Bought a new machine nearly a year ago. It was actually cheaper with Vista installed than XP, so I bought the Vista installed one. Big mistake. Vista is a resource hog.
Incorrect. Vista requires more ram to operate, however it has many new feature sets that use those resources. Vista will utilize existing Ram before it utilizes the paging file. it is the opposite of XP. This means quicker response of your programs. Also, if you enable Ready Boost, it will utilize that to hold some active memory instead of paging file.. which again helps speed up the system.
Vista is clearly defined to be able to run on 512 mb memory, however it is recommended to run 2 Gb.. Most people are upping to 4 Gb since it is so cheap.. 4 Gb @800 Mhz FSB with a gaming latency of 4-4-4-12 by Patriot Extreme is $99 at Tiger Direct now.
Starting your system up, with 4 Gb installed, the OS will use 1.06 GB of ram to keep the prefetch active to fast launch your software. however the CPU is only utilizing about 20% for startup. when idling it is about 1 to 2 % where XP is 4 to 5 %.
To lower resource usage, turn off features like Active Desktop, Windows Areo, and so forth.. Resources will go below XP usage when you do this.. Mainly the resources are being used by the eyecandy, not the system kernel.. as such it is actually more efficient than XP.
the OS may be more demanding, but it is hardly a resource hog. It adjusts paging file size in accordance to your Ram.
Vista had memory leaks and you needed hotfixes for certain hardware on board.. most of this is remedied in Service Pack 1.
It has nearly broken or has broken multiplayer for a number of games that I play, OP and Star Trek:Legacy, which I am sure is true of a number of games.
Information about Vista has been public since about 6 months before the release of Vista.. Vista does not support DirectX 8 or older software and DirectX 10 has been revamped with newer networking code. most people should expect that older software would not work correctly, just like SFC OP did not work correctly in XP before SP 1. the problem with SFC in Vista is because the game was written under DirectX 8, 7 or 6 depending on which SFC game you have.. those versions are not supported under Direct X 10.. However Dual booting to XP remidies this since XP was designed under DirectX 7 and 8 which is what makes XP compatible with SFC OP. If XP was built under DirectX 9.0c, then SFC OP would not be supported and most probably networking issues would have occurred then. Vista was built under DirectX 9.0c and DirectX 10.0 concurrently. As such there is no support for DirectX 8 or older as listed on the DirectX web site prior to the release of XP.
Vista requires programmers to use proper programming standards with todays technology instead of writing programs in software dated back to 1998.
If your games are broken in Vista, Check the manufacturer of the game for a fix, if the company no longer exists or refuses to support the software, then just buy a copy of XP and dual boot your system.. Problem solved.. you have Vista for the new software coming out, and XP for legacy programs.
Do not get Vista unless you intend to play games with DX10 features. There is no point. Vista was supposed to be the gaming-friendly OS especially with the Games for Windows initiative and Windows Live as a parallel to XBox Live, neither of which has come to anything. Microsoft totally dropped the ball on this stuff and on the OS in general.
Vista will operate any game that was created in Visual C++ 2005 or newer and encoded under DirectX 9.0c without a problem. Networking can be adjusted easily by the program creator. Again if they refuse, Dual boot with XP.
By the way, downgrading to Windows XP is not an option for most people who will be getting Vista, as they will likely be getting it from a new PC purchase. Vista Home Basic and Premium cannot do a downgrade, only Ultimate and Business users. Further, you need an OEM install disk of XP (which may be difficult to obtain) to do the downgrade, which is merely using your Vista key to license the XP install.
This is incorrect as well. Why would you want to down grade when you can just Dual boot. If you have an XP disk either retail or system builders OEM (not like Gateway OEM), then you can install XP into a partition of the HDD and after you follow the guide I provided, just Activate it.
If you are trying to Downgrade a prebuilt system, all you have to do is put in the XP disk, again retail or System Builders OEM versions, and just follow the instructions to erase the Vista information and install XP, however your problem will come by way of device drivers since XP does not contain the drivers for Vista based hardware.
So, the easiest way is to dual boot and you can use Vista to search the web for XP based drivers and save them to disk and then install them after the first boot of XP. Your system will be working just fine after that and all you need to do is get the XP updates.. make sure to burn the updates and newer device drivers to DVD so you can have them for the future.
As far as I am concerned, if you want to do gaming and don't have thousands to spend to get an experience that you can't get with a console, then you might as well get a console. This keeping up with the Jones crap with PC games is getting tired. The new machine I bought is essentially already obsolete, with Quad core and DX10 being the new gaming standard.
I can't think of any reason for Vista except DX10 and if you don't have the cash to build a very high end system and keep upgrading it to be on the bleeding edge, you might as well not even bother.
Oh, and by the by, I can't even get Vista SP1 because I have hardware components and drivers that are not compatible with it, despite the machine having the tag of being "Designed for Windows Vista" and not merely "Vista Capable". Thanks MS and Dell.
Then instead of trying to download the Vista SP 1 from Windows Update, get the Full Installer from Microsoft.com, or you can search torrent sites for Vista Service Pack 1 RTM.. it is readily available for everyone and will install regardless of your hardware components.. this was posted in the Vista Service Pack 1 Whitepaper (readme file) that has been out since Aug. 2007. Microsoft provided a way for you to update your system without having to buy new hardware.. The reason that the Service Pack was designed the way it is is to make the end user contact the computer manufacturer and ask them why their vista machine is using substandard parts that are suppose to be Vista compliant, but are infact refurbished XP system parts.
That is the problem with buying a system from places like Gateway or Dell.. It is far easier and cheaper to build your own computer.