QUOTE (extrabigmehdi @ Mar 29 2007, 09:21 PM)

Well, I've tried it and it boot much faster than Xp. It look less memory greedy, even after enabling themes, hardware acceleration for graphics ....
And I'd say more or less the inverse: slightly slower all-around. Perhaps it depends on the actual hardware you're using. It means very little without numbers. Either ways, it's in the same ballpark.
QUOTE (extrabigmehdi @ Mar 29 2007, 09:21 PM)

What's wrong with win 2000 ? It's a pretty good system.
It
was a pretty good system. See 2 quotes below.
QUOTE (extrabigmehdi @ Mar 29 2007, 09:21 PM)

Xp is based on win 2000 by the way.
Honestly, I'm tired of that old line. Vista is based on XP. XP is based on 2k. 2k is based on NT4, which is based on a older VMS-like NT core and Win9x aesthetics. Win9x being little more than a new desktop and 32bit support on top of Win3.11, which is Win3.1 with network support, which was little more than an app launcher with basic multitasking for dos, dos being little more than a CP/M look-alike... You get the drift. It's not so much the way you put it as much as the "XP is just 2k with more DRM" folks which annoy me to no end, and by their logic you might as well still be running CP/M, if not one of its predecessors.
QUOTE (extrabigmehdi @ Mar 29 2007, 09:21 PM)

Most important differences are cosmetics.... Xp is a little bit more handy (behavior of the taskbar).
Which brings me back to my previous point. Of course XP is not totally different than 2k. Very few new OS'es are drastically different from their predecessors. Yet XP is so much more than 2k:
-new taskbar stuff and new start menu altogether
-there's a 64 bit version (imagine that), and also media center/tablet pc editions
-Better deployment tools and better group policies
-ClearType
-System Restore
-Hibernate -- and ACPI that actually works (unlike Win2k) as well as hot-docking for laptop users
-Prefretching
-Basic firewall (good enough for most uses)
-Remote Desktop and Remote Assistance
-Fast User switching for home users
-IE7 and WMP11 won't ever make it to Win2k
-IE's ActiveX addon manager
-MMC 3.0
-The .NET framework 3.0 (the future of development on Windows) will never be ported to it, so no new apps that use WPF either (a very big problem IMO), nor any of the upcoming development tools (that alone is a reason enough for me to never consider using it again)
-Tons of improvements for end-users so they don't screw up their systems, like Windows File Protection
-Lots of useful little things like driver rollback (who never came across a buggy or problematic driver before?)
-Tons of security enhancements, like DEP
-Recovery Console
-UPnP
-newer version of IIS
-no powershell on win2k
-Automatic Updates
-tons of little and sometimes useful things, like the image viewer (with built-in slideshow, just press F11), CD burning, zip file extractor, movie maker and all that
-Better WiFi/BlueTooth support
-Win2k is in "extended support" (and there's only like a couple years left)
-many new apps and even hardware that requires WinXP (or newer)
... LOTS of new stuff. Win2k just isn't viable anymore for me.
QUOTE (extrabigmehdi @ Mar 29 2007, 09:21 PM)

There's nothing essentially new in Vista except perhaps directx 10.
You're joking, right? DirectX 10 is just a TINY part of the changes. Even if you also exclude Aero Glass and Flip 3D (the "shiny" stuff people can actually see), there's still TONS of changes.
-New installer and deployment tools (disk imaging based, no need for ghost anymore.) WDS replaces RIS. Out with the NT3-era blue screen installer that requires a floppy to load Mass Strorage Adapter drivers.
-ReadyBoost, ReadyBoot, ReadyDrive and SuperFetch
-the new shell (i.e. explorer)
-the sidebar
-new desktop search app
-lots of new apps, like windows mail instead of the outlook express, calendar, photo gallery, etc. (lots of them!)
-voice recognition
-BitLocker
-new games like you've seemingly noticed
-the improved media center app (in some editions)
-IIS7 (a huge improvement over XP's)
-further improved security, like "real" NX bit support, IE7's protected mode, etc
-new better driver model (WDDM)
-transactional NTFS and the Kernel Transaction Manager (a very big deal on its own IMO)
-boot configuration database (no more boot.ini)
-better thread scheduling
-I/O cancellation finally done right
-I/O prioritization
-memory priorities
-kernel address space that changes dynamically
-symbolic links (not the same as 2k or XP's, and explorer is symlink-aware too)
... etc.
Saying Vista is like XP with DirectX 10 is exactly like saying a 2008 Porsche is like a 1976 Ford with new paint. Not only it totally misses lots of the underlying technology changes, but it also misses lots of the obvious stuff too.
On a side note, why can't I ever seemingly find the latest typo no matter how many times I preview, and it just jumps at me when I post? ...