• fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 hours ago

      Windows 7 was just vista with dipping sauce.

      By the time 7 came out Vista was fine. Vista was the usual bugs of a new OS, plus the new drivers which most manufactures decided to not do properly so they made Vista look much worse than it actually was. The much higher system requirements really didn’t help.

      If you bought a new machine with hardware that came out post Vista’s launch you probably had a good experience with Vista. I personally had 0 issues with my machine in 2008.

      • SaltySalamander@fedia.io
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        5 hours ago

        Vista’s major problem was that it released during a time that the PC industry was racing to the bottom in terms of pricing. All those initial Vista machines were woefully inadequate for the OS they ran. 1-2GB RAM, which was perfectly fine for XP, was pathetic for Vista, yet they sold them anyway. If you bought a high-end machine, you likely had a pretty decent experience with Vista. If you bought a random PC at Walmart? Not so much.

      • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Vista paved the way for Win7 by highlighting the abysmal driver and support issues. Which got significant work done on it so by the time Win 7 acme out things were in a good state.

        Vista was, much like ME, was a decent OS hampered by its time and hardware, but have been meme’d into festering shitpiles.

        • KnightontheSun@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          I’m on board with your Vista–>7 thoughts, but I do take issue with ME. It never was a decent OS and it very much was a steaming shitpile. It was far too much new code stupidly rushed for the holiday season. I remembering installing it being a roll of the dice even with the same hardware. It would work, then it wouldn’t, then it might work with some odd issues, then it deffo would not at all. Hours wasted trying.

          I really did try, but never had a good experience with WinME and I know of no one else who did. Even first Vista was better (though saying that makes me shudder).

      • magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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        9 hours ago

        Vista shows how important the initial reputation is. Everybody had made up their mind to hate it, even if the hate wasn’t fully justified. There wasn’t much Microsoft could do about it, other than releasing Windows 7.

        Windows 8 on the other hand was genuinely bad.

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      11 hours ago

      Except ME was part of the DOS line, while XP extended Win2k which is NT.

      But I take your point, just that Win2k was (largely) the end of MS producing DOS-based operating systems (with XP being the final nail in that coffin).

      In business, once Win2k was out, we stopped deploying Win9x entirely. Before that, NT was problematic on some hardware and for some software/users. Win2k solved most of that.

      • SaltySalamander@fedia.io
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        5 hours ago

        Win2k was (largely) the end of MS producing DOS-based operating systems (with XP being the final nail in that coffin)

        Win2k and WinXP were not built on DOS. They were not DOS-based. They were NT-based. ME was the final nail in that coffin.