To top it all off it is alleged that if you upgrade your pc with a few items then the software will stop working? not tested this yet, but it would put a spanner in the works for future upgrades.
Vista is shat
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Vista is shat
Be careful with vista chaps.... all the magazine reviews state you will be given the choice of 32bit/64bit installations all on one DVD. Bull.... you only get 32Bit if you purchase Home premium. I have had to pay extra for a 64bit version to be posted out to me, but because i have already installed the 32bit version i cannot now install the 64bit version without purchasing a seperate licence.
To top it all off it is alleged that if you upgrade your pc with a few items then the software will stop working? not tested this yet, but it would put a spanner in the works for future upgrades.

To top it all off it is alleged that if you upgrade your pc with a few items then the software will stop working? not tested this yet, but it would put a spanner in the works for future upgrades.
Have it
Its the same activation things as in XP, but I have read MS backtracked on the whole change a few things and your screwed routine. I believe it is now along the lines of 10 points for the machine, with things like the network card getting 3 points, memory 1 point, etc... If the changes add up to more than 10 then you need to reactivate, if less then your fine.
I would have stuck with the 32 bit version myself, but I am still holding onto xp for the near future. Gaming takes a bit of a hit in vista, framrates are all supposedely lower. Until the drivers mature and the dx10 hardware is cheap as chips, I shall stick with xp.
I would have stuck with the 32 bit version myself, but I am still holding onto xp for the near future. Gaming takes a bit of a hit in vista, framrates are all supposedely lower. Until the drivers mature and the dx10 hardware is cheap as chips, I shall stick with xp.
- Woz
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It gets even more frightening if you read this:
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/p ... _cost.html
Personally, I'd rather not touch it with a barge pole.
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/p ... _cost.html
Personally, I'd rather not touch it with a barge pole.
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I've installed Vista on just over 25 machines so far. Lot of the misconceptions and near slander are in the reports above, that my client had.
Mine is the only one thats been a REAL problem (x64 vista on 12 of the machines btw, including mine).
on mid range (P4 2.2 to P4 3.2ghz HT version) with mid range DX9 graphics cards its incredible. Not a big performance hit in apps and a nice install with nearly all drivers (including speedstep) sorted.
on high end PC's (surprisingly) it's shat. Here's my list of problems.
x6800 will not go over 60% utilisation without power management cutting it right down, even though its been modified to use 100%
ATI Crossfire X1800's don't work in crossfire properly at all.
3gb of physical memory results in Vista using 1.9GB physical at boot! not so big a problem I hear you say, well yeah, if that didnt mean a 5gb page file that hangs the disk on boot being created/deleted.
The licencing thing only applies to OEM as far as I am concerned, which locks it to your BIOS version! Upgrading BIOS means no OEM install! there's a million other options and gotcha's with OEM.
In a nutshell, Vista (IMO) is great... really great.. Media Centre and meeting space are hot.
A LOT doesn't work... theres a lot of missing pages in control panel applets and stuff. 3rd party support , from my experience just is not there.
the only reason I upgraded is due to my software assurance licence and if I could snap my fingers back to XP64, to be honest, at this stage; I would.
Mine is the only one thats been a REAL problem (x64 vista on 12 of the machines btw, including mine).
on mid range (P4 2.2 to P4 3.2ghz HT version) with mid range DX9 graphics cards its incredible. Not a big performance hit in apps and a nice install with nearly all drivers (including speedstep) sorted.
on high end PC's (surprisingly) it's shat. Here's my list of problems.
x6800 will not go over 60% utilisation without power management cutting it right down, even though its been modified to use 100%
ATI Crossfire X1800's don't work in crossfire properly at all.
3gb of physical memory results in Vista using 1.9GB physical at boot! not so big a problem I hear you say, well yeah, if that didnt mean a 5gb page file that hangs the disk on boot being created/deleted.
The licencing thing only applies to OEM as far as I am concerned, which locks it to your BIOS version! Upgrading BIOS means no OEM install! there's a million other options and gotcha's with OEM.
In a nutshell, Vista (IMO) is great... really great.. Media Centre and meeting space are hot.
A LOT doesn't work... theres a lot of missing pages in control panel applets and stuff. 3rd party support , from my experience just is not there.
the only reason I upgraded is due to my software assurance licence and if I could snap my fingers back to XP64, to be honest, at this stage; I would.
See me looking beautiful on my journey across Australiasia at www.jdt-downunder.fotopic.net or Canada at www.garyjones.fotopic.net
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Some other bits and bobs about vista.
Data transfer over USB or burning CD/DVD's is allot faster within vista.
I had a dead hard drive that xp could not see, but vista fixed the MBR and got the hard drive working which allowed me to remove the data needed before the hard drive died completely. (and saved a £1400 ontrack bill)
Data transfer over USB or burning CD/DVD's is allot faster within vista.
I had a dead hard drive that xp could not see, but vista fixed the MBR and got the hard drive working which allowed me to remove the data needed before the hard drive died completely. (and saved a £1400 ontrack bill)
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- Woz
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And that's the important bit!DE-G@vnor wrote: the only reason I upgraded is due to my software assurance licence and if I could snap my fingers back to XP64, to be honest, at this stage; I would.
If you have SA, then the licensing is a no brainer, although even if I had it I'd wait for SP1 before I even thought about a major rollout.
As it stands, my office is way too tiny to get SA and I'm not going to get Vista at home until I get a new machine (if at all).
Theres no two ways about it, in case my post is open to misinterpretation (sp?) - no way would I install this in an office.
Roaming laptops (salesmen, directors etc) then well, on my experience, for Meeting Place alone, its probably worth a try.
Roaming laptops (salesmen, directors etc) then well, on my experience, for Meeting Place alone, its probably worth a try.
See me looking beautiful on my journey across Australiasia at www.jdt-downunder.fotopic.net or Canada at www.garyjones.fotopic.net
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Meeting place is not netmeeting, but does a similar thing.
Key features are this:
1. Shared Desktop, variety of choices, read only, view, slideshow mode etc.
2. Shared "Meeting documents" - so say I put a document in "Plan to hunt down and molest Woz.doc" with some action points in - this can be shared, each user gets a copy and can amend it. My version stays unchanged. At the end, I can decide whether to get everyones version, or let the system automatically include everyones changes etc.
3. Really easy setup for wireless laptops - I go to a meeting at a blue chip company with my laptop . They don't provide the projector they promised and I'm not allowed to plug into their network (really common for me this). Well, I can fire up meeting place ONLY - and select to setup an "Adhoc network" - put in a shared password. All other users fire up meeting place and simply select "connect to a meeting" and put in the shared password . Windows Automatically setups up an encypted wireless network and everyone joins.
4. people can send messages and questions to one another, privately, publically or a mix.
Point 3, for me, is a real real beauty. In my version of Vista (Ultimate) it works a treat, in Vista office it doesnt work yet
There's loads more to it, but thats all I've really needed
Key features are this:
1. Shared Desktop, variety of choices, read only, view, slideshow mode etc.
2. Shared "Meeting documents" - so say I put a document in "Plan to hunt down and molest Woz.doc" with some action points in - this can be shared, each user gets a copy and can amend it. My version stays unchanged. At the end, I can decide whether to get everyones version, or let the system automatically include everyones changes etc.
3. Really easy setup for wireless laptops - I go to a meeting at a blue chip company with my laptop . They don't provide the projector they promised and I'm not allowed to plug into their network (really common for me this). Well, I can fire up meeting place ONLY - and select to setup an "Adhoc network" - put in a shared password. All other users fire up meeting place and simply select "connect to a meeting" and put in the shared password . Windows Automatically setups up an encypted wireless network and everyone joins.
4. people can send messages and questions to one another, privately, publically or a mix.
Point 3, for me, is a real real beauty. In my version of Vista (Ultimate) it works a treat, in Vista office it doesnt work yet
There's loads more to it, but thats all I've really needed
See me looking beautiful on my journey across Australiasia at www.jdt-downunder.fotopic.net or Canada at www.garyjones.fotopic.net
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Hopefully most of you guys know I'm not the fanboy type.Woz wrote:It gets even more frightening if you read this:
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/p ... _cost.html
Personally, I'd rather not touch it with a barge pole.
I'm really not sure of the motive of the writer for the above link, I remember similar things with XP and product activation.
Here's my 2 findings that completely debunk that huge article.
1. CPU Usage from the media protection process does not EVER go over 2% on my machine - unless its looking for a codec.
2. If , when you setup Windows Media Centre or Media Player, you select "do not automatically download DRM information for owned tracks" then it doesn't even run that process ever.
See me looking beautiful on my journey across Australiasia at www.jdt-downunder.fotopic.net or Canada at www.garyjones.fotopic.net
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Aye, I'll edit an application compatibility thingy me bob on this post, maybe its helpful to someone. If anyone but us are still here *tumbleweed* 
I'll mix the home stuff up with the office stuff
WORKS:
Avast AntiVirus
Microsoft One (just)
Microsoft ISA Firewall Client (2006)
Office 2007
IE7 (lot better on Vista for some reason)
Nero
DVD Decryptor / DVD Shrink
Overall - not overwhelming support.
DOESNT WORK:
(strangely) Windows Defender / Security Centre on 64bit
AVG etc.
VMWare (beta is available but shat)
Virtual PC
SQL Server 2000 Server Manager
MSPClient
Any peripheral by HP, unfortunately
(multifunction printers etc, drivers)
Deamon Tools
ATI Crossfire on x1800 and above, drivers claim it, but its shat
NVidia SLI not supported, drivers dont support it properly.
Microsoft ISA Firewall Client 2000
Lotus Notes works but is a complete shit to install thanks to Windows hiding loads of files (hehe, in your eye IBM)
I'll mix the home stuff up with the office stuff
WORKS:
Avast AntiVirus
Microsoft One (just)
Microsoft ISA Firewall Client (2006)
Office 2007
IE7 (lot better on Vista for some reason)
Nero
DVD Decryptor / DVD Shrink
Overall - not overwhelming support.
DOESNT WORK:
(strangely) Windows Defender / Security Centre on 64bit
AVG etc.
VMWare (beta is available but shat)
Virtual PC
SQL Server 2000 Server Manager
MSPClient
Any peripheral by HP, unfortunately
Deamon Tools
ATI Crossfire on x1800 and above, drivers claim it, but its shat
NVidia SLI not supported, drivers dont support it properly.
Microsoft ISA Firewall Client 2000
Lotus Notes works but is a complete shit to install thanks to Windows hiding loads of files (hehe, in your eye IBM)
See me looking beautiful on my journey across Australiasia at www.jdt-downunder.fotopic.net or Canada at www.garyjones.fotopic.net
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- Woz
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I've read somewhere that the 2003 server admin tool won't run under Vista. Pretty much a show stopper if true!
Oh - Symantec Antivirus - you need to upgrade to get it working with Vista. You need your license key if you're a corporate, dunno the situ if you're a home user.
I've got a single Vista laptop deployed and it's been nothing but pain as the machine is in New York so I can't physically see the damned thing and remote admin tools aren't working.
Oh - Symantec Antivirus - you need to upgrade to get it working with Vista. You need your license key if you're a corporate, dunno the situ if you're a home user.
I've got a single Vista laptop deployed and it's been nothing but pain as the machine is in New York so I can't physically see the damned thing and remote admin tools aren't working.
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Has anyone got the creative X-FI game pro fatality to work with Vista yet? More to the point, the MIC as it shows the mic to be not available. This is a bummer because you cannot play the likes of BF2142 or use SKYPE etc. The latest driver on the creative website hasn't cured anything really yet!
Croooooky AKA []DAU[]_
Croooooky AKA []DAU[]_
Have it
- Bob_The_Engineer
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From what I remember this is down to the Vista DRM management module. The drivers have to be ratified by Microsoft before the mic will work in order to negate the possibility of using the anti-feedback routine to rip DRM content.
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