To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Since when? Windows XP Pro is about 2GB default install. I believe the minimum requirement for an XP Pro installation is 1.5GB hard drive space available.
The minimum requirement for a default Ubuntu installation is 4GB disk space for full install and swap.
You can use the alternative Ubuntu install cd and trim this size down, but you can also use NT Lite to trim the default Windows XP Pro size down considerably.
If you're going to bash Windows, please do it accurately. Making up statistics does not help anyone.
Sources:
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/sysreqs/pro.mspx
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/SystemRequirements/Gu...
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/SystemRequirements
Windows XP's disk usage depends on how much memory you have, because of the pagefile. The pagefile starts off as 1.5 times the physical memory in the machine, capped at 2GB for 32-bit versions of the OS. You also have the hibernation file, which is a bit larger than the amount of physical memory in the machine.
Installing the 32-bit version on a machine with 2GB of RAM would get you a 2GB hibernation file, and a 2GB swap file. That bumps the disk space requirement up to 6GB.
Installing the 64-bit version on a machine with 4GB of RAM would get you a 4GB hibernation file, and a 6GB swap file, for a total footprint of around 12GB.
Granted, Ubuntu has a swap partition as well, but it doesn't show up anywhere except the partitioner. And it's not as large as Windows's default page file.







Member since:
2006-11-13
Windows XP pro install is around 8-9G HDD space.
Windows 7 (from the reviews I read) is around 10Gig HDD space.
Ubuntu 7.10 (what I currently use) is around 1.2Gig HDD space.
Mac OS-X: I have no idea it's install size, but I'm pretty sure it's bigger than Ubuntu.
NOTE:
Also note that Ubuntu comes with an office suite (OpenOffice) whereas Windows doesn't. Add MS Office to the Windows list and I think it grows by another 1Gig.
Either way, I think it's great that they cut down on the default running services. I would rather enable them as I need them.