I haven't been running Vista but I was just looking at the latest PC 
Magazine.  I'm reading the “Vista: The Essential Guide” (January 2007) 
and it's full of confusing contradictory information. BTW, this is a 
“double issue” but somehow, it still feels light compared to what it was 
historically.

We start with the “First Word” by Jim Louderback. He starts his article 
off with the statement “Our long,national nightmare is over!” I'm sure 
he had a grin on when he wrote that.

Louderback was interviewing Jim Allchin about Vista. Allchin stated 
“It's preordained that we are moving to 64 bits. I cannot predict how 
long it will take, but we will get there.” Louderback reports that 
Allchin believes “that with Vista, the time is now.” Okay. I'm confused. 
Are we now at 64 bits or not with Vista? Are all of the driver 
manufacturers delivering 64 bit versions? We'll have to see what kind of 
fallout this is going to have in the public sector.

Louderback goes on speaking with Allchin about IPv6. Louderback states 
“Why go IPv6? Better quality of service, better connectivity, and the 
death of NAT.” Is the death of NAT a good thing? I wouldn't want all of 
my machines to have a public IP address and be addressable from the 
outside world. This puts too great a of a burden on my firewall. NAT is 
a great tool (one of many) in protecting my machines from attack. Is 
there something that is going to take it's place?

Looking deeper into the magazine we have to differing opinions from 
Michael J. Miller and Bill Machrone. Miller states “Though long overdue, 
Vista offers some impressive features. The graphics finally takes 
advantage of the hardware that most PCs have had for quite some time.” 
The very next page (after the Matrox advertisement) Machrone states 
“Don't upgrade to Vista – Buy a new computer instead. To get all the 
performance that Vista has to offer, chances are somewhere between good 
and excellent that the system now on your desk isn't going to deliver.” 
He goes on later to state “... opt for the gut-level improvements” “That 
means hardware that can deliver more than a new graphics card and an 
additional gig of RAM”

I think Machrone is more on the mark on this subject. Don't bother 
upgrading an old machine. It's time for a brand new one, even a machine 
that might not exist yet. It feels like Vista is targeted for a machine 
that isn't on the mass market. Who wants to run Vista on a machine that 
was designed for high-end gamers?

It feels like we're in a “tweener” stage here. We're moving away from XP 
and the $1K hardware, and moving into an area where we're not going to 
be happy with hardware and OS performance for a year or so to come.

-Kevin

Kevin Cully
CULLY Technologies, LLC

Sponsor of Fox Forward 2006!
http://foxforward.net


john harvey wrote:
> Has anyone been running Vista? If so, what are your experiences? What
> version should a developer be using? I am going ahead with enrollment in the
> empower program, so I guess I'll just use the Vista that comes with the MSDN
> Universal subscription.
> 
> John Harvey
> 
> 
> 
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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