I'm using vanilla Realtek onboard audio that came with my Gigabyte GA-X38-DS4. It had significant issues in XP if the system is under load (which makes sense, because it's a software solution anyway) that have never once recurred under Vista (which also makes sense, because the brand new audio stack has monumental changes that reduce latency along with core features of Vista that allow for far better thread scheduling under duress.) Further, I've had three hundred Vista machines go through automated build process framework that I architected, and none of them in had any issues with audio at all. A few of those machines (IBM Thinkpad T400) had problems with the switchable video option, but that was resolved by a manufacturer driver. Another random few had bluescreen issues (IBM T60/T61) that were later found to be caused by a malfunction in the docking station of all things.Well, the opposite for me. And I seen this behaviour on a row of systems. Vista was even worse as it sometimes just totally hanged for 20 seconds or so.
Are you using a Soundcard which bypasses the Software Mixer by any chance? (Creative does AFAIK)
My last XP system was a 7900GT and suffered the same problem, and I have used a GeForce Ti500, a modded Radeon 9500np, and a Radeon x800 before that last NV part. All of these had problems with alt-tabbing in XP. And startup times on Vista were far better than XP on my system, along the lines of 30% or so.Alt-Tabbing was sketchy in WinXP and yes it did mess up the system a couple times for me, but I almost never had a problem with it once I got rid of ATI-drivers.
The graphics stack sure is an improvement, it just pales against the longer startup times and tons of background processes introduced
Sure. The average lifespan of an modern operating system is probably at MOST a decade. The average lifespan of a human is about 60 years, give or take based on your environment. When I get to 60 years old, there damned well better be someone coming in behind me with bigger, better and broader ideas than mine. I have no problem with that, and would be honestly concerned if anything else were really the case.I bet you`re older than XP, wanna finish that line of tought ?
I think you can look at anything and find the negatives, just like you can look at something else and entirely ignore the negatives. It's called bias, and it's a standard human trait. I think you've discovered your own. NT 6 and later (Vista and up) have massive changes to thread scheduling that greatly enhance multitasking performance under high load, power utilization, far more I/O throughput and prioritization under high load, far better logging output for "basic" system support staff (like our contracted helpdesk), far better system recovery options (like instanced copies of documents that you've saved), far better remote management functionality and group policy capabilites -- it has WORLDS of benefit over XP and 2000.I wouldnt mind a replacement if it were an noteable improvement, Win7 is a bag of up and downs for me. When I switched from 98 to XP I never looked back as 98 died several times a hour when developing programs. I dont see big improvements like that in Win7 anywhere while the downsides are there all the time.
Just because you either A: don't use it or B: don't see it does not negate the fact that these things DO exist.
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