Jaden Mental wrote:The hardware is essential in terms of how well Vista works. I have 3 questions.
Firstly, what kind of hardware does your computer have?
Secondly, is the computer custom built or did you purchased a built one?
Thirdly, does the computer have symmetry? A good example of computers with symmetry would be alienware even though it is crazy expensive. Does it have Raid? Is the CPU over clocked? Dual/quad/single core CPU?
Oh, and an additional question. What version of windows Vista is this? Basic? Home Premium? Business? Enterprise or Ultimate? *64 or 32 bit*?
I am useing Windows Vista ultimate 32 bit and have not really encountered anything that makes me frustrated. For me it works crazy fast. *My computer scored 5,3 out of the Vista hardware capabilities, think the max was 10.* Oh, and Service pack 1 seems to remove most of the negatives.
Jaden Mental wrote:1Gb of ram is quite little for Home Premium. I think 2GB was minimum or recommended. Basic runs 1GB, but don't even touch basic. The CPU is not really that strong, but I think it would manage ok at best.
Basicly, I think your laptop would best be suited for XP if you are going to use a microsoft OS. SP1 might improve things, but I am not really sure it will help this laptop. Don't use Norton tho, use F-Secure, it does not demand too much from your computer. My hardware scored 5,3. And that is a 2,66 dual core, 2 x 500 GB storage, 8800 gts graphic card and 4 gb ram. Pretty strong symmetry too. Vista works really well on it. *Gears of war on the highest quality was pretty much no problem aside from some cut scenes.* Oh, and its a desktop mind you.
Maokun: Ninjas or Pirates? (Vikings are not a valid answer, sorry)
EricTheFred: Vikings are always a valid answer.
EricTheFred wrote:The way people talk about Vista now is identical to the way they spoke of XP before SP2, or 98 before SE.
Jaden Mental wrote:You use Vista MSP?
but I ceartainly know that Vista demands hardware to move smoothly because its a huge OS
Kenshin17 wrote:I think the fact that you have to have a gaming class machine for the OPERATING SYSTEM to run well is rediculous.
Jaden Mental wrote:The thing is that in order to make Vista work well you need a strong system, if you got a strong system then it is likely to work much faster and better than XP, but if not strong enough it is likely to belly flop and fail miserably.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Vista is nothing more than "XP Service Pack 3".
Jaden Mental wrote:Nowadays VMware can make you run pretty much every OS you want on every new platform at near native speeds. *Heard rumors about it even surpassing native speeds, but I am guessing that is hardware related if at all true*.
mechana2015 wrote:1. The widgets bar taking up a decent sized section of the desktop. I know its a mac thing, but its nice having them hidden when I'm doing other stuff.
2. Vista Pro crashing due to that video background thing. This was on a Dell XPS gaming computer.
3. Wacom Drivers getting disabled/corrupted constantly (may have been fixed). My friend was having to re-install his tablet drivers every 20 minutes at one point.
4. I think Aero is ugly. This is just personal preference, but I like my windows to look solid.
5. Counter intuitive placement of many buttons in IE. Every other browser is like... exactly the opposite on a lot of things. What gives.
Jaden Mental wrote:Again, I said the vmware would be hardware related if so. Meaning that a 48GB DDR-3 ram, quad Geforce ultra, 6TB on level 0 raid and 8 core Intel QX 9750 would likely run OSX better on a vmware than a mac mini running it standard. This is an extreme example mind you. Not saying that the vmware would make the OS faster than the original version, but that the hardware available might give it the egde at times.
Symmetry is a very important part of makeing a computer. Researching what hardware would work well with the OS/Software. You can for example find computers with a sole purpose such as 3d rendering, which have excellent symmetry for such an application. The same applies to an OS and hardware symmetry. For example Intel CPU's is rated to have higher performance levels than the AMD CPU's. Even though some new features that AMD brings is not to underestimate. Makeing a computer with symmetry would involve haveing safe, but functional improvements such as decent overclocking, raid and varius other things. I focused mainly on Intel/Kingston/Geforce in terms of performance. If I would to have for example used an AMD motherboard with an intel CPU and another type of ram, then things could have gotten bad. Alienware is a pc producer who produce great high performance computers with symmetry at retardedly high prices.
Oh, and as for the Vista vs XP performance thing. I still think it works faster on the faster computers than XP. I mean in terms of installing there is not really much to say, but it managed to delete like 90 gigs on 30 seconds which XP came nowhere close to. Responsiveness is the only thing I think XP wins on and that is that its menu's are slightly faster while in Vista you have to wait about one second. I have not done any huge performance test, but overall it seems better. Not to mention that I am not running SP1 at this moment which will improve the overall performance.
Jaden Mental wrote:As for the vmware, it makes you able to access different OS'es on different platforms meaning I could access OSX if I wanted to on a windows computer using vmware. And as I said, it is probably hardware related if the computer surpasses the native speed. Though I would not be surprised to see a similar hardware surpass the an OS in terms of speed while using vmware.
Warrior4Christ wrote:1. I'm confused... are you talking about MacOS or Windows? The Windows Sidebar does get hidden when you do stuff on 'more front' windows...
2. What are you referring to as Vista Pro, and what video background?
Kenshin17 wrote:Another thing I love about OS X, they give you fluff, but the fluff is actually usefull.
Look at Expose, and spaces.
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