Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 24th Jul 2008 22:04 UTC
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Member since:
2007-02-17
I agree that Vista is no more problematic than any past Microsoft's new release, but the perception of those problems is different today.
The next OS is going to meet even more resistance.
Two problems with this theory ...
(1) Vista really is terrible, it is not just people's imagination, and
(2) Microsoft just saying over and over "Vista isn't broken, it is actually great ... la la la la I can't hear you" isn't going to fix the problems.
In short ... Vista is indeed far more problematic than any past Microsoft's new release. Vista is deliberately "broken" ... it is made to disallow the owner of the machine, who is expected to pay for Vista, from doing certain things on their own machine. How lame is that?
What is even worse for most people is that Vista is notoriously slow. Any other OS at all (that can run on the same hardware) runs significantly better on that hardware than Vista does. Why would anyone pay extra money to hobble their expensive new machine?
If you have an older machine, or even a low-powered new machine (say a "netbook") ... and it can run XP or Linux perfectly snappily but it chokes on Vista ... then who is going to get Vista? What does Vista give you other than a larger bill for a more-expensive-than-you-really-need machine?
These are the problems with Vista. Everyone knows it. Microsoft playing marketing games trying to deny these deficiencies is just simply not going to cut it.
Edited 2008-07-25 15:10 UTC