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Poll When do you plan to upgrade to Vista SP1?
Right now
Next week
When it's officially released
Never
What is this Vista you speak of?
After CowboyNeal upgrades
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:277 | Votes:1973

Vista SP1 Release Candidate Available

Posted by kdawson on Thu Dec 13, 2007 09:57 AM
from the get-it-while-it's-hot dept.
Microsoft has made available the release candidate for Vista SP1, after a limited beta begun last September. Informationweek points out white papers telling business users that if they were waiting for SP1 to solve application compatibility issues, they needn't bother waiting: SP1 won't solve them, and in fact might cause applications to break that were running under Vista. Techworld outlines the hoops users will have to jump through to get SP1 installed.
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  • So... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Gigiya (1022729) on Thursday December 13 2007, @09:57AM (#21683347)
    Is it worth installing?
    • ./ should make an article about this guy - "Elusive single Vista user tracked down to this very website".
    • by WED Fan (911325) <akahige.trashmail@net> on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:07AM (#21683443) Homepage Journal

      Is it worth installing?

      Are you planning on installing it on a production machine?

      Are you planning on installing it on your home machine?

      The answer is: Don't!. But, if you do, don't come complaining that it broke your system and that's why MS sucks. It's a release candidate.

      Are you planning on installing it on a test system and documenting any issues to see how things go so you can plan on how the install will go when it is in RTM?

      O.k., go ahead, that's what a release candidate is for. Especially if you plan on providing the feedback on major issues.

      Anyone who installs "beta", "community technology preview", or "release candidate" software on their systems and then complains about the experience and how it sucks should be branded with a big ol' "D U M B A S S" on their short-bus-riding-tuckus.

      Now, if you install the RC on your test system, provide feedback on you major error, and then the RTM has the same problem, you can complain.

      • by Mongoose Disciple (722373) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:25AM (#21683663)
        Why would anyone bother installing beta software before writing giant posts criticizing it and proclaiming the imminent death of Microsoft, when it's so much easier to farm mod points by cutting out the installing step? Heh.
      • by PolyDwarf (156355) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:37AM (#21683837)
        Meh... My company nominated me to be the Vista guinea pig, to test whether the software we produce was compatible with Vista, and to make changes if it wasn't. Given that I didn't have a choice in the matter (Other than to quit... And quitting over that seems a bit dumb), I've got every right to complain.

        Vista's shell sucks. I hate it with the burning rage that could only otherwise be produced by 35 angry chihuahuas.

        Luckily, geoshell works on it, so I don't have to put up with it.
      • by Luke Dawson (956412) on Thursday December 13 2007, @11:16AM (#21684451)

        Anyone who installs "beta", "community technology preview", or "release candidate" software on their systems and then complains about the experience and how it sucks should be branded with a big ol' "D U M B A S S" on their short-bus-riding-tuckus.

        Sorry, gunna have to disagree with you there. A release candidate is just that - a candidate for release. Just because Microsoft has warped the term to mean "late beta", doesn't mean that's what it is. In many cases a release candidate becomes the final release.

        RC's aren't meant to have major errors. RC's are designed to be feature-complete and stable. If a release candidate has major bugs, then it isn't release quality and thus should never have been labeled as such in the first place.

        Note: I'm not condoning putting RC's on mission-critical equipment, but I fundamentally disagree that an RC should be inherently considered unstable.

      • Re:So... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by JebusIsLord (566856) on Thursday December 13 2007, @01:26PM (#21686493) Homepage
        I've noticed that shutting down seems to be more reliable (as an aside, why is this a problem with EVERY SINGLE NEW OS Microsoft releases, for at least the first year? How hard is shutting down???).

        File copies are faster (as in, they work properly now. Yay?).

        My Hauppauge TV tuner still doesn't work with 4 GB of RAM (x64 edition). I have to set it to 3GB max in msconfig. Hauppauge says this is a vista driver model issue, but clearly it still isn't fixed.

        Still slow as molasses.

        I bought a Macbook back in the spring, and find myself pretty much only using the Vista box now as a media center server (Media center is still pretty damn cool). I'm usually pretty patient with MS, but Vista is clearly a useless upgrade thus far - I can't even use the 4GB of RAM! Might as well roll back to Media Center 2005.
  • But... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 13 2007, @09:59AM (#21683363)
    Does it run Windows?
    • Re:But... (Score:4, Funny)

      by ultranova (717540) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:46AM (#21683977)

      No, but Linux runs Windows applications [winehq.org].

      The question, then, is which has netter application compatibility: Wine or Windows Vista ? In my experience Wine bugs mostly cause slightly corrupted graphics, while Vista causes applications to crash randomly.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        You have much better experiences with Wine than I do then. Usually Wine errors result in the application crashing for me.
  • This will be the same as all the other Service Pack 1's for Microsoft OS's.

    It's the mile-marker where the new OS stops feeling "foreign" as the details are refined, and developers have some reason to fully embrace it. Corporate deployments will pick up, as software vendors of TRUE business applications release their "real" Vista products. etc etc etc

    It's the same old pattern that has been going on since Windows NT. Business as usual.
    • Re:Same Old SP1 (Score:5, Informative)

      by Slashidiot (1179447) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:07AM (#21683451) Journal
      It would be the same old same old if the SP1 solved the most obvious flaws of the OS. But the thing is this SP will not solve the application compatibility issues, which in my opinion is one of the big reasons why people don't move to Vista. So, not bussiness as usual, but bussiness even worse than usual. Cool.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        That's not true. Sp1 has never solved the glaring flaws of Microsoft OS's. They get solid around SP2 or SP3. But that doesnt stop adoption.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        The problem is that the application compatibility problem is really a double edged sword. Microsoft bit themselves in the ass by pretty much forcing the habit of always running as admin when using windows. This led to programmers doing things like writing to there install dir and using system wide registry keys when a local one is more appropriate.

        The real problem is poorly written applications for the most part. The fact the microsoft had to add file system and registry virtualization to vista is just a de
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          ***can't recall more than 5 problems upgrading from 95 to 98 back in the days***

          That's probably because there wasn't that much difference between Win98 and Win95 OSR2. And there were no DRM issues. And the systems were simpler back then.

          As I recall the only major issue with Window 98 relative to 95 was mediocre performance (due to IE integration) and that 98 would often hang during shutdown because of what turned out to be about five dozen separate and distinct configuration specific bugs. But those

  • "According to Microsoft, when Vista SP1 is offered to users normally through Windows Update, the prerequisite steps will have already taken place automatically over several nights. Microsoft has not set a definitive release date for SP1, other than to promise that it will launch sometime in the first three months of 2008. " So the question I have to this statement is why does it need to reboot the computer now if later it will be able to do the prerequisite steps automatically for the offical release. Why c
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:05AM (#21683411) Journal
    Quite sad actually. Despite all the negative reports about Vista, the new machines will ship with Vista as OEM, usually without compatibility issues or driver issues because the vendors take care of it, the juggernaut will roll inexorably and gain market share.

    There will be no change in the situation as long as the business customers take it in their chin and continue to buy MSFT no matter how much abuse they suffer. If the constant acceleration of upgrade treadmill gets interrupted, at least MSFT will retreat from all its loss leading misadventures and allow creativity and innovation to flourish in other areas of computing. Hopefully. The way it goes, PCs are a lost cause for the next five to ten years.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Not everyone is mistreated or abused by Microsoft. Many people have a great experience, and many businesses would be greatly harmed if Windows was not an option.
      • Just think. Why do replacement carafe for you coffee make costs 12.99 + shipping and handling and three weeks of wait time, while a new coffee maker costs only 14.99? vendor lock.

        Why does the replacement battery for iPod was once priced at 79$? vendor lock.

        Have you compared the cost of replacement battery, cable, charger, bulb of anything proprietary with standard compliant versions of the same thing?

        There could be a million businesses, happy with MSFT experience, happy with the price MSFT is chargin

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        many businesses would be greatly harmed if Windows was not an option.

        That depends on whether the alternative options are comparable or better, and what the switching costs are. Nobody buys their operating system for its own sake. They buy it because they need it to run the applications they want. If every application in the world were available on every operating system, there would be little reason for anyone to use Windows, given the regular infestations of viruses, spyware, etc that plague it and its relatively high cost compared to the alternatives.

        Unfortunately, we d

  • by QuickFox (311231) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:06AM (#21683423)

    SP1 [...] in fact might cause applications to break that were running under Vista.
    Clearly Microsoft is releasing this to solve the problem with Vista being too popular.
  • SP3 (Score:4, Informative)

    by Corporate Troll (537873) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:07AM (#21683439) Homepage Journal
    I'm much more interested in WinXP SP3 or Win2k SP5...
    • Re:SP3 (Score:4, Informative)

      by Fast Thick Pants (1081517) <fastthickpants&gmail,com> on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:36AM (#21683811)

      I'm much more interested in WinXP SP3 or Win2k SP5...

      Win2k SP5 will never happen because MS wants people to think that Win2k is obselete abadonware, even though they've promised to support it until summer of 2010 [microsoft.com]. They refused, for instance, to make a public patch for Win2k's Daylight Saving rules. I doubt they'll even do another post-SP4 patch rollup -- probably just the same trickle of IE6 and DirectX patches we've seen for the last couple of years.

      (Of course, you can make your own SP5 [hfslip.org] and use third [intelliadmin.com] party [mdgx.com] time zone updates. There will probably be a lot of third-party patching as MS continues to drop the ball, pushing the new shiny stuff instead.)

  • AnandTech says an RC of XP SP3 is also released. http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=9987 [dailytech.com] Although I don't understand why "download directly from microsoft" on that page links to http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail/Microsoft_Windows_XP_Service_Pack_3/1197391546/1 [betanews.com]
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:11AM (#21683503) Journal
    The biggest challenge, according to independent software vendors and Microsoft, is getting apps to work with Vista's advanced security features, such as the User Account Control. It's designed to prevent desktop users from making changes to their system images without approval from an IT administrator. The feature operates at the kernel level and can affect the way third-party applications, including antivirus software, work.

    Oh yeah, sure. MSFT dissed Linux with the Total Cost of Ownership BS. The cost of migrating applications to Linux was what had boosted the cost for Linux column. Now will Gartner re run the Total Cost of Ownership studies including the cost of migrating "XP to Vista"?

    • by rkanodia (211354) on Thursday December 13 2007, @02:11PM (#21687147)
      Gartner's raison d'être is to promote Microsoft and proprietary software in general, regardless of the real advantages and disadvantages. Bill Gates could start shipping big boxes full of venomous snakes, and Gartner would have an article explaining how black mambas and hooded cobras add significant shareholder value, especially when compared to Ubuntu, which only ships with Python and not an actual python.
  • by Penguinisto (415985) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:14AM (#21683545) Journal
    I'm thinking that folks Out There(tm) are going to start realizing that you simply cannot make a flawed architecture run any better by adding more duct tape to it.

    I'm actually not trolling, but if anything, stating the obvious. Windows NT's setup was a good-enough architecture back when "the company LAN" was just a bunch of computers strung together on a hub or in a ring. The Internet changed that, and just as it almost left Microsoft behind back in 1995 at the apps level, it's almost about to leave them behind right now at the OS level. It's becoming apparent that the thing simply cannot keep up with what's required.

    If SP1 actually improved speed and performance, as well as add a better legacy/compatibility mode, they might have been able to eke by without people (outside of /. and the Mac community) questioning it.

    Not anymore.

    I think we're going to start seeing the decline of Microsoft. It won't crash overnight, but I suspect that, barring a miracle on their part, things will only start falling from here for them. Between Macs at home and Linux at the server room, MSFT's market share loss will be slow at first, then start accelerating. It'll take about a decade, but by then Microsoft's OS will be about as popular as Amiga's was in 1998-2000 (roughly), but will perhaps a larger base of holdouts, depending on developer mindshare and markets.

    I've never really said that (at least and meant it) before... now it's moved from being a personal guesstimation to becoming my professional opinion.

    Glad I went full *nix a long time ago...

    /P

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      are going to start realizing that you simply cannot make a flawed architecture run any better by adding more duct tape to it.

      I dunno, some of the 'problems' described sound like maybe, to some extent, MS was attempting to go beyond duct tape with respect to their atrocious security situation, where if you have an account on a system, you can alter entirely too much about it. The problem with doing that is applications that designed themselves with that (and they hit the same sort of breakage in a coarser way when people were moved from the 9x architecture to XP, for certain account setups, which is why to this day most users gi

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:23AM (#21683635) Journal
    The upside, according to Microsoft, is that all applications that currently run properly on Windows Vista will continue to work on Vista SP1.

    What the heck is going on here? That applications wont break is an upside? Wasn't the biggest selling point of MSFT has been the compatibility with the existing installed base?

    This is a telling moment for all the CIOs and IT managers of corporations. The biggest reason why most companies could not migrate to a competing platform (or at least platform-agnostic technologies) was because they were locked into this proprietary system and it simply costs money to remove all the hacks and remove dependencies. Now they can't dodge the cost. It is inevitable. Given that, does it make sense to pay so much to get locked into another proprietary vendor locked system again? They were fooled once into vendor lock or vendor lock crept up on them unsuspected. But now?

    The MSFT strategy is clear. They must make the cost of migrating from XP to Vista will be marginally smaller than migrating from XP to platform-neutral-technology. If the IT managers fall for this trap once more they will exactly be in the same situation five years from now.

    The key is open standards. We don't have to bicker among ourselves the merits and demerits of open source vs closed source, or free software with paid software or whatever. Open Standards will level the playing field. That is all we should ask for. Let us duke it out in a level field and may the better philosophy win.

  • by xirtam_work (560625) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:27AM (#21683677)
    One of the biggest reasons people and companies are not upgrading to Vista is backwards compatibility. Microsoft have a free product called Virtual PC that anyone can download. They should include a suitable version of XP with very Vista license and include Virtual PC in the standard install. If you can run all your mission critical apps in a compatibility layer like this (think 'Classic' on the old PPC Macs) then they could really move forward with Vista and make it a modern OS and drop the old cruft they've been carrying for years in the name of backwards compatibility. If they wanted to they could even include Win95/Win98/WintNT or even Win3.1 virtual environments.

    If Parallels and VMware can make the desktop sharing between Mac OS X and Windows easy, why can't Microsoft make it easy between Win9X/NT/XP and Vista easy?

    Problem is no one at Microsoft in interested in doing this. I was invited to Microsoft's London offices last month and suggested it to a few of their top engineers and sales/marketing people and no one wanted to admit that Vista was a relative failure. You can downgrade to XP but you need your own DVD/CD media, and can't run Vista and XP at the same time, it's one licence or the other. Madness!

  • RC? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:33AM (#21683779)
    FTFA: "Not everything planned for the final version of SP1 has made it into the release candidate"

    So much for a release candidate...
  • Oddest warning (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:33AM (#21683783) Journal
    The SP1 release candidate will have to be uninstalled before applying the final code in 2008, Microsoft warned as it also issued an odd caution on the subject. "After you uninstall Service Pack for Windows (KB936330), we recommend that you wait at least one hour before you try to install the final release of Windows Vista SP1," another support document read.

    I have heard phone support script humanoid robots demand that I turn off the modem and router and wait for 30 seconds before switching them on. Kind of made sense, something like make sure all capacitors are fully discharged and the machines are really truly off.

    In India there is a popular belief that if an AirConditioner is turned off one must wait for three minutes before turning it on. One technician hand waved about the compressor might be at some odd point in the cycle and suddenly making it run would "break" the shaft. Did not believe him. But in the last trip I find that all the A/C are connected to the grid through "voltage stabilizers" that have a delay timer to prevent the machine from being turned on too soon!

    Now MSFT takes the cake! Wait for one hour after uninstalling software! Why? The pagefile is still thinking SP1 is running? The MSFT DRM software has to call in and tell Redmond that SP1 has been really uninstalled and get a confirmation back? Or uninstalled bits of SP1 is considered to be an radioactive waste and they must be beamed to Jupiter to be buried?

    • by slackmaster2000 (820067) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:47AM (#21683999)
      "Wait for one hour after uninstalling software! Why?"

      To calm down, that's why. Attempting to perform too many consecutive installations of Microsoft software, without proper breaks, has been linked to the recent upsurge in general anxiety disorder.
    • Re:Oddest warning (Score:4, Insightful)

      by SL Baur (19540) <steve@xemacs.org> on Thursday December 13 2007, @01:34PM (#21686609) Homepage Journal

      Wait for one hour after uninstalling software!
      When the time comes, packet sniff everything coming out of the box and watch everything that's running. If I cared, which I don't, I'd bet you that you will see nothing at all.

      A one hour delay sounds like propagation time through a distributed data base. So all that it probably is waiting for is whatever implements Microsoft Windows registration to fully recognize that the machine in question is legal to switch to Microsoft Vista SP1. I.e. it's perfectly normal and there's nothing to see here, move along.
  • by kuactet (1017816) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:41AM (#21683889)

    Dear reader, I have a confession to make: I love Microsoft. I love it more than I love my family. This ought not come as a surprise to any that know me: a long line of jaded ex girlfriends will laugh bitterly and recall the passion they could never share in, and those few that can call themselves my friends accept that, on Patch Tuesday, their lives are nothing to me.

    But above even my love for Bill Gates' corporate loin product is my love for my work. It is a sacred task that has been assigned to me, and I dare not let friends, nor family, nor even software allegiances stand in the way of the fairness and impartiality that is my trademark.

    But why do I tell you this? Why do I bare my soul in such a vulgar fashion? It is that you may understand: even now, I will not let my love blind me; I do not write from the perspective of an enamored lover, nor a too-faithful user. No, it is as a Genuine Microsoft User hungry for the Next Best Thing that I pen this, my review of Windows Vista.

    Part I: Making the Switch

    "Aha," you are saying, having been inundated by countless negative reviews, "He will surely realize that Vista is in every way a downgrade from previous Microsoft products; he will slowly become disillusioned with its clunkiness, bloat, and arbitrary changes made only for the sake of justifying an overzealous Vice President's salary. Over the course of many painful pages, he will finally renounce his love for the Monopolist, and end with an impassioned plea for the adoption of the obviously superior Apple OSX [slashdot.org] while a swelling orchestral piece rises in the background."

    Alas, no. Such a review, while undoubtedly entertaining, would be as far from the truth as, say, religion. No, this is most assuredly a glowingly positive testimonial: Windows Vista is easily the best operating system on the market today. Such an assertion, I realize, may offend some of my readers' base sensibilities; if that is the case, kindly allow me to show you to the exit [kuactet.com].

    But I have, once again, gotten ahead of myself. Firstly, why I choose to review the Vistas now, rather than immediately following the January launch, bears explaining.

    It was a cloudy Monday morning, some two months back, when my erstwhile laptop, a venerable old Compaq, gave up the ghost. The screen, which had been flaky for a number of weeks, finally quit altogether.

    After a brief mourning period, I began scouring the print classifieds, searching for a replacement. I soon found one, a dual-core offering from Hewlett Packard. The $600 price tag--considerably less than my weekly escort--made its purchase, and my subsequent review, a foregone conclusion. It arrived the following Thursday, in the hands of a perky blonde UPS driver; I christened it Alex, turned it on, transferred my data (a breeze thanks to Microsoft's new Streaming Automatic External Backup Restore technology), configured it to suit my needs, and resumed my work.

    I have been using it, very happily, ever since and, today, shall pass judgment.

    Part II: New Features (and what they mean for you)

    Aero:

    This brand new DirectX-based desktop rendering engine was the focus of Microsoft's Vista promotional materials. It is easy to see why: Vista with Aero is stunning; it puts, in this writer's humble opinion, all other human achievements to shame.

    I have been to the Louvre; I have seen the works of the masters, of Monet and Michaelangelo. My heart swelled, and I nearly wept at the sight. But the feeling I get when I gaze at Aero... even that cannot compare. It is more than my simple words can express. My screenshots [kuactet.com] are but pale reflections of its splendor.

    You must experience it yourself: study the subtle interplay between light and shadow, feel the cool ephemer

    • by GregPK (991973) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:58AM (#21684165)
      Dude, share the drugs... Even when I worked for Microsoft selling Vista I didn't push that hard. Yea, I would've sold about double the product off the bat. However, My reasons why... -I would've pissed off customers and lost thier trust. -I would have pissed of stores -I wouldn't have sold as much Office. -I wouldn't have sold as much Windows XP -Would have decreased overall Microsoft Sales Even the sales I did make came back to the store screaming about Vista breaking this or that. Do you know what it's like dealing with hysterical customers? Do you? For every great feature Visa brings, it ads 3 other counter-intuitive ones.
  • Hoops? What hoops? (Score:5, Informative)

    by prisoner-of-enigma (535770) on Thursday December 13 2007, @10:53AM (#21684097) Homepage

    Techworld outlines the hoops users will have to jump through to get SP1 installed.
    OK, this is just getting to be sad. Slashdot can't announce anything about a Microsoft product without resorting to needless hyperbole.

    Here are the "hoops" you have to "jump through" to install SP1:

    1. Download the RC1 package.
    2. Execute the .CMD file.
    3. Done!

    Vista will automatically download all updates you need to install the RC1 and install them over the next couple of days (unless you have automatic updates turned off, of course). If you're impatient like me, you can manually kick off Windows Update and install everything with a couple of reboots.

    So, speaking as someone that's compiled their own Linux kernel and most of my apps from source more than a few times, the above is no "hoop" at all. Slashdot again goes out of its way to make things seem worse than they are. It's a Release Candidate for crying out loud! I never see this level of scrutiny and criticism directed at any Linux-related software, be it free, open, or commercial.
  • by misleb (129952) on Thursday December 13 2007, @11:22AM (#21684543)
    Am I the one one who finds it amusing that we have betas and release candidates for service packs? And then we often get patches to fix service packs after they finally do release it.

    Future tech support calls:

    Tech: "What version are you running?"

    User "Lemme check. Looks like version '2007 SP1b Build 3567 Patch Level 3'"

    Tech: "Sir, you should be at version 2007 SP1b Build 3768 Patch Level 2"

    User: "Wait, is that newer or older than what I have now?"

    Tech: "It is a newer build of an older patch. You can download it from our web site, but if you do install it, you will not be able to install older builds of newer patches."

    User: "Uh, OK?"

    Tech: "You may also want to try running the beta version 2008 which I hear from our dev tech is just awesome after you apply all the prerelease sub patches."

    User: "Uh..."
  • Submission accepted? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Devistater (593822) * <devistater.hotmail@com> on Thursday December 13 2007, @03:46PM (#21687874)
    Odd, it says my submission for this story was accepted, but it doesn't mention my name in the summary. Of course, the editors did rewrite my submission, and it looks better this way. My original submission was a bit awkwardly phrased with quotes. Probably a bit dry.
    But I still like my headline better, it was "MS says Vista compatibility not solved in SP1" :)
    • You miss the fact that fortune 500 companies usually either lease their hardware, or budget for a full hardware refresh every 3 years. That's just how business works.
      • by Dan Ost (415913) on Thursday December 13 2007, @12:06PM (#21685331)
        When we get new machines, the machines come with a corporate image already loaded. Our current corporate image is XP, not Vista. If a machine comes with Vista, it'll get wiped and replaced with the corporate image.

        This is in a Fortune 100 company. I expect that this is typical of the other Fortune 100 companies.

        Out of curiosity, anyone know what Microsoft's corporate image looks like? Specifically, is it XP or Vista based?