Re: Early adopter retros
- From: Peter in New Zealand <peterbalplug@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:14:11 +1200
philo wrote:
"Peter in New Zealand" <peterbalplug@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in messageLove that idea. W2K would make a great basic starting point, but then perhaps MS's bottom line might start slowing down. I don't mean to beat the money drum (so many folk seem to), but in the end a philosophy of continuous growth seems to be the necessary strategy now-a-days. Trouble is you can't grow indefinitely, so I suppose one day something's gotta give. Interesting to see if that happens to MS. On the other hand their OS and software have made the remarkable standardisation we see now actually possible. Sure would hate to go back to the old days of every computer manufacturer having his own OS and apps.
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philo wrote:good"Peter in New Zealand" <peterbalplug@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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philo wrote:"Peter in New Zealand" <peterbalplug@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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, just what "engine-room" differencesIt may very well be.That being the case then W2K must rank as perhaps the best version ofare there between the two?Truth is, there is very little difference between Win2k and XP.
When I setup an XP machine I generally turn off the eye candy
by setting if for best performance.
Windows ever produced.
But there is a legacy version of XP (not avail in the USA) that isIforlow end machinesFascinating - I didn't know about that. Now how about a legacy version
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Fundamentals_for_Legacy_PCs
of Vista with all the eye candy removed, all the background activity,
and a folder tree structure that is the same as the previous one for
complete backwards compatibility. Hmmmm - sounds like W2K eh. Although
hardware...sorealise it's not quite that simple. (smile)
I did give Vista a good, three month try out.
It's possible to turn off the eye candy and set the GUI back to a Win2k
look...
However to run Vista properly you really need some pretty new
I am not going to be using it.Yea, I kept it on my main machine for almost a year, and, like you,
ended up turning off all the "extra" bits & pieces. Funny thing is I
built the machine expressly for Vista, so the hardware specs were OK for
it. But now it's running W2K, and I personally can't see what advantage
any later OS offers me. It must be really difficult for a software
company when their software reaches a point of maturity where any
further releases run into the law of diminishing returns. I quite like
an idea I saw written about somewhere a few months ago. The idea that MS
need to strip Windows right back to a very basic OS, and then offer
modular "plugins" for added functionality. Then one could purchase the
level of functionality one wanted. The same writer commented that he
suspects Windows has become so massive and monolithic perhaps even MS
don't fully know how it works entirely any more. Certainly it's
difficult to see how their formula of constantly adding in more and more
functionality can work beyond the massive package that Vista is.
I like the "modular" idea.
Basically just start with Win2k, then add whatever else is needed!
--
Peter in New Zealand. (Email address is fake)
Collector of old cameras, tropical fish fancier, good coffee nutter, and compulsive computer fiddler.
.
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