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View Full Version : Ten Reasons to Buy Windows Vista



fkdup74
02-21-2006, 02:25 PM
1. Security, security, security: Windows XP Service Pack 2 patched a lot of holes, but Vista takes security to the next level. There are literally too many changes to list here, from the bidirectional software firewall that monitors inbound and outbound traffic to Windows Services Hardening, which prevents obscure background processes from being hijacked and changing your system. There's also full-disk encryption, which prevents thieves from accessing your data, even if they steal the PC out from under your nose.

Perhaps most crucial (and least sexy) is the long-overdue User Account Protection, which invokes administrator privileges as needed, such as during driver updates or software installations. UAP makes it much more convenient for users to operate Vista with limited rights (meaning the system won't let them do certain things, like load software, without clearance from an administrator). This in turn limits the ability of malware to hose your system.

I just post the news, I don't always agree with it
the "admin rights on demand" is one example
how is that more secure? how is that protection?
seems more like one big fuckin hole to exploit
I smell a shit load of patches for this little feature of Vista.....

2. Internet Explorer 7: IE gets a much-needed, Firefox-inspired makeover, complete with tabbed pages and better privacy management. There's also the color-coded Address Bar that lets you know if a page is secured by a digital key, or, thanks to new antiphishing features, if it's a phony Web site just looking to steal information about you.

These features will all be available for Windows XP users who download IE7. But Vista users get an important extra level of protection: IE7 on Vista will run in what Microsoft calls "protected mode"--a limited-rights mode that prevents third-party code from reaching your system. It's about darn time.

3. Righteous eye candy: For the first time, Microsoft is building high-end graphics effects into Windows. The touted Aero Glass interface features visually engaging 3D rendering, animation, and transparencies. Translucent icons, program windows, and other elements not only look cool, they add depth and context to the interface. For example, hover your cursor over minimized programs that rest on the taskbar and you'll be able to see real-time previews of what's running in each window without opening them full-screen. Now you can see what's going on behind the scenes, albeit at a cost: You need powerful graphics hardware and a robust system to manage all the effects.

4. Desktop search: Microsoft has been getting its lunch handed to it by Google and Yahoo on the desktop, but Vista could change all that. The new OS tightly integrates instant desktop search, doing away with the glacially slow and inadequate search function in XP. Powerful indexing and user-assignable metadata make searching for all kinds of data--including files, e-mails, and Web content--a lot easier. And if you're running Vista on a Windows Longhorn network, you can perform searches across the network to other PCs.

5. Better updates: Vista does away with using Internet Explorer to access Windows Update, instead utilizing a new application to handle the chore of keeping your system patched and up-to-date. The result is quicker response and a more tightly streamlined process. The update-tracking mechanism, for instance, is much quicker to display information about your installation. And now key components, such as the Windows Defender antispyware module, get their updates through this central point. Like other housekeeping features, a better Windows Update isn't a gee-whiz upgrade, but it should make it easier--and more pleasant--to keep your PC secure.

6. More media: Over the years, one of the key reasons to upgrade versions of Windows has been the free stuff Gates and Company toss into the new OS, and Vista is no exception. Windows Media Player (perhaps my least favorite application of all time) gets a welcome update that turns the once-bloated player into an effective MP3 library. The Windows Photo Gallery finally adds competent photo-library-management functionality to Windows, so you can organize photos; apply metatags, titles, and ratings; and do things like light editing and printing. The DVD Maker application, which was still very rough when I looked at it, promises to add moviemaking capabilities--along the lines of Movie Maker--to the operating system. There are even some nice new games tucked into the bundle.

7. Parental controls: Families, schools, and libraries will appreciate the tuned-up parental controls, which let you limit access in a variety of ways. Web filtering can block specific sites, screen out objectionable content by selected type, and lock out file downloads. You can also restrict each account's access by time of day or day of the week. As a dad, I can tell you this will be great for keeping kids off the PC while you're at work, for instance. You can even block access to games based on their Entertainment Software Rating Board ratings.

8. Better backups: When Windows 95 first came out, the typical hard disk was, maybe, 300MB in size. Today, desktops routinely ship with 300GB or 400GB hard drives. And yet, the built-in data-backup software in Windows has changed little in the past decade. Windows Vista boasts a much-improved backup program that should help users avoid wholesale digital meltdowns. Microsoft also tweaked the useful System Restore feature--which takes snapshots of your system state so you can recover from a nasty infection or botched software installation.

9. Peer-to-peer collaboration: The Windows Collaboration module uses peer-to-peer technology to let Vista users work together in a shared workspace. You can form ad hoc workgroups and then jointly work on documents, present applications, and pass messages. You can even post "handouts" for others to review.

10. Quick setup: Beta code alert: There are some Vista features I hope dearly for even though they haven't been built yet. This is one of them. Jim Allchin, Microsoft's co-president, says that Windows Vista boasts a re-engineered install routine, which will slash setup times from about an hour to as little as 15 minutes. Hurray! The new code wasn't in the beta version of Vista that Microsoft sent to me--my aging rig took well over an hour to set up--so I'll believe it when I see it. Still, any improvement in this area is welcome.

read more.....

:source: Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20060221/tc_pcworld/124642

Filliz
02-21-2006, 02:30 PM
Have you seen this Vista review (http://www.metacafe.com/watch/66582/microsofts_forbidden_apple/)? :lol:

Barbarossa
02-21-2006, 02:33 PM
1. Security? About time. :01:
2. IE7? Helllloooo FireFox :wave:
3. Yawn. More stuff for me to disable :sleep1:
4. Searching across PC's on a LAN??? WTF happened to security?? :unsure:
5. Anticipating plenty of Critical Security Updates, are we? ;)
6. More anti-trust lawsuits... :dabs:
7. Kids know more than their parents anyway. Pointless. :(
8. Great. Fill up my bigger hard-drive with more backup data. Whoopee. :huh:
9. Yeah. Nice idea, never really works very well though does it? :blink:
10. Is it quicker than not upgrading to Vista? I think not... :shifty:

Busyman
02-21-2006, 02:38 PM
Have you seen this Vista review (http://www.metacafe.com/watch/66582/microsofts_forbidden_apple/)? :lol:
What was funny about it?:unsure:

fkdup74
02-21-2006, 02:42 PM
Have you seen this Vista review (http://www.metacafe.com/watch/66582/microsofts_forbidden_apple/)? :lol:

:lol:

Filliz
02-21-2006, 02:45 PM
Have you seen this Vista review (http://www.metacafe.com/watch/66582/microsofts_forbidden_apple/)? :lol:
What was funny about it?:unsure:
You didnīt notice?
Watch it again keeping in mind that the voice is actually some Microsoft dude giving a video presentation of the new vista,...but what do you see on the video? :shifty:

true_neo
02-21-2006, 04:30 PM
5. Better updates: Vista does away with using Internet Explorer to access Windows Update, instead utilizing a new application to handle the chore of keeping your system patched and up-to-date. The result is quicker response and a more tightly streamlined process. The update-tracking mechanism, for instance, is much quicker to display information about your installation. And now key components, such as the Windows Defender antispyware module, get their updates through this central point. Like other housekeeping features, a better Windows Update isn't a gee-whiz upgrade, but it should make it easier--and more pleasant--to keep your PC secure. Now THAT is tight! Ive always been annoyed of the fact that Windows uses IE to manage updates.

3. Yawn. More stuff for me to disable :sleep1:$5 says you use the Classic theme in XP. Hell I want my computer to look nice, Im planning on waiting to upgrade my comp till Vista has been out for a few months or smth, then get a McNasty upgrade. Hence my computer will be good enough to run it with all the neat stuff on :01:

4. Searching across PC's on a LAN??? WTF happened to security?? :unsure:Well just because your LAN can access certain folders on your computer doesn't mean that the LAN has to be able to access ALL the folders, nor that you have to place ALL your child porn in the shared folders :rolleyes:

5. Anticipating plenty of Critical Security Updates, are we? ;)You try creating a next-gen OS and see how many patches you need. Besides, can't it just be that they want to give themselves and us an easier way of offering and installing updates?

7. Kids know more than their parents anyway. Pointless. :(Then again Vista aims for the future, and people with 10 year old kids today may not be as technologically retarded as you claim.

8. Great. Fill up my bigger hard-drive with more backup data. Whoopee. :huh:As opposed to you complaining because data got lost. Whopee. :huh:
Besides, Im sure you can turn it OFF (like I have done with System Restore).

9. Yeah. Nice idea, never really works very well though does it? :blink:I assume you have actually tried the ready-made Vista spin on this and state your opinion based on own experience. No?

10. Is it quicker than not upgrading to Vista? I think not... :shifty:Hey, if YOU wanna live in the computer stone age forever, power to you mate. I for one don't like this.



What was funny about it?:unsure:
You didnīt notice?
Watch it again keeping in mind that the voice is actually some Microsoft dude giving a video presentation of the new vista,...but what do you see on the video? :shifty:I can only repeat Busyman's question.
So what if Microsoft puts in what Mac has had for a while? At least more than 5% of the computing world have applications that fit Windows, and I'm just happy that Microsoft finally improves their OS.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
Im not a Windows fanboi. There's a LOT of things I don't like hate in XP. But as far as I've seen, pretty much all of my beefs have been remedied in Vista.
Personally, I am very excited about what Microsoft has to offer when utilising McNasty computer power like most of us will be getting by then already. To me, it looks like Microsoft truly tries to bring the best aspects of the competing OS'es onto Vista (with the exception of option to run on lowend systems, of course).
That's why it pisses me off to extremes when people bash something they haven't even tried. Give the thing a fucking break. Gayness about it such as DRM can and will be combatted.
People complain about how insecure XP is, yet when they actually sit down and code something that supposedly improves this, THATs not good enough either...

Filliz
02-21-2006, 04:39 PM
I can only repeat Busyman's question.
So what if Microsoft puts in what Mac has had for a while? At least more than 5% of the computing world have applications that fit Windows, and I'm just happy that Microsoft finally improves their OS.
It's still funny.

Barbarossa
02-21-2006, 04:48 PM
3. Yawn. More stuff for me to disable :sleep1:$5 says you use the Classic theme in XP.


Damn right! :lol:





7. Kids know more than their parents anyway. Pointless. :(Then again Vista aims for the future, and people with 10 year old kids today may not be as technologically retarded as you claim.


But I know people who ask their 10 year old kids to configure their PC's for them, so go figure.




10. Is it quicker than not upgrading to Vista? I think not... :shifty:Hey, if YOU wanna live in the computer stone age forever, power to you mate. I for one don't like this.


I'll probably be upgrading to Vista in 2008, assuming that they do launch it in the third quarter of this year. It's always worth waiting a couple of years for them to sort out the teething problems in each new OS. XP Professional is far and away the best operating system that M$ has produced, I would hardly call it the computer stone-age. :blink:

zapjb
02-21-2006, 04:50 PM
11. Get to spend $1,500 for hardware. So Vista will run almost as well as your current $500 XP computer!:sick:

Barbarossa
02-21-2006, 05:14 PM
12. You want to play HALO2... :mellow:

Skiz
02-21-2006, 06:16 PM
The admin rights on demand actually sounds like Linux, where only the root can make changes to the system whereas any users can run applications. It's more like protection against ourselves (and more importantly, our idiotic families and friends).

Damnatory
02-22-2006, 08:43 AM
When exactly is Vista supposed to be released retail?
As I've got 3 PC's and a Laptop on the way, I think I can spare a PC to try out the new OS. As it is, I'm already thinking of sacrificing a windows machine to run MAC OS X on it. :lookaroun

Vista seems like a great alternative than trying to find mac compatable software, for my PC.

GepperRankins
02-22-2006, 11:16 AM
What was funny about it?:unsure:
You didnīt notice?
Watch it again keeping in mind that the voice is actually some Microsoft dude giving a video presentation of the new vista,...but what do you see on the video? :shifty:
where would the computer world be without stolen ideas? :smilie4:


kind of annoying for apple that microsoft are inevitably gonna be more successful :dabs:

Busyman
02-22-2006, 11:51 AM
What was funny about it?:unsure:
You didnīt notice?
Watch it again keeping in mind that the voice is actually some Microsoft dude giving a video presentation of the new vista,...but what do you see on the video? :shifty:
OSX and pics of Bill Gates. I didn't think it funny though.

Apple didn't even come up with 'windows' first. They stole it from Xerox.

Filliz
02-22-2006, 06:45 PM
It's not so much about who came up with what first, but the guy in that video is presenting it like they just invented the wheel.

Busyman
02-22-2006, 07:00 PM
It's not so much about who came up with what first, but the guy in that video is presenting it like they just invented the wheel.
It'll make Mac users angry for sure.:happy:

They copied OSX so bad that I thought it was OSX.:huh:

Damnatory
02-22-2006, 08:41 PM
It's not so much about who came up with what first, but the guy in that video is presenting it like they just invented the wheel.
It'll make Mac users angry for sure.:happy:

They copied OSX so bad that I thought it was OSX.:huh:
The video was OSX. :frusty:

Filliz
02-22-2006, 10:03 PM
It'll make Mac users angry for sure.:happy:

They copied OSX so bad that I thought it was OSX.:huh:
The video was OSX. :frusty:
Maybe I should've made that more clear to begin with but I really thought it was obvious enough. :P

tesco
02-22-2006, 10:27 PM
5. Better updates: Vista does away with using Internet Explorer to access Windows Update, instead utilizing a new application to handle the chore of keeping your system patched and up-to-date. The result is quicker response and a more tightly streamlined process. The update-tracking mechanism, for instance, is much quicker to display information about your installation. And now key components, such as the Windows Defender antispyware module, get their updates through this central point. Like other housekeeping features, a better Windows Update isn't a gee-whiz upgrade, but it should make it easier--and more pleasant--to keep your PC secure.
I'm looking forward to this, xp should have had it a longgggg time ago. :rolleyes:

Yoga
02-23-2006, 12:20 AM
Cripple the os and call it another version.

asmithz
02-23-2006, 01:37 AM
5. Better updates: Vista does away with using Internet Explorer to access Windows Update, instead utilizing a new application to handle the chore of keeping your system patched and up-to-date. The result is quicker response and a more tightly streamlined process. The update-tracking mechanism, for instance, is much quicker to display information about your installation. And now key components, such as the Windows Defender antispyware module, get their updates through this central point. Like other housekeeping features, a better Windows Update isn't a gee-whiz upgrade, but it should make it easier--and more pleasant--to keep your PC secure.
I'm looking forward to this, xp should have had it a longgggg time ago. :rolleyes:

I don't really see the differnce, but it be cool to see it work I guess.

tesco
02-23-2006, 05:16 AM
I'm looking forward to this, xp should have had it a longgggg time ago. :rolleyes:

I don't really see the differnce, but it be cool to see it work I guess.
You don't have to use IE to get windows updates.:P :01:

Sneakydave
03-06-2006, 12:12 AM
You don't have to use IE to get windows updates.:P :01:

So just as the file browser and as the default browser for msn and wmp?

Ill be happy when i can just completely uninstall it :P