What is bad about windows vista


















Vista does this pretty well. Hard drive space is a non-issue. In fact, the percentage of the average hard drive used up by the Windows installation has declined with each major release, as the size of hard drives have increased faster than the size of the Windows installation. This site may earn affiliate commissions from the links on this page.

This was definitely the most secure OS that Microsoft had ever released but the price was user-hostile features such as UAC, a far more complicated set of security prompts that accompanied many basic tasks, and a host of software incompatibility issues. In other words, Vista broke a lot of the things that users were used to doing in XP. Security isn't even that big of an issue because XP SP2 and above are solid and most IT departments have it locked down quite well.

As I wrote in the article Prediction: Microsoft will leapfrog Vista, release Windows 7 early, and change its OS business , Microsoft needs to abandon the strategy of releasing a new OS every years and simply stick with a single version of Windows and release updates, patches, and new features on a regular basis. Most IT departments are essentially already on a subscription model with Microsoft so the business strategy is already in place for them.

As far as the subscription model goes for small businesses and consumers, instead of disabling Windows on a user's PC if they don't renew their subscription, just don't allow that machine to get any more updates if they don't renew. Then users would have the choice of renewing on their own after that.

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Developers, DevOps, or cybersecurity? Which is the top tech talent employers are looking for now? Usually, new software enables you to do more with your computer. Vista, though, is designed to restrict what you can do. DRM is more accurately called Digital Restrictions Management, because it is a technology that Big Media and computer companies try to impose on us all, in order to have control over how our computers are used.

Technology security expert Bruce Schneier explains it most concisely :. These features will make your computer less reliable and less secure.

They'll make your computer less stable and run slower. They will cause technical support problems. They may even require you to upgrade some of your peripheral hardware and existing software.

And these features won't do anything useful. In fact, they're working against you. They're digital rights management DRM features built into Vista at the behest of the entertainment industry—And you don't get to refuse them. DRM is enforced by technological barriers.

Which version was the right one for you? Microsoft offered no less than six editions, with different features, at various price points. To complicate things further, vendors had begun selling PCs supposedly compatible with Windows Vista before the OS's requirements solidified. After Vista's release, it became apparent the OS's actual hardware requirements would be much higher than initially estimated.

Vista-Capable, according to Microsoft and hardware manufacturers, didn't mean Vista-Compatible. Adding insult to injury, many hardware vendors took advantage of the opportunity—and Vista's upgraded driver model—to stop supporting products still on store shelves. The vast majority of people were stuck in a dilemma. If Vista demanded—but didn't offer—more than Windows XP, why upgrade? Did glassy windows and better search functionality justify replacing half your hardware?

Thus, they stuck with Windows XP. UAC was Microsoft's visual equivalent of Linux's sudo command, which allows the user to run commands and execute programs with elevated rights as an admin. However, unlike sudo, UAC didn't work with sessions or allow chaining multiple actions. Instead, it would repeatedly interrupt you and demand confirmation for what it deemed insecure, potentially hazardous actions—like browsing your C: drive.

Its real goal wasn't to protect the average user from nasty malware but to force developers to write better programs.

We kid you not. Vista had a sidebar for its widgets. And yet, why use it when you could move those widgets anywhere on your desktop? You could use your Flash Drive as an extension for your RAM to help programs load and perform faster. But why bother when actual benchmarks revealed the feature had negligible impact on real-world workloads?

In reality, the heavier use of the paging file compared to XP worked as evidence Vista's RAM management wasn't as "smart" as Microsoft believed.

In theory, Vista's approach could work if we all used our PCs in precisely the same way daily. But, evidently, we usually don't. In another misstep, Microsoft didn't communicate clearly to the average consumer this new resource-usage paradigm.

Today Vista is considered one of the worst versions of Windows, and as we saw, justifiably saw. It's hard to love an OS with features designed to annoy you. Still, Vista was also where many Windows features we take for granted were introduced.



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