UK Greens Declare Vista Bad For Environment 290
schwaang writes "The UK Green Party says that Vista's DRM requirements will force many unnecessary hardware upgrades. Quoting: 'There will be thousands of tonnes of dumped monitors, video cards, and whole computers that are perfectly capable of running Vista — except for the fact they lack the paranoid lock down mechanisms Vista forces you to use. That's an offensive cost to the environment. Future archaeologists will be able to identify a "Vista Upgrade Layer" when they go through our landfill sites.'"
Linux is bad for it too (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Linux is bad for it too (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Linux is bad for it too (Score:4, Informative)
They don't go in the trash.
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No, seriously, I would!
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Re:Linux is bad for it too (Score:4, Informative)
For Ubuntu try this:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/install.exe [ubuntu.com]
For Debian, the sister project of Ubuntu's project:
http://goodbye-microsoft.com/index.html [goodbye-microsoft.com]
*disclaimer, I've not tried either one. Just thought they might be of use to you in this situation.
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I guess no real work will get accomplished today
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Re:Linux is bad for it too (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Linux is bad for it too (Score:4, Funny)
So I plan to hit the used computer store and garage sale market hard now that Vista has come out. I'll be able to finally put together that 100 node Beowulf cluster I've always been wanting...cheap!
Strange... (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe MSDN Vista is missing the "upgrade all your crap" bit being set.
Re:Strange... (Score:5, Interesting)
Two year old isn't really old, is it? My main desktop is from beginning 2003 and it's still a nice machine.
I found a perfectly functional P-IV 1.9GHz/512Meg RAM/40Gig HD/Dual-headed-matrox in the dumpster at the recycling centre. Booted it up, and a spyware infested Win2000 popped up in my face. That was fixed with a Linux install. How old is the machine I just described? It's perfectly capable of running WinXP. Vista, probably not all that much....
People throw away the nicest machines if for them it "behaves broken" or "because a newer version is out".
Those greenies may have a point, but I foresee golden times for dumpster divers....
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Vista runs fine on it. The "experience" score was a bit low, but everything worked fine.
People who want the latest and greatest whiz-bang crap may need to upgrade, but thos
Re:Strange... (Score:4, Informative)
"vista is 5 years more advanced than XP", huh? what, exactly, are the features of Vista that make it a "upgrade" from WinXP, or better yet, Win2k?
Is there ANY feature of Vista that will improve my ability to do ANYTHING AT ALL I currently do on my Win2k machine?
NOTE: Due to Microsoft failing to release the software after developing it (except to a $6000 version of Win2k Server), my Win2k machine does not fully make use of a 64-bit CPU, or a "hyperthreading" intel CPU. I'm aware of this, and don't consider it a problem as there are no 64-bit apps or games that look interesting; and my dual AMD CPU motherboard unclogs it's nose at hyperthreading, it's a silly concept. The only thing that makes me even consider changing operating systems is the 64-bit thing; eventually, software developers are going to start using it... I just hope Debian & WINE will be up to the task by then.
So, I repeat, to the parent & everyone else who even begins to consider "upgrading" to Vista: Is there ANY feature of Vista that will improve my ability to do ANYTHING AT ALL I currently do on my DRM-free Win2k machine?
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Fast User switching is a good feature? huh. my kids like it, but I can't figue out why; the only XP machine in the house is my uberfast new laptop, and it takes essentially the same amount of time to log out then log back in as it does to do the switching thing.
and yeah, I capitilize too much when i'm feeling particularly fed up with something. sorry about that.
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I have seen XP running on a 200Mhz CPU with 256MB of memory, just as a rough metric.
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Less than 128 requires you to tweak it by turning off a lot of services.
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sounds painful. XP should have at least 256MB of RAM. 128MB works but HURTSBADLYOMFGPLEASEMAKEITSTOP
128 MB isn't so bad.
My wife has a 266 MHz pII Dell laptop that runs XP with 128 MB of ram and a 6 GB hd. It works just fine. It didn't hurt badly at all, well, not any more than using Windows and Office normally does.
It's not a speed demon, but it runs IE and firefox just fine, Office works nicely, etc. In fact, the only thing it really couldn't do fast enough for her was run the Sims (the original and it's umpteen expansion packs.) It actually gave the Sims a nice try, but wasn't quite fast e
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Re:Strange... (Score:4, Informative)
Read the technical description of it on the MS site to cut through the hype - it is a horrible idea and won't help.
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Vista Experience on older systems? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Exactly, probably not as the technology is only just starting out, but in a few years when we are all rushing out to buy HD-DVD instead of DVD there will be alot more of these files around.
The truth is that new versions of windows have always obsoleted perfectly useable old PC's through lack of drivers or through requiring hardware that is more than most end users need.
When XP came out I had to give away a perfectly good scanner because windows did not have drivers for it
they forgot to mention (Score:3, Interesting)
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Ya, that was all the speculation and theory; however, it doesn't hold water in reality.
There have been several reviews from Tom's to TweakVista that show that Vista on a laptop does not increase battery drain, and the Aero Glass only consumed 1 watt of power over having it turned off, and this is offset by the other power saving features of Vista.
I know this is SlashDot where facts don't matter, but do we ha
Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, DRM sucks. But DRM is no excuse to just start making up FUD. Vista is a hog, but blaming it all on DRM seems pretty inaccurate. Saying that everyone is going to start filling landfills just because their video card doesn't support HDCP seems like it's crossing over into "deliberately lying".
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
I doubt that a two year old laptop will have a Blu-Ray drive, so no, I don't think it would be able to play one. People will have to upgrade to enjoy such things, but this has nothing to do with Vista.
Yes, I would tend to agree, but I don't think this has anything to do with the features in Vista or any other OS for that matter. It is the content producers choice to use DRM on their content and they are rightfully to blame for it.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of folks like being able to upgrade only what's needed on their system. Vista is just making it so you'll need to upgrade stuff for the sake of getting their DRM shit working. Even if your system is already capable of doing all the whiz-bang stuff.
Fuck it. I've been using Win2k/Ubuntu and have yet to have a reason to install XP. I doubt I'll feel the need to move to Vista. I'll just drop Win2k when things stop supporting it. Why should I drop $200 for something that'll require me to drop another $1000 for no new functionality?
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:4, Informative)
Try downloading a 1080p trailer from Apple sometime. Notice how, even with the fastest software decoder (CoreAVC, although libavcodec comes close), your formerly fast CPU can barely manage to keep up. Now consider that Blu-Ray/HD-DVD have considerably higher bitrates. IF said content uses the image constraint token, then yes, you will need HDCP, or your content will be downscaled to 960x540 (the same resolution as many "HD" XVID HDTV rips, mind you). It works the same way on a standalone HD-DVD or Blu-Ray player. Apple's implementation will doubtless work the same way as well, because it's mandated by the HD-DVD and Blu-Ray licensing groups.
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Your monitor is an aging 17 to 19 inch 4:3 display. Your monitor is a power hungry fifty pound glass bottle. Which will in not so very distant future be making the trip to the dumpster anyway.
Tell me that there is anything which will hold you back when the big screen HDCP monitor become
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Yes, I would tend to agree, but I don't think this has anything to do with the features in Vista or any other OS for that matter. It is the content producers choice to use DRM on their content and they are rightfully to blame for it.
Except it doesn't seem to cause any problems for the PS3's blu-ray playback! And because of the "signed driver" and "authorised hardware" issues there will be problem with a lot of legacy hardware (by which I mean anything in your machine that the manufacturer hasn't got signed drivers for).
It appears that MS is making more of an issue of DRM than anyone, including the content producers expected. And their EULA says that they accept no responsibility for any breakages or lost data. Pah! On the other hand,
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is the content producers choice to use DRM on their content and they are rightfully to blame for it.
I won't argue with blaming the content producers for DRM. But they aren't the ones who are paying for it. The people who buy Vista are paying for it— through the additional monetary costs of the hardware needed solely for the Premium Content pipes, and through the obligatory CPU overhead of running the processes that assure the OS that you haven't sneaked any non-DRM hardware onto the machine in the last few milliseconds.
The people who buy Vista are paying for all this even if the box will never be used for Premium Content. Even if the only thing they will ever do is run spreadsheets, word processing, Blender, and Tetris— they will stay pay to protect DRM Content Providers from the possibility that a copyright might be infringed on in their box.
Vista is a great way to spend a lot more money on a new box that will give you marginally better performance on the job than your old WinXP box. If you think that the appropriate design goal of an OS is to provide the user with the most cost effective means of utilizing cost effective hardware to get his computing tasks done, then Vista is "defective by design".
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DRM is crap because it lets the consumer pay for it to take away consumer rights whilst having absolutely no benefit to the consumer. If DRM ever managed to stop breaking copyright, it could be considered useful, but it doesn't. All it does is make honest consumers pay more to get their legal rights back, that were taken from them by DRM itself. DRM is extortion; "the more you pay, the
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What two year old consumer laptop had a blu-ray or HD DVD drive in it? He has most likely has a CDR/DVD combo drive or DVD burner either of which could read DVDs fine. I've been sick and tired of this whole HD tv
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Have you? I think you'd find that the current HD-DVD movies don't have the flag that turns on the degradation requirement. But still, the 2-year old Celeron won't play movies in their full 1080p glory, because my 3 year old P4 can't properly play even 720p video without choking.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Informative)
Have you tried it? The non-HDCP signal degradation is optional, at the disc maker's option. My understanding is that most discs being shipped now do *not* have this degradation option enabled, because the studios know that most equipment out there right now does not have HDCP. A link from the article below claims that Hollywood promises not to enable the degradation until 2012 (take that promise for what it's worth.) So if your ancient laptop actually had a Blu-ray, it would probably play fine.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_Constraint_Tok
I'm no DRM or Vista fan, but a lot of people on both sides of this debate are spreading misinformation.
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In the process probably requiring more processing power that doing a non "degraded" rendering of the data.
That's what all the bruhaha is about.
Actually it's more about needing a more powerful machine to do useful work, thus otherwise perfectly functional machines ending up scrapped.
It's not a big deal to some pe
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Incorrect. It is stopping you.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_Video_Path [wikipedia.org]
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Though TBH I think that's more a society problem than Microsoft's fault.
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The ads told me to... Must... obey...
Oooh! Shiny!
Vista Upgrade Layer (Score:2, Funny)
stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm sure somewhere there is a black and white layer, probally started sometime in
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They'll create some *native*
oh please (Score:4, Insightful)
Number of people wo will buy Vista retail - tiny
Number of people who will upgrade an old PC just to run Vista that they just bought - tinier
Number of people upgrading who will toss out perfectly good vid cards/monitors rather than building a secondary PC - all 3 of you.
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Already a lot of them prefer purchasing a new machine instead of paying a sizable part of the price to have it "repaired" by removing spyware.
Triggers Broom (Score:2)
Personally I've been using the same computer for over 8 years now. Fair enough it might have a different monitor, mouse, case, motherboard, powersupply, more hard drives etc but it's the same computer all right.
Old News... (Score:2, Insightful)
Vista defaults to Standby, not Power off! (Score:5, Insightful)
You can change it (Score:3, Informative)
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You had to go and dig for that option, not many people are willing to do that, or have the knowledge about it, or even know that their pc doesn't shutdown when you select 'shutdown', but instead go to sleep.
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
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I've had to turn off standby & hibernate on my 2.8 GHz Xeon work machine because neither work right in Vista, which I've been testing for a month or so. I'm sucking up way more power than I did with XP.
CompSci students - heads up! (Score:5, Funny)
(Worked for my Masters, could work for you, too...)
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GUI landfills? (Score:5, Funny)
Kittens (Score:3, Funny)
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Good. I hate cats anyway. I'll be sure to buy a few extra copies!
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FUD (Score:4, Insightful)
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What a load of rubbish. (Score:5, Insightful)
Far and away the vast majority of PC users will be sticking with their current XP install until they buy a new PC, which will come pre-loaded with Vista. And even then, people don't tend to throw away their old PCs if they still work. They tend to keep it around as a second machine, or pass it on to a relative (instant recycling).
I hate DRM as much as the next Slashbot, but come on. Thousand of people dumping perfectly good hardware so they can watch HD-DVD movies? I don't think so.
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Spyware drives upgrades. Since a user's computer is "too slow" to "open the internet" they get a new one. Not understanding a drive whipe + antispyware would do em good for what they u
Vista upgrade is not required (Score:2)
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Huh? Why would they have to do that?
Faster PC's may be good for environment? (Score:3, Interesting)
EU gets Vista-N, no media player = no DRM (Score:3, Funny)
So why would they need to upgrade their monitor?
Get Serious (Score:3, Insightful)
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Yes, but how many people will want to buy this and not use all the bells and whistles? very few.
"since most consumers will stick with the operating system they have until they buy a new PC that will be preloaded with Vista anyway."
Or there desire for vista is strong enough to buy a new computer easlier than needed. Looking at the history of computer consumers, this is likely to be
VISTA upgrade layer (Score:2)
Throwing away computers!? BLASPHEMER! (Score:2)
But then where do I host my gigs and gigs of porn, store all my old music I don't like anymore.. what machine would I retrofit into my arcade chasis and set up as my MAME/LAME and SNES9X machine?
Maybe what we really need is a creative linux hacker to buy up old machines, throw some apps on it to do home server functions, and then sell them back to the old users. What could they do? Just as an example, put one in the kitchen with a touch screen that you could use to track inventory, br
The Real Environmental Issue (Score:3, Insightful)
Computer-related activites already spoil the envir (Score:3, Insightful)
I still don't see why the world is going to rush out and buy Vista. I wouldn't recommend to ANY of my customers to even consider upgrading for a minimum of six months because there is going to be quite the bug-fest with Vista 1.0. Besides, what's the real upside over XP? Security? Ha!
Vista SAVES on electrical usage. (Score:3, Informative)
So the dumb-ass greens should be ENCOURAGING Vista use, because there's a LOT of people that just keep their machines on 24/7 for the same reasons I do. Instead they get all caught up about DRM on HD-DVD and Blueray (which almost no one has anyway, so no one is going to throw away) and a little more power usage from Aero. If you don't like the increased power usage from Aero, turn it off.
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Re:How many dgrees (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How many dgrees (Score:4, Insightful)
I've never quite understood all of the concern about monitors and lead. Almost all of that lead is vitrified in the glass, just the same way that leaded crystal drinking glasses are chock full of lead. If the lead is immobilized enough to drink out of, it wouldn't seem that monitor glass would pose a major threat.
Moreover, monitors would generally end up in a landfill with some kind of containment system. People fret about the 5 pounds of lead frozen in glass and buried in a landfill, yet anybody can go down to Wal-Mart, plop down a couple of bucks for a pound of lead airgun pellets, and indiscriminately scatter them around the environment. Why no comparable outcry about that?
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If the monitors were crushed in the trash compacting process the glass may become shatter and/or more powder like. Most land fill companies don't really sort monitors or at least the curbside trash pickup guys mostly don't. There might be a group down the line that att
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I am assuming you really meant: Linux, free for over 10 years.
Apologies if I'm wrong and you really don't like Linux.
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Perhaps, after your done reading TFA, perhaps you should try reading TF discussion? The knee-jerk reaction you are talking about simply hasn't happened. The only knee-jerk reaction I've seen here is yours: