SFC2 EAW seems to run just fine. Haven't tried Dynaverse too much, so I can't comment on that. SFCOP probably works fine too, but then again, I haven't installed it. I sold SFC3 years ago, so, no help to you there either. I've also had some experience with Age of Sail II and Milkshape on Vista Home Basic. Age of Sail is a no-go in whatever compatability mode you may choose, but Milkshape seems fine. Interestingly, I had no problems with Photoshop, either 7 or CS3 when I upgraded, though it might have be a compatability mode/administrator mode setting issue for you, Major Racal, IIRC.
I don't know, maybe it's just me, but griping about the OS doesn't solve any problems. I wasn't thrilled by the solutions I came up with, as it's rather extreme, but it does work well enough for my needs. As for certain issues some folks seem to have with the OS ...
As I recall, nobody asked for XP either, and there was allot of grumbling about it too. Now folks have forgotten Win98SE and embraced XP in the face of Vista ... I just don't get it. What's with the grumbling? Vista is hardly ideal, but it's here and there's precious little any of us can do about it other than learn the system and utilize it for our needs. If you find a program won't run on the OS, find a way to make it run if you need it that badly. I did.
1. It's memory use on the harddrive does not grow over time. - Haven't had it long enough to notice ... had it since March ...
2. I never have to download an update to fix problems. - Oh, like that never happened in any version of Windows before ... (or Redhat Linux, for that matter) ... there's always going to be updates and fixes these days. One might argue about the sad state of releasing Beta software or whatnot, but that seems to be rather a situation none of us can do anything about either.
3. It has a search feature engine that actually works. - Again ... no problems there yet.
4. Role back feature does not delete my files representing hours and hours of work. - Never seen any of this either.
5. Boots up or shuts down in less than five minutes. - Hm. Only when I tell it to. After installing an update, of course, one must reboot a system, but I'm pretty sure that's not what you mean.
Change is scary, especially when something you love is rendered obsolete. It seems unfair. It is, and no one sympathises more with some of you than I do, but let's be constructive around here and find solutions rather than grumping like old men in a retirement home about 'In my day ...'
I, Mudd.