Thursday, April 5th 2007
The Register makes a solid list of reasons to upgrade to Windows Vista
Hardcore Windows XP fans will claim that Vista is currently buggy and bloated. Hardcore Mac OS X fans will claim that at least half of Vista is inspired by Mac OS X. Hardcore Linux fans laugh at all of this, and simply install the free Beryl user interface on the latest free distro of Ubuntu (or some other *nix distro). However, The Register has found some compelling reasons to move from whatever you're using to Windows Vista. The following is a shortened list, please click the source link for the full version of the list.
Source:
Reg Hardware
- UAC- It really makes the OS more secure, and despite how annoyed you may get with it, you have to admit it's a step in the right direction.
- Windows Aero- It's pretty and easy. Enough said.
- It comes with better bundled software- All the programs that come pre-loaded with Windows are either old favorites, or very new programs with great features.
- Vista Live = Xbox Live for the PC. Really.
- Halo 2- What Halo fans have been waiting for over the years is finally coming to the PC. And it looks better than most of us imagined.
- DirectX10 API- All new games/ graphics cards will eventually be exclusively for DX10 and Vista, so we better get used to it.
- Windows Vista search functions- Windows indexing the everything really helps when you misplace something.
- Windows Firewall- It's pretty good this time around, if you need a firewall.
- Lots of pretty hardware/laptops are coming out that are designed just for Vista.
- Microsoft is pushing for a complete move to Windows Vista, hence, they'll drop support for everything older just like they did for Windows 9x and ME.
51 Comments on The Register makes a solid list of reasons to upgrade to Windows Vista
Vista has potential, i will give that...but has bugs and compatibility issues to knock out first. Possibly end of this yea or so, vista should be ideal.
-3rd party drivers
-hardware problems
-no Vista exclusive games nor none MS software. I mean you don't buy an OS to just use the OS only!!!
-HTPC issues
Disclaimer - this post has been edited by a mod who follows the rules of the forums...
i will tell you what xp cant do dx10 games that make or kids laugh at the graphics of halflife2
you know the stop what do you get on your xp rig
I would elaborate on where I obtained this free OS but it would be against the rules.
i mean your gal wants want to ride with u
the piont xp run games great most game-programs were made on it and design to play on it
but vista run them fine i can live with 97fps instead of 105fps
or burn a cd at 90sec instend of 85sec and it LOOKS soooo much better and there alot of other impovements (like being able to play better looking games witch is why i use a pc over a xbox like the rest of you)
:laugh:
but it would run slower
-Many third party drivers did not function correctly, even with the no-driver-signing hacks.
-more cluttered, and hard to navigate interface
-alot of bloat to slow things down
-aero sucked, nothing usefull about it.
-many bsod
-overall lower performance, and less control over the OS, without any considerable benefits.
Vista is currently only good for noobs who dont know better, and just think newer is better.
Hardware and third party drivers are not the fault of Vista. The final version was RTM months before it was available to the public.
That being said, it can make your Vista experience less pleasurable. Cat 7.3s BSOD on me. Had to roll back to 7.2 . Sure, it made me unhappy, but I blame it on ATI, not Vista.
Ok then, lets all blame:
-ATI
-Nvidia
-Sound Blaster
-Logitech
-HP
Did I forget anyone? :rolleyes:
What you are saying is no different then a person saying, "there are no decent women out there" Maybe, just maybe the problem isn't the women! :slap:
So what, you want them to continue to use the same driver framework in their new OS, just because companies already know it inside out? Microsoft suddenly isn't allowed to make changes in the core of their OSes?
So, YES, it is the fault of nVidia, ATI, Creative, HP, Logitech, etc., etc.
Like I said before. All the manufacturers had the final version of Vista available to them for months before we did. Plenty of time to make at least a stable driver.
Blaming every manufacture who are trying to figure out how to combat Vista's short comings is not the answer here. Specially when XP has no problems, regardless of the reasons why.