Jay,

I have Vista Home Basic and yesterday (at long last) the auto update gave me 
SP1.

If may be early days but SP1 seems fine to me - as has Vista from when I bought 
my new PC almost 18 months ago.

IMHO it seems to me that the problems that users have had is with upgrading old 
hardware running XP to Vista. I reckon that upgrading PCs - right back from the 
start of Windows - has been problematical. Back in the late '90s at work we 
began only upgrading the OS when a new PC was purchased and it solved lots of 
problems.

Clearly, there are going to be problems with people seeing the cost of hardware 
(even though it's cheaper now) as too much to warrant upgrading the OS. Indeed, 
that's why I hung on with W98SE for so long. I wished then that I could have 
afforded to buy new hardware earlier and, with hindsight now, even more so. 
Nevertheless, if you can't afford it...

As for compatibility with older programs there are, as I see it, two types of 
problem. Firstly there the things that are never going to be upgraded - old 
multi-media CDs, DOS-based games, that sort of thing - which cost money at the 
time and cannot (always) be used on newer equipment. Then there is the 
replacement of programs that can, fairly easily, be upgrade to a current 
version. Cost may well be a factor but, while the supplier is still active, you 
are likely to get a better product. (Definitely so with RBTI.)

For me, I suspect that some sort of switch in the OS could be used to remove 
support for whatever compatibility with old hardware & software could be 
incorporated. I suppose that happens to some extent anyway but not at the 
kernel level?

That said, I still regularly use a DOS box for file movements as it's so much 
easier with a BAT file. With MikeB's help I'm moving forward but it's slow and 
time's at a premium. If there were some easy way in Windows to program the old 
DOS type of operations then that would be very useful. There's not the time to 
learn all the programming and it keeps changing anyway. I knew a bit of BASIC, 
I could write macros in DOS versions of Word but Visual Basic and beyond is too 
much to have to learn _properly_ and I just dabble. R:Base is different because 
it's changed relatively slowly as far as the commands' syntax is concerned - 
bit by bit is easy to keep up with and I like doing it.

Regards,
Alastair.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jay Ward 
  To: RBASE-L Mailing List 
  Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2008 3:55 AM
  Subject: [RBASE-L] - Somewhat off list topic -- Vista


  The last few items on the list have been about DOS and Vista compatibility so 
I have a few questions for the group.

   

  1.    We accept the fact that 7.5 has gone away since a majority of us are 
using 7.5.  Why can't we accept the fact that Microsoft should not go back for 
generations and create as much compatibility as possible?

  2.   Mac is a great system but compatibility isn't always there.  Why should 
Microsoft create compatibility?

   

  I ask these questions for several reasons.  On Dec. 17 the formal beta for 
Win 7 is now due and it seems to be a good date.  When the beta for Vista came 
out it ran fast, booted in under 15 seconds (64-bit version) and basically had 
no drivers.  Over 2MM lines of code later we have Vista SP1 and we all complain 
about it.  What would happen if Microsoft released Win 7 as incompatible but 
fast and solid, which I think Vista is?  Would we accept it.  We are all caught 
in looking backward and not keeping up at times.  MAC has somewhere in the 
neighborhood of 1000 drivers.  Vista is now up beyond 30,000 drivers to stay 
compatible.  Do you think it is time to redo the system and make it small, fast 
and stable regardless?

   

  I only ask these questions since I will have Win 7 on the 18th of December if 
the date holds as I think it will and I do have some input into their planning. 
 What say you?



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