This entry was posted on 1/29/2007 1:46 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
There's an article floating around the Internet today called "Facts
About Windows Vista." In it, you'll find 4 genuine pieces of
information (which are not all that exciting, by the way) about the
world's most expensive operating system, following by some inane
statistics on how many dopes will use it.
C'mon, Reuters. You
call this news? The entirety of their article tells us this: new look,
easier search, gadget sidebar, and better security. Oh, and a million
this, and a million that for 2007, blah, blah, blah.
Um. Thanks. Looks like you succeeded in reading the packaging. Good for you.
For
real information on Vista, you're better off reading some real reviews
like this one, or this one. Or better yet, get thee to a PC store
tomorrow and give it a test drive yourself.
For enterprises
looking to deploy Vista, the amount of information you need to arm
yourself with is vast. Maybe Window's should have called it Vasta. What
else describes something with 50 million lines of code? (Those poor
coders' eyes. They must all be bloodshot and blind at this point.)
My
favorite "fact" from the article states that only 15% of today's
computers have the necessary hardware to upgrade to Vista. In other
words, Microsoft (and PC manufacturers, to be sure) don't actually want
you to upgrade. They'd all rather you just go out and buy a new
computer and continue to line their pockets.
The truth is,
they probably don't want to deal with all the support calls from dopes
who can't read the fine print, get halfway through an install, and
realize they don't have the right graphics cards, enough RAM or, heck,
enough hard drive space left. (Vista requires 15 GB of hard drive
space.)
Sounds like a killer business model to me.