
The center of gravity is
shifting away from the traditional, massive operating systems of the past, as even the major OSes are slimming their footprint to make code bases easier to manage and secure, and to increase the variety of devices on which they can run, InfoWorld reports. Microsoft, for one, is cutting down the number of services that run at boot to ensure Windows 7 will run
across a spectrum of hardware. Linux distros such as Ubuntu are stripping out functionality, including MySQL, CUPS, and LDAP, to cut footprints in half. And Apple appears headed for a slimmed-down OS X that will enable future iPhones or tablet devices to run the same OS as the Mac. Though these developments don't necessarily mean that the
browser will supplant the OS, they do show that OS vendors realize they must adapt as virtualization, cloud computing, netbooks, and power concerns drive business users toward smaller, less costly, more efficient operating environments.
Member since:
2005-07-06
It is not just hard drive or ram memory space.
I have seen Windows machines that are *NOT* connected to the network waiting for the time-out before they would continue their operation when you login or started certain program. If you disabled networking they would start almost instantly.
In other words the computer is slowed down by a service you never requested, and should have never been active in the first place.
I am sure this is not Windows direct fault as other programs would start up right away, but why is the service even running if the computer have no use for it?