Abhas
Retired Administrator
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2004
- Location
- New Delhi, India
I will be getting a free copy from Dell.. Hopefully it should be soon, can't wait to get my hands on win 7 ! 

So that's a no then? I thought it was just XP in Virtual PC with some integration tricks, which shouldn't need virtualisation support.. My CPU is just a P4 2.8Gh HT, I'm fairly certain it fails on that.@Matt - your processor needs to support virtualisation and then you need to enable it in bios (I also had to flash bios). Only pro and ultimate as well. Works great for me though.
1. Neither Vista NOR 7 hog over 1 GB of memory if you have only a gig's stick. I've been using Vista with 1 Gig for 2 months now (One burned), and even with Visual C++ 2008, MSN, MPC, Foxit Reader, and Firefox with 9 tabs open, I'm still at just 70% RAM usage, which means 700mb...i'll still prefer XP mainly because i've been using it for 8 years now..its not funny ! besides, theres nothing tempting enough in windows 7 that would make me want to switch to it...add to that, am not a big fan of an OS hogging over 1GB of ram just to look pretty.
and 20GB of installation ??![]()
XP does everything i want,its hugely backward compatible and since TAOC is been programmed in XP, makes it even harder !
I'm almost 90% certain that Windows XP Mode is nothing but running Windows XP off a virtual PC (without needing a valid Windows XP key, of course). I didn't test it out on a mobo without hardware virtualization, though, so I don't know if it would function or not.So that's a no then? I thought it was just XP in Virtual PC with some integration tricks, which shouldn't need virtualisation support.. My CPU is just a P4 2.8Gh HT, I'm fairly certain it fails on that.
As others have said, storage prices have slashed in accordance with Moore's law and they'll keep doing so. Next summer, you're probably going to see premium terabyte drives in the $50-60 range (the lower-end models are already retailing at around $70) and it's only going to fall. Of course, this doesn't mean squat if your mobo doesn't support SATA, which means you're basically going to be screwed until it is time for an upgrade. At a time when we're seeing flash drives with 16gigs retailing for about $50 or so, I don't think you can complain about an OS taking up 20 gigs.i'll still prefer XP mainly because i've been using it for 8 years now..its not funny ! besides, theres nothing tempting enough in windows 7 that would make me want to switch to it...add to that, am not a big fan of an OS hogging over 1GB of ram just to look pretty.
and 20GB of installation ??![]()
Microsoft is going to officially end support for Windows XP fairly soon, which will mean that device manufacturers are accordingly going to stop supporting XP. Which means that when the next wave of devices come in, they're going to be targeted towards Vista/7 meaning that you're going to go from a "backwards-compatible" machine to a "backwards-only" machine. With regards to TAOC and any application, for that matter, while its a good idea to develop in a stable OS, you want to make sure you can deploy to future technologies. Especially with the dev cycle length for TAOC, you don't want to end up releasing the product with the only compatible OS being phased out quickly.XP does everything i want,its hugely backward compatible and since TAOC is been programmed in XP, makes it even harder !
I've had it installed since it was released to MSDN subscribers (back in August). Two thumbs up from me. That said, if you don't have a problem using Vista, don't feel inclined to update. The only reason I'm upgrading all my personal workstations is that after Windows 7 I couldn't stand using Vista.Anyone have the release version installed yet? Thoughts? Money's tight, so I'm sticking with Vista.
As little as ?30 definitely.