I got this down the Apple pipeline, worth a read. Debate encouraged!
I am still debating selling Vista. Don't ask me about the date (3.12?)


Dim Vista
Stephen Manes 03.12.07


Windows Vista: more than five years in the making, more than 50 million
lines of code. The result? A vista slightly more inspiring than the one over
the town dump. The new slogan is: "The 'Wow' Starts Now," and Microsoft
touts new features, many filched shamelessly from Apple's Macintosh. But as
with every previous version, there's no wow here, not even in ironic quotes.
Vista is at best mildly annoying and at worst makes you want to rush to
Redmond, Washington and rip somebody's liver out.

Vista is a fading theme park with a few new rides, lots of patched-up old
ones and bored kids in desperate need of adult supervision running things.
If I can find plenty of problems in a matter of hours, why can't Microsoft ?
Most likely answer: It did--and it doesn't care.

Example: If malware somehow gets into your machine, Windows Firewall will
not stop it from making outbound Internet connections to do its evil deeds.
If you turn off that firewall in favor of a better one, the Windows Firewall
control panel will admonish: "Your computer is not protected; turn on
Windows Firewall." But the Windows Security Center will correctly tell you
that a firewall is on and that you shouldn't run two at a time. Call it
convistancy.

Gaffes like this make you wonder if security really is improved as much as
Microsoft claims. You'll still have to add your own antivirus software, a
new Vista-ready version at that. And Vista's irritating and repeated
warnings about possible security breaches don't always mean what they say
and are usually irrelevant. You'll take them as seriously as the boy who
cried wolf, making them useless as defensive tools.

As usual, things Microsoft was touting last time have mysteriously gone away
in favor of putative new wonders. Windows XP's heralded "task-based
interface" often let you perform actions by picking them from a list. Now
many of those actions have disappeared--except where they haven't.

Likewise, Control Panel options have been totally rejiggered yet again for
no apparent reason. You can still use the Classic panel view that's been
available since time immemorial, but several items have been confusingly
renamed out of sheer perversity.

The new desktop search features are a mess, thanks in part to inscrutable
indexing defaults and options. A "quick search" panel at the bottom of the
Start menu lets you find results, whether in a file's name or its contents.
But on one machine--oddly, the fastest I tested--it was far, far slower than
using Start's regular search option. Though that option finds folders like
Accessories, quick search doesn't always. And if you click away to do
something else while you wait for answers, Vista abandons the "quick search"
and makes you start over.

Windows Mail is a mild reworking of Outlook Express whose big new feature is
a spam filter that in my tests flagged nonspam as spam and vice versa an
unacceptable 10% of the time. The bare-bones word processor WordPad used to
be able to open Microsoft Word files. No more. What possible rationale could
there be for "fixing" that, except to force users to shell out for the real
thing?

Potentially exciting improvements keep coming up short. The speech
recognition system's clever design lets you control the computer via voice
and dictate into programs like Word. It did pretty well at understanding me
even when I used a less than optimal built-in microphone instead of a
headset. But my enthusiasm turned to dust when the software for correcting
inevitable mistakes locked up repeatedly--even when it understood what I was
saying.

Many touted improvements, like the Web browser and media player, have been
available for XP for months. One minor winner is Vista-only: file lists that
update their contents automatically. You no longer have to hit View and
Refresh to see files added since you last opened the list window. Macs, of
course, have done this for years.

The new Mac-like ability to show thumbnails of documents and running
programs is cute, but it doesn't always work--typical of a level of fit and
finish that would be unacceptable from a cut-rate tailor. Only in
Windowsland will you find howlers like a Safely Remove Hardware button for
memory card readers that happen to be hardwired into your computer.

Still with us: program crashes, followed by the machine's refusal to shut
down until you lean on the power button awhile. Thereafter you may be
subjected to ugly white-on-black text from CHKDSK, a DOS-era program that
issues baffling new reports like "44 reparse records processed."

Should you upgrade your current machine? Are you nuts? Upgrading is almost
always a royal pain. Many older boxes are too wimpy for Vista, and a
"Vista-ready" unit Microsoft upgraded for me could see my wireless network
but not connect to it. The diagnostics helpfully reported "Wireless
association failed due to an unknown reason" and suggested I consult my
"network administrator"--me. Yet I've connected dozens of things to that
network, including other Vista machines, a PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's own
Xbox 360.

My recommendation: Don't even consider updating an old machine to Vista,
period. And unless you absolutely must, don't buy a new one with Vista until
the inevitable Service Pack 1 (a.k.a. Festival o' Fixes) arrives to combat
horrors as yet unknown.

I suggested to one Windows product manager that if the company were truly
serious about security, Vista might offer a simple way to delete files
securely and eliminate all traces of identity and passwords so you could
safely pass the machine on or sell it years from now. His reply: "Does any
other operating system do that?" That tells you all you need to know about
Microsoft. The real slogan: "No innovation here."

As Bill Gates winds down his roles at Microsoft, Windows Vista may be the
chief software architect's swan song. It's a shame his legacy is something
so utterly unimaginative, internally discordant and woefully out of tune.

Stephen Manes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is cohost of PC World's Digital Duo, which
appears weekly on public television. Visit his home page at
www.forbes.com/manes.


-- 
Regards,
 joeuser - Still looking for the 'any' key...

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