 Originally Posted by Ynot
you wait.....you just wait......
6 months from now, forums, globally, will be chok-a-blok full of "Vista ate my music licences" posts
mark my words.....
[/b]
Call me when that happens, k?
If you make a concious effort to stay away from DRM (it's not hard people, just simply steer clear of any online music purchasing services) then you'll be fine.
As for Gaming on Vista, I've got mixed feelings. I ran Battlefield 2 & 2142, Half-Life 2 (and almost all the other source games) on Vista (3.2 ghz, 1GB of ram, and a nvidia 7600) and here's what I found:
Pros:
- The games ran/loaded a lot faster, probably due to the fact that it was a clean Vista installation and Vista's new memory management thing that Kaniaz told me about.
- DirectX 10 - Not something that will matter until games start using it, but oh will it be sweet.
Cons:
- When playing Battlefield 2142, I was kicked from Punkbuster for having "inadequate OS privileges" (it even says you need "Windows XP with admin rights" on the game box), but this was fixed easily by running the program as administrator: Just right click (mac user: "lol whats right click?") and select "Run as administrator". I admit that UAC is a tad bit annoying but it's easy to turn that off.
- Drivers drivers drivers - This is a problem that will go away within a few months (providing that hardware companies get their ass in gear), but it is still an annoying one. My obscure sound card was viewed as a modem from the operating system. I managed to get sound to work - kinda, but it ceased to work in Half-Life as soon as I started to play a new game. (It was pretty weird, since the game couldn't use sound, the G-man's lips didn't move in the opening scene).
One thing I've heard people say that's quite annoying is this:
It uses up all of my ram! Just look at the task manager, see, Free memory: none
That's Vista's new RAM caching, basically it puts the extra RAM you're not using to good use. When you close a program it keeps it in memory so it loads faster next time you run it. There's also superfetch, which watches what programs you use and, after a while, tries to predict what programs you will use when, preloading them into the RAM when it thinks you're gonna use them. Of course when new programs are introduced and it needs more RAM, cache'd programs are moved out of memory. Right now I have 13 MB of ram free, 512 is being used, and 1009 is holding cached programs. Some may think that Aero uses up all the RAM since the minimum requirement for it is 1GB (but really, if you have less than 1GB, then that's pretty sad), however right now the aero process (dwm.exe) is using 2 megabytes (because I'm in remote desktop), but when I'm using the actual computer it tends to stay at about 24 MB.
Windows (Vista) is an operating system that does the thinking for you, so you don't have to.
 Originally Posted by Ynot
BSD and GNU/Linux distros still get my vote[/b]
Both the greatest and worst thing about Linux/UNIX is the fact that everything needs configuring. It's great because it allows for the most customizability, but it sucks because not everybody cares (especially grandma) whether their print server renders print jobs client-side or server-side. They just want it to work, that's all.
 Originally Posted by Ynot
The hardware looks awesome and takes up almost no space.[/b]
I do have to admit, Apple does make some sexy hardware (except for the mighty mouse), I mean look how popular iTunes/iPod is, and it's not exactly the pinnacle of media systems software-wise.
EDIT: Haha, way to stay on topic, MSG. O'nus: Buying from an OEM vendor is usually good since you get a warranty, support, and the whole shebang, but they usually install shitty software on your computer that the companies pay them to install, so if you buy a Dell or HP or something then make sure you ask that they not install anything but the OS. As for a Mac, I think it'd be fine as long as you just do simple stuff like browse the web and IM, but if you do get a mac don't even think about being able to upgrade anything.
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