The only reason for me to upgrade would be if a new game would not run on previous OS, why would you voluntary double the RAM of your machine just so you could run the newest OS? From experience of previous "upgrades" I would estimate 2Gb RAM is required for Vista.
I am currently burning the free Vista Beta 2 to DVD. I am just curious to see if anyone here has played with Vista yet. I've heard some good things so far. The worst I've heard is that it is a memory hog (worse than XP). Anything?
I'm a sucker for the all the "pretty UI" enhancements they've been teasing me with. That, and it's free. Plus, I have an extra machine.The only reason for me to upgrade would be if a new game would not run on previous OS, why would you voluntary double the RAM of your machine just so you could run the newest OS? From experience of previous "upgrades" I would estimate 2Gb RAM is required for Vista.
I've heard that is asks "Are you sure?" every time you do anything remotely useful on your machine. That would drive me insane (or, more insane, as the case may be)...
Hmm, sounds irritating. I actually had a similar problem with Windows stopping an application in XP when I was trying to play the new Rainbow Six game. I had to turn off some non-intuitive setting to get it to work.It's not so much "Are you sure?" as warnings that you are about to run something that is trying to mess about in the gubbins of the system; previous versions did seem a bit over protective however now I'd say it was about on par with OS/X. (And you can configure it so you don't need to enter a password each time.)
Hmm, sounds irritating. I actually had a similar problem with Windows stopping an application in XP when I was trying to play the new Rainbow Six game. I had to turn off some non-intuitive setting to get it to work.
*whimper*You're going to have to avoid updating to any new OS then, it's something that is pretty much in all the new OSs.
I don't see how a feature like that will improve security for the home user. The computer illiterates will continue to click "OK" in every window that pops up.I've heard that is asks "Are you sure?" every time you do anything remotely useful on your machine. That would drive me insane (or, more insane, as the case may be)...
I don't see how a feature like that will improve security for the home user. The computer illiterates will continue to click "OK" in every window that pops up.
I've had ZoneAlarm do this to me on more than one occasion when a game has for some reason best known to itself tried to access the network/internet. ZoneAlarm pops up a "Do you want to allow this?" dialog, but because the game's running full screen it doesn't get displayed. I sit there wondering what's wrong until the "Ah, Zonealarm" neurons get fired.I actually had a similar problem with Windows stopping an application in XP when I was trying to play the new Rainbow Six game.