Tweakguides.com: Breath of Fresh Air

I finally got around to reading this juicy, albeit lengthy, Tweakguide.com article, Vista Annoyances Resolved, last night in which Koroush Ghazi takes an objective view of Windows Vista from inception to its current state. You see, like a lot of us, Koroush is tired of reading, in his (assuming he's a he) words, "what can only be described as a plethora of articles on Windows Vista, almost all of them repetitive, one-sided and of little practical use." The main driver of this type of FUD is the hunger for traffic. If sex sells on TV and in advertising, bashing Windows Vista sells on the internet. As the article points out this has resulted in what the  New York times coined as "blog stress" to refer to the never ending need to break company news and expose corporate blunders, mostly unsubstantiated.

So what I find refreshing about this article is, it attempts to provide a blow by blow of reviews and articles that reveal the good, the bad ... and the ugly. All of his claims and opinions are backed up by articles, reports, and data readily available to anyone with some time on their hands and is familiar with this thing called the Internet. For the conspiracy theorists out there, Microsoft has no relationship with Koroush beyond that fact that he uses our products. He includes a full disclaimer on page 3.

Some of the "neat" stuff Koroush points out are things we are pretty proud of, especially the security enhancements in Windows Vista. There's been an ongoing debate whether or not it's actually better than XP. Koroush unearths some numbers:

In a comparison of Vista and XP security advisories issued by Microsoft between November 2006 and July 2008, Windows XP had 64 advisories rated Critical or Important, whereas Vista had 33 of the same type. Similarly, comparing the advisories issued by Secunia in 2008 Windows XP had 35% of its advisories rated Highly Critical or above, compared with Windows Vista's 29%. In fact as of late August 2008 XP still shows 30 unpatched security advisories, the highest one rated Moderately Critical; Vista shows 2 unpatched security advisories, the highest one rated Less Critical.

There's also been some speculation that XP's adoption curve and reception was much faster and more favorable than Windows Vista.  We understand that people get tired of Microsoft constantly saying "Vista is great! Vista is selling like hot cakes!" (it is, by the way!), which is why it's great to see Koroush point out that there is evidence out there to demonstrate that Windows Vista is on the right track. It's also refreshing to see that Koroush kept an open mind and took the time to understand what normal adoption rates look like.  

The above information is provided simply to demonstrate that Windows XP was subject to the exact same types of criticisms and concerns as Windows Vista, many of them totally baseless or sensationalist as we now know. It took roughly three years or more for XP to reach the point (SP2) where users began to start trusting it, and started blaming their errors and problems on things other than the OS itself.

He also outlines some very creative solutions to common issues he's noticed users may be hitting up against like slower than desired performance or driver support. While we appreciate his efforts, we don't recommend or endorse the tweaks included in the article.

Like I said, the article is long, but it's full of interesting information, tips and tricks for the PC users. And again, it's great to see that there is a cure for blog stress...


Comments

  1. Posted on: September 04, 2008 at 8:28AM  

    Yesterday i have tested XP X64 edition. WOW, now that's what i call an good OS. X64 is the future. Anyone can tell us something about vista X64? It is better? Solved the driver related issues?

    Best regards. ed

  2. Posted on: September 04, 2008 at 4:52PM  

    I've been using Vista X64 on two HP laptops for several months, and haven't had any problems at all.  HP has provided the 64 bit drivers for everything, including the tablet digitizer and fingerprint reader on the tablet PC. I've NOT found anything that wouldn't run on X64, with the exception of Cisco VPN client but they say they will never support Vista X64.  One laptop has 2 gigs of ram, the tablet has 3 gigs, and both run great.  Use both for multitasking a lot, picture editing, video editing, listening to music, surfing the web, etc.

    No complaints about Vista here, either 32 bit or 64 bit version.

  3. Posted on: September 05, 2008 at 3:19PM  

    How did this end up an XP-Vista arguement?

    Vista works well on great hardware

    XP works Great on all hardware!

    that is that..

  4. Posted on: September 06, 2008 at 12:57AM  

    the vista vs xp is actually part of the initial post, almost half! A lot of peaple without heaps of computer science under their belt rely on things like tweakguide to provide better service to clients, not all working in the industry are MSCE! Also not all hardware works under XP and some only partially. (anyone else got old 98 hardware under the house?) so just-etc- that is not that. configuring the os to run according to specific needs is somthing that a lot of end users need all the help they can get. thankyou to everyone that takes time to share their knowledge and make computer use more enjoyable for the rest of us.

  5. Posted on: September 09, 2008 at 4:43AM  

    Great article I finally read all of it. It's really a fresh unbiased view of how things really are. If you check a few posts back you'll note that I have been saying for a long time that XP and Vista adoption rates are very similiar, and even leaning in favor of Vista.

  6. Posted on: September 09, 2008 at 8:55AM  

    No, i dont work for Microsoft. That isnt to say i wouldnt consider it a great honor.

    Call me a "butt kisser" if you want. The fact remains that I recently deployed over 500 new machines at a new facility and did not have one single VISTA related problem. Dell sent a couple DOA machines, HP sent a couple DOA printers. The new ability to Vista to hop HAL's was trememdously helpful because we had 3 different form factors to deal with, all with differneces enough to hose an XP image trying to hop from one to the other. Not Vista, though. Lets not forget that it was all done using WinPE 2.1 which is run off the core of Vistas kernel.

    If you know what you are doing, Vista is a great OS. There is a slight learning curve for those coming from XP, but then again if everything was identical it wouldnt be a newer OS. Self-healing NTFS, scheduled defrags, volume shadow services, synch manager and a plethora of other options that come standard on Vista have reduced quite a few problems and saved us lots of time, in my IT Dept.

    The only "problem" we HAVE had, is that the company who's programs we use for a DB interface wont update their code to work in conjunction with UAC. Its not MS's fault, its the fault of the software maker who violated MS's instructions on where to set user-editable files when they are run as a user. Its NOT Microsofts fault when every software programmer is sloppy and wants a user to run as admin 100% of the time.

  7. Posted on: September 10, 2008 at 8:05AM  

    okay look. i dont know any of this high end techinical stuff,  i'm a regular computer user who's just trying to get my work done, and windows vista has been a source of no end of annoyance and irritation since the day i got it.  It keeps asking me unneccessary questions, windows keep popping up when i'm trying to do something in a hurry, all of my favourite programmes have some sort of compatibility issue with vista and worst of all, its slower than xp on a pc that's 3 times more powerful then my old platform.  My dad cant open hisbank websites, my mum cant install her favourite games and I cant even figure out where the damned print button is in ms office 2007.  Its bloody unwieldy, hard to use and troublesome.  I've actually been AVOIDING using my new pc since i got it because it has so many compatibility issues. XP never had problems like this.  Hell, dos never had problems like this.

    Look there's no point creating a fancy "secure" programme if i cant even use it without yanking half my hair out.  Windows vista needs some serious fixing. And real quick.  Right after i type this i'm going out to the pc shop to try and find a retail version of xp, because i can take this crap anymore.

    Take your technical geekspeak elsewhere, the rest of us just want a pc that WORKS.

  8. Posted on: September 11, 2008 at 2:21PM  

    Vista does work. Don't insult those responsible enough to learn how to use their machine.

    You dont goto the grocery store and buy a pack of chicken and the chicken cooks itself for you. You dont buy a car and the car drive itself. You learn to cook, you learn to drive. In the same way you should learn to properly operate and maintain a computer operating system and your experience wouldnt be so unsatisfactory.

    99% of computer problems are end-user related. Think about that.

  9. Posted on: September 11, 2008 at 6:14PM  

    "99% of computer problems are end-user related."

    That's simply a cop-out. An operating system should make things transparent for it to succeed. Your grocery analogy isn't quite right. A better analogy would be that you go to the car dealership, but are then forced to change the tires, wire the radio, and tune the engine yourself to get it to work right.

    If this were 20 years ago, then yes. That was expected. But to really have gotten nobetter off than we were then is really a knock to Microsoft and the only thing us customer are to blame is that we've accepted this sad state of affairs as the norm. I should not be expected to understand my OS in order to get my job done. That is the entire point of the OS.

    You don't see people hacking and tuning a Mac to work. It just works out of the box. That's progress. Vista is the same as XP is the same as 2000 is the same as...DOS really. If Vista had autoexec and config.bat files, I'm sure we'd be having to tweak those still too.

  10. Posted on: September 11, 2008 at 7:56PM  

    KnoxITPro,

    I cannot believe that you deployed 500 machines and didn't have one single problem with Vista. If you did, you'd be in the guiness book of records. Just the IE compatability issues ALONE would have caused some problems.

    Anyone else care to claim a 500+ user OS deployment of Vista that didn't have ANY OS problems whatsoever? Anyone? EVERY computer install of that size is going to have SOME kind of issue.

    Anyone else dare to claim that 99% of the computer problems are caused by end-users? Only 1% is caused Vista?

    If this is indeed true, then please provide us the link to your deployment whitepapers and process. The Microsoft Consolting Services and their Critical Situations (critsit) team will be knocking at your door to get you hired because you've achieved what nobody else on the planet has been able to do.

    Bottom line: prove it.