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Thread: First Vista experience

  1. #1

    First Vista experience

    For those who are interested, I've posted my first 4-hours of Vista experience in an internet cafe: http://www.afterwarp.net/forum/thread1063.html This is biased personal opinion based on the very first 4-hours of installing/using it, so don't throw any rocks please.

  2. #2

    First Vista experience

    Thanks for the Lifepower. Good article.

    Yesterday I bought and installed Home Premium on my wife's machine . (OEM version NZ$160)

    I am not usually an early adopter but in this case we needed to know that our software product works correctly.

    Installation went fine it finished in 40 minutes. Activation went without a hitch.

    Word of caution upgrading an existing computer is a pain in the butt. A clean install is the way to go.

    FIrst major snag: There does not appear to be an easy way to get email messages to cross from Outlook Express to the new Windows Mail. If the old system and the new system are on the same machine. Windows mail also does not support adding in a hotmail account.

    I tried to install Thunderbird but the installation does not work for me. I get a few windows popups and then it just stops. Great!

    The desktop is very slick and for a office user it will work very nicely. However, I personally found it frustrating to set up Windows how I like my system to be. Lots of advanced stuff is there but it is hidden and tucked away.

    In a few years we will all be using Vista and I am sure it will be ok. However, for the moment I found the whole process kind of underwhelming. Within 5 minutes I had the feeling of - this is just windows but with more hassles and popups.

    The security pop-ups gets talked about quite a bit. Like most people I found myself not reading them and automatically clicking them away whenever they popped up. I feel the popups should have been reserved for very important events and not used as a standard event whenever Windows does not recognise the program or developer, which at the moment is about 99% of them.

    All in all I would say this is a pretty poor effort for Microsoft. Lifepower mentions ME, while I don't think Vista is as bad as ME was it still feels like a "theme for XP" rather than a brand new OS. I don't feel Microsoft has made a product primarily for users. If in doubt I would avoid for the time being and check back in 8 months or so to see how things are then. As software is updated to take account of Vista things may become smoother. At the moment the early adopter is in for a frustrating ride.
    The views expressed on this programme are bloody good ones. - Fred Dagg

  3. #3

    First Vista experience

    As I posted jokingly in response:
    Shooting yourself in the foot with Vista:
    • You double click the gun icon, and wait as your cursor temporarily locks. A dialog requesting confirmation reads "Wait, are you sure that you want to shoot yourself in the foot?" Obviously the answer is already yes, you wouldn't have double clicked the gun icon otherwise, so you click okay and wait. After a hour long period of hard drive grinding, flashy effects, and your computer seeming locked, an information dialog pops up: "You do not have adequate permissions to shoot yourself in the foot." You shoot yourself in the head instead to put yourself out of misery.


    By me. :twisted:

    Haven't tried Vista, and have no desire to. The most irritating thing about it that I have heard is the increase in clutter and the LUA, limited user accounts, that masquerade as security, rather than the frustrations they really are.
    The main logic in my mind behind this decision is the fact that programming games is my hobby, as is playing them. No game requires only Vista, IE no XP, yet and until I find that it becomes truly necessary to change my OS I won't do so. Mainly because the glitz and bling I already own in the form of ObjectDesktop by Stardock, plus I payed only $40 for it whereas it costs about $150 for a Home Premium license over here. The most obnoxious thing that concerns me, is that Vista is a huge pig (from appearances at least) with the advanced functionality hidden and locked away. I am a poweruser who doesn't need coddling, and if I want to shoot myself in the foot, then I want it to let me make that mistake. Just my own two cents on the matter.

  4. #4

    First Vista experience

    I haven't tried the official release though I'm planning on downloading since I have an Academic License (When you can get it for free, you might as well get it )

    However I tried the Beta 2 release and did enjoy it, if we don't count that it went down every 10 minute for no reason. I escpecially like the idea about searching in stead of using the typical treestructure for locating files.

    However I will only install Vista on a partion of my harddisk in the beginning. It would be stupid to leave XP completely at this moment. I will look into Vista for 4-6 months and then see how things are looking.
    Imagine I've written something clever here inspiring you to make something awesome. If that happens give me credits

  5. #5

    First Vista experience

    I expressed similar concerns to my friend who's been running the beta version for some time..

    His response was that you can turn off all the extra security warnings and things and it's back to working like XP did.
    My site: DelphiTuts.com (coming soon)...

    Download Font Studio 4.21 here.

  6. #6

    First Vista experience

    True it is possible to switch off. Although for joe-average I would suggest they leave it on.
    For example when I installed FFDShow I got an unexpected piggyback from "save now" program. This adware was trying to install itself but because of the security pop up I was able to stop it.
    The views expressed on this programme are bloody good ones. - Fred Dagg

  7. #7

    First Vista experience

    Actually there are also some quite positive stuff about Vista. For instance, the compatibility and gaming issue that has been discussed throughly on GameDev appeared to be a wild exaggeration. The games I tried ran fine as well as third-party applications. As I said, it felt "too much XP", that includes the compatibility.

    The security warnings are good and bad. Bad because they get annoying, good because if you pay attention to them, you can prevent malware from being installed.

    Also it is the very first public release of Vista. I recall Windows XP was no more stable back when it was first released - it took them two service packs to make it okay, so most likely we'll be all using Vista in several years, as Czar said.

  8. #8

    First Vista experience

    Quote Originally Posted by Lifepower
    Also it is the very first public release of Vista. I recall Windows XP was no more stable back when it was first released - it took them two service packs to make it okay, so most likely we'll be all using Vista in several years, as Czar said.
    Why do we continue to accept that first release software should be buggy?

    We don't expect it from car manufacturers so why software? Release it when it's ready not when the shareholders want the share price to go up so they can see their net worth has increased.

    There has to be a better way of writing less buggy software, be they operating systems, games or db applications.
    <br /><br />There are a lot of people who are dead while they are still alive. I want to be alive until the day I die.<br />-= Paulo Coelho =-

  9. #9

    First Vista experience

    Why do we continue to accept that first release software should be buggy?
    Would you prefer having to wait another 4 years for Vista?

    By which time technology has moved on, and the shiny new interface is dull and crusty.
    My site: DelphiTuts.com (coming soon)...

    Download Font Studio 4.21 here.

  10. #10

    First Vista experience

    Quote Originally Posted by Nitrogen
    Would you prefer having to wait another 4 years for Vista?

    By which time technology has moved on, and the shiny new interface is dull and crusty.
    I would actually if it is going to be more stable more what every the other marketing speal that they proclaim. User Interfaces can be changed at the drop of a hat, it's the internals that will determine if it's usefull or not once you get over the eye candy.

    Same goes for cars. Porsches may look very sexy, but it's when using them day to day that will determine whether you should stick with it or trade it in.
    <br /><br />There are a lot of people who are dead while they are still alive. I want to be alive until the day I die.<br />-= Paulo Coelho =-

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