just a note that if you're still geek enough to be using xp (and i
and others have very good reasons that will not change soon, if ever -
i'm more likely to move to linux than a post-vista windows system,
because they're really legitimately awful on a lot of levels) - support
ends on april 8th. so, it's a good time to track down all the updates.
if, for example, you've been relying on an sp2 disc and then running
windows update whenever you reinstall, you won't be able to do that
anymore.
somebody will no doubt do this and torrent it, but trusting them is another issue. better to do it yourself while you can.
there
are hardware issues that jumped up in vista that never got solved. the
only solution is to buy specific hardware. i mean, if you're running a
pre-built system then you probably won't notice any of this. but, as
deep and valid as the criticisms of apple are, you're better off with a
mac than a dell or an hp....
there's a lot of fixes
that don't work floating around. i actually worked support for vista and
i will authoritatively tell you that microsoft's response is to blame
it on the hardware.
yet, the same hardware works flawlessly with xp.
so, there's conspiracy theories floating around that probably have a lot of truth to them.
around
'06, microsoft started loading it's operating systems up with
meaningless services that are designed solely to require faster
hardware. there's almost no functional use for any of this, except to
coerce people into upgrading their systems. that much is really not
debatable.
but you can turn that off. that's minor.
one
of the bigger problems is with copy operations, and while it may be
true that this is at it's core a problem with user-mode drivers (that is
to say that the hardware people never made drivers that work properly
with the security aspects of windows, post-vista), there's still this
lingering question of whether the thing is by design.
what
that means is that people with certain types of fairly modern hardware
are stuck with xp, unless they want to upgrade central aspects of their
system or deal with cripplingly bad file operations.
that's
a very good reason to either stick with xp, or move to linux. microsoft
isn't going to make an exception - they're going to blame it on the
hardware manufacturers. and the hardware manufacturers are going to tell
you to buy new hardware - and you'd better do the research to make sure
the drivers work right.
for me, the precise issue is
my board. but, i mean, it's a perfectly good asus with sata connectors
that can handle up to 16 gb of ram. there's no good reason to upgrade
this board. intel just won't fix the chipset drivers to work properly
with the way windows does, post-vista.
but if i stick with xp, then i get full use of the board.
worse,
the truth is that xp just performs better at core os functions for the
simple reason that it's doing less things in the process. getting the
drivers to work right will speed up file operations, but it will never
be as fast as xp on the same hardware. that would defy basic logic; it
would require doing more things in less time. nor does a home user need
to care about the security functions that slow everything down...
so,
again, it goes back to the conspiracy theory: were the security updates
really necessary and were they really buckling to pressure to
idiot-proof the os, or are they just driving the hardware market by
literally introducing billions of empty cycles?
i'm
hoping microsoft decides to do a final platform update or something that
pulls everything together. that'll make life easier. but, i suspect
that they won't. so...
april 8th.