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#181
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 08:55:26 -0500, "(PeteCresswell)"
wrote: Per Char Jackson: ...I'm surprised to hear that a minor shuffling of folder structures caused you more than a few seconds of downtime. It shouldn't have taken longer than that to see what the new folder structure was and get back on track..... Maybe this is more a comment on my lack of gray matter... but, as another computer user with decades of experience, I post rants on a regular basis on the subject of Microsoft's gratuitously moving the furniture around. Yeah, coping with a given function may only be a few lost minutes... but those minutes add up over many functions and hopping back-and-forth between OS' doesn't help any either. If it were only the few hours total that a retail user like me lost, I guess it would be no big deal in the grand scheme of things. But for a company with 20,000 employees - all of whom are going to lose those few hours and maybe more if they wind up going to some sort of class on the new sys..... I would say that's a *very* big deal man hour-wise. First, it doesn't really work that way, although that's an easy way (and unfortunately a common way) to look at it. Twenty thousand employees losing some amount of time isn't the same as the company losing 20,000 times that amount of time. I read an article that pointed out that it's more like everyone losing some amount of time in parallel rather than serial, so the amount of lost time is the average amount lost rather than the total amount lost. I suspect that will generate some comments since it's different from what we're usually told. Second, I suspect the transition from XP to Vista/7 was a lot smoother than you make out. My employer transitioned from XP to 7 around the end of 2010 and it went without a single whimper. On Friday we had XP SP3 with Office 2007, and on Monday we had Win 7 with Office 2010. I don't recall hearing a single complaint within my area, but of course I can't speak for the entire 60,000 employee base. Likewise, my wife's employer is considering a move from XP to 7, so they've started by giving that combo to a few people in each department to see how they handle it. My wife was selected, and she reported that there was no interruption in her work flow. For people who use applications, it's business as usual. People who like to tinker at the file and folder level will have to spend a few minutes here and there, but again, no big deal. There are differences, but far more is the same than different. |
#182
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
In ,
Char Jackson wrote: On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 16:18:52 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: In , Char Jackson wrote: As a computer user with decades of experience, (a claim you've made repeatedly), I'm surprised to hear that a minor shuffling of folder structures caused you more than a few seconds of downtime. It shouldn't have taken longer than that to see what the new folder structure was and get back on track. Because you forget that I also have dozens of computers and I want things simple. And I can't have Windows 7 doing it one way and XP doing it another way. You're free to continue to make that claim, but I don't understand it. You don't understand that I place portable applications under XP and Windows 7 I can't run them there. I see nothing difficult about moving between two versions of Windows, You don't? I do! OE doesn't run under Windows 7 while it runs from Windows 95 to XP). XP didn't need UAC, why does Windows 7 need it? Why doesn't Windows 7 run all of my XP applications? Why does Windows 7 run fewer applications than any Windows version before it? Why does Windows 7 deny file access to administrators? Windows 7 Access Denied For Administrator « Think Like a Computer http://think-like-a-computer.com/201...administrator/ and in fact to me it's very little different from moving between two TVs, two cars, two bathrooms in the house, and a hundred other examples. They are standardized. Try driving a car that uses the accelerator on the left and the brake on the right. How fun would that be? Or if the steering wheel went right when you turned left? Sure you could get used to it, but it is still stupid. Do you also get confused when you shop at two stores, and the second store is not the same as the first? Do you also get confused when you walk into a workplace and discover it's different from your own home? These are things we all deal with daily and for most of us they aren't a big deal. We are talking about Windows! Quit trying to compare apples and oranges. I suppose the day is coming where I'll be where you are now, unable to get my head around two of something, but I hope that day is far off. No you don't get it! Every single software developer who burns bridges has failed! -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - OE-QuoteFix v1.19.2 Centrino Core Duo T2400 1.83GHz - 2GB - Windows XP SP3 |
#183
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 17:51:44 -0600, Char Jackson
wrote: On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 16:18:52 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: And I can't have Windows 7 doing it one way and XP doing it another way. You're free to continue to make that claim, but I don't understand it. I see nothing difficult about moving between two versions of Windows, and in fact to me it's very little different from moving between two TVs, two cars, two bathrooms in the house, and a hundred other examples. My view is somewhere between those of the two of you. I think BillW50's "I can't have" is a great exaggeration. But I also think it's preferable to have all your computers run the same version of Windows, so you don't get confused between two operating systems or forget how to do something on one because you just used the other. Similarly, I think having two very different cars can be a big problem, if you forget where some control is that you want/need to use. For that reason, I'm unhappy with some rental cars I've driven. So, I have an EEE netbook that came with XP installed, but I upgraded it (in two steps, via Vista) so it and my desktop are almost the same. It's true that Windows 7 performance on the EEE is very poor, but since I essentially use it only for E-mail when traveling, I don't have any real problem with that. And I'm much happier having it match the desktop than I was before doing the upgrade. Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP |
#184
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
In ,
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: In message , BillW50 writes: [] I don't think Vista was ever offered much on netbooks, though I could be wrong. I put Windows 7 on a netbook (EeePC 702 with 16GB SSD) once and it was awful! As Windows 7 ate up 50% of the CPU power at idle. There are limits! I once overrode the limits and ran NT on a machine with 4M of RAM; it worked in the sense that nothing malfunctioned, but not in a way that could be described as usable. Or, '95 on a '486 (with something like 16 or 32M); that was just about usable, but I'd not like to go back to those days. I don't know what sort of processor an EeePC 702 has (nor how much RAM, as opposed to SSD), but I'd imagine even XP would groan on it: weren't those mostly originally sold with the (well-disguised) Linux that was customised for them? The Asus EeePC 702 (like all 700 series) comes with a Celeron 900MHz, which they underclock down to 633MHz. Being underclocked they are virtually impossible to overheat. In fact some have removed the fan to have a completely noiseless netbook and they work well without a fan. Most of the 700 series came Xandros Linux. These were the first netbooks on the market and the ones that you have heard came with Linux. Although they always came with XP drivers too, in case you rather run XP. Only much later did they offer XP instead on these machines. The 702's came with 1GB of RAM but I upgraded all of mine to 2GB. And stock, 702s came with a 8GB SSD. But I had to upgrade the 8GB to 16GB just to install Windows 7. I was shocked how slow Windows 7 ran on it. Eating 50% of the CPU at idle means that Windows 7 eats about 300Mhz of CPU power just for itself. 30 years ago if you asked me if an OS eating 300Mhz of the CPU power would be ok I would say that is crazy. Now jump to 30 years later and I still think it is crazy. I started testing Windows 7 on other computers and the 300MHz loss of CPU power was the norm. In fact, I couldn't find any single core processor that could run Windows 7 well enough. Only multi-core processors is the performance satisfactory. XP flies on the 702 btw. The only problem with XP on the 702 was sometimes DPCs ate 50, 80 or sometimes 100% of the CPU power. I am not sure why that happens. It seems to be related to radio interference nearby. Linux doesn't run as well on these machines especially when flash or video is involved. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - OE-QuoteFix v1.19.2 Centrino Core Duo T2400 1.83GHz - 2GB - Windows XP SP3 |
#185
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
In message , Char Jackson
writes: On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 08:55:26 -0500, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Per Char Jackson: ...I'm surprised to hear that a minor shuffling of folder structures caused you more than a few seconds of downtime. It shouldn't have taken longer than that to see what the new folder structure was and get back on track..... Maybe this is more a comment on my lack of gray matter... but, as another computer user with decades of experience, I post rants on a regular basis on the subject of Microsoft's gratuitously moving the furniture around. Yeah, coping with a given function may only be a few lost minutes... but those minutes add up over many functions and hopping back-and-forth between OS' doesn't help any either. If it were only the few hours total that a retail user like me lost, I guess it would be no big deal in the grand scheme of things. But for a company with 20,000 employees - all of whom are going to lose those few hours and maybe more if they wind up going to some sort of class on the new sys..... I would say that's a *very* big deal man hour-wise. First, it doesn't really work that way, although that's an easy way (and unfortunately a common way) to look at it. Twenty thousand employees losing some amount of time isn't the same as the company losing 20,000 times that amount of time. I read an article that pointed out that it's more like everyone losing some amount of time in parallel rather than serial, so the amount of lost time is the average amount lost rather than the total amount lost. I suspect that will generate some comments since it's different from what we're usually told. It's also rubbish, I'm afraid. Ten people losing an average of an hour represents significantly more lost time than five people losing an average of an hour (same average); granted, possibly not twice as much (though I would say it was), but certainly not the same. The fact that the time is parallel rather than serial would only make a difference if their work was pipelined, like a very old-fashioned production line, which is unlikely to be using Windows 7 computers. Second, I suspect the transition from XP to Vista/7 was a lot smoother than you make out. My employer transitioned from XP to 7 around the end of 2010 and it went without a single whimper. On Friday we had XP SP3 with Office 2007, and on Monday we had Win 7 with Office 2010. I don't recall hearing a single complaint within my area, but of course No, they were all too busy figuring out how to do things ... (-: I can't speak for the entire 60,000 employee base. Likewise, my wife's employer is considering a move from XP to 7, so they've started by giving that combo to a few people in each department to see how they That's a less risky approach. My employer does it something like that - or for some things a wide roll-out, but not instantaneous. handle it. My wife was selected, and she reported that there was no interruption in her work flow. For people who use applications, it's XP to 7 as the OS, for people that just use applications, probably little or no interruption, especially if they use the default locations for everything (and the people doing the transfer move the files from the old default location to the new). Office 2007 to '10 probably also not a great change: 2003 to 2010 (or even 2007) a bit more, as users have to find where all their old actions are in the new ribbon. (Their old actions may have been in illogical places, but at least they knew where they were.) [] -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf I multitask... I read in the bathroom. |
#186
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
Char Jackson wrote in
: First, it doesn't really work that way, although that's an easy way (and unfortunately a common way) to look at it. Twenty thousand employees losing some amount of time isn't the same as the company losing 20,000 times that amount of time. I read an article that pointed out that it's more like everyone losing some amount of time in parallel rather than serial, so the amount of lost time is the average amount lost rather than the total amount lost. I suspect that will generate some comments since it's different from what we're usually told. Averages, and statistics, can say almost anything, especially in a magazine article. What matters is that if 20,000 workers spend one hour each on something that stops them doing 1 hour of useful work, that's 20,000 hours of useful work that didn't get done, and even if it all happened in one hour, that's time you can't get back. Enough man-hours lost to put a firm into bankruptcy, or at least 'administration' in times like these. Depending on exactly what 'useful work' happens to be, the values might be hard to assess, but in anything that takes an easily quantifiable amount of time and energy, the lost working time is as easily calculable as numbers of bricks carried, or numbers of miles driven. Most failing businesses fail as a result of losing track of this basic detail, not from failing to grasp finer points of statistics and averages. Same logic that makes a 'business plan' nonsense the moment it goes beyond a tangible count of orders placed. If the work time is spent on coding or design, it's much harder to quantify, but there is still a huge impact on the ease and rate of that work, based on distractions alone. Precisely quantifiable or not, the effect of disruption in a working environment is immense. |
#187
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in
: It's true that Windows 7 performance on the EEE is very poor, but since I essentially use it only for E-mail when traveling, I don't have any real problem with that. Awesome. There is a phrase: "sledgemhammer to crack a nut". I think an OS that reduces a 900 MHz machine (allegedly underclocked to about 633 MHz?), to the point where handling emails is about the limit of immediate aspirations for it, has set a new record for some kind of sense of proportion. |
#188
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 18:16:27 -0600, "BillW50" wrote:
In , Char Jackson wrote: On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 16:18:52 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: In , Char Jackson wrote: I see nothing difficult about moving between two versions of Windows, You don't? I do! That's right, I don't, and I doubt that I'm more mentally agile than the average bear. It's just not that big of a deal. And yes, I know that you find it difficult because you proclaim it loudly and often. and in fact to me it's very little different from moving between two TVs, two cars, two bathrooms in the house, and a hundred other examples. They are standardized. Try driving a car that uses the accelerator on the left and the brake on the right. How fun would that be? Or if the steering wheel went right when you turned left? Sure you could get used to it, but it is still stupid. I've ridden motorcycles for most of my life. The standard location for gear shift is at your left foot and the rear brake at your right foot, but a friend of mine had a Brit bike (Triumph?) that had the shifter and rear brake reversed. I don't even want to say it took 5 seconds to get used to it because it really took no time at all. Second example, I bought a bike in 2007 that had the gear shift on the left handlebar. Time to get used to it was measured in seconds, and all happened before I tossed a leg over the seat. Not a big deal. Third example, as a small town kid I learned to drive when I was 6 and began driving regularly when I was 10 or 11. The steering wheel was always on the left side until I delivered mail, where the steering wheel was on the right side. Again, I don't think there was any time spent on getting used to it. You just get in and drive, just like you just get on the bike and ride it. We humans are smart enough to adapt to our surroundings. That ability diminishes with age, some faster than others, but still. You already know about the fourth example. I move back and forth from XP to 7 many times throughout the day. There is no period of adjustment required. I just do what I need to do, and if that means going to \Users instead of \Documents and Settings, for example, then so be it. It's trivial to remember little things like that. I think the TV example was valid, too. Depending on where I am in the house, I watch one of three TV's, each a different brand with a completely different remote. I have zero problems picking up any of the remotes and using it by touch. How is that possible, you say? It's because we humans can adapt to our environment. Less so as we get older, perhaps, but I'm not there yet. I suppose the day is coming when I'll be where you are now, stuck in my ways and no longer able to adapt, but I hope that day is far off. |
#189
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
| I see nothing difficult about moving between two versions of Windows, | | You don't? I do! | | That's right, I don't You seem to be arguing with a number of people in this thread that they're simply wrong, stubborn, living in the past, or senile for not wanting to switch to Windows 7. I wonder why you spend so much time hanging around in an XP newsgroup in the first place. Does it just bug you that everyone isn't a "novaphile"? People can have different opinions about the changes between systems, but your claim that there's very little change simply isn't true. For corporate employees who only use MS Word, the version of Word may be the most notable factor. They wolud probably have more trouble switching Word versions than they would switching Windows versions. Those are the vast number of people who email from Word, print from Word, work on Word, and actually have no idea where their files are. ("It's OK. Word knows.") Those people don't use PCs. They use MS Word. But for people who really use their PC, who install their own software, and who are facile with Windows Explorer, the changes from XP to Vista/7 are extensive. The restrictions are just one very big change. It's true that those restrictions were in place for "lackey" users on XP installed to NTFS, but that scenario was/is virtually non-existent outside of corporate workstations. Vista/7 has made it very difficult not to operate as a corporate lackey on a workstation PC. |
#190
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Why do you still use Windows XP?
Per Char Jackson:
Do you also get confused when you shop at two stores, and the second store is not the same as the first? I see that as a pretty good analog. I wouldn't use the word "confused", but the local grocery store re-arranges the food locations I definitely lose time on my next shopping trip - and I've heard other people complain about it. The spiel I heard from the grocery store perspective is that moving stuff around increases sales because people wind up wandering past products they had not considered buying before - as they try to find the products on their shopping list. I'd say it's definitely a time sink from the customer perspective. -- Pete Cresswell |
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