QUOTE (win95guy @ Jul 12 2008, 10:12 AM)

It seems that you are one of the few people who understand that the Conroe range of CPUs isn't better than
the previous just because of Multi-Cores on the cpu but the cpu architecture itself being more efficient
making a 1.8ghz cpu rival the best of the Pentium Ivs that were released.
With XP you can obtain free programs that emulate DOS and can run 16-bit apps fine like DOSBOX. There
is also compatibility mode.
See how you can delete the recycle bin? Windows NT5 and onwards (W2K and newer) has a better for of Windows
SYstem File protection that is great for home users so they don't deystroy their OS as easily as the probably
could with Windows 98's system file protection.
Oh and the C2D and C2Q chips aren't based on the Pentium 3 Tualatin... It goes like this:
Pentium 3 Tualatin > Pentium M > Core > Core 2
So yeah you were right but you were basically saying that the Core 2 is based on P6 architecture meaning any
example could have been used as far back as the Pentium Pro (Excluding Netburst based CPU architecture).
Win95Guy

Pentium 4 (Netburst architecture) was the biggest mistake Intel made. They were slow and ran very hot. Dual PIIIs @ 1GHz+ wipe the floor with any P4. I know that the Tualatin evolved in the Pent M and later in the Core, but i simplified it a little.

DOSBox is very useful. I do prefer a P1 with 32MB RAM and an AWE64 soundcard instead, but that's just me. But i'm talking about 16-bit Windows programs. And no, ntvdm.exe doesn't do the trick, especially when you have a game using mixed 32-bit and 16-bit DLLs. Compatibility mode? Bwahaha, what a joke. When it does work it makes the program throw random errors instead of not starting at all. Really awesome.
As about deleting the recycle bin, in 2k/XP you can delete the boot loader with 3 lines in a bat file without anyone noticing. On next reboot there's no more winblows. In what way did security evolve in XP?
QUOTE (herbalist @ Jul 12 2008, 12:00 PM)

I don't have a problem with real progress. When change is for the sake of profits and doesn't represent any real benefit to the user, it's a whole different story. As for the ability to integrate into our daily lives, what can XP or Vista do that 9X wouldn't be able to handle?
98 does have memory usage issues in its design. It wouldn't surprise me if someone here figured out how to fix that too. Until then, getting long run times from 98 means using software that makes efficient use of memory. With SeaMonkey, I can browse for a while, then shut it off and have almost the same amount of free resources I started with. Not so with IE6.
Maybe Vista or XP need multiple processors to do that. 98 doesn't.
ScreenshotThis is with a 366MHZ Celeron and 64MB RAM.
Rick
The memory leak issue isn't that bad. For some reason or another i have to reboot at least once a day so i don't worry about it. However you are wrong about SMP, and... uh... Try Youtube or another flash video site on that Celeron.

My laptop in sig can run them in their window without hiccups, but smooth fullscreen is only possible if i don't have anything else CPU intensive running at that moment.
A little example of SMP. Yahoo Messenger has the nasty habit of locking up when transferring files at high speed (over 2MB/s). With my dual-PIII i can set Realtime priority and assign it to one of the CPUs, and i still have another one available to surf the web or play games. On a single core system Yahoo Messenger would kill all CPU resources, forcing you to wait till the transfer is done.
QUOTE (SlugFiller @ Jul 12 2008, 03:32 PM)

IIRC the XP recovery console is extremely limited in functionality. It's tough enough just copying a file from folder A to folder B in it.
With DOS, I get something that is intended to be a full operating system, and I get all the command line tools and 16-bit software I could possibly need. I always keep Norton Commander on-hand, making me hardly miss the absence of the GUI. Log reading, text file editing, copying, zip and cab extraction, etc etc... I have a complete toolset.
With Linux, the root console gives such complete support for non-X programs, that you wouldn't believe it doesn't load any kernel modules. With nano I can easily (well, relatively...) edit the configuration files, fixing any malconfiguration or error, something I can only dream about in Windows. It would have been an awesome feature, had it not been the only way to get the system working (forget X-based, even a curses-based configuration dialog would have been sufficiently awesome).
XP's recovery console is no replacement for cascaded kernel responsibility. In XP, if one driver goes, everything goes. This just gets worse with every new release.
I wished i was in Linux when i saw Vista's permission stuff. I want root command line.

And i sure miss DOS alright. I remember being 6 and learning what I/O, IRQ and DMA meant so i could configure my soundcard for DOS games in Win95.

I keep a 586 box around just for messing about in DR-DOS.
As for XP's drivers, this is why they removed the Vista audio stack from the kernel space to the user space. However, this didn't make it more stable than XP, just created more trouble...
QUOTE (BenoitRen @ Jul 12 2008, 05:33 PM)

Sure, but that's because Vista is a hog. Single-core has always done multi-tasking well on modern OSs.
See above.