IglooEater said:Yup. XP. My parents' and brother's XPs confirmed my decision to go mac. bsod every day. Or more than that. Plus all kinds of other programs freezing. No Vista, never bsod'ed it would freeze before it got there on what was a high performance machine at the time. The thing would just randomly turn off and the screen went black. Again, more than once a day. Also painfully slow. Had to give it to XP, next to Vista it was blazingly fast. I was fortunate enough to hardly ever have to run them.LonelyBoy said:IglooEater said:LonelyBoy said:Cthulhu said:Well if consumption is your gauge than the iphone is the best camera in the world and you can't eat a better burger than mcdonalds.
Also Justin Bieber is a musical genius and we have come full circle...
Judging market wishes by consumption is also faulty in numerous ways, the market doesn't want a buggy version of windows that bsods randomly, but it consumes it in droves. It wants an iphone with a headphone jack and an macbook with usb ports, but buys them without them in record numbers.
If your Windows BSODs randomly, figure out what your issue is. Windows has been quite stable since Windows 2000, unless you have bad hardware or malware.
We, by the way, have not come full circle; you've just repeated your Bieber argument. You really think that just wins it for you, don't you?
The 95s and 98s I worked with were plenty stable. I've heard otherwise regarding XP, and especially Vista.
XP? Seriously? XP was worshipped so hard I still know people who swear by it (and, scarily, run it). Vista had issues, but not BSOD issues. 95 and 98, the old 16-bit (partly) codebase, had issues and gained more over the life of an installation. I have never, ever, had 2000, XP, 7, 8, or 10 (the full 32-bit NT kernel) BSOD without an identifiable hardware or software issue to be resolved. The same things that affect Linux and Macs.
I never ever had MacOS freeze. ever. A third party app will occasionally stop responding. But my baseline mbp is 8 years old now, so I can accept some general slowness.
95 and 98 however were quite fine if one remembered to do a reinstall ever year.
How do you find the newer versions for speed? I've heard things have improved sense Vista days, but I've honestly never seen a machine running anything newer than Vista.
Each new version has gotten faster. Honestly, it sounds like your parents' and brothers' machines had something wrong with them - nothing will wreck a Windows machine like having a million toolbars, weather buddies, and so forth installed. Or crappy hardware with iffy drivers (and that does mean stuff like cheap store-bough PCs). All I can say is, I have had a damn herd of PCs in my households running the various versions of NT kernel, and every BSOD I've had (which is not many) can be traced to a specific issue that caused it. And not "Windows is crappy". Things like a stick of RAM going bad, or a beta graphics driver.
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