● 05.17.10
●● BusinessWeek on Vista 7 Being Bad for Business, Reducing Efficiency
Posted in Microsoft, Vista, Vista 7, Windows at 3:00 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Another sincere take on Vista 7, courtesy of a businessman who has tried the operating system for 6 months in his small enterprise environment
THE reality behind Vista 7 is distant from perception. Microsoft has spent so much money on marketing and bribed so many people (we have given actual examples) that a lot of people perceive Vista 7 as a success and Vista as “merely a mistake”. Intel has learned from its own experience that Vista 7 does not work for business, but it’s good for increasing sales of chipsets.
One who offers apologetic words to Microsoft is still not satisfied with Vista 7, not even after half a year. He is the owner of the Marks Group, which he describes as “the author of four best-selling small business books.” He wrote an article which BusinessWeek has just published, in which he says:
I kvetched when Windows 7 came out, and then again six months later.
Here is the article he points to (an article which we missed, dating a month earlier). He basically says that Vista 7 has harmed productivity where he works.
After installing Microsoft’s latest operating system, one business owner finds his staff covering less ground [...]Yet so much of Windows 7 resembles Microsoft’s operating systems of the past. Some of my applications still freeze, and I still reboot and start over, hoping it won’t happen again. Networking still takes an information technology professional to set up.[...]Running a business? Buying a new computer? Don’t get too excited about Windows 7. It’s fine, but our upgrade didn’t improve our game. And I’ll never be able to cover as much ground at shortstop as I once did.
“It’s a small improvement over Vista,” explained our reader Ryan about Vista 7 (he has used both Vista and Vista 7), “but you’d be doing a lot better to get a RAM upgrade or a new CPU and sticking with Vista if that’s what you already have. CPUs get pretty damned cheap if you get them as an OEM part that’s a couple years old. I remember I got a system in 2005 with a Sempron 3100+ and by 2006, I upgraded to a Athlon64 3400+ for about $20. I saw a nice across the board performance improvement of well over 30%.
“Vista to Windows 7 will speed your PC up about 5% and cost at least $120.” –Ryan Farmer“Vista to Windows 7 will speed your PC up about 5% and cost at least $120. It’s better to upgrade a Vista era PC with more RAM and a new CPU than with a copy of Windows 7.”
Microsoft still relies on bundling here. Microsoft doesn’t need to sell Vista 7; it just needs to ensure — using illegal tactics most of the time — that OEMs do not offer anything but Vista 7 and then convince people to spend their money on a new PC.
Those who are looking for a well-behaved and light operating system should take a look at GNU/Linux. Increasingly, Linux gets preinstalled on devices (tablets and smartphones for example), often with GNU. █
Share in other sites/networks: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Permalink Send this to a friend
----------
➮ Sharing is caring. Content is available under CC-BY-SA.