Vista Problems!

  • Thread starter Thread starter Piet
  • Start date Start date
P

Piet

Hi

After looking at various comments about Vista it is quite clear to me that
Vista runs very well on a GOOD PC. Something like a quad processor and
enough 800mhz memory plus a fast front end bus.

It does not perform well on PC's that are short of resources.

It is no use to tell people to go to Linux etc instead of elaborating about
the hardware being used.

Piet
 
im not useing a quad processor and my vista premium kicks ass on my pc! my
processor is a single core and its fast enough to run vista games with no
probs.
 
Quad processor? That's a bit extreme, I think. I've had it running on a
single core processor at about 2gHz with 1GB of memory and have been pretty
pleased with the result for everyday use.
 
Piet said:
Hi

After looking at various comments about Vista it is quite clear to me that
Vista runs very well on a GOOD PC. Something like a quad processor and
enough 800mhz memory plus a fast front end bus.

It does not perform well on PC's that are short of resources.

It is no use to tell people to go to Linux etc instead of elaborating
about the hardware being used.

Piet


Vista performs well on a system where there are ample resources and where
the individual components and software have decent support from the
manufacturers/authors.

A single core machine will run Vista very well. There is no requirement to
have quad core, although it would be nice of course..
 
I have Vista Ultimate on 3 DELL GX-280 (4 years old), 80 Gb HDD (C:), 3.8
Ghz of CPU, 2Gb RAM. Works well, better than XP on another partition (extra
SATA HDD installed).
 
You posted a message with a poor subject/title. It is very generic and
doesn't tell anybody anything or ask anything of anyone. It's just a
pointless statement.

Stating that Vista runs on a "Good PC" is also a useless statement. It is
very relative and makes little sense. A "Good PC" to one person mail still
fail all system requirements to run Vista. It doesn't change the fact that
the system is a "Good PC", it just means it can't run Vista.

On the other side, a "Great PC", one being better than a "Good PC", still
may have issues running Vista, simply because the "greatness" or "goodness"
has never been an indicator of how a computer would run a certain operating
system.
 
/Piet/ said:
Hi

After looking at various comments about Vista it is quite clear to me that
Vista runs very well on a GOOD PC. Something like a quad processor and
enough 800mhz memory plus a fast front end bus.

It does not perform well on PC's that are short of resources.

It is no use to tell people to go to Linux etc instead of elaborating about
the hardware being used.

Piet

Echoing others who have responded, this is a four-year old Pentium 4
with a NVidia 5200 (128) video card...
I do not game or use video-intensive applications, but do run the usual
programs, scanner/printer typical of many users. A 22" LCD is in service.

Truthfully, I have never seen a machine that is more responsive than
this one, even at the office. (Probably because of all the
virus/malware checking there). XP, also on this box, feels similarly
responsive. For my purposes, there is no pressing need for quad
architecture at this time.
 
I think most people are missing the point of your post. They are hung up on
the "quad processor" statement. I agree with your overall message. There is a
small but very loud group of folks here that for some reason can't let us
discuss Vista without trying to badger and insult the group. I'm not sure
why, but I believe their apparently their technical abilities do not let them
productively participate in their own OS forums so they come here to troll
and cause trouble.

The assumption that Vista requires more resources than, say Ubuntu, leads to
the conclusion that Ubuntu runs better (i.e., faster) than Vista on any given
hardware. While this may be true at a high level, your point is well taken
that posting "Use *nix" for every problem that is posted here isn't welcome
or productive without understanding the root cause of the issue (Ubuntu may
not support the hardware). Occasionally the OP does reply back to say that
they are using XYZ tuner card or ABC software that isn't supported on a *nix
platform and the silence from the open source zealots is deafening.

Not all of us have drank the kool-aid. We're here because we want to be.

Keep posting!
 
MICHAEL said:
Malefactor, you're not supposed to be using your MSDN copies on every day
production machines.

Why not? I do it all the time. Do you think Microsquish is going to come
over and take my computer away?
 
Bill Yanaire said:
Why not? I do it all the time. Do you think Microsquish is going to come over and take my
computer away?

That's what the MSDN EULA states.

No, Microsoft is not going to come to take away your
computers. It's a matter of integrity and honor.


-Michael
 
MICHAEL said:
That's what the MSDN EULA states.

No, Microsoft is not going to come to take away your
computers. It's a matter of integrity and honor.
Michael,

What is interesting is that Bill Yawn continuously slams Linux because it's
FREE (and hence can't be any good), but on the other hand is quite prepared
to abuse Microsoft's EULA in order to use a FREE Vista install. It indeed
does reflect on his integrity.

Cheers.

--
Frank's Brain Activity Plotted (watch the red line):
http://i68.photobucket.com/albums/i4/Astronomy2/PreformanceMonitor.jpg

AlexB: "If it is Business or Ultimate open Command Prompt as administrator
and type lusrmgr.msc."
^^^^^
I must say the developers at Microsoft do have a sense of humour.
 
It is not production machines. I do not produce anything. I am a developer.
I purchased a brand new DELL T7400 for what you can remotely call
production. That "production" is in fact my own research.

You Michael is an idiot who don't understand basics. I've told you many
times: MS is fully aware of what their MSDN subscribers are doing. If I am
allowed to download and install software it means I am within legal limits.
If I install software from a DVD and I enter a product key it means I am
within Legal Limits. I can entre the same product key a number of time
within the confines of my private office and home office.
 
Funny to hear such words from you Michael. Very funny. I thought you were
not aware of their existence in the English language.

Or you think they should be applied to others not yourself?
 
Well, what do you mean by "abuse?" Where does this idiotic notion come from?
I explained to you many times that the subscription for MSDN Pro which cost
me last year $900.00 sharp specifies that we can use software for
development. It does not limit the number of machines we can install it on.
 
alexB said:
Funny to hear such words from you Michael. Very funny. I thought you were
not aware of their existence in the English language.

Or you think they should be applied to others not yourself?

I think that lobotomy Dr. Walter Freeman gave you as a child,
did not work all that well.


-Michael
 
alexB said:
It is not production machines. I do not produce anything. I am a developer.
I purchased a brand new DELL T7400 for what you can remotely call
production. That "production" is in fact my own research.

You Michael is an idiot who don't understand basics. I've told you many
times: MS is fully aware of what their MSDN subscribers are doing. If I am
allowed to download and install software it means I am within legal limits.
If I install software from a DVD and I enter a product key it means I am
within Legal Limits. I can entre the same product key a number of time
within the confines of my private office and home office.

Once again, you prattle on barely cognitive of the tripe
you write.


-Michael
 
I do not produce anything. I am a developer.

Having spent the first part of my life as a developer and now this part of
my life as an administrator, I find the statement above to be unintentionally
hilareous. No insult meant to alexB.
 
PNutts said:
Having spent the first part of my life as a developer and now this
part of my life as an administrator, I find the statement above to be
unintentionally hilareous. No insult meant to alexB.

It is very funny and I think it says exactly what we all know about alexB.
He isn't going to get it, though. Someone will have to explain it to him and
then he will just get mad and call us Arabs or commies.
 

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