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- Aug 26, 2005
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Speak for yourself. As an IT Manager, I love Vista Business. I'm just not upgrading existing computers, but slowly phasing into Vista via new computer purchases.
I don't have to. The data backs it up.
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Speak for yourself. As an IT Manager, I love Vista Business. I'm just not upgrading existing computers, but slowly phasing into Vista via new computer purchases.
As far as the subscription model goes for small businesses and consumers, instead of disabling Windows on a users PC if they dont renew their subscription, just dont allow that machine to get any more updates if they dont renew. Microsoft could also work with OEMs to sell something like a three-year subscription to Windows with every a new PC. Then users would have the choice of renewing on their own after that.
Vista is slower than XP.
You don't need to cite any article to know it. You just have to use it.
Benchmark it if you don't believe. All benchmarks will show you that XP is consistantly faster than Vista.
I have used Vista since beta 2 (which on my old computer was rather slow) but now my Vista x64 partition boots faster than my XP, and for the most part things are more responsive.
Transferring files across hard drives, or USB ports is the only noticeably slower part of Vista.
I have run my benchmarks and the differences are so small it is almost immeasurable for many programs
Alright, well I'll qualify.
I work for an engineering firm. Our main production software is AutoCAD (Civil3D, Land Desktop, AutoCAD Vanilla, and Electrical). Every AutoCAD, 3dMark, and office app benchmark I've run show a marked decline in performance between Vista and XP, and even moreso in a 64bit environment.
I don't have to. The data backs it up.
but IT shops are not, and will not, be deploying it.
Transferring files across hard drives, or USB ports is the only noticeably slower part of Vista.
How do the 64bit versions of some of those programs come in to play for those benchmarks im wondering
Alright, well I'll qualify.
I work for an engineering firm. Our main production software is AutoCAD (Civil3D, Land Desktop, AutoCAD Vanilla, and Electrical). Every AutoCAD, 3dMark, and office app benchmark I've run show a marked decline in performance between Vista and XP, and even moreso in a 64bit environment.
If all you're using a PC for is browsing and making spreadsheets, Vista is fine. But so is a Mac or Linux. But when you're actually USING a PC's resources, you see very quickly the decline in performance.
you spoke in absolutes.
I'm disputing it because you're wrong. I'm deploying it in my company. Again, for the most part, there's nothing wrong with Vista. There's simply no reason to upgrade, only purchase new computers with Vista on it if the company doesn't mind straying from standard setups. XP is merely a victim of it's own success.
How long does this Vista hate mongering need to go on guys? The [H] is supposed to be above all that. We look at facts, not fucking Mac ads and by listening to your aunt's daughter's cat.
only purchase new computers with Vista on it
How long does this Vista hate mongering need to go on guys? The [H] is supposed to be above all that. We look at facts, not fucking Mac ads and by listening to your aunt's daughter's cat.
Azhar, there is no point in arguing with XP Zealots, they are the worst of all fanboys... trust me on this one.
I said nothing about love or hate. I'm said, in the business world, it's failed. It's well known. When even your BFF Intel passes on it, you've got a real problem. I'm done.
Valuable money? Couldn't have been an American company then.It was a nightmare for their desktop support department and a lot of valuable time and money was lost.
lmao, you are using 3mark benchmarks and synthetic to determine actual application and desktop performance?
Ockie I expected better of you.
I don't understand how you conveniently glossed over the other applications he mentioned, particulary AutoCAD. I use AutoCAD at work everyday, it is memory and CPU intensive. And it's not 3dmark or synthetic - it is something real-life application used by millions of engineers everyday.
You attract more bees with honey, and Vista zealots are employing quite the opposite tactic. You don't attract anything with rat poison.
You attract more bees with honey, and Vista zealots are employing quite the opposite tactic. You don't attract anything with rat poison.
Mav451, there is no point in arguing with Vista Zealots, they are the worst of all fanboys... trust me on this one.
And I am well rehearsed for autocad, but autocad does not set desktop computing standards in the business world... so it's quite flawed to include them as such as an umbrella.
but hey, thanks for labeling me based on pure assumptions when you have absolutley no idea.
Wouldn't business world software be less intensive than AutoCAD though? Database software, or your typical Office or similar software isn't exactly taxing RAM or CPU. Why not compare more resource intensive applications, as a worst case scenario?
Especially considering how wide-spanning the use of AutoCAD is in the engineering world.
Hypocritical much?
Hypocritical much?
Considering that I wasn't directing my comment to you nor was I bashing XP.... fail.![]()
No not really. Ockie and I don't dislike XP nor Vista. You on the other hand show irrational dislike for Vista in just about every post I read from you. We were merely defending Vista from FUD spreaders. Fanboyism != telling the truth.
Nobody's saying XP is bad. It's not. XP also took awhile to gain foothold in the IT world.
The #1 reason should have been:
XP Works. Why fix something that isn't broken?
You mean just like how Shotglass01 wasn't directing his comments at you nor was he bashing Vista? fail.![]()
You on the other hand show irrational dislike for Vista in just about every post I read from you.