great on modern hardware, and does a lot of things XP will never do.

    --
    Jeremy
  24. Re:What else did we expect? by not+already+in+use · · Score: 3, Insightful

    as someone who used Vista from the RC days right until months after the release

    Some of it was fixed in SP1 but I didn't try it for long enough to find out what... I haven't even considered running Vista since and never will.

    At least you admit that you have no desire to form an objective opinion.

    --
    Similes are like metaphors
  25. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by Dextrously · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In fact its ability to isolate faulting apps is excellent.

    I think its ability to isolate faulting apps is a little too excellent. Often times, Vista will report that an app has hung or is not responding and should be closed when it is simply performing a rigorous task. This leads to calls where the user keeps complaining about a crashing app, Photoshop or Quark usually (although Quark truly does crash very often). Often times in my experience, Vista is simply being impatient, and conveying that impatience on the user (who really doesn't need assistance in this aspect). *face palm*

    What really sucks is that XP is a just-fine OS as well.. but if you try to config a system on Dell now with XP it is an EXTRA $150 (!!).

    It is a secret to no one that Microsoft offers incentives to OEM vendors who comply with their policies. I'm sure no one here, including yourself is surprised about this. If the OEM vendor doesn't comply, they will suffer serious repercussions in their ability to compete with other vendors who do comply. Whether this is a bad thing, or a good thing is completely relative to your perspective.

  26. Viruses by DrYak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A system from 5 years ago can do that easily, and older ones could still probably do that

    ...if they weren't completely crawling under the load of viruses, spywares and trojan by now, under the management of Random User Joe.

    At least that's something average users are going to need their multiple cores for : to keep their system running for a longer period even if there are a dozen of background tasks spitting ads about online-casinos and various-body-parts-enlarging drugs.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  27. Re:Weren't the earlier betas much faster? by dotgain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, while that was the official story, it doesn't seem at all credible. We'll (probably) never know for sure, and therefore I'm not saying you're wrong, but lacking evidence either way it's reasonable to assume bad faith on Microsoft's part.

  28. The Reality Check by westlake · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The average computer user doesn't need multi-core systems and DDR3 RAM. They run a web browser, email client, and IM client. Maybe watch a movie. A system from 5 years ago can do that easily, and older ones could still probably do that.

    I thought it worth looking at what people are buying at Amazon.com.: In brackets - the number of days in the Top 100.

    Bestsellers in Software

    1 MS Office Home and Student 2007 [863]
    2 Quick Books Pro 2009 [232]
    5 Photoshop Elements 7 [253]
    8 MS Outlook 2007 [840]
    9 Dragon Naturally Speaking 10 Standard [273]
    13 Photoshop Elements & Premiere Elements 7 [243]
    18 MS Offfice Pro 2007 - Full Version [427]
    20 Quicken Deluxe 2009 [258]
    21 Rosetta Stone Version 3 - Latin American Spanish [325] $494
    23 Family Tree Maker 2009 Essentials [247]
    25 MS Street & Trips 2009 [234]
    34 Corel Video Studio Pro X2 [34]
    45 Corel Paint Shop Pro X2 Ultimate [19]
    46 Sony Vegas Movie Studio 9 PLatinum Pro Pack [217]
    47 Oregon Trail 5 [170]
    48 Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 [273]

    In sum: the essentials for the MS home office and a broad mix of video and photo editing software for the amateur-enthusiast.

    This isn't the market as the geek imagines it.

    I'll admit that Rosetta's strength surprised me. I think it's sign of how deeply Hispanic - multilingual, multicultural - this country is on the way to becoming.

    It can be very revealing to look at sub-categories like Home & Hobbies. Home design, landscape design, home publishing and other craft projects dominate here.
    It's computer aided design for the middle class - a software category I'm not even sure the geek knows exists.

    If none of these apps bring your aging PC to its knees, a game certainly can:

    Best sellers in PC Games