Don Kiely's Technical Blatherings

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Is Vista Not Ready for Laptops?

I attended a lot of sessions at DevTeach in Vancouver last week. It’s one of my favorite conferences because it is relatively small and therefore intimate, yet it attracts some amazing speakers, including some fine speakers from Microsoft.

Unlike some conferences, all speakers deliver their sessions from their own laptops instead of from a desktop machine provided by the conference. Not surprisingly, most speakers are running Vista since it is Microsoft’s latest and greatest client OS.

But it struck me at how many problems speakers were having with Vista. I’m not sure I attended a single session where some problem didn’t arise (but maybe I’ve blanked the good experiences out of my memory). One speaker couldn’t get the projector to work with Vista without technical help from the A/V support staff, then the magnifier was so small as to be worthless, making it hard to see important stuff. Many machines were slowed to a crawl, presumably from the combined performance-sucking power from PowerPoint and Vista’s Aero interface, not to mention Visual Studio or SQL Server Management Studio.

The carnage was impressive. It seems that Vista pushes the limits of laptop technology. Apparently the OS demands not only a new laptop but a top of the line version of the laptop with all the processor and memory you can throw at it.

And me? No problems at all. I had one issue with Diskkeeper kicking in during a session but I shut that off and problem was over. PowerPoint, Visual Studio, and whatever else I had to run, no problem.

I’m running Windows XP. I think I’ll stick with it for a while longer, maybe even after I replace my three-year-old laptop. Sorry, Microsoft!

posted on Wednesday, December 05, 2007 8:33 AM by donkiely





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