Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 2nd Feb 2009 21:23 UTC
Windows Windows Vista has never exactly been a favourite subject among company IT people. Migrating from Windows XP to Windows Vista isn't exactly a worry-free process, and machines that run Windows XP comfortably may have trouble powering Windows vista. As such, adoption of Vista has been slow. Two years after Vista's release, the OS is still struggling in the enterprise sector, according to a Forrester report.
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RE: Windows 7 = Vista 2
by kaiwai on Tue 3rd Feb 2009 01:29 UTC in reply to "Windows 7 = Vista 2"
kaiwai
Member since:
2005-07-06

Whats left to say. I used to post more regularly. Vista is Microsoft Current OS and by every metric has been out for over 2 years. It has been defended by the faithful including Moderators here ruthlessly. Astroturfing is rife. Users have been Vilified for not having current hardware, and that depressing voice of the individual on the all over the net that posts "I use 64-bit Vista Ultimate and never had a problem" but he's the only one. Microsoft get in trouble for their Vista incapable machines. Vista is DRMed to the eyeballs.

...and Microsoft continue to rake in Billions.

The saddest think is all these companies are sticking to XP an 8 year old OS. Microsoft Fanatics are clinking to Windows 7 which I suspect will still be DRMed, has serious activation issues, is anti-capitalist, and overpriced.


1) DRM is only an issue if you as a software developer hook your application into using these facilities - if you as a software programmer choose not to use those hooks that enable DRM then you have nothing to worry about.

From the consumer end, start demanding DRM free software - support companies who provide legitimate ways of backing up DVD movies and ripping them so one can use it on a hand held device such as an iPod. Unless you use your voice and demand a change - things will keep going on as usual.

2) Regarding activation - activation has been around prior to Microsoft Windows; anyone remember then node locking software on the old UNIX workstations? remember purchasing SUN Forté developer and having to send in a massive form for a password to unlock the software? You'd think Microsoft would have learnt something from it (namely, that node locking/activating etc is a stupid idea) - but they haven't.

3) The reason why people stick with Windows is either because they require certain pieces of software (and the alternatives are below quality they expect) or because their hardware isn't fully or properly supported. As for those who defend Windows Vista - its confusing, but there are lots of things that humans do which make little or no-sense what so ever.

Edited 2009-02-03 01:32 UTC

Reply Parent Score: 4