Vitaly's WebLog
Writing on software development and all related

Do NOT upgrade to Vista

November 10, 2007

This post is aimed to those who are thinking about upgrading their OS to Vista. I know it is a bit late, but its makes my opinion more weighted as I had plenty of time to evaluate it. I acknowledge that there may be lot of happy users that do not have any problems with it, so consider my experience like a worst one, but the one that may happen with you.

First of all, I'm an early adopter. I always hasten to see new products, even if I realize that it can break my system. This means that I ready to sacrifice some stability in the name of new features.

So did me when I installed Beta 2 of Vista on my home laptop. And that did not stop me to install release version of Vista, when it came out, on my work machine. So what did I end up with?

  • Expectations that most software that does not work on Vista is updated to work with it
  • Expectations that my OS (release version) works that stable as previous version of it.

That both expectations are funny by themselves, but those of a typical user of OS, I believe. So what we end up with after 11 months after Vista release?

  • No enough drivers still! When you are going to install some new device, it turns our there is no drivers for it. Okay, the situation becomes better every day, but be ready to that you just CANNOT use some of your hardware. It is ought to notice, however, that when there are drivers, Vista does it very smooth to install them.
  • Vista that was installed on my work PC became so unstable so I was not able to work. Windows explorer consumed all CPU resources when I ever clicked on toolbar. I admit there are tremendous possible causes to that, but, based on my experience, that happened only with Vista.
  • Visual Studio has just closed sometimes. That was very pity, especially when I was in a middle of something.
  • IIS had crashed on unexpected shutdown. There was electricity strike and my IIS did not outlive it. So I had to use IIS on other machine for several months. I just was not able to repair it anyhow I tried.
  • My sound card was not performing well on Vista. It just stopped working sometimes, and the only was to reset the machine.
  • On my home PC I have to repair network connection each time PC was waked up.
  • Some applications just was not able to run on Vista

When your PC starts performing bad it is an only way to reinstall OS on it sometimes. That is the favorite answer of our network administrator to a tight problem – "you have to reinstall Windows". And that happened with me too quickly. I've downgraded to XP on my home laptop first, and that was RELIEF. I did not thought it will so good to return to XP, really. Machine became much more stable and faster. So, I did the same for my work PC, and now I'm happy with Windows Server 2003 on it.

What features I miss now

Quick boot time. Yes it really boots fairly quickly and when you log in it is not stalled by launching all your start up applications, but does it in background. On XP you should just wait.

Pictures rotation. Unexpectedly I found that my new camera + vista can rotate photo as it should be. I was surprised a much. That is really great feature and I really miss it now.

Screenshots. There is handy application that comes with Vista called Sniping Tool. I have been using it.

THAT IS ALL. I have used to side bar, but there is Google counterpart that can be run on XP. Window search that is built-in Vista also can be replaced by Google search.

Now when I look back I realize that it was bad experience. Yes, Vista looks good, but it performs worse than XP and no so stable. So I do not suggest upgrading to Vista, unless you have very simple PC config and is not rely on it much.


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Comments

November 10. 2007 13:24

Trackback from DotNetKicks.com

Do NOT upgrade to Vista

DotNetKicks.com

November 10. 2007 18:10

Interesting... I've been using Vista on my primary machine since it RTM'd, and the only issue I had was my printer didn't have drivers for a couple months untill Lexmark released them. If you remember when Windows 95 came out, all the same issues existed of hardware not having drivers since you needed new ones for Win95.

Chris Pietschmann

November 21. 2007 21:14

Weird, I've been using Vista heavily for about six months - I'm a software developer. Naturally I have to install many heavy software packages such as Visual Studio 2005 and 2008, Office 2007, SQL Server 2005, etc. I too was against upgrading to Vista at first, but my reasons were based only off of rumors, I never tried it for myself; when I purchased a new laptop recently (about six months ago), it came with Vista pre-installed so I grit my teeth and started playing around despite my better judgment. However, it came as a total shock to me that the OS ran great and I noticed these following advantages:

1) Much faster than my XP box with the same configuration and programs.

2) Faster boot and shutdown cycle.

3) Indexed file system search is blazingly fast.

4) I don't have to click on the start menu to launch programs (just hit <WinKey> and start typing the first few letters of your program name and <Enter>Wink.

5) Indexed file system search is awesome. I've literally searched for license keys in email messages and got the results in under two seconds (I've got tens of thousands of emails archived).

6) Scheduled tasks - I can make automated tasks; why doesn't XP have this?! I've scheduled incremental backups daily and full backups weekly.

7) The machine doesn't slow down over time like XP. That might change given that it's only been six months, but my XP boxes would start to slow after a month tops.

8) Defrag runs automatically on a schedule (by default it's every week, but you can turn this off) and in LPIO (Low Priority Input Output) mode (that means I can't tell it's running, so I can continue working without interruption).

9) Drivers have not been a problem for me, believe it or not (with the exception of the video driver not fully supporting OpenGL, but that's Fujitsu's fault since they didn't write the driver to support some OpenGL versions - Vista can't do anything about that; click <a href="gregs-blog.com/.../">
here</a> for more info. In fact, I've not had to install one driver for any external device (here's the corresponding hardware: two printers, one scanner, two mice, external USB hard drive, USB memory stick, and two digital cameras).

10) Media support on web pages is much better - there are no missing plugins I have to install.

11) All of Vista seems to be multi-threaded in a much better fashion. For example, you know how in XP you'll sometimes get a window that goes blank with an hour-glass and the title changes to "(not responding)"? In Vista this doesn't happen, all windows can always accept input even if they are processing something heavy.

12) File previewing in explorer is MUCH better than XP. It is the kind of preview in Mac OS.

I think I'm one of the lucky one's though. I've heard numerous stories where the experience was just the opposite of mine. I think it has something to do with hardware compatibility, driver compatibility, and generally how you setup your machine (and possibly how you tweak it). We'll have to wait for Service Pack 1 to know for sure; I'm pretty sure that'll fix most of the issues just like SP1 & SP2 fixed the numerous issues of XP and OSR2 fixed the issues of Win98. If I had the bad experiences that I've heard so much about, I wouldn't use Vista either.

But you know how it is with Microsoft - release crap at first, fix it later.

Greg Dolley

November 21. 2007 21:18

Damn, the link in my last post got messed up. Anyway, if you want to read about Fujitsu's crappy video driver problem, just go to http://gregs-blog.com and click on the November article entitled: "Certain Notebook ATI Video Card Drivers Not Supporting OpenGL 2.0 / How to Update Mobility Radeon Drivers."

Greg Dolley

December 5. 2007 03:08

Greg, yes, there are many good features in Vista too. And I agree with you that it runs ok for someone, perhaps my configuration was not that usual. When my Vista became unusable, I voted for Windows Server 2003 instead of reinstalling Vista again. When SP1 will be released I will install it again. Or perhaps will wait for Longorn server, it should better for work machine.

Vitaly Gorn

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