Heretic_Cata
We're gonna live forever
I think first you have to find out someone who can explain why you should get Vista.
Good luck with that tho.
Good luck with that tho.

I've looked, and can't find where I picked that up. But I will say that that is at least implied in Microsoft's own pronouncements, including its longest suicide note inhistory. (To be honest, I am actually amazed that you were able to get quality CDs/DVDs out of Vista. But maybe you weren't trying for high quality.)Wow - Stop making stuff up.
I've ripped and burned CDs with built-in Windows Media Player. And for the hell of it, I just installed DVD Decrypter and ripped my Batman Begins DVD. Granted WMP can't play DVDs in folders like that, but VLC works. Afterwards I used HandBrake (search the Doom9 forums) to convert the .vob files to x264, which also happily plays in VLC.
So where's your proof that CD ripping/burning, DVD conversion doesn't work on Vista?
We pop in a DVD and hit play. It seemed to be a little sluggish. So we pop out of full screen mode to check the process list and mfpmp.exe (the DRM CRAP) was chewing up 30% CPU and I suspect interfering with playing. So we trying using both Media Player Classic and VLC, no better maybe even worse. I told him that it could be because Windows is recognizing that the disk is a copy. So we check out some of his DV. I showed him how to pull DV off his camcorder and save it as xvids a year ago to prevent him from getting into format hell. OUCH what a load a crap! HIS VIDEO, his PRIVATE, made for his use by his self, he owns the copyrights pulls up the mfpmp.exe chewing up HIS CPU FOR HIS PERSONAL FILES! That gets me thinking well maybe its because it is an unsanctioned (by M$ point of view) codec so I ask him if he ever played with Windows Movie Creator and saved a couple of files. He says sure, and we dig in his drive to find them. We pull it up in Windows Media Player and AGAIN!!! mfpmp.exe is started and chewing up his CPU. I shake my head. I hate to see what people end up doing with Office 2007 and that headache of DRM.
No native support for OpenGL - to be seen how the ATI or Nvidia drivers do in enabling it.
Throw away your Digital Speakers you will not get any sound out of them
Upgrade your display to the most expensive in order to view any DRM content
Upgrade to at least 1 GB RAM most likely you should upgrade to 2GB to leave room for your applications
Upgrade to a FAST video card with at least 256MB of display memory, 6600GT as a realistic minimum. (Caveat 6xxx series might not support HDCP so could prevent you from viewing HD content. It does support WMV-HD. I couldn't find anything that listed if it does or not specifically.)
The ONLY card in Nvidia's lineup that currently SPECIFICALLY SAYS Supports HDCP and Windows Vista is the 8800 which is also DX10.
WMP supports ripping to WMA (variety of bitrates including lossless), MP3 up to 320 kbps, and plain WAV (which is also lossless). DVD Decrypter removes CSS protection from DVDs but does not touch the video itself, and HandBrake and the underlying x264 encoders are GPLed and multiplatform. Thus the quality of my converted DVDs are dependent on the quality of the OSS converters, and not on any aspect of Vista. (As an aside, I can also use a win32 port of dd to rip .isos).I've looked, and can't find where I picked that up. But I will say that that is at least implied in Microsoft's own pronouncements, including its longest suicide note inhistory. (To be honest, I am actually amazed that you were able to get quality CDs/DVDs out of Vista. But maybe you weren't trying for high quality.)
Here's something I *am* aware of. I had this little interchange with someone who had the dubious pleasure of helping a friend install Vista, on a slightly older machine (P4/512M RAM/GeForce 4MX 64MB card):
From everything I can see, if you are a serious gamer, with a top-of-the-line system, you probably won't notice Vista's crap, too much. But if you want to play "premium content" video, you had better have a very expensive HDMI-cap[able monitor, AND an HDMI-capable video card. No cheap stuff. And don't forget, that the ubiquitous, industry-standard SPDIF digital audio connectors DON'T work! They are disabled by the DRM system!
To get "Rich Media" you are going to need to be really "RICH" to afford it. I just checked Dell and HP and neither are selling systems with XP anymore. They don't offer SPDIF speakers, only analog speakers, and HP only has one monitor the 19" widescreen that can display HDCP media. Dell all the 20" or higher displays can.
So in order to use HD video you have to have an inferior analog audio jack AND the most expensive monitors they offer.
OPENGL is no longer supported natively, but only as an add-onto DirectX10. (Which I find very odd, because DirectX was originally, at least, based on Open GL....) ATI and NVidea are scrambling to produce drivers that will handle that correctly. Of course, if you want to play Windows games, why bother with OpenGL? After all, only no-name stuff like Quake3 runs that.
Here is a summary I have found:
All I can say is Vista will never come near any machine I am responsible for.
This makes me wonder: Can other OSs such as Mac OS X or Linux legally implement HDCP without content degradation? Note that it's not an option for Microsoft to take an illegal route; they're already a large enough legal target.HDCP is licensed by Digital Content Protection, LLC, a subsidiary of Intel. In addition to paying fees, licensees agree to limit the capabilities of their products. For example, High-definition digital video content must be restricted to DVD quality on non-HDCP compliant video outputs when requested by the source. DVD-Audio content is restricted to DAT quality on non-HDCP digital audio outputs (analog audio outputs have no quality limits). Licensees cannot allow their devices to make copies of content, and must design their products to "effectively frustrate attempts to defeat the content protection requirements."
Why do you think I am sticking with Windows XP as my primary OS and testing out a few Linux distributions as my secondary OS (running in a virtual machine on XP). I am happy with what I have with WIndowblinds (GUI skinner), DesktopX and Yahoo! Widgets (A widget program), Iconpackager (Icon skinner), and ObjectBar in Windows.From what I can see, based on what MS has said, in order to do in Vista roughly everything that you can do with XP, you need to upgrade to Vista Ultimate. Anything in between will leave you grumbling about missing functionality. To install Ultimate, you need a significantly newer / more powerful system than I have. And for what? Eye candy? I have 3D eye candy right now - at least as good as Aero. For anti-customer (DRM) crap? Surely, you jest! For hundreds of dollars? When I can get everything that Vista offers (except the DRM crap) for the price of a download, all perfectly legal?
Yummy, that sounds almost as good as English jelly.I am happy with what I have with WIndowblinds (GUI skinner), DesktopX and Yahoo! Widgets (A widget program), Iconpackager (Icon skinner), and ObjectBar in Windows.
I have yet to find some sort of weather widget for Linux (Kubuntu dist) that transmits to me the weather from weather.com. Since at the most, the widgets I use are mostly weather widgets.Yummy, that sounds almost as good as English jelly.![]()
I looked at it and I have no clue on how to install itFor KDE (Kubuntu), check out SuperKaramba - using the Liquid Weather widget.
I have it hooked up to weather.com (the default).
./configure;make;make install
Nope
I went from Windows 98 --> 2000 --> XP.
2000 is superior.
Upgrade to at least 1 GB RAM most likely you should upgrade to 2GB to leave room for your applications
Upgrade to a FAST video card with at least 256MB of display memory, 6600GT as a realistic minimum.
From what I can see, based on what MS has said, in order to do in Vista roughly everything that you can do with XP, you need to upgrade to Vista Ultimate.
To install Ultimate, you need a significantly newer / more powerful system than I have.
So in order to use HD video you have to have an inferior analog audio jack AND the most expensive monitors they offer.
No native support for OpenGL - to be seen how the ATI or Nvidia drivers do in enabling it.
Throw away your Digital Speakers you will not get any sound out of them
Upgrade your display to the most expensive in order to view any DRM content
Upgrade to at least 1 GB RAM most likely you should upgrade to 2GB to leave room for your applications
Upgrade to a FAST video card with at least 256MB of display memory, 6600GT as a realistic minimum. (Caveat 6xxx series might not support HDCP so could prevent you from viewing HD content. It does support WMV-HD. I couldn't find anything that listed if it does or not specifically.)
The ONLY card in Nvidia's lineup that currently SPECIFICALLY SAYS Supports HDCP and Windows Vista is the 8800 which is also DX10.
Vista sucks up resources like you wouldn't believe, according to what I've heard. RAM especially. I believe an OS should run in the background, like a service (or daemon, right Padma), not as a program running in the foreground.