That's actually not the primary problem with Vista. The issue with Vista is that it's incredibly bloated with all sorts of unnecessary and useless widgets and various background processes. This makes the OS incredibly slow comparatively, and is why most people hate the thing. It's packed to the gills with unneeded crap that you can't easily turn off. Fortunately, 7 came along and basically gave us Vista without that crap, so now we're all good.SacremPyrobolum said:The obvious answer is because its so unreliable and unstable. But why is that? What does the programing do so wrong?
I know, It isn't shit as nearly everbody say it is I even think it's better than XP.TestECull said:I'm still using Vista on a technicality[footnote]Realtek's Win7 nForce 4 audio driver gets stuck in an install loop. By the time I reinstall Windows I oughtta have a decent sound card and/or an entirely new rig, so I'll be moving on to 7.[/footnote]. I can tell you it's a combination of 95% PEBKAC and 5% bandwagoneers. I don't have a damn bit of trouble with it. It isn't buggy. It isn't laggy. It isn't overly bloated[footnote]I'm smart enough to use MSConfig to disable most of the shit I don't need.[/footnote]. It isn't unstable. It isn't incompatible. It isn't a memory whore(That title goes to Firefox). It's just attacked endlessly by fanboys, morons and bandwagoneers who don't like it is all.
It's nothing like ME, that's for sure.
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Not all issues are down to user error. Some come in through vulnerabilities in things like flash and other components. Some of these are injected into adverts or components of otherwise reputable sites. Some of these have a hell of an easier time with a system which automatically grants them full administrative access as yours does cause I do not believe for a second you run a limited account.TestECull said:I'm not dumb enough to click on every link I hit, I block ads and scripts 99.9% of the time(Certain sites are whitelisted so they don't probate me, namely this one), I run regular AV scans, I don't use Internet Explorer, I don't open strange attachments or click on strange links, and I don't download stupid shit.number2301 said:Erm, you know a hell of a lot of the updates are security fixes? You're putting yourself and everyone else at risk by disabling updates.
The last time I had any sort of malware Windows ME was but a twinkle in Bill's eye. I don't need Microsoft breaking everything behind the scenes to keep me safe. I can do that myself.
I can think of one good reason why you should turn both Windows Update and UAC off.And besides, I can't think of a single reason to disable them, the ones which aren't security fixes are driver updates, or they add functionality or performance.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. If it is broke, fix only what's broken.
That philosophy keeps my pickup truck running great, and it works on my computer just as well. Both are well past their prime and should have been retired years ago.
I've found Windows runs just fine right out of the box. It ain't broken. So why should I fix it? Those updates just break more shit than they fix anyways. Pre-SP1 my com surrogate, whatever the fuck that is, works fine. Post-SP1, however, it crashes every time I load a folder that's got a lot of movies or pictures in it. Takes explorer.exe with it. This annoys me since I FRAPS an awful lot of things. My boot times doubled thanks to SP1. My shutdown times pre-SP1 were pretty snappy. Post-SP1 the only way I get a snappy shutdown is with an AC failure. AKA I flip the power supply/power strip off. Then there's all my old Win98SE era games that run fine on RTM Vista, but with SP1 installed, are horribly broken in some manner.
I don't update my video drivers unless they're broken, either. I'm still on 195s. They work, they get good FPS, they're stable as hell, so I have no need to get the latest ones. Same goes for any other drivers. I must be doing something right, because you don't get over 1200 hours consecutive uptime(That screeny I posted is a few days old) if you're screwing around on the job.
I remember having to spend a great many hours modifying a version of the Geforce 7600 drivers so that I could use them with my laptop and actually leverage that second card I bought. It took six months to get an official driver to support this feature.Void(null) said:Ok the problems with Vista was thus:
Drivers. Drivers & Drivers.
The OS was simply not supported at the developer level and thus finding stable working drivers was a nightmare and it created a vicious circle where people were not making Vista or 64bit drivers a priority because so few were using the OS and so few people were using the OS due to the instability from poor driver support.
It is? Still using Vista since I do not enjoy the W7 tool bar, to much mac for me ...SacremPyrobolum said:The obvious answer is because its so unreliable and unstable. But why is that? What does the programing do so wrong?
I did try 7. My uncle friend loaned me his comp for a few days so i could try it.Soylent Bacon said:WHAT???kouriichi said:I love my vista. I refuse to tech up to windows 7 because i love it so much.
At least try Windows 7. I don't even...why would you...?