Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 27th Mar 2012 22:17 UTC
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We have 2 Windows 7 PCs at work, the rest is XP (and one Mac of course).
When I have to do something on an XP machine and the user doesn't have the permission things get nasty. I have to log out (close all their programs, files), log in as admin, log back in as the user. Stuff like "run as" only works with .exe files. It's very cumbersome.
Windows 7 just asks for an admin username/password, like OS X, and it works.
For me, personally, that's the Holy Grail.
For me, personally, that's the Holy Grail.
For me, it's the compositing. Windows XP has such horrible interface lag and graphical artefacts it makes me want to cut myself. Mind you, I switched from BeOS to Windows XP, so that sudden drop in fluidity, responsiveness, and smoothness may have scarred me for life regarding XP.
Sure, compositing is basically just a brute force approach to responsiveness (BeOS did it with good code and clean design), but it's better than nothing. I always wonder why Mac OS X always feels just a tad bit less responsive than Windows 7 - like somebody put sticky syrup underneath everything. It has compositing too, after all.
Edited 2012-03-28 08:39 UTC





Member since:
2005-06-29
Windows 7 was lighter than Vista, and Windows 8 is lighter than Windows 7.
Microsoft is on a roll there.