7 things I hate about Vista

I've had an OEM copy of Vista Ultimate 64 bit version, with all the updates installed expect the foreign language ones, for about a month now. This article details the features which I do not like.

7. Instant search tool, great useless tool, the constant indexing of my hard drive has not actually made it any easier to find what I was looking for. Sure if know the exact name of a file or the general size yeah I can save time because I don't have to wait for a search to complete, but I generally have to do several searches to find what I am looking for. Still not very helpful

6. Inconsistent loading of the OS. I turned on my comp when I came home and just let it sit, didn't log in nothing, went to watch some tv for a bit, had dinner, came back to a blank screen, a solid on harddrive light and dvd rw drive light on solid, no signal to the monitor. I pressed the spacebar, wiggled the mouse, tried esc, then CRTL + ALT + DEL, nothing changed. I had to reboot because Vista feel off a cliff while I wasn't using it. Fucking lame.

5. UAC, nuff said, annoying as fuck, turning it off, in my system tray the red shield icon sits, unable to ever get that out of there, every once in a while when Vista feels like pushing my buttons, it pops up like the robot from lost in space "DANGER DANGER" whatever. When you turn off a feature in Windows it should go away, and bother you no longer. Not the UAC, I'm sure there is a hack, but I am seriously not motivated enough to figure it out cause I am just gonna scrap Vista if SP1 doesn't radically change my mind.

4. I hate with Vista, that sometimes programs like Yahoo messenger, lock up or crash, Doom3 has done it, and it brings the OS down as well, Like I can CRTL + ALT + DEL and get to the menu of options, which are all bad execpt the task manager, which is the only thing I wanna see pop up when it happens, but when messenger dies for whatever reason, it locks the whole OS up. On XP with this same rig, via my quad core, I could just select the process, and kill it, and restart Messenger, with Vista, I can't get the power of the 3 cpus not maxxed out, to the task manager. That's bullshit Microsoft!

3. Disk utilities, specifically the defragmenter, I'll run that, then I'll run the Aus logic disk defrag, and get another 5-10% better defrag from doing that, WTF?

2. Lack of extras and I mean serious lack. There is no Windows Virus scanning, so I use AVG, but with Windows having historical vulnerability to viruses you'd think that they would be interested in providing a free anti-virus for people running Vista, but my biggest lack of extra falls into the category of Word Processing. There is no MS WORD, no EXCEL, nothing, on the "Ultimate" copy of Vista. Basically you spend $200 on an OS, and then you can spend another $150-$600 on word processing software? Seriously, a computers primary job used to be word processing and it has never really gotten away from that. Imagine, a coffee maker that doesn't brew coffee anymore, but controls your television. Where the hell is Microsoft on the ball on this one?

1. Slowness, I hate that this OS runs slower, and bogs itself down, on a monster system. It is probably more secure and maybe more stable than XP, but I was doing fine with XP SP2, security wise, and stability wise, and experiencing much more responsive OS tasking, and switching between what I was doing. Vista is all bullshit when it says you can do more with more.

There are only two benefits that Vista has going for it, one is DX10 and DX10.1, and being able to handle more than 4 GB RAM. That's it. I have decided that everything else about Vista is either pure fluff or less than the value offered by XP.

[MOVED FROM BELOW DUE TO JU's PISS POOR EDITING SCHEME]

Well here are a few things I would have included in the Vista Ultimate package.

1. Better Speech Recognition The Vista Speech Recognition menu is slightly faster but it doesn't seem to recognize my speech any more effectively than XP. Which is sad. Gates said that he saw us using verbal speech to communicate with our computers much more than typing way back in the 70's/80's. For sure it would be faster and more efficient than typing. My first experience with speech recognition was in the days for a 500 mhz cpu. Then again with my single core 2.4 ghz processor. Now that I have a quad core, of which Vista mostly doesn't utilize, the experience has not significantly improved. This type of a program could/would vastly improve the versatility of an OS. It would also give Windows a feature other OS's don't have setting them apart.

2. Real Word Processing: MS WORD Where is the Word Processor for Vista? Oh yeah it's in another $500 upgrade package aside from the OS. What bullshit. They don't even include the back burner Microsoft Works anymore. They could have at least given the user MS WORD 97 or 2003 or something instead of nothing with ULTIMATE! What they did give you is the antiquated notepad which doesn't even "nextline" properly but reads text files great. Except for the free Textpad program which works even better and opens more different kinds of text files. Wordpad was also included but it's the same Wordpad as WIN95. Really is that what I'm paying for with Ultimate, a word processor that was midrange 13 years ago?

3. Faster and better performance than the previous OS Really instead of the whole sidebar crap they could have bumped the speed of the a window closing or opening from the half second you see, to something like a tenth of a second, increased the size of the red X bar so when you wanna close something, you close it on the first try every time, and instead of just renaming everything from XP to Vista, they should have errorer on the side of making fewer changes to names of things, because now everybody has to learn a whole new OS again. If I was going to have the sidebar, the first thing I'd have in there is a google map of where the computer is at, instead of a second clock, 4 inches above my digital clock on the system tray. Real big benefit Microsoft.

4. Driver Support for EVERYTHING I mean everything, Microsoft is the biggest company in the industry, they have an OS which is the basis for everything to run on and 3rd party devs to develop for, not the other way around. Vista, should have included all the drivers that XP had for programs and hardware, and automatically emulated 32bit mode when necessary. So that end users, i.e. me, don't have to go digging online to find drivers for stuff that works with XP just fine. On a 15 gigabyte install, there wasn't room for a folder with these updates/drivers?

5. Real Backward Compatibility With an Ultimate copy, or "Premium level copy" of anything, there should be support for programs that originally ran on older copies of Microsoft OS's. Start with DOS and work your way up. This should come standard, with Vista Ultimate and why not. Obviously end users aren't going to be able to remember every thing they run on XP or Win 2000 that ran on older stuff like 98SE, 95, and DOS. There are a very few but select programs that people keep and run be it because of older machines or just low IT budgets. Whatever, there is a need to run older stuff and that capability should be with Vista at the "Premium level copy" of the OS.
292,563 views 135 replies
Reply #1 Top
BoXXi hugs his XP..........
Reply #2 Top
7. I don't thinks it's that bad.  I find that I am using it more and more and if you don't like it, you can turn off indexing and go the XP route
6. Haven't seen that but understand it could be irritating
5. Thank God for TweakVista!!
4. I have NEVER seen that.  Something fugly might be going on there.  I have apps crash (infrequently) but they never take down Vista
3. And if they did the monopolists would go nuts about MS killing competition
2. See above
1. If you are running Vista on the same HW you were running XP you will likely take a hit.  That should be expected.

As always in these type of posts, it's good that we have choices in OS vendors and OS.  You should always run the system that fits your functionality needs, your budget, your security comfort zone, etc.
Reply #3 Top
Lion hugs and squeezes his XP too   
Reply #4 Top
5. in my system tray the red shield icon sits, unable to ever get that out of there


You have a choice in the security center to turn off the warnings.
Reply #5 Top

The seven things I hate about Vista:

1) The start menu
2) The start menu
3) The start menu
4) The start menu
5) The start menu
6) The start menu
7) The start menu

The single largest step backwards in O/S history. Who ever designed that folder system should be keel-hauled.

Reply #6 Top
I don't really care that you are moaning about Vista- it's really the whole whambulance attitude. If you hate it so much, stop posting and complaining about it and go back to XP, already. (Hey I just got Vista I'm paying the "Ultimate" Price for it! and 7 things I hate about Vista)

If you can't afford it, perhaps you can stand on a corner and collect 1 penny for each of your many complaints and then use them to revert to a legit XP.

The disc gave me a 30 day free trial period with which to run until activation. Try as I might to find illegitimate ways to get past activation, and they do exist I guess, I couldn't get anything to work lol, though I only really made a few half assed attempts.


Reply #7 Top
Hugging, cherishing and still loving my XP.  
Reply #8 Top
AL hugs his Vista Machine

Never had a problem.
Much quicker than my XP machine. Ram,ram,and more ram
The only time the UAC comes up is when I open SDC or IP.
"There is no Windows Virus scanning" it's called Windows Defender and Norton. Don't laugh never
had a virus accept a cookie tracker.
Every time I hear that people don't like Vista the next thing they say is 64bit. I think there
lies the problem.
That and Nvidia. I've read on this site most people complain that there is no areo or video games
are crashing there CPU's and it seems like it's the 8000 series cards.

Vista Ultimate, Intel Dual Core 6600 @ 2.40GHz, 4 gigs ram, 512 ATI vid card 30x faster than
XP MediaCenter, Intel Dual Core 2.80GHz, 4gigs ram, 128 ATI vid card
Reply #9 Top
The single largest step backwards in O/S history. Who ever designed that folder system should be keel-hauled.
Thank goodness for ObjectBar.
Reply #10 Top
I like running Vista Ultimate 64 better than XP XP Pro anytime. Vista has never crashed due to a software issue. I did have a crash due to my nvidia card I used to have. Since I switched to an ATI X1950 XT, I've never had a problem. I do have a dual boot system with XP on a seperate drive. The only reason I have XP at all is due to Sandisk  and Real not having a build of Rhapsody that works on Vista. I have a Sansa mp3 player and it uses Rhapsody.   Other than that, I'd be strictly Vista Ultimate 64 al the way. I am unhappy about the lack of Ultimate Exras thus far, though.
Reply #11 Top
Just sent my machine back to hp, 8 months old and wont boot up. running vista home premium edition. Hope it comes back with XP on it. !!!!!
Reply #12 Top
bilbo hugs his vista...
Reply #13 Top
Snake: HP partitions the harddrive so you can make a restore disk or use the partition to bring you cpu back to factory condition. That's probably what HP will do.
Reply #14 Top
Anne hugs her Wonderful Vista...


Why must we do the battles of Which OS is better???
Reply #15 Top
The seven things I hate about Vista:
1) The start menu
2) The start menu
3) The start menu
4) The start menu
5) The start menu
6) The start menu
7) The start menu
The single largest step backwards in O/S history. Who ever designed that folder system should be keel-hauled.


Wholeheartedly Agree
Reply #16 Top
RoseNell hugs her Vista,, I HAVE NONE OF THE PROBLEMS THAT YOU STATED IN YOUR ORGINAL POST. May be its your computer. Not one of the things your posted do I have a problem with. I can still do just about everything I could do on XP.. Even better.

Faster, more secure, I have learned how to skin it now without any problems.

I would take a look more closely at your issues and check out your computer.
Good luck...
Reply #17 Top
it seems like it's the 8000 series cards


Im running a GeForce 8600 GT and have had zero issues with it. Works like a champ.
I also semi-agree with BookChick.. I think you made your points pretty well known on your previous thread.

While I am not overall impressed that much with Vista, I might as well keep it and get used to it as it is the way things are going. I would rather be well versed in it when the masses are just cutting their teeth on it.
Reply #18 Top
What's that saying "Intel inside idiot outside" nough said.
Reply #19 Top
Thanks ALMonty, i have made the restore discs, but nothing happens when inserted in the drive. Staples UK where the machine was bought cannot get it to work either. All good fun !!!!
Reply #20 Top
Good things will come to those that wait and will look to the future!
Vista is one of the best operating systems on the market today. User friendly NO~!
If you don't care for it - get rid of it and stay in the back with the rest of the crowd. Who has XP problems still too!!!!
I'm staying up to date and everything works correctly here with no problems. If there is a problem I fix it. So I have no problems to speak about that has me bluffed yet.

SGT
Reply #21 Top
Im running a GeForce 8600 GT and have had zero issues with it.


I'm not saying everyone that has those cards has problems. Most people that say they can't run Dreams, their specs contain 8000 series cards.


Or they just don't know how to update their drivers.
Reply #22 Top
The seven things I hate about Vista:

1) The start menu
2) The start menu
3) The start menu
4) The start menu
5) The start menu
6) The start menu
7) The start menu

The single largest step backwards in O/S history. Who ever designed that folder system should be keel-hauled.


I find the Start Menu a huge step forward. To have one neat small menu where all you have to do is type the first three letters of the app you are looking for into the 'Start Search' box is, for me, infinitely quicker and more intuitive than having all your programs spread out over the entire screen.

As for the indexing, I've also found that after you've had Vista for a while, it's a good idea to rebuild your search index with the Folder Locations you need. Initially it takes an hour or two do index the locations (and you really should not work on your machine at all while it does this), but once it's finished you then have a very quick search tool for you system.

After using Vista for the last eight months my experiences have been very positive. On my system is has been amazingly stable, faster than XP, quicker than XP. I love the sleep mode when I shut my laptop. I go for over a week without having to reboot. However, this is, of course, just my personal view and if it's not running well on your system then put XP back on it.
Reply #23 Top
I find the Start Menu a huge step forward. To have one neat small menu where all you have to do is type the first three letters of the app you are looking for into the 'Start Search' box is, for me, infinitely quicker and more intuitive than having all your programs spread out over the entire screen.

As for the indexing, I've also found that after you've had Vista for a while, it's a good idea to rebuild your search index with the Folder Locations you need. Initially it takes an hour or two do index the locations (and you really should not work on your machine at all while it does this), but once it's finished you then have a very quick search tool for you system.

After using Vista for the last eight months my experiences have been very positive. On my system is has been amazingly stable, faster than XP, quicker than XP. I love the sleep mode when I shut my laptop. I go for over a week without having to reboot. However, this is, of course, just my personal view and if it's not running well on your system then put XP back on it.


BookChick wholeheartedly agrees and hugs her Vista.
Reply #25 Top
Am I missing something like a plug in for this site? I keep seeing all kinds of html that looks like it should be hidden.

[

[

[color="#FF0000"]NO~!


LOL...

Anyway, Vista doesn't actually crash, it just hangs and does whatever it is doing going on about 3 min before I have to reboot if I want to get any work done, this is when Yahoo Messenger fucks up. With XP I could always get to the task manager and it was always given priority 1 on the system at least from my perspective as user.

You guys are right, it's a good idea to go with XP, and I have tried over and over, at this point I will have to spend another $100 to do that, and I just don't have the motivation like I wrote.

One day though, when I am having a particuarly typical exprience with Vista, fucking acting like a system hog on my top of the line rig, and I'll just snap, and go out and pay whatever it costs to get XP again. I might even just take my harddrive and fucking hammer it out back. I've already given my friend my copy of the Vista DVD just in case I get the old urge to fire up the microwave with a DVD in it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xy4mzu6U-s
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Telrq_8Ufs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyRnEEKPXg8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-oWB4z0rsQ

beep beep beep beep Vista is done honey!
Maniacal laughter in the background