Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 9th Sep 2011 15:17 UTC
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RE[2]: ummm ... hibernate?
by Moochman on Sun 11th Sep 2011 16:28
in reply to "RE: ummm ... hibernate?"
Oh, and don't get me started on driver installation. Why is it that on Mac and Linux, you can plug in any old mouse, any old keyboard, any old thumb drive, any old memory card reader, (almost) any old printer or camera, and it instantly "just works" while on Windows it takes at least 30 seconds for the first time plugging in each new device, sometimes even multiple times per device depending on which USB port you plug it into!
RE[2]: ummm ... hibernate?
by Moochman on Sun 11th Sep 2011 19:27
in reply to "RE: ummm ... hibernate?"




Member since:
2005-07-06
Exactly. And this gets at the primary issue with Windows 7 (and Windows Vista before it): regardless of how fast the OS is "in use", when you have to wait between 10 and 60 minutes for it to update itself every few days, when all you want to do is turn it on (or off) and start (stop) working, all that theoretical speed is negated from the end-user perspective. This is one of the reasons people love the iPad (and to a lesser extent, the Mac)--it's generally hassle-free, while updates are fast, easy, not forced down your throat while you're trying to work, and most important, few and far-between. Turning on/off a computer, starting the task you want to start, whatever it may be, should not be an ordeal, it should be instant, like an appliance, like a TV. As long as Microsoft fails to understand this, Windows will continue to lose market share to all manner of competitors, iOS and Android included.