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Vista
Forever
After
five years in development, MICROSOFT'S new operating system
is finally about to hit the street. Is it a keeper?
By Peter Lewis
February
23, 2007
What
does Windows Vista have in common with the just-christened
nuclear aircraft carrier George H.W. Bush? Answer: They are
both powerful flagships of technology that took five years
and billions of dollars to build. Also, while they’ll
both be in use for years to come, they’re almost certainly
the last of their respective kinds. The world now moves at
Internet speed, and slow, complex behemoths—whether
warships or software—are being forced to become smaller,
faster and more maneuverable.
Vista is anything
but. After numerous well-publicized delays—two years
of core coding had to be scrapped and rewritten to plug security
holes—Vista will be launched on Jan. 30, backed by Microsoft’s
largest-ever marketing blitz. Vista is actually an armada
of different versions: Windows Vista Home Basic ($199 for
the full version, $100 for the upgrade), Windows Vista Business
($299/$199), Windows Vista Home Premium ($239/$159), Windows
Vista Ultimate ($399/$259), and Windows Vista Enterprise Edition
(prices vary). One of those versions almost certainly will
be loaded on your next new Windows-compatible PC.
How does Vista
stack up? After a couple of months of testing in the FORTUNE
gadget laboratory, my verdict is this: Vista is definitely
the best operating system Microsoft has ever made. (Mac users,
stop snorting!) It offers greater security and reliability
than previous versions of Windows; a prettier, more useful
user interface; better support for networked computers; backward
compatibility with older programs, plus a better bridge to
future technologies like 64-bit computing; and greatly improved
search abilities. I’ll definitely upgrade from Windows
XP—but probably not until Microsoft releases the inevitable
bug-fixing and hole-patching Vista Service Pack, which may
be months from now.
Vista’s negative
ledger is shorter—some significant headaches but no
deal breakers. One big hurdle is that you’ll need serious
hardware to take advantage of the best features. Only the
most expensive versions of Vista—Home Premium and Ultimate—offer
the new “breakthrough Vista experience” Microsoft
is touting, including the glassy Aero interface and fancier
graphics. Older PCs lack the horsepower to run it. If you
haven’t bought a new PC in the past year or so, you’ll
probably have to grab your wallet and a screwdriver to upgrade
your hardware. That’s not including the hundreds of
bucks you’ll spend for new Vista-enabled versions of
your favorite applications.
Even if you have
a Vista-ready computer, upgrading to Vista is vexing. For
starters, new PCs labeled “Vista-ready” may not
be capable of running the premium versions, which are, of
course, the versions you’ll want. To run them, you’ll
need a “Vista Premium ready” PC. (To find out
which version of Vista your PC can handle, visit www.windowsvista.com/upgradeadvisor.)
If you’re still eager to upgrade, the best way to go
is a so-called clean install—backing up and wiping clean
the hard drive, then reinstalling everything—a hassle
even for experienced users. And then there’s the issue
of drivers, the software that Windows PCs need to work smoothly
with printers, scanners, and other peripherals. I wasted a
full day tracking down and troubleshooting the updates just
so I could print a letter.
Any major operating
system upgrade is a hassle, especially for corporate information-technology
managers who oversee thousands of PCs. That’s why only
a small share of corporate users will be upgrading to Vista
this year. Most who do will replace older PCs with new ones
preloaded with Vista. “For most organizations it’s
going to take 12 to 18 months of testing,” says Michael
Silver, senior software analyst for technology consultants
Gartner Group. “Testing applications, waiting for software
vendors to come up with new [Vista-specific] versions—by
that time the machines in the office are going to be another
18 months older. Why spend the money to upgrade if you’re
only going to have it for another six months to a year?”
Even so, Vista
is destined to repay Microsoft’s massive investment
in it. Most of the half-billion people around the world who
use a version of Windows today will move to Vista eventually,
mainly through the purchase of new PCs. Here’s what’s
best about what they’ll be getting.
Look
and Feel
Vista’s Aero
3D interface is refreshing, although strikingly similar to
Apple’s Mac OS X. Transparent windows make it easier
to see files and other windows cluttering your desktop, and
with the Ultimate Extras free download (also available on
Jan. 30), the desktop itself can be a movie or an animated
image, like ocean waves or a rippling pond. Microsoft has
also added a feature it calls Windows Sidebar, an area of
the screen where one can stash mini-applications called Gadgets,
such as clocks, stock tickers, calendars, or RSS readers.
You know, sort of like Widgets on Apple’s Dashboard.
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