The Most Annoying Things About Windows Vista
#2
Posted 20 February 2007 - 04:34 AM
#3
Posted 20 February 2007 - 05:04 AM
#4
Posted 20 February 2007 - 06:14 AM
#5
Posted 20 February 2007 - 07:35 AM
#6
Posted 20 February 2007 - 08:08 AM
Any article that talks about Vista performance will (or should) note that maxed out RAM is super imporant for it to function well. So, why bother with Vista? I haven't and don't ever intend to, and as a Windows 2000 user, I have no need to go any further with M$
#7
Posted 20 February 2007 - 08:57 AM
#8
Posted 20 February 2007 - 04:49 PM
1. Vista Home Basic is NOT completely useless. If somebody needs to buy a new computer but only needs basic capabilities like email, internet, word processing, etc., there's really no need for fancy 3D effects and media center apps and such. This version allows them to get a low-end computer at a reasonable price, and they still receive all the new security benefits that Vista has to offer. And for the record, Home Basic still comes with an interface that mimics the glass effect of Aero, even though it's not true 3D translucency, so it doesn't look like complete crap.
2. Quit ragging on UAC, please. Is it the best possibly way to gently hold the hands of all the security-challenged users out there? Perhaps not. Does it get their attention and get the job done? Yes. I can't believe you are slamming a feature so badly simply for the way it looks. The benefits of such a feature FAR outweigh any aesthetic issues. Seriously, this gripe is completely over-exaggerated.
3. I agree with you on this one a bit. Why they decided to supersize every icon in sight is beyond me. The fix, however, is even simpler than you think. While viewing your desktop (or any Explorer folder for that matter), hold down the Ctrl key on your keyboard and scroll down (or up) with your mouse's scroll wheel to adjust the size. If you already selected the "classic icons" for your desktop, scrolling down one notch past that downsizes those annoying little shortcut arrows so you can see most of the icon again.
4. Again with the versions, sheesh. Home Basic is designed for people at home. It has advanced multimedia capabilities and parental controls. Most people will want this. Business focuses on productivity, which includes more advanced networking features, and has no need of things like media center or parental controls. The only people who will be using this at home are most likely techies or people with separate computers just for work who need to connect to resources at their workplace. Ultimate gives you the features of both if you need the best of both worlds. Although I agree the pricing has gotten ridiculous, it's only logical that the Ultimate edition will cost more because you are getting more functionality than the other versions by themselves. The biggest reason anybody would want this is if they have a single PC and want media center stuff, but also desire better networking features like remote desktop. I personally fall into this category. The versions make sense, so please keep your gripes to the actual pricing where it belongs.
5. Agree with you on this one. Microsoft is really starting to look bad by pushing this DRM crap so far. It's an insult to the vast majority of people who legally acquire their digital media and just want to enjoy it without any hassle. The concept of "a few bad apples ruin it for everybody, so deal with it" does not work on this scale. Technology like this only serves to alienate your userbase. This fact is being proven by the increasing number of people switching to Mac OS.
6. Again, I agree with you here. Not being able to do a clean install with previous version disc verification is a very unfair way of selling people an upgrade. And the sheepish way in which they finally revealed this information just shows that they knew it was a bad idea but they did it anyway, for apparently no good reason whatsoever. Wake up Microsoft. Your perfect world where people only buy Windows with new PCs is never gonna happen. You need to allow the growing number of enthusiasts to enjoy your products, not try to stop them from going outside your miserable little concept of fair use.
7. I think you are misinterpreting this one. That statement sounds to me like if you ALREADY have your copy of Vista Home whatever installed on a physical computer, you cannot also install it in a virtual environment as a second copy. The way I understand the license agreement, with Enterprise and Ultimate (I would have to do some reading to confirm this with Business), you can install your copy on one physical computer and also in a virtual environment on that same PC (not a different PC). If you buy one copy of Home Basic or Home Premium and install it in just a virtual environment and not on a physical PC, you should be okay. However, I would not recommend this unless you have a very powerful, PC because virtualized systems take a lot of system resources and never run as fast as non-virtual installations do. Also, don't expect Aero to run in a virtual environment, because it will never happen. In any event, home users aren't really going to benefit from virtual environments like business users would. If they were the type of people to need a second virtual copy of Vista running, they'd probably be the type of people to be running Business or Ultimate anyway, so it's pretty much a moot point.
8. I agree that the number of prompts to download and install software is starting to get excessive. This is one instance where Microsoft is just throwing up more trenches and barricades, when what they really need to do is build a new fort. However, annoying as they may be, they do serve a purpose. All those prompts would make it very difficult for a malicious program to automatically download and install itself in your computer. If you are at all concerned about spyware or other forms of malware, do NOT turn off UAC or any other security prompts. If you have kids, ABSOLUTELY DO NOT turn it off. :lol: I myself have not had a single piece of spyware infect any computer I've owned in the last couple years, and I'm still going to leave UAC turned on, because once again, the benefits, in my opinion, outweight the annoyances.
9. I think this is just one of those things you're gonna have to deal with. I know I certainly don't like the way they rearranged certain things. However, as I am getting used to the changes, I can see why they did what they did, to a certain degree anyway. Basically they are trying to make things less complex and easier to understand for the average joe, and in the process are actually making things more complicated for us techies. I do like the way they've changed the old "Add or Remove Programs" thing, but I think they kind of messed up stuff like the display and desktop settings. There are way too many instances where some of the old dialogs have been completely redone to the new Vista look, and then you click a button and all of a sudden an old, mutilated version of an XP dialog box pops up. This is not a finished UI, in my opinion. I seriously hope the next refresh of Windows will fix this problem. The new UI should have been all or nothing.
10. I totally agree with you on this. The new search feature doesn't fit my concept of reality at all. Most of the time, when I search for a file, I'm actually looking for a program or system file, not a personal document. I already know where all my own documents are at. If you don't, you are probably unorganized, or lazy, or both. In XP, there's a registry hack that will return you to the good ol' Windows 2000 search box, but I doubt that's still around in Vista. Furthermore, Microsoft's idea of searching for text within files is that the only files that will be search inside of are recognized file types that are known to have text in them. Even in XP, If you have files with oddball extensions (software developers have TONS of these) or no extension, you have to use registry hacks (or the above-mentioned Windows 2000 search box) to make those files searchable for text inside the file. This is completely unacceptable.
11. The current selection of gadgets is indeed pathetic. Several of the available ones are completely and utterly useless. Hopefully this will get better with time as enthusiasts start firing up their creative juices.
12. This new version of the old Network Neighborhood is pathetic. On the network where I work, if I open this, I have to wait for like 2 minutes or so for this to populate every single friggin' computer on the network. This is a worthless piece of crap. I know a TON of people, both work and home users, that will be seriously peeved at this. The old Network Places needs to come back.
13. This one really isn't fair. Driver compatibility isn't Microsoft's problem, it's the problem of the video card manufacturers and game software developers. Microsoft told developers to use RC1 as a basis for making their apps and drivers compatible, and that was quite a while ago now. Because of this problem, I would say unless you really can't wait to try out the latest and (supposedly) greatest thing, wait until this summer or fall before you spring for that new computer if you want to get Vista. By then, app and driver support should be caught up a bit. Vista will eventually surpass XP in compatibility and hardware support, but it's going to take time, and nothing will change that.
Having only used Vista on my main PC for a few days now, I haven't had time to really develop my own list of annoyances, but one in particular stands out. What the heck happened to the File Types dialog where you can modify file extensions? It is just plain GONE! In order to change what program a particular type of file opens with, you have to open the properties of a file of that type and click the Change Program button to select a new program. You can't modify any other right-click settings like Edit, Print, etc. this way. Also, the file type registration method most programs use when they want to take over file types no longer works. If you install a media player, you have to manually change the setting for all media types away from Windows Media Player. This is ridiculous, and uncalled for. To me, this looks like another attempt by Microsoft to discourage the use of third-party apps that want to yank ownership of file types away from Microsoft software.
#9
Posted 21 February 2007 - 02:26 AM
Also, I hope that vista isnt too much of a RAM hog, thats not gonna be good for lappy users using PC2700 still. Anythiing in that size is gonna be expensivvvvve in 2GB chips.
(Btw, how do you find the time to write so much?? :P )
#10
Posted 21 February 2007 - 10:28 AM
As for spyware, seriously, I don't get spyware. I use Firefox, first of all, which prevents a LOT of crap from getting through when I'm going to unknown sites. Also, I don't go downloading and installing stupid programs unless I know what they are. Once in a rare (and I do mean rare) while I find something that triggers an antivirus alert, but it always gets disinfected right away. I also keep a watch on my task manager to see what stuff is running in the background. I do run a spyware scan every so many months, and it never finds anything of consequence, beyond your basic tracking cookies and whatnot, which you'd have to be extremely paranoid to worry about. I have had spyware get onto computers I own in the past (MySearch bar comes to mind), but like I said, it's extremely rare. And ever since I started using Firefox (when FF 1.0 came out), I have not had one single piece make it into my computer. I have cleaned out tons of computers ridiculously full of spyware, so believe me, I know what to look for.
And for that matter, what makes you think just doing a Google search puts spyware on your computer? If you're talking about tracking cookies, those aren't really spyware pursae. I'm referring to stuff that does driveby installs, downloads and installs even more malware, spits out popup windows all over the place, runs keylogging programs to steal passwords, etc. I have had nothing like that on my computer in over 2 years, and that's the honest truth. See that's the thing, people think Windows is so insecure that you will get full of spyware and viruses no matter what, and that's simply not true. It's just a matter of how informed you are when it comes to dealing with your computer's security.
#11
Posted 21 February 2007 - 11:46 AM
These security bits are being transferred to my new Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 system (running on an ASUS P5B mobo with eVGA 7950GT vids in an AeroEngine case) beginning today. Am I using Vista on my bright 'n' shiny new 'puter? No, no, and no. Despite MS's "generous" upgrade coupon (with a March 31st deadline!), from what I can see, read, hear, Vista is very pretty but it's unfinished, unco-operative, paranoid, buggy and the best example yet of MS cobbling together a (very) few good, if late ideas of their own with others adapted from the Mac OS (with a different "look and feel" to avoid copyright infringement) under the death-grip control of Hollywood and the music industry moguls. And too expensive to boot (literally!). I, too, will wait for Vista SE while I enjoy excellent Aqua dock pretties (free download from China) and 3d windows display (also free from - guess where? - China). And it will still run faster than Vista, less encumbered than Vista, and with much less frustration than Vista.
Hey, Billy Gee, are you listening?
#12
Posted 21 February 2007 - 08:44 PM
#13
Posted 21 February 2007 - 09:28 PM
#14
Posted 22 February 2007 - 11:17 AM
#15
Posted 22 February 2007 - 04:47 PM
#16
Posted 22 February 2007 - 04:58 PM
I'm rethinking my "slavish" attitude towards Microsoft particularly when I have to call in for reactivation when I had XP. I only use windows due to the games I can play on it. Otherwise, Apple would serve me just fine for all the other things I do. Now with game consoles proliferating the next computer I get just might be an Apple and if I want to play games I'll get a console.
I feel like a fool paying the price of an appliance for something as unfinished and buggy as Vista. I guess it is true a fool and his money are soon parted.
#18
Posted 23 February 2007 - 01:25 AM
#19
Posted 23 February 2007 - 08:57 AM
Oh and heaven forbid you have a driver that is not compatible with Vista. The sonic DLA driver that comes with Dell machines ... hates Vista. You get a pop up message that won't go away for at least 5 minutes. Literally. You close it and it pops up again. Thank goodness, Google is my friend and I found a fix by uninstalling the driver in safe mode (because it wouldn't let you uninstall it otherwise. I know I tried for DAYS to do so).
It's very pretty, but I seriously doubt I'll upgrade my pc at home with it. At least not until a few service packs have been sent down the pike.
#20
Posted 23 February 2007 - 08:04 PM
When the dust settles in 3-5 years, 90% of the PCs in the first world will be running Windows Vista.
Vista's flaws will make no difference.
And, I say this as an Apple FanBoy with only Macs in my home-based business. Yes, I think Mac OS X is better, but that is not important.
Windows Vista will dominate. Totally.
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