[SGVLUG] Fw: OT: MS VISTA (more pain)
Tom Emerson
osnut at pacbell.net
Thu Apr 10 11:03:25 PDT 2008
This started as an off-topic thread on my HP list about Vista and what it can or cannot do (and the troubles that ensued) Here is one message I think folks around here should be aware of...
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: John K. <john3000 at COX.NET>
I have hopes for Vista, but I have no interest in putting it on any
machine I use or manage, at least for the next several months.
Quite frankly, my experience with Vista is such that I don't see any
overwhelming advantage to moving to Vista, despite the improved
security (or at least the appearance of improved security).
While I saw a big difference between Windows 98SE and Windows XP Pro,
I don't see anything approaching that between Windows XP Pro and
Vista. And actually I still have two PCs running Windows 98SE that
run 24-7. One now spends most of its time as a print server and the
other is the family music server. One hasn't been rebooted since a
power failure earlier this year, and the other was restarted a couple
of days later (two fans in that box failed to spin up after power was
restored, so I had to find replacement fans). Oh, and I don't buy
that Windows Media hype about how you need Vista to really have a
media PC. Both of the Windows 98SE boxes have ATI All-In-Wonder
cards and both can record, edit, and playback video (the one with an
ATI All-In-Wonder Rage 9000DV card does it better and can pause and
resume viewing while recording continues). Maybe it is a little
easier in that you don't have to install a lot of drivers, but I
really haven't found much you can do (media-wise) on Vista that you
can't do on 98SE.
In comparing Vista to XP Pro, the only factor which leans in Vista's
favor is its ability to run applications with large memory
requirements so much better than XP. I routinely get "out of memory"
errors with XP, but in using Vista I haven't had that problem. What
are these "large memory" applications? Adobe Photoshop CS2, Corel
Paint Shop Pro X2, Canon Digital Photo Professional, things like
that. While I have 2 GB of RAM in the XP boxes, they don't seem to
be very adept in managing it, and there seems to be a hard limit to
how large the virtual memory space can be. Once the Task Manager
shows 3.22 GB, the applications start popping "out of memory"
modals. Unfortunately, I see this way too often.
Stability is NOT a problem with XP. My main PC (which is where I do
my image editing) is not a small system. Currently it has an AMD
3800+ dual-core with 2 GB RAM and 12 hard drives for a total of about
5.2 TB of disc space (hey, when your raw image files come from the
camera as 11 MB to 16 MB files, you eat up disc space very quickly).
Most of those hard drives are external USB drives, so the amount of
space on the PC varies from day to day. Along with all those
external USB drives, there are many other USB devices - CF card
readers, webcam, graphics tablet, printers, Spyder 2 Pro color
calibration sensor, MP3 player, and of course keyboard and
mouse. Yup, so many USB devices that there are three external USB 7
port USB hubs, and there is only 1 empty USB port. Oh, and it has
dual monitors (very handy for image editing).
Did I mention that it also runs Apache and MySQL in the background,
as well as some "services" I developed in PHP which hit certain web
sites every 15 minutes, capture the pages, parse the pages, and save
copies of the pages along with metrics from the pages?
So how long does this XP Pro system run between reboots? Not as long
as an HP 3000, but not too bad for a PC. I usually reboot it once a
month when the Windows Updates come out. Last month I didn't reboot
it, so as of a few minutes ago it has now been up 59.66 days since
the last reboot.
It is true that my Linux box has been up a few months since its last
reboot, but then it is a pretty basic configuration. It doesn't
receive the pounding the Windows XP box receives, so I'd expect it to
run at least two years to see the level of activity the XP box sees
in two weeks.
So which do I prefer, Windows XP or Linux? It depends on what I have
to do. These days I do a lot of LAMP and WAMP, and with so much open
source software from the Linux/Unix world now running on Windows XP,
I'm actually finding that I do a lot of my LAMP development on
Windows XP Pro and then moving it over to Linux and testing on both
Windows and Linux, making sure that there is ONE version of the code
and that it runs on both platforms.
Choose Linux or choose XP? Nope, can't make that decision, I want them both!
John
*** When replying to this message, please do not delete these ***
*** signature lines. Otakon Katsucon HP3000-L @classiccmp.org ***
*** DigitalCosplay.com JohnKorbPhoto.com ***
More information about the SGVLUG
mailing list