![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
Like that old saying "No one ever got fired for buying IBM equipment", no one gets fired for buying that microsoft junk. I've switched over almost entirely to Vista (three laptops, two desktops -- still have three desktops running XP) and like it. You are in the minority. I saw a report on slash dot that 2/3s of computers that had Vista on them now have reverse migrated back to XP. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Smith wrote:
Jay Honeck wrote: Let's start again: I was asking about the specific example of the recalled Chinese toys that were painted with lead paint. Did anyone hear anything about anyone being injured by this event? Luckily, no. So, luckily, the governement acted timely. However, there have been intoxinations caused by long time exposure to lead in the past. The best known example is probably the antique Rome. No need to repeat every mistake. For more information about the toxity of lead: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead#Health_effects The majority of lead poisoning cases in children in the US are among immigrant children treated with folk remedies. Here's just one article about it; there are lots: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22782271/ In the Southwest, almost all cases fall into this catagory. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:zs7rk.307204$yE1.53876@attbi_s21: I never heard of any kids being hurt in this lead-paint situation -- did you? A bunch of unrelated stuff snipped I find nothing relevant here, Stella, unless you'd like to discuss some unrelated lead-paint-scare press releases from (among others) the most corrupt politician in Illinois history, with the possible exception of King Daley? Let's start again: I was asking about the specific example of the recalled Chinese toys that were painted with lead paint. Did anyone hear anything about anyone being injured by this event? I can find nothing about any injuries in the media. Yeah, but you only look at faux news, so... Bertie |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news ![]() I've switched over almost entirely to Vista (three laptops, two desktops -- still have three desktops running XP) and like it. you are a sick sick man.... :-) It's fast, it's intuitive, it's easy, and it's cheap, relatively speaking. Actually, the only gripe I've had with Vista is getting XP machines to work/print on a Vista network, which has been stupidly hard. The OS itself has been utterly bulletproof. Perfect for you, a system for idiots Bertie |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You are in the minority. I saw a report on slash dot that 2/3s of
computers that had Vista on them now have reverse migrated back to XP. Perhaps, but given the thousands of Vista machines that are sold daily, my minority status won't last long. As is always the case with OS upgrades, there is now a growing group of young computer owners who have known nothing but Vista, who will regard XP the way we regard Windows 3.1 or DOS. I have found nothing about Vista to complain about, other than the aforementioned networking-with-XP-machines difficulty. It's stable, easy to use, fast, and offers some enhancements and eye-candy that XP didn't have. More importantly, I found the migration from XP to Vista to be completely intuitive, with no instruction or help screens required. I just got to work, and the OS simply disappeared, as every good OS should. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 Ercoupe N94856 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
You are in the minority. I saw a report on slash dot that 2/3s of computers that had Vista on them now have reverse migrated back to XP. Perhaps, but given the thousands of Vista machines that are sold daily, my minority status won't last long. As is always the case with OS upgrades, there is now a growing group of young computer owners who have known nothing but Vista, who will regard XP the way we regard Windows 3.1 or DOS. I have found nothing about Vista to complain about, other than the aforementioned networking-with-XP-machines difficulty. It's stable, easy to use, fast, and offers some enhancements and eye-candy that XP didn't have. More importantly, I found the migration from XP to Vista to be completely intuitive, with no instruction or help screens required. I just got to work, and the OS simply disappeared, as every good OS should. I mis-remembered the story I quoted. The actual story was the 35% of new Windows computers are downgraded either at the factory or by the user shortly after purchase from Vista to XP. So there are still thousands of XP machines shipping and those are people that made the decision to not use Vista. I tested Vista on one machine in our office. It ran slower than the same machine with XP. There was a lack of drivers for some fairly common hardware and this was about 8 months after Vista shipped. MS pretty much knows it built a dog. That's why they have kept pushing back the drop dead date on XP. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gig 601Xl Builder wrote:
I tested Vista on one machine in our office. It ran slower than the same machine with XP. There was a lack of drivers for some fairly common hardware and this was about 8 months after Vista shipped. MS pretty much knows it built a dog. That's why they have kept pushing back the drop dead date on XP. This will seem obvious as written, but it seems to escape many of the people I talk to on a day-to-day basis: Most of the machines that Vista is meant to run on haven't been built (or, in fact, designed) yet. That includes the systems presently being sold. Meanwhile -MOST- early-stage software products, especially Microsoft OSes and web browers, are buggy and insecure crap for at least the first year after they're released because X-million people haven't found X-million ways to break them. I work with a guy who actually CAMPED OUT for the midnight release of Windows 95 at Incredible Universe. He CAMPED OUT for an operating system. And, wouldn't you be surprised; he's still single. But he's got a killer new Mac on which to play World of Warcraft and Flight Simulator X. -c |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
gatt schrieb:
And, wouldn't you be surprised; he's still single. But he's got a killer new Mac on which to play World of Warcraft and Flight Simulator X. he probably wouldn't be able to afford that MAC being married. :-) #m |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Martin Hotze wrote:
gatt schrieb: And, wouldn't you be surprised; he's still single. But he's got a killer new Mac on which to play World of Warcraft and Flight Simulator X. he probably wouldn't be able to afford that MAC being married. :-) Very true. Or the plasma screen, or Wii, or PS3, Rock Band, or Guitar Hero III... |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gig 601Xl Builder wrote:
I mis-remembered the story I quoted. The actual story was the 35% of new Windows computers are downgraded either at the factory or by the user shortly after purchase from Vista to XP. That sounds like an old story. Checked lately? I tested Vista on one machine in our office. It ran slower than the same machine with XP. Which makes your experience about 2 years old. Vista has a much larger footprint than XP, so you need more of a system to run it efficiently. OTOH, that's been the case with every new OS for the last couple of decades. There was a lack of drivers for some fairly common hardware and this was about 8 months after Vista shipped. At least some of this is marketing BS. I have a machine that has been running Vista for about a year, and according to HP, there are no compatible printer drivers for my printer. Of course, they recommended "upgrading" to a newer model printer. Well, I just happened to notice that the drivers for the "newer model" were _exactly the same ones_ as for the printer I had, but HP's brain-dead installation program wouldn't install the older ones. So, I installed it manually (via regedit), and it's been working flawlessly since then. I'm no fan of Vista, but then I'm no fan of XP or of OSX either. Those of us that need a lot out of an OS can break any of them without much effort. But, they'll all handle more than what the vast majority of users need. MS pretty much knows it built a dog. That's why they have kept pushing back the drop dead date on XP. What drop dead date on XP are you referring to? The drop dead date for Windows 2000 isn't even here yet, and the drop dead date for Win98 was less than a year ago. XP has a long way to go before it's deprecated. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|