D
Dan
I am certainly looking forward to the future in computing. There will be so
many opportunities and sky computing certainly looks more promising now as
time goes on. However, I for one am a guy who likes old-school computing
while enjoying new computing as well when it is needed to accomplish the task
at hand. Windows Vista has been available for a while now and now we also
have Windows Vista Service Pack 1 and soon will have Windows 7. Meanwhile,
the browser wars are really heating up and Google has gotten into the act
with its Chrome browser which I have not bothered to try out yet but know I
will eventually try it out on the Windows XP Professional side of my
multi-boot computer and/or maybe on Windows Vista Home Premium (32 bit) in my
laptop computer. I find it annoying that if users buy a new computer so many
of us have to deal with junk that is installed on the computer by default and
it certainly makes me want to go and buy a retail copy of the operating
system and not just deal with an oem version or a defunct and problematic
image of the operating system. In my case, with the Toshiba Laptop computer
the problem falls in my opinion clearly on Toshiba in this case because I
sent it in and the laptop computer was repaired and returned but I had issues
with it upon return. Anyway, I called up Toshiba support and used their cds
to install Windows Vista Home Premium again and it almost installed correctly
but had errors tied with trying to install Microsoft Works on the computer
but that was the only error. Toshiba has now sent me new cds and I will
eventually try again but certainly not now because I am just tired and
annoyed at using the oem version and am about ready to go out and buy a
retail upgrade copy of Windows Vista. The question now is I guess I will try
1 more time to correctly install the Windows Vista Home Premium oem and then
finally get a retail version so I do not have to deal with all the associated
crapware on the machine which is now just about 13 months old. I find time
certainly does fly especially in the world of technology. Finally, I wanted
to send my thanks to everyone in this newsgroup for all of their great
contributions and say Long Live Windows 98 Second Edition which remains my
number 1 operating system and yes my opinion is Microsoft did get it wrong by
choosing the business NT source code instead of the 9x source code but I can
see that Microsoft has a good chance to get it right in the future when their
new operating system based on their new source code is release. Note: It
will not be Windows 7 because this will still be NT based although I know
from Steve Riley, MSFT comments that much of the NT source code has been
reworked and rewritten, the underlying problem in my opinion, is that it
comes down to the foundation of a problematic code that is too limited in
computing nowadays which will indeed eventually thankfully be replaced and NT
finally put to rest and hopefully that will solve many problems. The
question I pose to all of you is will Microsoft be able to have an
all-one-solution with one source code or is it indeed needed that there be
again a business source code and a home based source code that despite the
added cost and complexity is necessary in today's computing environment or is
it just not needed anymore?
many opportunities and sky computing certainly looks more promising now as
time goes on. However, I for one am a guy who likes old-school computing
while enjoying new computing as well when it is needed to accomplish the task
at hand. Windows Vista has been available for a while now and now we also
have Windows Vista Service Pack 1 and soon will have Windows 7. Meanwhile,
the browser wars are really heating up and Google has gotten into the act
with its Chrome browser which I have not bothered to try out yet but know I
will eventually try it out on the Windows XP Professional side of my
multi-boot computer and/or maybe on Windows Vista Home Premium (32 bit) in my
laptop computer. I find it annoying that if users buy a new computer so many
of us have to deal with junk that is installed on the computer by default and
it certainly makes me want to go and buy a retail copy of the operating
system and not just deal with an oem version or a defunct and problematic
image of the operating system. In my case, with the Toshiba Laptop computer
the problem falls in my opinion clearly on Toshiba in this case because I
sent it in and the laptop computer was repaired and returned but I had issues
with it upon return. Anyway, I called up Toshiba support and used their cds
to install Windows Vista Home Premium again and it almost installed correctly
but had errors tied with trying to install Microsoft Works on the computer
but that was the only error. Toshiba has now sent me new cds and I will
eventually try again but certainly not now because I am just tired and
annoyed at using the oem version and am about ready to go out and buy a
retail upgrade copy of Windows Vista. The question now is I guess I will try
1 more time to correctly install the Windows Vista Home Premium oem and then
finally get a retail version so I do not have to deal with all the associated
crapware on the machine which is now just about 13 months old. I find time
certainly does fly especially in the world of technology. Finally, I wanted
to send my thanks to everyone in this newsgroup for all of their great
contributions and say Long Live Windows 98 Second Edition which remains my
number 1 operating system and yes my opinion is Microsoft did get it wrong by
choosing the business NT source code instead of the 9x source code but I can
see that Microsoft has a good chance to get it right in the future when their
new operating system based on their new source code is release. Note: It
will not be Windows 7 because this will still be NT based although I know
from Steve Riley, MSFT comments that much of the NT source code has been
reworked and rewritten, the underlying problem in my opinion, is that it
comes down to the foundation of a problematic code that is too limited in
computing nowadays which will indeed eventually thankfully be replaced and NT
finally put to rest and hopefully that will solve many problems. The
question I pose to all of you is will Microsoft be able to have an
all-one-solution with one source code or is it indeed needed that there be
again a business source code and a home based source code that despite the
added cost and complexity is necessary in today's computing environment or is
it just not needed anymore?