by seige » Feb 5th, '07, 09:11
Well, I'm sorry you were tempted by 'early adopter' syndrome–I'm always guilty of that sin!
I spoke to my buddy who installed Vista, and his machine is a 2.1 core duo Intel processor, and he's running with 4Gb RAM. He uses his machine for CAD work.
Since his 'upgrade' (I say it like this cos he's now regraded back to XP) he noticed applications running slower, if at all, and most hardware wasn't recognised or functional, including his wireless keyboard, printer and scanner. Networking also caused a few headaches. But being a tecchie sort of bloke he persevered I imagine.
He even tried getting new drivers for the respective devices—which was to no avail.
It took a clean install of XP and re-installation of all his applications to get up and running again, a total of a weekend's downtime all told.
I think Vista's 'minimum hardware requirements' are a little misleading. And at the minute, it seems like installing Vista is the equivalent of a newly qualified mechanic dropping a V12 5 litre engine into a Ford Mondeo and expecting the car to function correctly.
He did say the interface was nice... but in his opinion, the overheads placed on the system by all the bells and whistles is probably part of the hold up.
In his opinion, you need pretty much a 2 year old or newer machine which is pretty hi-spec to even stand a chance.
As a Mac user—and evangelist (:D) I'd just like to say that Apple's new operating system runs like a dream—even on 7 year old Macintoshes. This is mainly due to Apple's control of their own hardware... which isolates a lot of development potential problems. Mac machines are built by Apple to their own specs, and therefore their operating system can be more predictible during the development.
On the other hand, a PC is basically a Frankensteins' monster of various components. When buying a PC, usually the spec sounds great—good processor, nice case, fast DVD writer, free printer etc. But these packages skimp on essentials which you DON'T see, like the motherboard and the graphics & sound drivers.
Buyer beware.
It's sad really, as the PC community has waited a long time for Vista. And early adopters of the new OS may just find themselves either struggling to cope with it or ditching it altogether.