My Portland Event (again)
One of the other discussions which occurred at my Portland event was around Vista. As always, there were some lovers and some haters. I started the discussion and then let the audience go at it. And, as usual, I was impressed by the different experiences people had to discuss. While those who don't like Vista were (as they always are) the most verbal, those who liked Vista were (as they have been at all my events) the more numerous. But, I wanted to point out a blog post that I just finished reading entitled, "Why I suddenly like Vista." The actual post is, in my opinion (which does not reflect Microsoft's opinion in ANY way), precisely the kind of ignorant drivel I run into every day which seems to be so prevalent with regard to Windows Vista. The author claims that he can "finally" run Vista because he has a quad-core machine with 8GB of RAM. The reason I bring this up in relation to my Portland event is because this was one of the questions -- "What hardware is REALLY needed to run Vista well?" My answer was (as it often is), "it depends." :)
I have a machine at home which was running Vista Ultimate with 3GB of RAM, which was a very good experience. I took 2 of those out to upgrade my mom's PC and ordered myself two more. While those were in the mail, I was running with 1GB of RAM in my system. Did it work? Absolutely. Was it as fast as it had been? Not always. It depended on what I was doing. But, overall, it was still a fine experience. In fact, it was fine enough that those other sticks of RAM sat on my desk for weeks after they arrived before actually making it into my system. The only problem I ran into was the inability to launch my virtual machines in Virtual PC. (This is expected, though, since I had those machines allocated to use 1GB of RAM each. If you only have 1, you can't really allocate it multiple times. And this is what finally got me off the couch and forced me to open the new RAM and put it in my machine.)
So, back to the blog post I mentioned earlier. Here is a link to the post. As I said, it's drivel. Why, then, am I sending you there? Because of the comments. Clearly, I am not the only one who finds this article laughable. Nor am I the only one who finds Vista to be a good OS. I think the comments are worth reading. Why take my word for how great Vista is when you can take the words of complete strangers from the Internet? ;)
Technorati Tags: Windows Vista,Microsoft
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
PingBack from http://mstechnews.info/2008/11/my-portland-event-again/Anonymous
January 01, 2003
Couldn’t agree with you more on this post, but I must add that I think there is still one major issue with Vista that Microsoft needs to address…"Windows Experience Index". I think a great deal of people would be a lot happier with their Vista experience if this tool never existed. My home use laptop is a $399 Dell special running Vista Ultimate with all of the "Aero candy" enabled. I run MS Office and Internet Explorer with fantastic results, but according to my Windows Experience Index Base Score I am at a discouraging 1.0. This in my opinion is like getting out of bed every day, looking yourself in the mirror, and saying “I’m not good enough”. I think it’s time for Microsoft to pull the plug on the Windows Experience Index, and just let Vista demonstrate its full potential.Anonymous
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