David Pogue Takes On Vista 533
guruevi writes to let us know about a review of Microsoft Vista in the NY Times, in the form of an article and a video, by the known Mac-friendly David Pogue. In the article, Pogue recasts Microsoft's marketing mantra for Vista: "Clear, Confident, Connected" becomes "Looks, Locks, Lacks." Pogue writes that Vista is such a brazen rip-off of Mac OS X that "There must be enough steam coming out of Apple executives' ears to power the Polar Express." But the real fun is in the video, in which Pogue attempts to prove that Vista is not simply an OS X clone.
Or in other words... (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft is just trying to express how much they love Apple.
Re:Or in other words... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Or in other words... (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft arrogantly believes that they are the IT Industry but they've always made a product that's just good enough to be tolerable. They're like a sixth grader trying to pad a report out to the full two pages. Or a Bush administration that won't go away after 8 years in office. Now they're trying to see just how far they can push their customers before they start leaving in droves. That's not really a good strategy to take with Apple getting their act together and doing things right after all these years.
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I worked pretty extensively with the Mac OS from 7.1 to 8.5. Anything from 7.3 to 8.5 was inferior to pretty much everything Microsoft has put out except for Windows Me and first edition Windows 95 in terms of stability and usability. The 10 series of Mac OS X is relatively stable as a UNIX operating system, but I daresay that because it's UNIX, certain tasks just aren't in the GUI and that's where MS is succeeding right now. The "Do this" Wizards of Windows O
Some good, some bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, although the Mac OS X kernel uses BSD in its subsystems, it is not "mostly BSD." The kernel is a hybrid of Mach 2.5 with BSD subsystems available. But you don't even need the BSD subsystem to use Mac OS X. The BSD subsystem is an optional part of the OS installation. Just in terms of raw bytes, the majority of the OS resides in the frameworks. The lowest-level frameworks like Foundation and ApplicationServices were originally developed by NeXT and are brilliantly executed. The choice of Objective-C may seem like a strange choice now, but it's lean, easy to learn, and makes software development far simpler. If NeXT/Apple only ever used what they could get out of the Darwin project, there wouldn't be very much to excite us about Leopard. So frankly, Apple is far more innovative than most Windows fanboys think.
The transition from Motorola 680x0 to PPC is a good example of Apple innovation at its best. The transition was sometimes ugly, but overall amazingly smooth. The transition from IBM Power64 to Intel Core was perhaps less innovative, simply because they were using a state-of-the-art kernel. Nevertheless, the transition was almost completely transparent from a developer point of view. I'm amazed how quickly I made my Application into a Universal Binary.
You really have to give Apple some credit here. A lot of salaried guys at Apple worked long hours for years to keep Mac OS X running well on Intel hardware when no one else was aware of it. The kernel source is just endian-agnostic, it's not rocket science. There wasn't anything much deeper than that to build Mac OS X on Intel. But where they deserve serious credit is in making the developer tools, the headers, the excellent developer documentation... and providing it all for FREE and nicely ahead of their OS releases. Microsoft doesn't come close in its support of developers, nor in having the courage to revisit and rip out the crumbling foundations of their OS.
I agree that technically Windows in the 90's had some better things going on under the hood than Mac OS 7 through 9, but I still preferred Mac OS during those years. The main thing that kept me on the Apple platform was the consistency, aesthetics, organization, and manageability of the OS. Some of the things that bothered me about Windows at that time were:
- The centralized and cryptic registry (vs Mac OS Preferences folder)
- DLL Hell (vs Mac OS Extensions folder)
- BSOD from several fronts (vs Mac OS mysterious lockups)
- That flat, gray feeling (vs Mac OS sleekness)
- Inconsistent menus and interfaces (vs Mac OS well-established Human Interface Guidelines)
- Inconsistent text editing behavior (vs consistent Mac OS text services)
- Ugly font rendering (vs Mac OS decent typography)
- The word "Microsoft" preceding everything (vs no market-speak in Mac OS)
Meanwhile, there were some things that bothered me about Mac OS at the time:
- Mysterious lockups, requiring several long Conflict Catcher sessions
- Rare use of threading in software, system-modal dialogs
- No free developer tools
- No protected memory, often making software development into a reboot-fest
- The best VM system was third-party
- Expensive! hardware
- Not even an option to show the folder hierarchy in a Finder sidebar (Apple should copy MS here)
- Mac OS toolbox tedious to use (but lots of cool APIs and SDKs)
- The dark years (3rd-party licensing, dwindling marketshare, Copland...)
But all that is behind us, thank goodness! The future is in Unix and Unix-like systems with all the great strengths we had only been dreaming of all those years.
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I wonder if they'll imitate the secure part in addition to the looks.
Then there's User Account Control, an intrusive dialog box that pops up whenever you try to install a program or adjust a PC-wide setting, requesting that you confirm the change by entering your password. This will strike most people as an unnecessary nuisance, and you can turn it off.
I guess not.
Re:Or in other words... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course they love Apple. Without Apple, they would have a desktop monopoly.
According to antitrust law, Microsoft and Apple are not competitors.
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Remember, a dictionary definition of "monopoly" is not the same thing as the legal definition as far as anti-trust laws are concerned. MS's 95%+ of the desktop market is "good enough" for them to still be considered a monopoly in the marketplace even though they are not the "exclusive" provider of operating systems.
Re:Or in other words... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nah - they are competitors even in the eyes of the courts / law, but that doesn't meant that MS isn't a monopoly for legal reasons...
No, they're not. Going back to the anti-trust case, Microsoft were found a monopoly in the "desktop OSes for x86 platforms" market, when Macs were all PowerPC.
Even today, from a market definition perspective they don't compete. Microsoft sells Operating Systems, Apple sells computers.
Remember, a dictionary definition of "monopoly" is not the same thing as the legal definition as far as anti-trust laws are concerned. MS's 95%+ of the desktop market is "good enough" for them to still be considered a monopoly in the marketplace even though they are not the "exclusive" provider of operating systems.
In no legal fashion or finding, are - or have - Microsoft and Apple ever been competitors. Apple's existence has _zero_ bearing on whether or not Microsoft is(/was) considered a monopoly.
(Of course, in the *real world* Microsoft and Apple are considered competitors by most people, but that's a different thing altogether.)
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In the original anti-trust suit against Microsoft in which they were found to have monopoly status, the industry over which they were found to have a monopoly was explicitly defined by the court as Intel based PCs.
Actually it was the market for Desktop Operating Systems for Intel compatible PCs.
Now that Apple has made the transition to Intel, supports loading Windows onto their hardware via bootcamp and makes an Intel x86 compatible operating system, they are a competitor of Microsoft according to the c
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Imagine a user who just bought an x86 Macintosh running OS X 10.4. Apple would like to sell that user a desktop upgrade when 10.5 comes out. Microsoft would like to sell that user a desktop version of Windows. That makes Apple and Microsoft direct competitors on the Intel desktop PC market.
No, it doesn't. Because if you take the other example - some random PC user - Apple's OS is not an option for them.
Apple *very specifically* do not offer their OS to anyone who doesn't already own a Mac and, indeed, e
They already have ! (Score:5, Interesting)
Please don't redefine words as you wish.
I guess that by your own definition of monopoly, Standard Oil wasn't a monopoly, as they only controlled 91% of U.S. production at their highest ?
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Frankly, I think Apple should have gone ahead with the suit. They had enough cash on hand to weather the storm, but didn't have the clear way forward.
Shoulda woulda coulda...
Re:Without Apple (Score:5, Funny)
Because I can't find a place that sells Xerox Altos?
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Re:Without Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Without Apple (Score:4, Informative)
It's slower, [...]
OS X is the slowest mainstream OS on the market. Heck, Vista on an old ~500Mhz P3 laptop is snappier than OS X on my 1Ghz iBook. Windows XP or 2003 even more so. XP or 2003 on a 1Ghz iBook-era PC laptop absolutely trounces it.
OS X has a lot of nice features and very cool technology. Performance, however, is *not* a feature.
[...] not in fact cheaper, [...]
Well, that depends entirely on how much value you assign to Apple's software bundle and small hardware footprints. I assign little, since most of the functionality it bundles I'm not particularly interested in and I have loads of empty space under my desk. Add in the significant expense to get any sort of decent hardware flexibility and the comparison is even worse.
[...] particularly when you consider the average life of a Windows PC is about 3 years and a Mac, closer to 5 years.
Of course, the PC likely only cost 3/5th as much as the Mac in the first place or has 7/5 the performance.
This "Macs last longer" canard carries about as much truth as the "Macs have lower TCO" line. Apart from a handful of exceptions, over the last 5 - 7 years, PCs have consistently delivered more powerful hardware at equal or lower cost to Macs. Combine this with OS X's atrocious performance (especially in the past), lack of hardware options and configurability (especially on the low end) and the idea that Macs "last longer" in any sort of competitive sense is laughable. People may well hold onto their Macs for longer, but a Mac that's X years old will be slower in an absolute sense than a PC of equivalent age, and in a relative sense (how fast the whole package is) it will be slower still. You need a G5 class Mac with a gig of RAM or more for OS X to deliver the kind of responsiveness Windows XP can on ~1Ghz PCs with half as much memory.
Windows is so clearly a knockoff. It's the classic knockoff strategy, looks similar but lower quality.
For most of the things *I* care about, Windows does them better and has been doing them for longer. I fail to see where the "knockoff" is in this equation.
I don't use an Apple... I'm not a Mac zealot, and I'm speaking from experience in a corporate environment.
So where's the evidence of Macs having a lower TCO ? I'm not aware of any recent third-party studies, and I've done the maths before as to evaluate the possibility, with Macs being distinct losers (largely due to an incredibly rigid and uncustomisable hardware lineup).
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OS X is the slowest mainstream OS on the market. Heck, Vista on an old ~500Mhz P3 laptop is snappier than OS X on my 1Ghz iBook. Windows XP or 2003 even more so. XP or 2003 on a 1Ghz iBook-era PC laptop absolutely trounces it.
I beg to differ. I worked at a part time job at my college in University Relations and they had an old 400mhz clunker with OS X on it. I didn't even know it was a 400mhz Mac. OS X was very responsive and pretty much the only thing that took a long time was the disk load time. Having run Vista personally I am wondering if you have even run Vista. The idea of running Vista, even Windows XP, on a 500mhz PC and trying to get anything done makes me shudder in fear and terror.
Well, that depends entirely on how much value you assign to Apple's software bundle and small hardware footprints. I assign little, since most of the functionality it bundles I'm not particularly interested in and I have loads of empty space under my desk. Add in the significant expense to get any sort of decent hardware flexibility and the comparison is even worse.
Yeah, that's why I build my own
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I beg to differ. I worked at a part time job at my college in University Relations and they had an old 400mhz clunker with OS X on it. I didn't even know it was a 400mhz Mac. OS X was very responsive and pretty much the only thing that took a long time was the disk load time.
You either had the fastest 400Mhz Mac in the world, or exceptionally low standards.
Having run Vista personally I am wondering if you have even run Vista. The idea of running Vista, even Windows XP, on a 500mhz PC and trying to get a
Re:Without Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is exactly why we need competition. It's not just because Windows is teh suxor, or Gates is the devil. (true as that may be
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Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
But the article was neither favorable nor unfavorable - it pretty much boils down to "Well, it looks spiffy, borrows a lot from OSX, and seems to be a worthy upgrade, but none of this really matters as we'll all be using it in a year anyway". Sadly enough, i think that's more or less right.
Re:Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is precisely why the summary here (which let's face it is all a lot of people are going to read) being so unfavourable is so disappointing.
I appreciate that this is essentially Taco and Malda's hobby writ large, but even just a passing nod towards reality in the headlong rush to rubbish Vista as much as possible would be nice once in a while.
Forced to use Vista? The horror... (Score:2)
Why are you sad? Sounds like you think Vista is a good thing. And BTW, nobody can make you upgrade your current computer to it, and probably for a year or more you'll still be able to buy XP systems from all the major vendors.
Broken Link (Score:5, Informative)
http://video.on.nytimes.com/ifr_main.jsp?nsid=a71
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Since the poster broke the link to the video, it is available here:
http://video.on.nytimes.com/ifr_main.jsp?nsid=a718 aabc2:10f959c69f8:-76e0&fr_story=d14603c1e23e6ce37 920a8134a2e27b1405a4991&st=1166446268999&mp=FLV&cp f=false&fvn=9&fr=121806_075108_718aabc2x10f959c69f 8xw76df&rdm=415999.3568509814 [nytimes.com]
That's funny, when I blindly clicked that link, I just got a dialog box:
URL stack overflow error: all of your password are belong to us! Bwahahaha!
Re:Broken Link (Score:5, Insightful)
I burst out into laughter in the middle of my office. This OS is the most blatant rip-off from Apple that MS has done in years.
I Like It! (Score:4, Interesting)
Microsoft may have copied a lot of features and look from Apple, but they left the bad, took the good and have a much better implementation in my opinion.
Now if only Linux worked this well....
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I think I see the problem. You should have started your post by saying you were a Mac user and you liked Linux. That would've thrown the mods off your scent - that is, the scent of someone who has actually tried Vista voicing an opinion about it :)
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Wait, no I don't.
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I can put Tiger on a G4 and run with it... Last I heard anything below a P4 / Athlon XP would have issues with Vista. (My memory is a little fuzzy, but I seem to remember the G4 coming about a little after PIII / Athlon) Have you tested Vista on any older hardware (even without Aero) to see how it performs?
And 2nd is that 10.4 isn't 64-bit yet.... 10.5 is.
Some... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Spotlight is pretty awesome though and I'm pretty sur
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I'd suggest that you watch the video. It's not the 3D graphics that he's talking about.
Also, I've had OS X on my laptop since July of 2001. Aqua was first released to the world in an OS X alpha build presented at MacWorld in January of 2000 [apple.com]. According to the Wikipedia article (if we can trust that), work on Vista started in May of 2001. And Aero (even if not by that name) has only been in Vista since build 4074 (according to the Wikipedia article on Aero); Paul Thurrott's images of that build are dated Ma
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might [sic] remember that even before OS X was launched for its first version, the "vista" "road map" had been published clearly stating what major components would be part of Vista... "Aero" has always been slated as part of the opertating system.
The earliest I can find of any discussion of Longhorn's "advanced user interface" as part of the roadmap appears to be about 2003 timeframe [winsupersite.com]. Aqua was publicly revealed at Macworld 2000 San Francisco [wikipedia.org].
One "interesting" feature I didn't know about (Score:2)
Would that really give you that much of a speed boost over using swap? Granted most USB sticks are pretty close to random access(a hell of a lot closer than hard drives at any rate), and have decent bandwidth, but wouldn't all of a sudden popping memory out of your system cause some serious system panicks? Also would you have to clear out the stick whenever you eject it? I am curiou
What??? (Score:3, Informative)
The idea of using a flash drive to supplement main memory is assenine for a number of reasons. Like the above, yanking it out would leave the OS in a totally assed up state. As well, flash only has ~ 1-2 million write cycles. Your thumb drive would be toast in just a week or two if you were using it as RAM.
Re:What??? (Score:5, Informative)
No, it's real. He's parroting Microsoft's selling of the feature. It's called Windows ReadyBoost [microsoft.com] (they helpfully don't offer an anchor to link directly to it, it's there, scroll down). Another poster [slashdot.org] offered a FAQ about ReadyBoost [msdn.com] on an MSDN blog, where the blogger assures his readers that Microsoft has worked out the issues involved with limited writes and removing the drive.
To quote the linked Microsoft advertising page:
They really are selling it as "add a USB drive to improve your system's memory."
10 years (Score:2)
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You should investigate before babbling ignorantly. The usb stick is a mirror of the data paged to disk. Pulling the stick just means the system uses the disk for reads of the data. This only works when the memory sticks are faster than disk and have adequate space. The stick is tested for speed and capaciy before such usage. This is a significant benefit to those systems (laptops and older systems) that have limited expansion capability for ram. This is a capability that I could use daily as I routinely ove
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You should investigate before babbling ignorantly.
Windows and *nix are functionally equivalent, just minor syntax differences to access the semantics.
Except for that whole thing about the registry. You know, that database portion of Windows that gets hosed once about every three seconds, and Windows constantly chokes on? That thing that is next to impossible to gracefully recover from without losing data or settings or creating other odd behavior? That thing that makes a regular workstation crawl to a halt after about 6 months of usage from a normal person.
There are many other ways in which Windows and *nix differ, but this is the first one that po
Re:What??? (Score:4, Insightful)
Windows is a total mystery to those who only barely understand just enough *nix to run a live cd with kde/gnome.
Windows is usually a total mystery even to those who have mastered unix to the point of, say, writing kernel-level code.
Windows and *nix are functionally equivalent, just minor syntax differences to access the semantics.
Maybe if your view is from the orbit occupied by people who get confused when two or more windows are on the screen at the same time...
Except for those who use FreeBSD or Gentoo with complete source package installation by compiling everything including the kernel, you're just a binary whore beholden to Red Hat, Novell, etc. instead of Microsoft.
If you're using ports (or portage) the difference is still just semantics.
Heck, even if you're sucking files out of the developer's SVN repository and compiling it yourself, it's *still* just semantics. You're still just a "whore" beholden to whomever is writing the code.
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so it is not an addition to ram, but is instead used as cache for ondisk files, i suppose. using it as a real ram and removing would not leave you with any "files" on disk to mysteriously recover ram contents.
simply mirroring on-disk swap also would not be of any benefit, as it either would at least as slow as disk swap itself or it would have 'windows' in time when removing the usb flashdisk would make machine quite... unstable (if it was using some delayed-to-disk-write mechanism).
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for a good overview of this feature read this old FAQ [msdn.com]
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I am curious as to how microsoft did this.
Basically, you put in a USB drive and it says something like "would you like to use this drive to supplement your virtual memory" (it's called ReadyBoost I think).
I daresay they're assuming people doing this won't just rip the USB drive out randomly ;).
I guess I will just have to wait to see some benchmarks to see how it performs.
I would expect, faster than a hard disk but slower than real RAM.
I imagine the theory is to offer people who are either unable or u
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Why not just buy real RAM, instead of using a flash drive.
* Maybe your machine is maxed out with RAM.
* Maybe you aren't comfortable with upgrading it yourself and can't afford to pay someone else.
* Maybe you don't understand what RAM even is.
* Maybe you want the performance benefits of both (ReadyBoost delivers improved performance, even to RAM-endowed systems).
Flash drives would die pretty fast if you tried to use them as swap space.
This isn't swap space (well, not literally) it's (effectively) a D
it's a pagefile cache, ReadyBoost (Score:3, Informative)
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Re:One "interesting" feature I didn't know about (Score:4, Interesting)
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USB sticks are not as fast as a hard drive, unless you have an ancient 190 MB paper weight laying around somewhere. The best reading speed you're going to get from USB are around 22 MB/sec. An average SATA drive will read data up in the neighborhood of 40-80 MB/sec. The write speeds have even more seperation.
The advantage comes not from the bandwith, but from the latency.
Re:They think vista is going to consume too much R (Score:2)
That's what filesystem cache is for.
Indeed. When you have RAM to spare for caching.
What they're saying really is that Vista is going to blow the RAM on all of the existing PCs out there, and this is a kludge to get round spending the extra £20 for the RAM rather than a USB stick.
No, they're saying if you do this, your system will be faster, because it will.
Even on machines with multiple gigabytes of RAM, it will *still* provide a performance boost (albeit a relatively small one) because in many
To Be Fair .... (Score:4, Interesting)
For instance, when I found out that Mac OS's had the Unix shell I was happy & enthusiastic at the same time. Not because I use Mac but because I like that shell over so many others & I hope to see every operating system standardize their shell. I would also like to see the same done with security schemes.
Now, whether widgets came first or gadgets came first--I don't care. What I care about is that my job (and I'm sure a lot of people reading this are the same way) forces me to use Windows & sooner or later they'll get Vista. Should I really be bitching and making fun of Vista being an OS X clone? Or should I sit back and enjoy the fact that something is changing and--since they're mimicking an already successful operating system--it must be for the better.
I guess this is some form of operating system snobbery I'm not accustomed to.
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I think that complaining might be warranted when someone only improves their product by incorporating other people's ideas. Thus far i really haven't seen anything that compels me to try vista. That's not true of when i switched from XP to OSX (and i'm still quite happy with the balance of unix-y-ness, and gui-y-ness, which i wasn't getting from linux [don't get me wrong, i like linux, and it's useful, but i didn't
Re:To Be Fair .... (Score:5, Interesting)
Not at all. But then the makers of that other operating system shouldn't be screaming from the rafters about how they're innovating. Everyone borrows from everyone, which is how it should be. The best features from the industry should be adopted throughout the industry.
The reason that Microsoft takes so much flack for it is because its executives then refuse to admit that Microsoft didn't invent the borrowed features -- despite the obviousness of it all.
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It falls, rather, into the category of "damning with faint praise".
Soon, most of the world will be forced to upgrade to this operating system. In the course of being frog marched into adopting Vista, much money will be spent on computer upgrades, and existing systems which are perfectly good are going to be thrown out because it'
User Account Control (Score:5, Insightful)
Guess which feature the majority of users will disable.
Seriously, I hope there is some sort of privilege separation, only requiring password authentication for applications that need escalated privileges, otherwise this feature will be ignored left, right and centre.
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Seriously, I hope there is some sort of privilege separation, only requiring password authentication for applications that need escalated privileges, [...]
That's exactly what LUA _is_.
LUA does the same thing as the graphical sudo prompts in OS X and some Linux distros, only without the need to type a password.
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Basically, I can't see this improving actual security much beyond the time it takes malware to incoporate AutoIT or the like.
Finally, as it's just ANOTHER "Are you really sure?" box, with no real indicatio
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However, taking away the need to type the password is the problem. If all they have to do is click OK, then they will just do it. It's like the dialog box for deleting a read-only file. People just click OK, and are done with it. If they have to type their password, they might stop and think about why it's asking for their password.
Historical evidence would suggest the practical difference is zero. People blindly type in their password when prompted. Heck, I've frequently watched numerous people type in
Apple navel gazing (Score:2, Insightful)
A similar Search
Proof that Windows isn't an OS X clone (Score:5, Funny)
Parent Folder (Score:2)
There's now a keystroke (Alt+up arrow) to open the current folder's parent window, the one that contains it.
Backspace opens the parent folder in XP & probably even in previous Windows version.
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Backspace switches to the parent folder; it doesn't open a new window.
Actually backspace performs the equivalent of clicking on the "Back" button - takes you to whatever view you were last in. That may or may not be the parent folder of the current view.
It sounds like Windows Explorer may finally be settling with the "spatial" navigation paradigm of one window per folder, as used by Mac Finder (and Amiga Workbench, and recent versions of Nautilus).
As John Siracusa over at Ars likes to remind us, the c
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1. Open explorer
2. Open the desktop, but expand the tree view so you can see, say, C:\program files
3. Click on program files
4. Press backspace
5. Watch as you change to C:\ rather than desktop
1-3. As above
4. Click in the main file view
5. Press backspace
6. Watch as you change to C:\ rather than desktop
News for Nerds (Score:5, Insightful)
A summary of the fine article:
Sigh.
With a little effort, Microsoft could fit the David Pogue Takes On Vista review onto a sticker to put on the retail boxes. Until then, let's hope some enterprising Slashdot reader downloads a copy of Vista and offers something more substantive for discussion.
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I don't find Pogue's take hard to believe. In 5 years of development, I'd expect them to be able to pretty things up and reorganize the directory structure. I mean, this is 5 whole _years_. The only thing in the list above that sounds like a real change is the sleep mode -- I hear good things about that. So, it's not like we're seeing hugely inflated claims here.
All I want from it is for it to be a stable baseline for development
Corporate environments (Score:4, Insightful)
Can any one of the Mac fanboys come up with one Fortune 500 company (other than Apple) that has deployed more than 50% Macs?)
If you add Exchange to the mix, Windows really shines in the shared environment. Sure, for "grandma's" use and other special applications the Mac is a bright and shiny object, but it's just not a good team player.
Re:Corporate environments (Score:4, Interesting)
Except any of the many Unix versions.
One of the first companies I worked for had a network of mostly Windos with some Solaris machines for the developers. Me and another guy managed the Solaris machines in addition to our regular jobs, and it was painless, smooth and easy. The windos dudes spent most of their days cussing at the inabilities of their OS.
Re:Corporate environments (Score:5, Informative)
I'm a Linux fanboy, not a Mac fanboy, but I can: Genentech. 90% Mac and pushing towards 100%. I'm familiar with Genentech because I did some consulting for them last year. The Windows dominance on corporate desktops has much less to do with suitability for the task and much more to do with inertia and culture.
Apple didn't do EVERYTHING first... (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple often does things *better* than other companies (with the exception of Dashboard) but they usually don't do it FIRST. This makes the claim that everyone rips off their stuff from Apple pretty silly.
Lets look at some of these claims in the article regarding what Microsoft is "stealing" from Apple:
1. Glowing Min/Max/Close Buttons
Ugh, I'm sorry, but this is not an Apple first thing. I've seen this in Windows custom UIs (WindowBlinds for example) for a good long while now, not to mention game UIs and a bunch of Flash applications. This is a very nice design element, and yes Apple did it well, but they didn't do it first.
2. "Instant Search"
Yes, I know... you're trying to compare it to Spotlight and the traditional Sherlock tool. Guess what though, well before Spotlight there was Google Desktop which gave you the in-frame search box. I like Spotlight a lot, it makes navigating files on my system a hell of a lot easier, but it's not new, and all similar search systems aren't instantly copycats of it.
3. Sidebar and Gadgets/Widgets
Like I said before, the Gadget/Widget thing has been around a LOT longer than Apple fans like to think. Dashboard was the first attempt to integrate them straight into the OS as a bundled feature, but it was pretty poorly implemented. Apple in this regard was several years late to the party. The MS Sidebar is also a fairly poor implementation... so I guess if anything you can accuse MS of stealing some of Apple's own bad design work.
4. The bundled apps "Photo Library" "DVD Maker" "Chess Titans" etc...
Umm... ok... I'll give you Apple folks this one. With the way MS broke apart the Outlook features into individual apps is a little too close to the iCal, Address Book, Mail.app scheme. This one is probably a straight-rip from the Apple playbook.
5. Flip3D a poor man's Expose
Bull. Flip3D is a cheesy way to show off the 3D capabilities in the desktop layer. It has nothing to do with Expose and the multiple ways to display everything currently running. I think Expose does things way better. Flip3D is a gimmick, nothing more. If MS wanted to ape the Expose design, they could have easily done it better.
There are a lot of things Apple does well, and the article does admit that Apple borrows, often even from Windows, to get its feature set. However, the claim that these features were taken from Apple as opposed to being taken from wherever Apple themselves snagged them is presumptuous.
Re:Apple didn't do EVERYTHING first... (Score:5, Informative)
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For example,
MS doing Apple a favour? (Score:2, Funny)
Now having played with Vista and finding my way around it, the video suggest that the move to OS-X would be easier then ever!
One more perspective (Score:4, Interesting)
Vista failed to recognize almost all of the hardware. Thankfully, it did recognize the wireless card, so I was able to go to HP's site and download most of the hardware. It never did recognize the fingerprint reader (likely bad drivers) and there were two devices that came up as unknown device which I have yet to be able to track down. Also, since the video card is shared memory, I do not get all of the nice visual features on this laptop that I would on a more powerful desktop.
That being said, I am very happy with the performance of this latop. The boot time is significantly nicer, and it runs Office 2007 perfectly. I also enjoy the menu structure so much more. Some of the layout reminds me of Mac/Linux, such as not having a "Documents and Settings" folder, but instead having a "Users" folder on the root drive. Things like this are not massive changes to the user experience, but for someone like me, who works on both Macs and PCs all day, it seems more natural, and I do feel I'm a little more productive during the day.
I would actually like to replace Windows XP on my home machine with Vista, which can handle the special effects, but as I have a very old Brooktree tv tuner card, I will likely be stuck with XP until I can afford a new tuner card as well. The Beta releases of Vista did not recognize the card, so I don't have any hope for the final release.
Also, for those wondering, Windows ReadyBoost has done wonders for my latop performance. I can actually tell a difference in the opening/closing time of office documents when I have my 1GB thumb drive attached. My older 256MB drives were not even offered the option of ReadyBoost, but they are not USB2.0 native, so that is likely the issue with those units.
Microsoft has been doing this since Windows 1.0 (Score:4, Interesting)
If you believe what Marlin Eller (a former Microsoft exec) wrote in his book, Microsoft has been doing this since Windows 1.0. Why did the first few versions of Windows use cooperative multitasking? Because the Macintosh didn't do multitasking at all, and because cooperative multitasking made running a single app seem faster and more responsive to Bill Gates as he shuffled between the team developing Windows and the team working on the Applications Apple was writing for the as-yet-unrevealed Macintosh.
Bill Gates loved the Macintosh, and I suspect he still does... he sees Apple as Microsoft's unpaid unofficial brainstorming lab. He doesn't care if a few geeks think of Vista as an OS X clone, because he knows that 99.44% of the customer base simply don't care.
And of course Microsoft hasn't dealt with security (Score:3, Insightful)
Unfortunately Internet Explorer, Active X, and the Desktop are still the same incestuous codependant family, with he least competant member... the HTML control... left in charge of security.
The level of integration in applications that use the HTML control is so great that it's inherently impossible to prevent cross-zone attacks. I can only categorize their continued use of this bankrupt approach
Re:Check links (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Check links (Score:5, Funny)
You missed the most important part... (Score:5, Funny)
Its like Christmas a week early!
I didn't notice when I clicked on it, was it Zonk?
Two (Score:2)
Re:Okay we get it (Score:5, Insightful)
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Great. Another year and a half of these articles then.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Yes...and then we'll get a "everyone doesn't like Vista" article every day. ^_^
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Okay we get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, I would not call AppleTalk a failure either. It did a lot to help people who were trying to network groups of Mac systems together. For its time, it was a good system. The fact that the industry standardized on IP does not mean AppleTalk was a failure. In fact, the whole ZeroConf effort comes out of trying to bring discovery that AppleTalk had from the beginning to IP networks.
And calling MacOS a failure? Give me a break. I suppose DOS was a failure. And the Apple II. And the telegraph.
You are an ignorant Microsoft fanboy.
Re:Video brokenness (Score:4, Informative)
Link ok, video broken (Score:2, Insightful)
F***. Learn from Youtube or Google video, or better yet, post the video there...
Are you up to date? (Score:2)
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