Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 6th Nov 2008 14:33 UTC
Windows Microsoft's Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) is in full swing this week, hot on the heels of the recent PDC. The main subject is, of course, Windows 7. This being a conference focused on hardware makers, Microsoft made a whole slew of announcements related to how Windows 7 will deal with hardware.
Thread beginning with comment 336570
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
lemur2
Member since:
2007-02-17

kde4 in record rewrite time? What world are you living in! KDE 4 was postponed several times, and then kde 4.0 was a pre release technology release (KDE did say that this would be the case, so I'm not bashing them).


Name any other desktop system, including KDE3, that has become as functional as KDE4 in anywhere near the same timeframe.

KDE4, timed from the point of having no code at all until now when it has become stable and functional enough to be useable and comparable with other desktops in current use, is world-record-pace of development. KDE4 is by far and away the youngest codebase for any contemporary desktop system with a comparable level of capability.

Vista is just fine, I don't know what people are complaining about, 4-5 months now, not an issue. It just runs nicely. Dave


Vista runs fine if your purpose for Vista is to: DRM-encumber consumers; restrict and control what they can do; take ownership of their own machines and their own data away from them; require them to upgrade to the latest hardware; lock them in to a sole-source software supplier and charge them a lot of money for the privelege.

If, however, your purpose is to own and operate your own computing resource at minimal expense and difficulty and maximum cost-effectiveness, security and utility, then Vista is an absolute dog.

Edited 2008-11-07 04:51 UTC

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 4

jbauer Member since:
2005-07-06

Vista runs fine if your purpose for Vista is to: DRM-encumber consumers; restrict and control what they can do; take ownership of their own machines and their own data away from them; require them to upgrade to the latest hardware; lock them in to a sole-source software supplier and charge them a lot of money for the privelege.


My god, you've been drinking too much badvista kool-aid.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

lemur2 Member since:
2007-02-17

"Vista runs fine if your purpose for Vista is to: DRM-encumber consumers; restrict and control what they can do; take ownership of their own machines and their own data away from them; require them to upgrade to the latest hardware; lock them in to a sole-source software supplier and charge them a lot of money for the privelege.


My god, you've been drinking too much badvista kool-aid.
"

You think so?

http://www.pcworld.com/article/153292/windows_what_is_next.html?tk=...

Despite a major push to sell the much-maligned Windows Vista, customers aren't buying. Nearly two years after Vista's release, Windows XP remains the standard desktop OS in business, and Microsoft has extended its availability three times (currently to August 2009) due to customer demand. Microsoft itself forecasts just 2 percent growth in Vista sales in early 2009, after lackluster sales in 2008. And that's after forcing customers to buy Vista to get XP "downgrades."


I'm not alone, it seems. Not by a long shot.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 4

proforma Member since:
2005-08-27

I have tried the new 8.10 Ubuntu (booting only on a CD) on my computer and to be honest linux still have a long way to go compared to even Vista. Lets not even talk about Windows 7.

The Windows re-drawing issues are the same as Windows XP has. It has to redraw the screen and this is set by default. Just aweful. ;)

Again, playing an MP3 should be built right in to the players! I should not have to download a codec to play an mp3 file. Stupid. Windows Media I can understand, but MP3 in this day and age? Really?

Then the multitasking is horrible. Loading the OS from the CD isn't a fast way to get to the features, but for godsake, at least read an MP3 off the hard drive without skipping while loading from a CD should not be a problem.

Look, I understand that I am using the CD as a live CD and I tried two different music programs on the disk and both skipped using many different mp3 songs that I tried to play (without drm) and on multiple hard drives and the music was skipping. I guess nobody notices it because people have ubuntu installed on their hard drives and they don't do any serious multitasking, but what the hell.

Finally, it froze up on me and even Windows has not done that and this is with stock hardware. I just rebooted to windows and I will try it again in 2 years to see if there is any real progress. I have been checking the progress every x or so years. Last time I had Knoppix (which was before Ubuntu) and I had lockups all the time on my laptop, it was worse than this experience because the games played far too slowyly when in Windows 2D games played great.

Linux does have some good things about it like the packages when dealing with software and virtual desktops but man it's seriously got a long way to go as far as mainstream desktop use.

As bad as people think Vista is or Windows 7 is going to be, it is significantly better than that of Linux. That also includes PowerShell 2.0 verses Bash.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: -1

unclefester Member since:
2007-01-13

Have you been you smoking crack? Of course you can expect latency issues when running from a live CD. MP3 is a patented codec and isn't free to use. Any more idiotic comments?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 3