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 11, 2008 at 8:08PM  

    and before you start in on me, I manage a 3050 user environment which currently has about 300 Vista machines deployed. I like Vista too, but your claim of zero problems did not match ours. We had many issues, especially before the service pack was released. Why do you think they release service packs? Because there are no problems?

  2. Posted on: September 12, 2008 at 1:19PM  

    Lets clear a few things up.

    These were ~500 machines with Vista preinstalled from Dell. Machines designed to run Vista. Plenty of hardware.

    I wiped the Dell vista install, and performed my own clean SP1 OEM install. Set up Office 2007, Firefox, some other small applications. Loaded all available windows and office updates. Sysprep'd the box, captured using imagex and deployed the 500 boxes using imagex.

    I hopped hardware several times to laptop models and a couple desktop variations. No, there was not a problem from VISTA. The only problem with an application we had was an web based oracle interface application that swaps data locally in some files, those files requested to write to program files as an administrator. In the end, it was the shortfall of the company who wrote this software, not Vista.

    IE Compatibility problems? Vista comes with IE7, and none of the updates failed or caused other issues. So what are you talking about?

    We had Dell hardware failures. We had DOA HP Printers. We had bad cat6 runs. We had ZERO problems that were flat out caused by Vista itself. Im not lying, I have no reason to lie. Microsoft isnt going to pay me to write this blog post, im not Jerry Seinfeld.

    Our environment isnt quite as locked down and doesnt use as many third party software apps as a lot of you probably do.

    I'm not quite sure why so many people are so anti-Vista. So far its worked well for me and in my job. I would venture to say that perhaps some companies need to hire systems administrators that are able to roll with the changes and learn to use a new OS.

    IEATPOI - Actually you are wrong. Nearly every day do we come across situations where Windows or Microsoft technologies simply trump Apple all around. Our tickets are about 70/30 Apple/Windows. That should say a lot.

    Apple deloyment is decades behind that of Windows, and thats a big one when you have sites of several hundred machines.

    Also, while you dont interface directly with the OS, you do need to know how to interface with its features. Do you hire a mechanic to change your radio station? Or expect your radio to do it on its own? You ask a mechanic to change a timing belt, the same way you ask Vista to defrag at XYZ timeframe, or whatever other setting. You cant blame the OS or its features when you yourself are unexperienced and unwilling to do your end of it.

  3. Posted on: September 15, 2008 at 10:49AM  

    Ok.

    I found an error for you. The one and only error out of nearly 600 vista machines.

    Upon sysprep'ing a Dell D530 Latitude laptop, to image over to ~60 others. The Intel 945 Video adapter driver somehow uninstalled itself. Like within 3 seconds of the sysprep shutdown.

    Is this a Vista issue, or an Intel issue? No real way to tell without digging for an answer. But ill let you guys place the lame on Vista.

    But wait...as soon as the image is applied and the box runs the setup routine and logs in, windows update finds the driver and asks to install it within seconds. So even though Vista messed up, shouldnt we give it credit for rectifying the situation before I even had time to?

  4. Posted on: October 10, 2008 at 7:39PM  

    Good article.

    good luck

  5. Posted on: January 13, 2009 at 5:42PM  

    Photo1921: Thank you for trying to save the up arrow. That is my single biggest obstacle to productivity in using Vista. Breadcrumbs are worse than useless. Microsoft, you trained millions of users to use PCs in a specific way. People are hating having to unlearn the behaviors you instilled in them to begin with - that is where so much of this Vista hatred comes from, in my experience.

    Some other annoyances:

    No XP-Style Start Menu: I seriously have to go back to the 2000-era "Classic" as my only option? WTF? I hate the loss of fly-out menus, but I like the double-column Vista menu. Why can't we have options?

    Changing the icon for "Show Desktop" without any warning. I discovered it accidentally days after using Vista.

    UAC's been beat to the ground already, so I won't go into detail here.

    Refresh icon on IE7 is moved and altered for no good reason. Again, a bit of scavenger hunting required here. Changes to fix flaws or improve user flow is one thing, but moving a perfectly good icon from one place to another place on the same horizontal line (and altering its appearance) doesn't enhance anything - it's just change for the sake of change. Again.

    Shut Down options hiding behind an icon. Initial mis-clicks made me frequently unhappy. Thank god Windows 7 seems to be fixing this one.

    I don't like that the little network icon in the taskbar don't flash when transmitting data anymore. That was a nice visual way to communicate information without requiring any clicking or input from the user.

    Too much work to change the system date and time.

    The next ones are not Vista per se, but also Microsoft design failures:

    Windows Media Player attempting to "sync" with every flash drive I ever plug in, as if WMP is a horny puppy and my USB Stick is a leg. Syncing is stupid. Windows is showing Apple envy, and that's just wrong.

    Ribbon Menus in Office. Where is the what again? Why did unicorns invade my PC? Nothing is where it should be. The second largest productivity killer in my new computer experience.

    So that I'm not perceived as all doom-and-gloom, here's some things I really have come to love:

    Moving the user folders to C:\Users. At first disconcerting, but this is an example of a change that made so much sense after getting used to it.

    Also, the new solitaire games and Purble Palace are cool.

    You die hard IT guys may not like it, but you all helped make computers this ubiquitous. It's not all the fault of users being too ignorant to learn their tools. Unskilled users believe the corporate hype that PCs are easy to use and understand. Since Microsoft created so much of that expectation, it has a responsibility to deliver.

  6. Posted on: January 23, 2009 at 9:56AM  

    I've had Windows Vista Business for a few years and have never had a serious problem with it yet.   The only issue at first was 'drivers' and thats been true of ever new version of Windows.  I was pleased with how many drivers the Win 7 Beta  automatically installed during my installation.  Far better than older programs did.