ddrueding
Fixture
I've gone nearly entirely to Vista. All my own systems run it or Server 2003, all my new client machines run it (or Ubuntu). Here I will try to explain why.
1. I like it. I like the new UI. Yes, it is different, and requires a whole new learning curve, but I was trying to be open and accepting when I was trying out Linux for the first time, and it kind of held over.
2. Speed. Yes, if you have a slow system, it is slower. But if you are trying to make a slow system snappy, you should be running Linux anyway. If you have a quick system (see sig) it really is quick. It's pre-caching tricks and other things do make a difference.
3. Less fussy. Yes, I said less. Have a system where the hard drive is on an expansion card? A fingerprint reader? A tablet? Need to sync files for offline use? All these things are easier in Vista.
I've heard all the complaints about Vista, and most of them are right. But I still think it's worth it. Besides, it lets me up-sell hardware like theres no tomorrow
1. I like it. I like the new UI. Yes, it is different, and requires a whole new learning curve, but I was trying to be open and accepting when I was trying out Linux for the first time, and it kind of held over.
2. Speed. Yes, if you have a slow system, it is slower. But if you are trying to make a slow system snappy, you should be running Linux anyway. If you have a quick system (see sig) it really is quick. It's pre-caching tricks and other things do make a difference.
3. Less fussy. Yes, I said less. Have a system where the hard drive is on an expansion card? A fingerprint reader? A tablet? Need to sync files for offline use? All these things are easier in Vista.
I've heard all the complaints about Vista, and most of them are right. But I still think it's worth it. Besides, it lets me up-sell hardware like theres no tomorrow