Originally posted by: soonerproud
Out of the box I can think of several things that Vista can do that XP can't.
1. (Superfetch) Intelligently cache your programs according to your usage patterns.
There is no way it can predict what I am going to use.
Hell, half the time I don't know myself till I click it.
2. Provide better security. Vista comes with a better firewall, a more secure kernel, better security defaults, (IE7 protected mode for example) and it has Windows Defender built into the system.
All useless to me.
I have a linux firewall.
Don't run bit torrent garbage.
And am very careful what I install on my pc and its source.
3. Richer Multimedia experience. Vista has improved multimedia tools compared to XP. DVD Maker, Media Center, Media Player, Movie Maker and Photo Gallery are all improved upon compared to their XP counterparts. Only WMP 11 is ported over to XP. Even then it is missing some of the polish and functionality the Vista version has.
Multimedia garbage is what it has. All those apps are pretty bad compared to commercial alternatives.
Even some of the freeware out there is better by leaps and bounds than the MS defaults.
4. Better desktop search. XP's default desktop search blows compared to Vista's. Sure you can add that functionality to XP at a huge cost to system resources. Vista's is integrated into the OS and does not consume the level of resources the software for XP does.
uhm ok. But I have never lost anything on my pc that I couldn't find.
Maybe I'm just better organized than most.
5. Better maintenance tools. Disk defragmenter now allows you to schedule regular defrags. Task Scheduler is way more robust and much easier to use. Windows Update no longer requires IE to run. Disk Cleanup provides more options than XP does for deleting files. And of course there is Windows Defender again.
Disk defrag in vista is still poor. Try perfect disk for something that works like a defrag should.
The thing I notice over and over from the above is that none of that is really the OS, except maybe superfetch.
Those are all things that are addons to the kernel.
Extra programs installed along with the OS.
All I want is a windows that provides an interface to the hardware.
I don't want my os to decide my email, browser, multimedia apps, etc.
All vista has succeeded in doing is tying the MS bundled applications even more into the system.
Look way back to win95.
Overlooking the problems it had, it did have one thing going for it.
It supported the software development community and freedom of choice.
Win95 was more your basic OS.
People sought out media players, browsers, email, word processors, etc.
Why ? because the os didn't come with any pre-installed, except maybe ie.
MS is just pushing the monopoly further with vista, calling bundled apps, part of the core os.
Why do you think sites like nlite are so popular ?
I still have vista installed as dual boot.
I think it would be a fine OS, provided you could strip out 75% of what MS bundled into it.