I currently run vista it works and I can play allot of games I only have three games in my entire collection (BIOS BIOS 2 STALKER call of pripyat) that I cant run so I,m thinking about replacing the entire system
I don't know you might want to replace the fan if it's giving that much noise. XP is also doing fine for me.Skorpyo said:Wouldn't know. I've (wisely) stuck with Good ol' XP.
Go ahead and call me old. I won't hear you over my WORKING computer.
As much as I like Win7 compared to pretty much all previous versions of Windows, a good deal of the specific things you mention, especially in the part I quoted, could easily be attributed just to finally having a hard drive that doesn't suck, because they're heavily limited by disk performance (and if you think that's impressive compared to before, try running the whole thing off a new SSD). Improvements in the OS itself obviously don't hurt, and reinstalling from scratch so you have less unnecessary crap running also makes a huge difference if you're not really anal about maintaining a relatively clean system.MercurySteam said:Then, a few weeks ago when my Hard Disk broke down and I purchased a new one I also acquired a Windows 7 Ultimate upgrade disk and installed it. And....
[HEADING=1]HOLEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE SHIT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![/HEADING]
The improvement in performance was mind blowing. My processor copied files twice as fast, games and programs installed so much faster and I didn't get stuck or get 'Not Responding'. Ever!
I upgraded from XP to Win7 x64---the improvement in performance gave this old dog of a desktop a new lease on life. I'd been using 7 on the laptop for almost a year (going back to the prerelease trial in the summer of '09) so I knew I liked it, but when it hit the desktop...wow.Skorpyo said:Wouldn't know. I've (wisely) stuck with Good ol' XP.
Go ahead and call me old. I won't hear you over my WORKING computer.
Eh, mine is pushing on five years with all its original components. Though by now everything is obsolete. It is better (usually both in cost and performance) to build a custom rig, but that requires a little more knowledge than the average layman has.MercurySteam said:Dell systems aren't much better. I've had my hard drive replaced twice, my GPU once and even my mobo has needed fixing. Once the warranty ran out they said they'd charge me $200 for a new Samsung 500GB internal. Instead I bought my own Segate 500GB for $85. It's smaller, faster and cheaper.
Basically the Dell custom computers are built with sub-par components and they only way to fix it is to replace them one by one.
EDIT: I realize this isn't a software issue, I'm just trying to make a point.
Building your own rig is sometimes cheaper with better performance and a longer lifespan. A few of my friends know a bit more about computers than me and some have even built their own so I could probably count on them if I ever wanted to do it myself.DeadlyYellow said:Eh, mine is pushing on five years with all its original components. Though by now everything is obsolete. It is better (usually both in cost and performance) to build a custom rig, but that requires a little more knowledge than the average layman has.MercurySteam said:Dell systems aren't much better. I've had my hard drive replaced twice, my GPU once and even my mobo has needed fixing. Once the warranty ran out they said they'd charge me $200 for a new Samsung 500GB internal. Instead I bought my own Segate 500GB for $85. It's smaller, faster and cheaper.
Basically the Dell custom computers are built with sub-par components and they only way to fix it is to replace them one by one.
My friend helped me install me GPU, so I'm sure I could count on help from him to build a custom rig. They're mostly cheaper and have better performance as well as a longer life, so building your own is seeming more and more tempting.
EDIT: I realize this isn't a software issue, I'm just trying to make a point.