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Windows 7
Who is using it and what do you think?
Personally I love it, it is what Vista should have been. VERY fast to start and all my applications and games run better than Vista by far. Lets hope Microsoft gives the peeps who bought Vista a deal to upgrade when the time comes. |
I've been using it for a few months, I like it. Hopefully Vista goes away soon :)
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I guess I could try installing it on my Intel Mac.......Naw!
But seriously, hopefully MS can give you guys something better than Vista. |
My Bud has it running on his Intel/Mac he was surprised how easy it was, he was expecting driver issues but had none.
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windows 7...what now? :neutral:
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I actually bought a copy of xp,MS quit producing copies at the end of january.So when there all gone...I'm using xp...till i die :)
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They will phase out XP and then no updates. |
I've been using Vista since I bought my computer, and it's been waaaaaaay better (and exceptionally more stable) than any computer I've spent any time on that used XP.
That said, I'm buying a Mac very soon. And this is the first I've heard of Windows 7... thanks for the heads up! |
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As a factory install, Windows 7 does seem to appear more robust than Vista. |
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That being said, I do have a slightly older XP box hooked up to the flat screen TV which I use occasionally as a media player or for the odd game. But it is frustrating. Had a video card fail (which got replaced under warranty) but was a pain to sort out. Now the ATI Catalyst Control Center won't run and I just haven't had time to sort that out. I've never had a major problem on a Mac that couldn't be sorted out fairly quickly and the only hardware failure I ever had was a faulty CD ROM that was promptly replaced under warranty. |
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I suppose it helps that all the software on this computer is newer. I wouldn't want to go through the trouble to get a legacy program to work on a Windows machine, it's just not worth it. Unless you have thousands of dollars in old software... Yup, definitely buying a Mac. I'm just tired of MS products. |
I actually never had any problems with Vista after SP1 came out. That being said I use it in a HTPc that really only streams movies and music from a central home server.
I too switched to the new Macbook with my latest laptop but I still have XP in it as well!:mrgreen: |
I'm running Vista on both my laptop and my desktop. I found vista easier to install then XP and have had no real significant problems on either machine. The laptop ran a little doggier until I boosted the RAM to 2 gigs but both run fine.
My only complaint about Vista has ever been that it uses more resources, but then it was the same way going from 98se to XP. I think a lot of the problems people have with Vista is that they are trying to put it on older machines without enough OOMPH to run it. Vista has received exactly the same kind of press that XP did in it's early days. I remember when XP launched and everybody HATED it, now it's the good old standby. If windows 7 is a more efficient version of Vista then I am looking forward to it! |
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Yes I would certainly say Windows 7 uses less resources and is faster than Vista. From a cold boot I can open Firefox and surf Canreef.com in less than 45 seconds, with Vista this probably took two full minutes to do. |
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That being said I am going to install Windows 7 on my laptop and play around with it. Anyone know if there are any issues with XP and W7 both running on a network? |
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My computer also takes FOREVER to boot as well Brad, are you a programmer or work for MS? |
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Hello,
Yeah Windows rocks in the corporate environment. UNIX and Mac OS doesn't even come close. I work on Sun OS all the time. When we do an upgrade on the hardware box that comes with a newer Sun OS, the application may not be compatible with it. You don't usually see this happening with Windows with enterprise software. Worst, you just build it again in VS. Also, some Linux/UNIX commands aren't running the way I've expected them to be. Again, this never happens with Windows. Also, Windows allow you to push out policies and manage domain or users much more easier. For Intranets that are authenticating users via Kerberos, Windows is better here too. For setting up clusters, Windows have the tools all built in to the server. With UNIX, you need to get Veritas. The list goes on. PS. I'm a Windows person. Titus |
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