This is where I post, and you can post too!
I made a serious mistake, you should read this before you do too.
Published on October 21, 2007 By Dan Greene In Personal Computing
I'm not going to lie to you all. Vista looks great, but it runs like shit.

---PROFANITY WARNING--- Nothing too severe but I'm not pulling punches with this one.

In the interests of telling you all where I am coming from I've been into computers since 1988 when I played a game called SUBBATTLE on my uncles Apple IIGS. My first comp was a 486SX 20mhz with 4 MB ram stock. Since then I have run DOS 5.1, 6.2, Win 3.1, Win 95/98SE, I've had a P3 500, a P4 2.4 Ghz, and now I am running

Vista, on this computer, which has a Q6600 2.4 Ghz Core 2 Quad processor, with an Asus P5K Deluxe Motherboard, 2 GB of PC2 DDR2 6400 RAM, LeadTek PX8600 GT 256 MB $100 Bargain card. I have 2 Western Digital Caviar 500 Gig harddrives.

My scores by VISTA, are...

CPU 5.9
MEMORY 5.6
GRAPHICS 5.9
GAMING GRAPHICS 5.5
PRIMARY HARD DISK 5.7

I'm not sure if these are on a scale of 0 or 1 to 6! But what the hell scores higher than a quad core? LOL My bottleneck is my Geforce 8600 GT, which I knew, but for $100 and really the 3rd best DX 10 nvidia card it seemed like a great idea. It runs Supreme Commander at about 20-30 fps on high, in XP SP2! so I really can't fault it at all, and I was in fact expecting to see a lower than 5.5 score. What troubles me, is that the scores are good but the overall performance of the OS is really not that great at all.

Now when I first put this computer together I ran an old OEM cd with XP SP1 on it, and upgraded and patched up to XP SP2, and everything was, happily very good. I have to say I was impressed with the performance of the system, both responsiveness wise and overall, it was running cream of the crop. I mean compared to my single core rig running the same speed and with less than 1 GB or ram it really was screaming. If something locked up as occasionally happens, you could just alt tab, close that sucker down and run it up again. No probs, at a maximum save and reboot and be back up in 2 min. XP SP2 is good!

The disc gave me a 30 day free trial period with which to run until activation. Try as I might to find illegitimate ways to get past activation, and they do exist I guess, I couldn't get anything to work lol, though I only really made a few half assed attempts. So going legit I called Microsoft hoping for a cheap and easy fix. Well to upgrade I'd have to have WIN 98 ME or 2000, and unfortunately I didn't have any of those stone age OS's discs around to play upgrade with. A retail copy of XP still costs over $200 OMFG and I can tell you why. Microsoft knows XP is bigger than VISTA, and still more profitable!

OEM Vista Ultimate for system builders, on the other hand, $149, from newegg, was the cheaper option and I'm sorry to say it would appear the one with less value.

Vista : Summed up for you in a few chapters The Great, The Good, The Bad, The Annoying, The Just Downright Pathetic!

Chapter 1 VISTA: The Great, It comes with Chess. Another feature I like is the system health report. I'm not sure if this is in XP but I've never seen it, anyway, it give you a bunch of info on the hardware/software, what's not working even if it appears to be so. Much more data then clicking on a component in the device manager in XP which basically says "this device is working properly" for everything. A nice feature and one that I don't think was advertised.

Chapter 2 VISTA: The Good, hey it looks sweet. I really wish the visual effects could have made it into WIN XP SP3, and maybe if VISTA continues to suck as much as it does it will. One thing I do like about Vista is the way the title bar draws kinda glows behind the words, and how the close box is a little bigger, easier to hit the first time, and how the windows pop up and fade out. I also like how it is kinda blurry behind a window but still semi transparent. Neat style.

So far its stable, and with 60 processes i.e. train tracks, it sure as hell better be! Not that XP really is all that unstable. But Vista thus far feels more stable. So good deal!

Smooth, fast install, but I couldn't get my RAID to work. So I'm not sure if that is the OS or if that is my BIOS. But given my expectations I wanted it to just work lol. So I'm blaming VISTA! Ok I'm not, even though I feel like it, I'll give you this pass Vista, you deserve one free phone call right?

Unfortunately even the good is really an overall negative.

But sorry Microsoft, I'm not a style man, I'm a substance man, I paid for performance and right now VISTA is not achieving an equal to or greater level of performance that I can get and did get with XP on this system. So as much as I like it, it's all bullshit that I don't need or want to sacrifice ram for, or cpu time or any of that flash.

It feels like these enhancements were for visual need alone, to sex up the look, and make it more flashy, to get you to buy it, in most cases, the visual things don't add any value whatsoever and they tax the system resources! If that sounds like a tech answer, consider I drive an 89 Buick and its peeling paint. It's 4 wheels and runs, but it ain't high maintenance. Vista seems to be high maintenance. Who the hell wants that!

Sure it Vista Ultimate looks nicer, but XP isn't a pig, it's a clean, slick, and easy to read and use system. No?

There is something called Readyboost, which allows you to plug in a flash drive, and the OS uses it to pre-load commonly used date for programs. So it's like having extra ram at the flash card prices, not as fast, but faster than Harddisk speeds I guess. Big deal, well not really. I have my 2 1 GB of them plugged in and it doesn't seem to really be doing anything with them.

Bottom line is You don't need this for what you are sacrificing by going with Vista over XP.

Chapter 3 VISTA: The Bad, Oh God where to start? First it has to be performance. With each new implementation a substance improvement has been performance. WIN 98 performed better than Win 95. Win 95 better than 3.1 and XP SP2 really beats Vista in every way.

I am by no means running a marginal system but I crap my pants when I think of what Vista Ultimate would run like on my Single Core P4 2.4 ghz system, not that the clock speed is so bad, but I have less than 1 GB ram in there.

I have a 700 watt power supply, a bunch of fans, LEDs, I'm not an environmentalist, but I'm not leaving this thing on when I'm not using it, that's just stupid. So a "cold start of the warp engines" as Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott would say, takes longer in Vista than in XP.

Why? Why does the computer have to be less responsive as well as take longer when starting? I'll tell you why, it's running more BS in the background LOL. So an XP startup uses less ram, about 250 MB at startup, is more responsive with my quadcore, gets to the desktop faster, 30 seconds as opposed to over a minute, and when I start clicking shit, it goes. With Vista, is take a second or two, which is ok but why? Why why why why why why why mother f--kers? Faster Bigger Better!!!, not slower, bigger not better.... LOL

Another thing Montgomery Scott said, was "if it ain't broke don't fix it"...

This is where you start thinking about the burger you just bit into, the fact that it aint cooked all the way through, its red, and you are wondering if you are gonna get the shits from it, 12 hours later.

They changes the location of stuff in the system, the start menu is different, they call things different things in the OS, sleep modes are weirder, lots of things are different. I had my setup with a fair bit of icons on the desktop and my side bar wasn't a side bar it was a quick launch bar that hid itself. Now they have this "side bar" which is way toooo wide, and really the one outstanding feature a year from the release is an attractive clock called a gadget, you can also have the task manager graphs running there and a few other things. If you do a scan of them on the net, most of them are rated 3 2 or 1 stars out of 5 by users. LOL Great.

Well I have a clock on my wall, and a digital clock on the bottom right of the screen. This is innovation? Really you have to try harder Microsoft!

More bad VISTA, takes half your ram, and fills it with whatever, and in some circumstances it is supposed to speed up the system. Well, I'm not sure if you need 4 GB ram but with 2 it's working but nothing is faster because of it. It constantly buffers to 1 GB, and from what I understand if you add more ram it fills it half way, I just don't see any performance increase with it. Maybe something under the hood runs faster, but extracting the Supreme Commander wrar, was about as fast as on XP I think. Don't really know, I'll figure that out when I go back to XP Which means it's a great feature that has no meaningful benefit. Remember I've run this exact same computer hardware setup with XP, and now Vista.

It feels like with all this loaded into the memory you'd see efficiency and cutting down loading times. Well nope lol. Out of the box and as far as I can tell with the latest updates, there are 60 processes running, and I have no idea what the bulk of them do, but they appear to keep the OS in line and unhackable for the time being.

CHAPTER 4: The Annoying, Another thing that sucks, and this is legendary at this point, is the constantly popping up goddamn UAC thing. No not Union Aerospace Corporation. But it feels like a fucking demon inspired invasion from hell. UAC is User Account Control, and it is as annoying and useless. Basically everytime you try to install something, it asks your permisison to do it. Unfortunately if a program a year or two from now that exploits this OS, asks, you will be so sick of making a decision yes or no, if it's bad you are just going to click yes or have turned this feature off or fucking installed WIN XP SP3, that it won't matter.

Seriously Microsoft get your QA department head's head, extracted from his/her ass, and get this feature reworked and toned down! Today!

It seems VISTA wants permission for everything, a case of the terrible twos and the the babysitter on meth. Come on does it really have to ask me if I want to close a program or install a program? Does it really have to interrupt the process every time a program doesn't have the credentials or the right signature? Can't we give the UAC some jedi mind trickery where is says "you don't need to see any id, these aren't the droids you are looking for". For crying out loud, I swear I counted about 15 different instances and it is annnnnnnnnooooying!

With premium versions of Windows past, you used to get MS Word or Excel or something worth owning a computer for. Now it's Windows Media player? I mean seriously does anybody need WMP 11 vs WMP 10? I'm beginning to wonder if I need to ever see DX 10 vs DX 9 if I have to put up with all this other shit. I think paying the "Ultimate Price" MS Word could/should have been included. Just to be fair and add some value. Value that is seriously lacking.

Flight Simulator X, dropped the Windows Aero to some crappy minimalist view because I was running this program. It looked weirder than XP but it was VISTA. Didn't Microsoft also build FSX? Uh hello! I guess when you get to be a billion dollar you can make a fat lazy lame OS and think you can hold onto your monopoly doing that aye? Doubt it.

CHAPTER 5: The Just Downright Pathetic!

My sister is running XP SP2, on a pre 2000 computer say 1999 or 98, with a 300 mhz pentium 2. We raced just for the hell of it. I'm embarassed and sorry to report, that her system boots faster than Vista on my system. That should be a clue there to the Microsoft folks. Especially when it installs an update, it keep the computer running longer than it shuts down, then when you power it up again later, it still is running that update in the beginning. Come on! Do it once I get my stuff started! What is so hard about doing what I wanna do first, then doing your bs update stuff Microsoft? I mean we got 4 cores to share, I have two hard drives, can't you schedule your updates for when I'm taking a piss?

Also, I can't seem to get it to be compatible with software I wanna run. A year out from its release It doesn't wanna play with anything but Flight Simulator X. I can't get Supreme Commander to update, I cant' get the Crysis beta to work, I can't get CounterStrike 1.6 to even install.

I thought Vista was going to be necessary to run Crysis and that is really the whole reason I got Vista, DX10 and Crysis. I wanted to check it out and now I have. Biggest mistake in last 2-5 years of my life to be honest. It won't install Nero 6.6.1 so I can't burn DVD's which kinda defeats the purpose of a DVD RW DRIVE don't ya think? Another great program that guess what, doesn't work with Vista is CAM STUDIO, which records the desktop or whatever is inside the record box. Well thanks but no thanks, if the only thing I can play with on my computer are gadgets and Flight Simulator 10, and every time that loads it brings the desktop to Vista Basic on a copy of Vista Ultimate, Microsfot can keep this shit. VISTA SUCKS, a year after it's release. Calling the tech support ppl, the guy from New Delhi said, hey we know we got problems, we are working on SP1. Great news, for the suckers still buying this OS. I'm not a developer, or a techie, Just a guy who likes fast and powerful computers and fun games, but this just sucks. Sucks sucks sucks! With no redemption.

Honestly I'm at a loss, there seems to be a total trade of compatibility for security. I thought we were all getting along pretty well with Windows Update in XP, Windows Defender, and a free AVG virus scanner. Evidently I missed the day when Microsoft traded the keys to the vault for the UAC, and your point click, permission granting. Bill Gates talked about trustworthy computing initiative and it that is this, what we need is an intelligent computing initiative, one that isn't going to ask me twice when I am installing something if I really wanna do it.

I am having difficulty finding installed programs lol. Give me a break here MS, I found the control panel and the my computer, but that should come stock on the desktop lol. Next thing you know Vista SP1, is gonna hide the recycle bin so the malware doesn't get it raid your recyclables. Typing stuff in the search bar is nice, and after having a system for 3 or 4 years gets necessary but I just installed, why can't I find my programs?

I'm so fucking angry right now, All I can say is this is to be edited lol. I'm pretty confident with my lack of getting the Crysis beta to work, my inability to get Supreme Commander installed, and total lack of success getting my RAID 0 to function, I'm going to go back to XP SP2. It's going to cost me another $200 but I am just ready to get into tears over this. I feel ripped off and physically sickened by Microsoft. Well ok I don't feel that bad, but damn I feel as bad with Vista as I felt Good with XP when I had put the entire computer together, installed XP and updated to SP2 only to have to activate in 30 days. That was freedom, productivity, and performance combined. Unfortunately I made an expensive mistake choosing Vista.

But hey it's not all bad, in 2 or 3 years, this OS might actually be superior to XP, and I'll have an OEM copy rearing to go, call it a long term investment if you will. I have to go to sleep lol. Nobody want's to continue to read this ramble. Night all. Drink your milk, stay off the drugs, stay in school, and stick with XP. All shall be well.

The Wow starts now, yeah the Wow how the hell do I get back to XP, and who the hell is gonna buy OEM Vista off me?
Comments (Page 9)
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on Oct 25, 2007
Oh look, the time is just slipping away out of your life, and you won't get it back!  
on Oct 26, 2007
"I am running Vista Business (32 bit) with a good processor, video card and 4 GB RAM (PC 6400) and the OS still feels like "bottled up"

I think Brad Wardell wrote about handles and how excess handels were a possible cause of bogged down system. I don't think I have the depth level of computer knowledge to really know if that is bs or an intelligent observation. What I will say is that there are more handels, more processes, more this that and the other thing going on in the background on vista than xp. I doubt that speeds things up, even if the intention is to do so. I think, if you ran Vista vs XP in like 5 years, when computers have so many CPU cores its crazy, like 16-32-64, the numbers will hopefully go up like that, then perhaps in practice Vista would be better.

Also on my Quad core when I was running Vista, it was not nearly as responsive, like I couldn't kill a task instantly because I couldn't get to the task manager instantly even if it was given realtime priority. So obviously there is lots of room for optimization there. Running a quad core, with these Vista scores, there is no reason for the system to not give me instant control/update or "percieved instant control/update". Certainly I can perceive instant control in XP with a quad core.

Why not in Vista? Sad.

I have no doubt some people just don't like vista, I don't like vista for very real and concrete reasons.

A. Compatibility, with what I was able to run software wise on XP!
B. Performance vs XP
C. Lack of a Service Pack, fixing the above!
D. Price, overprices vs the value, with ultimate, you don't get anything of measurable value over XP SP2, except DX10, WMP11. Oh wow, big whop. DX 10 is great when Crysis comes out, but what about when I wanna play anything else, or use my printer, or record a demo on the desktop, or type a word document, or encode mp3 files, or render video with Vegas 7.0, or the list goes on and on... You get all these supposed OS tweaks that accelerate your experience, but it's like towing a 25 ft boat with a Mustang versus, hauling my alum craft with my Buick. Good luck with that 4 second 0-60 acceleration with your yacht on the trailer hitch on your Mustang.
E. Overall experience, unfortunately the security features enable you to make yourself less secure with their lack of intelligent function because if you can stand to put up with the UAC, it becomes just another click to jump through, I bet Microsoft really believes that everyone reads the terms of use agreement too, instead of just rushing along with the install. Just 100% voted for Saddam Hussein too right. Uh huh. With the UAC, if you just clicked install, it should not bring up the UAC instantly and every time asking for permission to be clicked again.

It might be worth is if you didn't click install anywhere, but were surfing a website and it wanted to install a program, right after you loaded. Then the UAC would be helpful but the fact that it is a popup and everybody fucking hates popups. It just gets clicked instantly, or turned off. Real secure. I sure as hell didn't put up with it after the first day.

I'm a patient person, thus far I have attempted 3 reinstalls of XP, without success and have spent about 6 hours on the phone with MS trying to fix this shit. (More thanks Microsoft) Letting them know about my problems with Vista, explaining why XP is working better for me as a consumer, suggesting how to improve Vista, how to improve XP for SP3. Did you all know that you need a floppy drive to install a raid driver on XP?

Who the hell builds a monster kick ass high end computer, i.e. one which probably will be utilizing a RAID 0, with a Terabyte of storage, but then also installs a 1.44 mb floppy drive? Answer: AlmostNobody. This is something that should be fixed in SP3 for XP, it is a feature in Vista, where you can install a raid driver with a flash drive or cd/dvd.

Jythier, I am a moron for thinking Vista would be backward compatible for stuff like XP was for the majority of functions as far back as WIN 95/98. Microsoft is a moron if they think utilities like the UAC, which they started working on in ?2002? will actually make that OS more secure over XP, when the general public is either forced to use it because they still hold an OS monopoly, or the alternatives are more dangerous because they don't have the giant software support army MS does.

Bottom line, it is Microsoft and Microsoft alone who bears the brunt of my anger at the lack of value in the purchase I made. There is no single feature and certainly no conglomeration of utilities in Vista Ultimate, worth the $150+ I spent to acquire the OEM license. If they had included MS word, or Excel, then yeah maybe, and maybe it would be worth taking an extra day researching how to make the OS compatible beyond the patches and updates. However they didn't! They also didn't make the OS more productive then XP, or more secure. Fact is Vista's vulnerabilities just haven't been uncovered yet, likely they will.
on Oct 26, 2007
Also on my Quad core when I was running Vista, it was not nearly as responsive


Runing 32 bit? I can see why, the performance increase with the 3rd/4th core in 32bit is horribly bad and not even worth using. Oh and no thats not just for Vista. In a 32bit OS adding the 3rd core will increase your performance up to 15% if you are VERY lucky, the 4th is a mere 5%.
on Oct 26, 2007
I was running 64bit Vista, which I think may have been some of the compatibility issues, root cause. On XP it was SP2, I would assume 32 bit, since everything f--king worked lol.

Unfortunately, the worst news for me has arrived. I have been unable even with the help of the boneheads at MS (go figure right), to get XP back on this computer via the OEM disk with XP SP1, on it which was my original install route.

Which means, I have to get another OEM disk, and one that is new essentially, or a retail disk, which will be about as much as Vista OEM was lol. Mother FUCKER! lol. The good news is I can still pass on Vista Retail, or XP Media center which is like $300!

It seems the Vista partion is undeletable by XP. GODDAMN YOU TO HELL MICROSOFT, if this is true. Anyway all attempts, and I mean now I'm up to like 5 attempts, to reinstall XP have failed to this point! First the Quick format, then the slow format, then trying the other harddrive. Nothing, worked

Woe is me.
on Oct 26, 2007
Dan Greene, you have me confused......

#127
"I am running Vista Business (32 bit) with a good processor, video card and 4 GB RAM (PC 6400) and the OS still feels like "bottled up"


#128
I was running 64bit Vista, which I think may have been some of the compatibility issues, root cause. On XP it was SP2, I would assume 32 bit, since everything f--king worked lol.


on Oct 26, 2007

Starkers,

I believe he was quoting from my #90 post in which I was saying that although I have a good system, Vista still seems like it is a bit "bottled up" performance-wise.

Dan,

I believe you should be able to boot from the XP installation disc (I assume you have one from your reference to 'old OEM cd with SP1') and then delete the partition (press 'D' and follow prompts to complete deletion) that has Vista on it and then reformat it with the standard (not quick) option.

I have done this numerous times with an XP w/SP2 disc with no issues.

on Oct 26, 2007
Vista SP1 makes all of the performance difference for me. I can even work properly with no performance slowdowns even with DreamScene enabled.
on Oct 27, 2007
I believe he was quoting from my #90 post in which I was saying that although I have a good system, Vista still seems like it is a bit "bottled up" performance-wise.


Yeah....Dan was, silly me didn't see the quotes, did I!! This site has spoiled me rotten with the ease of using/reading quote boxes.

Sorry, Dan!!!

on Oct 27, 2007
Dan spoke of Microsoft having an OS monopoly. Well said. That's the whole problem right there. That's probably part of the reason we don't see Linux or the desktop more often. I thought they got into trouble over this a while ago?

I thought monopolies were illegal...
on Oct 27, 2007

I thought monopolies were illegal...

Not if they didn't create it it isn't.

If you are the ONLY player in a field....so be it.

If you actually stop others from entering....that's when you get into trouble....

on Oct 27, 2007
If you actually stop others from entering....that's when you get into trouble....


MS has done that. Remember MS stopping Netscape in favor of IE? They continue to do it as well. In fact isn't MS getting fined for that in Europe?
on Oct 27, 2007
If you are the ONLY player in a field....so be it.


Fact of the matter is, no matter how much it ticks people off, MS has built a (usually) better platform. The reason? MS has money to pay the top developers. So Bill Gates stole the idea Windows.... so what? Whaa waa waa.....  

My girlfriends uncle works for MS, something to do with the manuals that comes with the software. He makes an unholy amount of $$ just for that. If you can afford steak why pay for chopped liver (unless you like that sort of thing...)?

Personally, I like MS and Windows. Hell of alot more fun than Apple....
on Oct 27, 2007
Personally, I like MS and Windows.


Yep, me too! For the most part, despite a few hiccups here and there, Microsoft generally provides a good computing platform with with its OSes and software offings....and yes, that includes Vista.

A lot of people don't like Vista right now, but it is the future of computing and many of its detractors will eventually be thankful of MS' bold step to produce an OS that's not still tied to the PC Stone Age.

And Microsoft did not conspire to force people into upgrading all their hardware, either. In keeping with moving forwards, rather than stagnating, MS developed Vista with the new technologies of companies like Nvidia and Creative in mind. The 8000 series of GPU cards and X-Fi soundcards were in development/production before Vista was a twinkle in MS' eye....and all MS did was develop its OS to optimise the more modern hardware.

Besides, how many PC's that have been around since the inception of XP are going to efficiently last much longer anyhow? Right! So when you're in the market for a new PC, you gonna settle for an old 486 dinosaur (P1, P2 or P3) type box, or are you going to get something with ample RAM and CPU power, that takes advantage of 3d graphics and 3d surround sound, etc?????

OK, now that we've established that you'd rather a more modern and powerful machine, let's ask ourselves why MS would develop an OS that's incapable of maximising the full potential of all this modern hardware . As a business venture, would you??

Stands to reason, then, Vista was/is a necessary/essential step forward!! Sure Vista has has some teething problems along the way (not like XP didn't?), but then that also stands to reason, given the vast array of hardware and software configurations it is and will be installed on.

Considering all the variables, Microsoft has done a pretty good job of releasing half-way decent OSes, and that includes Vista. Given my trouble free experience of Vista, it will be more than decent when the SP's iron out those remaining issues that affect performance/etc for some users.

Oh, and this MS monopoly thing! Heaven forbid we as consumers (including those who voice their anti-MS opinions from a Windows platform) bear any responsibility for empowering Bill Gates & Co. It's not like our purchases helped enable Microsoft to become one of the wealthiest and most powerful multi-national corporations of all time, now is it!

Microsoft is not a monopoly because Apple and iterations of Linux exist to compete with Windows. Oh, silly me, I forgot! One or the other or both isn't mainstream and can't run many of the most popular programs and/or games. Guess, then, both have played a role in MS becoming this monopoly so many envision.

Am I a MS fanboi?? Nope! I don't like some of its practices any more than the rest of you, but I like to look at the bigger picture and weigh up both sides of the argument. Apple has practiced unfair and monopolistic practices as well, and Steve Jobs is no more or less likable than Bill Gates....it just business and we as consumers will make our own choices based on wants, needs and availability.





on Oct 27, 2007
Hey, Starkers. I just got a call from Bill and he wants you to head up their Vista PR team in Oz       
on Oct 27, 2007
Am I a MS fanboi?? Nope! I don't like some of its practices any more than the rest of you, but I like to look at the bigger picture and weigh up both sides of the argument. Apple has practiced unfair and monopolistic practices as well, and Steve Jobs is no more or less likable than Bill Gates....it just business and we as consumers will make our own choices based on wants, needs and availability.


I agree 100%, starkers. I have nothing against Microsoft whatsoever. It is people who rush to criticize others as ignorant because they DARE attack Microsoft that annoy me. While I run Linux, I make no apologies for going back to a Microsoft app to get certain things done.

ALL software developers should be responsive to the needs of their customer base, though, and Microsoft is no exception. Vista didn't come out perfect, and never will be perfect. Nor will the next O/S, or the O/S after that. The only way to make changes is to listen to the valid concerns of your customers.

I run XP on my laptop not because I was unable to get Vista (in fact, I would have saved $100 by having Vista installed), but because I needed an O/S that wasn't as resource hungry so that I could conserve resources to run multiple virtual machines and work with Linux development. Because Vista is so resource heavy, I would have had to spend far more than I could afford on a laptop to meet my needs, as well as deal with programs that are less than fully compatible. In addition, I have several software apps that are not fully Vista compatible that are needed for school and work. Whatever happened to backwards compatibility?

Vista is, to put it simply, the best choice for some, not the best for others. But there's no reason to criticize people for using Vista just because it happens to be your own personal O/S of choice.
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