from
mediavidea.blogspot.com
The main problems with Vista so far:
Problems Part 1
1. Costlier than the $100 Laptop and Gaming consoles: Vista Home Premium is $239, $159 upgrade; Vista Ultimate costs $399, $259 upgrade.
2. No instant plug and play: upgrading and setting up Vista will take much of your time.
3. Expensive for normal use: Vista is probably not for you if you use the PC for normal jobs like surfing and typing. Use Mozillla Firefox for same and better functionalities than Explorer 7. Microsoft may however try to convince you otherwise showing how cool Vista looks. If you are into looks, get a skin for your desktop.
4. Too expensive for Gaming: If you are into Gaming, for the price of a Vista, get a Gaming Console.
5. No big Vista application announcements: IBM, Intuit, large software vendors and even Microsoft’s own Dynamics ERP division have so far been quiet about their software for Vista.
6. Online software providers such as Salesforce.com do not plan to modify their offerings to suit the new Explorer
Now, we come to the actual problem with Vista.
After the lukewarm response to DRM initiatives by big companies, I am positive users will not like Vista’s draconian features that threaten to take the power away from them. Vista is actually worse than DRM.
To users, Microsoft says that it wants to protect them from computer viruses. To content owners (especially big media corporations), Microsoft says it will protect copyright. Actually, Microsoft ends up on the Big Media’s side, virtually controlling how users use and control their machines.
Problems Part 2
Highlights from the Vista user agreement, which comes into force once you choose accept and install the software.
7. This agreement only gives users only a few rights to use the software. All other rights belong to Microsoft.
8. If you do not like Vista's limitations, Microsoft says in the agreement that "you may not work around any technical limitations in the software."
9. Microsoft has the right to regularly check the legitimacy of the software (which you paid for) and CAN DELETE certain programs without your knowledge.
10. Microsoft can revalidate the software anytime or it may require you to reactivate it if you make changes to ‘your’ computer components.
11. Microsoft has set significant limits on users’ ability to copy or transfer the software. It prohibits anything more than a single backup copy and has set strict limits on transferring the software to different devices or users.
12. Only Windows Defender, the much-hyped anti-virus program –will determine what constitutes unwanted software. That means Microsoft can install Spyware and Adware with impunity.
13. Vista Content protection only helps Big Media: A computer scientist in New Zealand found that Vista intentionally degrades the picture quality of premium content when played on most computer monitors. Microsoft wants you to see that content on TV or bigger, pricier displays.
Options for existing PC (not using MAC OS, Linux) users
- Continue using Win XP
- For gaming, you are better off with the consoles
- Use online office application from Google which are getting better by the day, including better integration with other online apps, in a seamless experience.
- OpenOffice is getting better by the day.
- Home Entertainment: Steve Ballmer says Vista as the center and the launching point for the next generation of connected entertainment in the home. Translation: Expensive Home Servers, premium content, all controlled by Vista’s draconian features.
The world’s needs an open source home entertainment server along the lines of Openoffice, if that is our entertainment future.
Here's a very good in-depth read:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Bott/?p=220
and another:
http://www.trap17.com/index.php/problems-vista-report-will-be-sent-microsoft_t38302.html
and finally:
http://www.crn.com/software/197006899
It would surprise me if Bill Gates himself didn't have win 98 installed on his personal computer.
Wage