Archive for the ‘ Vista ’ Category

Microsoft Gives OEMs Five More Months

Microsoft is extending the time it will allow original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and retail outlets to sell PCs with Windows XP as customers continue to balk on upgrading to Windows Vista.

Microsoft had planned to stop selling XP through OEMs and retailers on Jan. 31, 2008, while custom system builders have until Jan. 31, 2009, to pre-install XP on machines. But because sales of Vista PCs have not been as strong as expected, OEMs and retailers have asked Microsoft to extend XP’s availability. OEMs and retailers will now have until June 30, 2008, to sell PCs with Vista preinstalled on machines, Microsoft said. Retailers also can sell XP out of the box until that time if they choose, the company said.

In fact, some PC makers are selling Vista-equipped systems with an XP Pro recovery disc to those who request one so that it can be used in case the purchaser isn’t happy with the new Microsoft OS.

Why?

“While we’ve been pleased with the positive response we’ve seen and heard from customers using Windows Vista, there are some customers who need a little more time to make the switch to Windows Vista,” Microsoft said in a press statement.

Microsoft also is extending the life of Windows XP Starter Edition, the version of XP for emerging markets. The software will be available until June 30, 2010, so users in those markets can take advantage of low-cost, hardware-constrained PCs that Vista may not be compatible with. Vista requires hardware upgrades that most PCs running XP do not have.

Per Microsoft’s policy as of 2002, a new Windows OS would stay on the market about four years after its original availability date. But XP was released on Oct. 25, 2001, more than five years before Vista limped out the door to consumers Jan. 31, 2007, after several delays and a major code overhaul.

Vista Expectations Lowered

Microsoft had high expectations for customer adoption of Vista, and claimed the launch would be one of the most successful in Windows history. Unfortunately for the company, those predictions so far haven’t panned out, and in July, Microsoft lowered its projections for customer adoption of Vista. The company had said the split between XP and Vista sales in its fiscal year ending June 30, 2008, would be 15 percent to 85 percent; now the company is saying the split will be 22 percent XP and 78 percent Vista.

According to some, that may even be optimistic. Paul Ghysels, a custom system builder who owns the Neighborhood Computer Store in Moraga, California, said that Microsoft has “really blown Vista.” He said he’s not surprised Microsoft extended the availability of XP for OEMs. “I figured Microsoft would have to come up with something because Vista is so unprepared for the market right now,” Ghysels said.

He added that the extension likely won’t affect his business much, since most of his customers come to him because they are already disillusioned with the major PC manufacturers and thus unlikely to want a name-brand PC pre-loaded with Vista.

Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1), a rollup of updates for the OS that Microsoft has said will be available in the first quarter of 2008, should make Vista more market-worthy. In fact, many consumers and businesses have said they would wait for the update before moving from XP to Vista.

Source: PC World

Academic Tour update

Another long (but fun) Academic Tour week got to an end: UBB Cluj (last Friday), Oradea (Tuesday), Târgu-Mureş (Thursday), and UTCN Cluj (today) were the past 7 days’ events. All in all, the speeches were well received, with the only remark that in some isolated cases, part of the audience had trouble related to the topic at hand.

For instance, my presentation, being a bit more in-depth than the others, and addressing a smaller scale of the audience, was at times ill received for the sole fact that people weren’t particularly interested in the subject (most of the people in the audience were developers, not sysadmins). That’s why I got a few conflicting remarks on the feedback forms, stating, for instance, on one hand, that more examples were needed, and on the other hand, that there were too many examples. :)

Even so, the people seemed to have enjoyed the events, and were definitely thrilled to have attended. Right now, I’m going back to packing, since I’m leaving for StudIT in Timisoara first thing in the morning, where I’m invited as a guest speaker.

Enable Aero Glass on compatible devices

Ran into this today, when installing Windows Vista Business on a ThinkPad x60s, and even though the manufacturer (Lenovo) said it was Windows Vista Ready, the Aero Glass interface wasn’t active. I found a trick that finally got it to work.

So, if you have a video card that is using WDDM drivers and supports DirectX 9c but is not allowing you to use vista glass, there is a cool trick that you can use to force Aero to run. Follow the steps below:

    START > regedit and hit Enter.

  1. Navigate through, HKEY_CURRENT_USER, Software, Microsoft, Windows and DWM.
  2. Set Composition to 1 and CompositionPolicy to 2.
  3. Restart the DWM by restarting the Desktop Windows Manager Session Manager service. This can be done in services.msc or by typing net stop uxsms and net start uxsms at command prompt.

Once the service restarts you will have Glass! :smile:

Operating Systems and Crappy Code

I rarely rant about stuff, but this one’s a bit too much to go unmentioned. I’ve got Vista Business running on my desktop (nearly 4 months now)… Haven’t had much trouble with it except for the Creative sound card drivers that are just one step away from completion and have been so for the past couple of months (so no accelerated/hardware sound support). That is, until Saturday, when I tried to write a DVD and noticed that my DVD writer had just “vanished” from My Computer.

Firs thing I check is, of course, the Device Manager console. I see it there, along with my other DVD-ROM unit, both with a yellow exclamation mark and a message stating “This device cannot start (Code 10)“. Wow! Now that’s new. One day before it was working just fine. Now I’m starting to think what the problem might be, and start playing with the cables in order to get to the bottom of this. First, I find that it’s properly initialized in the BIOS, then the IDE cable turns out to be fine as well, and so does the IDE port on the motherboard. I check it on another system (with WinXP), and it works just fine. :neutral:

I start google-ing the issue, and find out many similar problems, with very different (but totally useless) solutions. Seeing that I had a busy weekend, it’s just this morning that I got to continue with my “research”. And where does that lead me? Amazingly enough, it appears that me installing QuickTime (and iTunes along with it) on Friday is the main cause for the problem. Apparently, Apple’s iTunes (!) has some compatibility issues with Vista, which makes optical drives stop working… :!:

All right, now I uninstall this, and then I tell a few people about how funny all this is, noticing how Apple’s “awesome” developers could pull this off… And this is where I wanted to get:

<rant>

What I’m told (by more than one person) is that it’s not Apple that’s the “guilty” one here, it’s Microsoft and their (immature) OS! I mean, come on people! Since when does the OS have to “fix” poor coding skills?! And going on… should making sure that every piece of (crappy) code runs be a part of the OS’s core features? How come well-written apps work like a charm on Vista, some even without the need for elevated privileges, whereas the ones written by wannabe-devs just keep crashing graciously?

Bottom line: since when is support for poor code a measure of the quality of an Operating System? :shock:

</rant>

:roll:

Virtual PC 2007 now available

The final version of Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 was released yesterday, and is now available as a free download. These are a few of the features it includes:

  • Support for Windows Vista as a host
  • Support for Windows Vista as a guest
  • Support for Windows Vista 64-bit as a host
  • Support for hardware virtualization
  • Improved performance (compared to Virtual PC 2004)

I’ve been using Virtual PC for a few years now, along with Virtual Server – and they’re both pretty robust products. As a demo, you can see how Microsoft tools such as Virtual PC 2007 and Application Compatibility Toolkit 5.0 help customers migrate existing applications to Windows Vista, by watching this presentation.

To get or not to get Vista?

Here are a couple of articles recently published on APC Magazine:

Added later: it seems that the first article also received a reply from Thom Holwerda, on the upsides of Vista, which was then followed by a reply from the original author.

Funny, really. :)

Windows Vista is here!

Finally, after months of waiting, Windows Vista has been released to the public. The Redmond giant also put up a new website for the occasion, which, among many other things, includes a list of 100 reasons to switch to Windows Vista… In fact, the entire Windows website has received an uplift with the launch of Windows Vista.

Now we just have to wait for all the 3rd party hardware manufacturers to provide the proper drivers for the new OS, for the developers to release new (Vista-compatible) versions of their applications, and for the prices for latest-gen computer components to drop to a more affordable level – so that we may all enjoy <the “Wow” effect>! :)

On a more serious note, I’ve been running Windows Vista Business on my desktop for nearly two months now, and I’d say I’m pretty satisfied with how it’s been thus far. I do have minor issues with it here and there, but all in all, I think I’m sticking with Vista for the time being.

Later edit: Here’s the webcast from the official Windows Vista and Office 2007 launch, in Times Square, New York. It’s about an hour long, pretty interesting nonetheless…