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#31
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 18:12:20 -0400, joey wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 21:03:08 GMT, Charlie Wilkes wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:41:38 -0400, joey wrote: I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. The difference is that each of those operating systems brought new capabilities that users really wanted... win95 brought 32 bit support and a better GUI; 98 brought support for USB and much larger hdds; 2k/XP brought support for more RAM and even bigger hdds. What does Vista bring that anyone really cares about? 1. For gamers, DX10. Is DX10 something that inherently needs Vista, or is it something Microsoft will only develop for Vista? In any case, I don't believe there are any game releases that require DX10 as of yet. 2. It solves a major problem: software development companies that have been continually releasing software that requires admin rights on the end user PC will find it very difficult to operate in the world of Vista. That probably has value, but I wonder if anyone perceives the value, especially if they are using an XP system with a firewall and AV and not having problems. In any case... thank you for taking the time to provide a substantive and intelligible response. Charlie |
#32
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista Driver Development"
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 21:03:08 GMT, Charlie Wilkes
wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:41:38 -0400, joey wrote: I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. The difference is that each of those operating systems brought new capabilities that users really wanted... win95 brought 32 bit support and a better GUI; 98 brought support for USB and much larger hdds; 2k/XP brought support for more RAM and even bigger hdds. What does Vista bring that anyone really cares about? What can users do on Vista that they can't do on XP? I already listed some, but I am hesitant to just iterate through a feature list because there is quite a few. It depends on what is important to you. To some, being able to load some of the operating system onto a flash drive is a very compelling feature, and you can't do that with XP. To some, having a very cool UI experience and sidebar widgets on the desktop is an important feature. To some, having the peace of mind of the security features is enough. To some, the ability to play DX10 games is enough. To some, Flip3D is enough. To some, ShadowCopy is enough. To some, the ultra fast search-as-you-type is enough. To some, IIS7, having the .Net 3 framework without downloading an extra package, and having the Windows Communication Foundation built in is a compelling reason. It all depends on one's needs. I cannot begin to presume what is important to you, so I can't convince you that you should upgrade to Vista right now. But, if your hardware supports it and you plan to have the same hardware two years from now, you might as well start using it now because getting used to it will save you from being behind the learning curve from the rest of the corporate world. |
#33
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
joey wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 11:35:41 +0100, Conor wrote: In article , joey says... On Thu, 19 Apr 2007 21:39:55 GMT, "babaloo" wrote: It is not the drivers that suck. It is Vista that sucks. Spoken by a true technology expert (yawn). It's not Vista that interacts with the video card. The code between the graphics system of the of an operating system and the driver is all the same. The driver lies between the OS and the video card, and the driver is where people are having problems. Drivers are written by video card vendors, not Microsoft. Vista is the worst product every issued by Microsoft, an unbelievable fiasco. People said the same thing about XP at first. Ruling out graphics card drivers because we're not talking 3D gaming.... I've just installed XP and apps etc on a XP1500 system with 512MB RAM. It boots, opens apps and runs faster than my X2 4800, 2GB system with Vista on. I was fkin disgusted. I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. NT 3.5 and 4 loaded things faster than Win 95 or 98, especially if you threw more RAM at it. XP is slower than 2000. Vista slower still. |
#34
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista Driver Development"
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 23:35:25 GMT, Charlie Wilkes
wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 18:12:20 -0400, joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 21:03:08 GMT, Charlie Wilkes wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:41:38 -0400, joey wrote: I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. The difference is that each of those operating systems brought new capabilities that users really wanted... win95 brought 32 bit support and a better GUI; 98 brought support for USB and much larger hdds; 2k/XP brought support for more RAM and even bigger hdds. What does Vista bring that anyone really cares about? 1. For gamers, DX10. Is DX10 something that inherently needs Vista, or is it something Microsoft will only develop for Vista? In any case, I don't believe there are any game releases that require DX10 as of yet. There are important operating system changes that facilitate DX10. I don't know how much the audience here knows about operating system design, but it is fair to say it is substantial. To make it brief, I do not think DX10 is possible on XP without a HUGE service pack that would effectively replace the operating system kernel (making it a completely new OS version). Such an effort is extremely costly for MS, and its unlikely in my opinion that they will ever make such a dramatic "patch" for XP, because a patch implies they are providing a huge amount of development dollars (millions) to the general public for free. Not a smart move for any company -- best to make it a feature of the next version of the OS which includes some other things users might be willing to pay for -- and, if they aren't willing to pay for an upgrade to their current PC, they are sure to get it installed for them on their next new PC purchase. 2. It solves a major problem: software development companies that have been continually releasing software that requires admin rights on the end user PC will find it very difficult to operate in the world of Vista. That probably has value, but I wonder if anyone perceives the value, especially if they are using an XP system with a firewall and AV and not having problems. In any case... thank you for taking the time to provide a substantive and intelligible response. Keep in mind I'm not implying that everyone should upgrade today. My primary gaming machine does not run Vista yet, because I am waiting for drivers to mature and for DX10 titles to make it worth my while. I just don't like to see users crap all over Vista for uninformed reasons. |
#35
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista Driver Development"
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 19:51:48 -0400, No One
wrote: joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 11:35:41 +0100, Conor wrote: In article , joey says... On Thu, 19 Apr 2007 21:39:55 GMT, "babaloo" wrote: It is not the drivers that suck. It is Vista that sucks. Spoken by a true technology expert (yawn). It's not Vista that interacts with the video card. The code between the graphics system of the of an operating system and the driver is all the same. The driver lies between the OS and the video card, and the driver is where people are having problems. Drivers are written by video card vendors, not Microsoft. Vista is the worst product every issued by Microsoft, an unbelievable fiasco. People said the same thing about XP at first. Ruling out graphics card drivers because we're not talking 3D gaming.... I've just installed XP and apps etc on a XP1500 system with 512MB RAM. It boots, opens apps and runs faster than my X2 4800, 2GB system with Vista on. I was fkin disgusted. I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. NT 3.5 and 4 loaded things faster than Win 95 or 98, especially if you threw more RAM at it. XP is slower than 2000. Vista slower still. And DOS runs faster than any of them on single threaded apps, maybe we all should downgrade. |
#36
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
joey wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 23:35:25 GMT, Charlie Wilkes wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 18:12:20 -0400, joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 21:03:08 GMT, Charlie Wilkes wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:41:38 -0400, joey wrote: I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. The difference is that each of those operating systems brought new capabilities that users really wanted... win95 brought 32 bit support and a better GUI; 98 brought support for USB and much larger hdds; 2k/XP brought support for more RAM and even bigger hdds. What does Vista bring that anyone really cares about? 1. For gamers, DX10. Is DX10 something that inherently needs Vista, or is it something Microsoft will only develop for Vista? In any case, I don't believe there are any game releases that require DX10 as of yet. There are important operating system changes that facilitate DX10. I don't know how much the audience here knows about operating system design, but it is fair to say it is substantial. To make it brief, I do not think DX10 is possible on XP without a HUGE service pack that would effectively replace the operating system kernel (making it a completely new OS version). Such an effort is extremely costly for MS, and its unlikely in my opinion that they will ever make such a dramatic "patch" for XP, because a patch implies they are providing a huge amount of development dollars (millions) to the general public for free. Not a smart move for any company -- best to make it a feature of the next version of the OS which includes some other things users might be willing to pay for -- and, if they aren't willing to pay for an upgrade to their current PC, they are sure to get it installed for them on their next new PC purchase. It's still a "lock-in" feature no matter which way you cut it. MS could get DX10 to work in XP if they wanted to (****, they MADE DirectX, they can get it to work wherever they want), but of course their business model requires people to get forced onto another OS just for one little feature, otherwise they won't move willingly. 2. It solves a major problem: software development companies that have been continually releasing software that requires admin rights on the end user PC will find it very difficult to operate in the world of Vista. That probably has value, but I wonder if anyone perceives the value, especially if they are using an XP system with a firewall and AV and not having problems. In any case... thank you for taking the time to provide a substantive and intelligible response. Keep in mind I'm not implying that everyone should upgrade today. My primary gaming machine does not run Vista yet, because I am waiting for drivers to mature and for DX10 titles to make it worth my while. I just don't like to see users crap all over Vista for uninformed reasons. As long as you're willing to accept people disliking Vista for their own reasons, that's fine. They might not be in line with your own perspective though (eg. my above perspective on DX10). |
#37
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
joey wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 19:51:48 -0400, No One wrote: joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 11:35:41 +0100, Conor wrote: In article , joey says... On Thu, 19 Apr 2007 21:39:55 GMT, "babaloo" wrote: It is not the drivers that suck. It is Vista that sucks. Spoken by a true technology expert (yawn). It's not Vista that interacts with the video card. The code between the graphics system of the of an operating system and the driver is all the same. The driver lies between the OS and the video card, and the driver is where people are having problems. Drivers are written by video card vendors, not Microsoft. Vista is the worst product every issued by Microsoft, an unbelievable fiasco. People said the same thing about XP at first. Ruling out graphics card drivers because we're not talking 3D gaming.... I've just installed XP and apps etc on a XP1500 system with 512MB RAM. It boots, opens apps and runs faster than my X2 4800, 2GB system with Vista on. I was fkin disgusted. I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. NT 3.5 and 4 loaded things faster than Win 95 or 98, especially if you threw more RAM at it. XP is slower than 2000. Vista slower still. And DOS runs faster than any of them on single threaded apps, maybe we all should downgrade. DOS does not have the functionality that we require though, hence we use newer operating systems. Convincing people to upgrade from XP to Vista is tricky if the experience is slower without a SUFFICIENT gain in functionality. |
#38
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 19:46:07 -0400, joey wrote:
I cannot begin to presume what is important to you, so I can't convince you that you should upgrade to Vista right now. But, if your hardware supports it and you plan to have the same hardware two years from now, you might as well start using it now because getting used to it will save you from being behind the learning curve from the rest of the corporate world. Vista has nothing I care about enough to accept the license terms under which it is sold. After more than a decade of buying/using Windows, I have switched to Linux. Microsoft would have to come up with something really enticing to lure me back. Charlie |
#39
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
joey wrote:
On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 21:03:08 GMT, Charlie Wilkes wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 08:41:38 -0400, joey wrote: I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. The difference is that each of those operating systems brought new capabilities that users really wanted... win95 brought 32 bit support and a better GUI; 98 brought support for USB and much larger hdds; 2k/XP brought support for more RAM and even bigger hdds. What does Vista bring that anyone really cares about? 1. For gamers, DX10. The biggest issue here is that Vista moved the graphic driver model out of kernel mode space and into user space. This means much better stability and overall performance when the drivers are properly written by video card vendors. Even if the drivers are badly written, it means they cannot crash the core operating system components like they used to. True, when Direct X 10 ships. I believe that is schedule for September 2. It solves a major problem: software development companies that have been continually releasing software that requires admin rights on the end user PC will find it very difficult to operate in the world of Vista. This was the core issue at stake that led to most of the securty problems that gave Windows a reputation as less secure than Linux et al. For a while, MS placed an emphasis on allowing backward compatibility and not breaking applications even if they are badly written. Those days are over. Software companies that release software that doesn't follow best practices are going to find their **** doesn't work right under Vista. The unfortunate side effect of that for Microsoft is that of course idiot users are going to blame the OS first, which means for the next couple of years we are going to have to listen to people bitch about how Vista broke their software, when the truth is its the software and hardware vendors that have been ignoring the writing on the wall that has been there for 10 years. And sadly, MS gave the whiners a way to disable the security protection, so that if they really wanted to they could open themselves up to a world of viruses. The biggest break of the rules is Microsoft themselves. Almost every version of Word for Windows rewrote system DLLs and required a reboot to work. Some versions of Office would also break installed software due to the system changes. I remember the days when a new version of DOS would come out and Lotus 1-2-3 would stop working. The saying in those days was "DOS ain't done till Lotus won't run." |
#40
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NVIDIA: "We Underestimated Necessary Resources for Vista DriverDevelopment"
FoolsGold wrote:
joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 19:51:48 -0400, No One wrote: joey wrote: On Fri, 20 Apr 2007 11:35:41 +0100, Conor wrote: In article , joey says... On Thu, 19 Apr 2007 21:39:55 GMT, "babaloo" wrote: It is not the drivers that suck. It is Vista that sucks. Spoken by a true technology expert (yawn). It's not Vista that interacts with the video card. The code between the graphics system of the of an operating system and the driver is all the same. The driver lies between the OS and the video card, and the driver is where people are having problems. Drivers are written by video card vendors, not Microsoft. Vista is the worst product every issued by Microsoft, an unbelievable fiasco. People said the same thing about XP at first. Ruling out graphics card drivers because we're not talking 3D gaming.... I've just installed XP and apps etc on a XP1500 system with 512MB RAM. It boots, opens apps and runs faster than my X2 4800, 2GB system with Vista on. I was fkin disgusted. I was specifically addressing the post by bubaloo or whatever, but to address the problem you're describing, that same phenomenon has occurred with every MS OS release since the early days of DOS. Win 95 didnt have the responsiveness that Win 3.1 had. Win 98 didn't load apps as fast as 95, and so on and so forth through XP. NT 3.5 and 4 loaded things faster than Win 95 or 98, especially if you threw more RAM at it. XP is slower than 2000. Vista slower still. And DOS runs faster than any of them on single threaded apps, maybe we all should downgrade. DOS does not have the functionality that we require though, hence we use newer operating systems. Convincing people to upgrade from XP to Vista is tricky if the experience is slower without a SUFFICIENT gain in functionality. I would go for a separation of the OS from the GUI (more like Linux and OS/2). Give me a version of Windows that is command line and doesnt' have all the GUI crap. Let me run my own GUI. At least back in Windows 3.1 and NT 3.5 you could replace the Program Manager. I ran the Norton Desktop on NT until version 4. I prefer it over anything Microsoft has ever written. |
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