Windows Vista: A Review Recap

Back in late 2006 and early 2007, most appraisals of Vista were fairly kind.

By  |  Monday, October 12, 2009 at 2:48 am

PC World

“Everything You Need to Know About Windows Vista,” by Preston Gralla, November 22nd, 2006 and “Exclusive: First Vista PC Tests,” by Richard Baguley, January 25th, 2007

How are the visuals? “Some may say this is mere eye candy that won’t affect your real productivity. Maybe so. But it makes life at the keyboard fun again. And for my money, that’s right up there with productivity.”

How are performance and stability? “[W]ith the beta drivers in our tests, games ran significantly slower under Vista than under Windows XP. In earlier testing of the Dell XPS 710 running XP, this system ran at 143 frames per second in the game Far Cry at 1024 by 768 resolution. An identical system using the same settings with Vista managed a frame rate of just 108 fps–some 24 percent slower.”

How compatible is it? “The lack of Vista drivers for some peripherals could be a major issue for many users.”

How’s UAC? “Because of UAC, using Vista can at times become a herky-jerky kind of experience, with so many annoying pop-ups coming at you that you want to scream ‘Stop!’…Of course, if you do turn off UAC, then you have no one but yourself to blame if a piece of malware does get in and take over your system.”

The bottom line? “All in all, Windows Vista is a great leap forward for the operating system, with a much-improved, far more useful (and pleasurable) interface; faster, better search; beefed-up security that’s a big improvement over Windows XP with SP2; and far, far better networking. There are some clunkers in there, though, such as the annoying UAC feature…But the pluses make you forget the minuses.”

The New York Times

“Vista Wins on Looks. As for Lacks..,” by David Pogue, December 14th, 2006

How are the visuals? “Windows Vista is beautiful. Microsoft has never taken elegance so seriously before. Discreet eye candy is partly responsible. Windows and menus cast subtle shadows. A new typeface gives the whole affair a fresh, modern feeling. Subtle animations liven up the proceedings.”

How are performance and stability? Not addressed.

How compatible is it? “Moving to Vista means hunting for updated drivers for your printer, audio card and so on, not to mention troubleshooting incompatible programs.”

How’s UAC? “This will strike most people as an unnecessary nuisance, and you can turn it off. But it’s actually one of Vista’s most important new protection features; when the day comes that a virus is making changes to your PC, and not you, you’ll know about it.”

The bottom line? “[It]t doesn’t matter what you (or tech reviewers) think of Windows Vista; sooner or later, it’s what most people will have on their PCs. In that light, it’s fortunate that Vista is better looking, better designed and better insulated against the annoyances of the Internet. At the very least, it’s well equipped to pull the world’s PCs along for the next five years — or whenever the next version of Windows drops down the chimney.”

USA Today

“The Long and Winding Road,” by Ed Baig, January 25th, 2007

How are the visuals? “The Aero interface is handsome. Users will appreciate translucent edges, live thumbnail images that appear over taskbar items you mouse over, and a 3D effect that lets you use the mouse scroll wheel to flip through a stack of open windows.”

How are performance and stability? “[A]t times, the computer has been running noticeably slower. The system crashed at least once.”

How compatible is it? “Post-op, most of my programs seem to be behaving. Same goes for the printer. I successfully installed the Vista-ready 2007 version of Norton Internet Security, too….I did encounter a few compatibility snags. A downloadable update to Quicken didn’t load properly on first attempt. When I ran the Opera Web browser, the ‘color scheme’ was temporarily downgraded to Vista Basic, something repeated when I launched the InterVideo WinDVD program.”

How’s UAC? “Vista promises to be more secure. Time will tell. At the very least, Windows frequently asks you for permission before allowing potentially risky changes to be made.”

The bottom line? “In most respects, Vista is a better Windows. But you’ll need patience, money and a powerful system to upgrade. The overhaul isn’t so dramatic that you couldn’t hum along with XP awhile longer.”

The Wall Street Journal

“Vista: Worthy, Largely Unexciting,” by Walt Mossberg, January 18th, 2007

How are the visuals? “The new Aero interface is lovely, and it makes using a PC more pleasant and efficient. It apes some elements on the Macintosh but retains a distinct look and feel. Icons of folders look three dimensional, and they pop.”

How are performance and stability? “[I]n my tests, some elements of Vista could be maddeningly slow even on new, well-configured computers.”

How compatible is it? “To get the full benefits of Vista, especially the new look and user interface, which is called Aero, you will need a hefty new computer, or a hefty one that you purchased fairly recently. The vast majority of existing Windows PCs won’t be able to use all of Vista’s features without major hardware upgrades.”

How’s UAC? “One visible security feature asks for your permission before you do potentially dangerous tasks, like installing new software. This is a good thing, and it’s been on the Macintosh for years. But unlike the Mac version, the Vista version of this permission feature doesn’t necessarily require you to type in a password, so a stranger or a child using your PC could grant permission for something you yourself might not allow.”

The bottom line? “After months of testing Vista on multiple computers, new and old, I believe it is the best version of Windows that Microsoft has produced. However, while navigation has been improved, Vista isn’t a breakthrough in ease of use. Overall, it works pretty much the same way as Windows XP…Gradually, all Windows computers will be Vista computers, and that’s a good thing, if only for security reasons. But you may want to keep your older Windows XP box around awhile longer, until you can afford new hardware that can handle Vista.”

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31 Comments For This Post

  1. ediedi Says:

    "Most writers said to think carefully before upgrading an existing PC to Vista, but that it would be a welcome improvement over XP when acquired on a new machine." – pretty accurate in my experience.

    On a related note, Vista reviews were moderate, because they compared it to the very mature XP.

    W7 reviews are raving because they compare it to Vista. – something to take note of when forming an opinion based on reviews

  2. Muay Thai Says:

    Windows 7 is definitely a good upgrade, unlike Vista was… Muay Thai | Muay Thai Kick | Martial Arts for Children.

  3. Steve Wildstrom Says:

    As I wrap up another Win 7 column, thanks for reminding me that I was reasonably prescient about Vista. I would have been tougher on UAC, but I really thought Microsoft would fix it quickly. Actually, I should not have been surprised that they didn’t since I had been telling them how much it sucked since beta 1 to no effect whatever.

  4. oldtaku Says:

    Well just look at that list of book and magazine whores. Of course they’d be all enthusiastic about Vista so they can publish a whole new set of ‘how to make this not suck’ articles and books. I don’t trust their Win7 reviews either – which is fine, because you can try it yourself before buying.

  5. P Says:

    One thing I note that never gets mentioned…user interface changes that affect the normal productivity as one needs to get used to and figure out how to use. Just as productivity challenges exist in Office 2007, such is the OS as well.

    This is only exacerbated by MS getting it wrong and then having to fix soon there after–and I think this is one of the reasons business is slow to change.

  6. zato Says:

    “Did any of the reviews predict widespread dislike of and/or disinterest in Vista, or guess that it would never become the dominant version of the OS? No, and that’s OK: The point of a product review isn’t to predict how the marketplace will react.”

    All reviewers work for Microsoft. Their job is to fool the suckers into buying / preserve the monoply at all cost..

    “Only Forbes’ Manes was extremely negative, period. (His piece, the last he’s written for Forbes to date,”

    This is what happens when you go against Ballmer. RIP Mr. Manes.

  7. Harry McCracken Says:

    “All reviewers work for Microsoft. Their job is to fool the suckers into buying / preserve the monoply at all cost..”

    The “all reviewers work for Microsoft” meme was always grounded in conspiracy theory rather than truth, but it seems especially removed from reality in 2009. Much coverage of Microsoft is profoundly negative. And the monopolies are all in decline.

    “This is what happens when you go against Ballmer. RIP Mr. Manes.”

    Steve’s fine–he just decided to take a break from tech writing…

    –Harry

  8. david Says:

    interesting findings. now do the same for mac os x 10.6 snow leopard. very weird that all of the apple-loving pundits (including mossberg pogue macworld) made no mention of the crippling bugs this ‘finely tuned’ os is filled with. only place that has addressed the bugs, or solutions, is oddly enough ilounge… a site that doesn’t cover mac very often. look at all the comments, and the people thrilled with the solutions. is the reviewing media failing us?

    http://www.ilounge.com/index.php/backstage/comments/problems-with-mac-os-x-10.6-snow-leopard-join-the-sizable-minority/
    http://www.ilounge.com/index.php/backstage/comments/two-proposed-solutions-to-snow-leopard-crash-problems-on-macs/

  9. Rob Pegoraro Says:

    Thanks for writing this–it persuaded me to re-read the review I did of Vista in the Washington Post back in 2007. To sum that piece up:

    * I was lukewarm overall about Vista.

    * I had no idea so many users would hate Vista. Mind you, I don’t like XP and was glad to see Vista improve a few things about XP that have bugged me, such as Windows Explorer’s default interface.

    * I did note performance and compatibility issues but grossly underestimated how long the second category of problems would persist. It amazes me how apathetic some Windows developers have been about tweaking their apps to work in Vista when so many Mac developers have rewritten their software twice in this decade (once for the OS 9-to-OS X transition, once for PowerPC-to-Intel).

    * I called UAC a “constant barrage of nags… a disaster in the making.” That last part may have been too negative, as UAC doesn’t seem to have made Vista less secure in practice.

    * I counseled against upgrading from XP but wrote that on a new machine with enough processor/memory/graphics resources, Vista represented an advance from XP. I still think that, but I suppose I’m in the minority on this point.

    In looking over my 2007 review, I also see that I placed way too much value in the applets bundled with Vista, inasmuch as Microsoft has yanked most of them from 7. And I didn’t even think to mention compatibility issues with 64-bit Vista, a topic that now takes up a non-trivial amount of my reader e-mail.

    – RP

  10. zato Says:

    “but it seems especially removed from reality in 2009. Much coverage of Microsoft is profoundly negative. And the monopolies are all in decline.”

    That’s a good one, Harry. The 2 top ads on this page are from Microsoft, (Bing and Win Mobile) and are probably the only real paying ads. Tell us how much of Technologizers’ monthly income is from Microsoft. My guess is 70%. You work for Microsoft. And it’s no different anywhere else you go in the tech internet, You know what Microsoft wants for their money, and you supply it.

  11. Harry McCracken Says:

    Hey, Zato, your analysis of Technologizer’s revenue stream is not only wildly, wildly, WILDLY off–like, everything about it is utterly inaccurate other than the fact you saw some Microsoft ads–but just plain silly. If you’re going to fabricate an estimate of the situation based on, well, no knowledge whatsoever and a willful disregard of this site’s content, why stop at estimating that 70 percent of the site’s revenue comes from Microsoft? Why not 80 percent, or 90 percent, or 100%? Wouldn’t that be better proof of your thesis?

    Actually, why not hazard a guess that Microsoft is paying me off in gold-plated Ferraris, driven to my door by Steve Ballmer himself? Or that “David Pogue” and “Walt Mossberg” are Betty Crocker-like characters created by Microsoft’s corporate communications team? It’s only a little less accurate than your guestimate, and a lot more fun!

    –Harry

  12. Ric Says:

    Whats going to be funny is how Win7 will be an overwhelming success by comparison to Vista as it will just blow its sales and adoption figures out of the water, which is an effortless non-achievement. M$ will toot its horn loud and proud too! I have a Vista machine that I love the hardware but detest the OS and I am going to Win7 as a freebie upgrade. I wouldnt do 7 if it werent free and you best believe I will count in the stats for adoption and perhaps even sales (you know they will be fudged!) But the most telling fact of my story is I have XP Pro standing by in the wings ready to reformat the machine at the slightest Win7 terminal error. I lived without Vista and if 7 sucks I can live without it too.

  13. zato Says:

    “Why not 80 percent”
    Wow! I swear I was going to say 80%…

  14. zato Says:

    “Actually, why not hazard a guess that Microsoft is paying me off in gold-plated Ferraris, driven to my door by Steve Ballmer himself?”

    Quit joking, Harry. You’d have to be Pogue, Mossberg, Levy, or Ihnatko to get the Ferrari. A Harry McCracken is more like Geo Metro territory.

  15. tripleman Says:

    Funny, David, I’ve been running 10.6 since it came out and have had no problems – let alone “crippling” ones.

    I’m constantly running intensive graphics apps (practically the whole Adobe Suite) almost all the time as well as the browser, mail, etc.. and still have no issues.

    The system is a little faster, smaller and more stable. Not bad for a $35CDN upgrade.

  16. Harold Says:

    Windows Vista is absolute crapola!! A couple of tech guys I trust have told me that win7 is a decent, clean and strong OS and a big improvement over Vista. However they still are recommending XP over both until win7 SP1. But it may be too late for me. The frustration I experienced with Vista “forced” me to download UBUNTU via the wubi virtual partition on my OS. I estimate that I now run the UBUNTU OS about 35% of the time and when I figure out the WINE app, UBUNTU will most likely be my primary OS. I loved XP. Why Microsoft did not build upon XP’s success is a mystery to just about everyone that us/used to run it.

  17. Steve Says:

    It is fun to look back at the reviews now to see who was able to call it like it is and who's head was stuck in Microsoft's posterior. The two extremes would be Stephen Manes and Paul Thurrott. Paul's review is a real gem that simply defines Windows zealotry. Not surprisingly the mainstream media all took an approach somewhere in between – how safe…

  18. heulenwolf Says:

    Good work, Harry. Reviews are often treated too much like news – only good for the moment and then forgotten. I think they should stand alone and, as you have done, be reviewed themselves.

    I’d even like to see more reviews of products after they’ve been out for a while, like CNet’s Road Tests on the Real Deal podcast, only more formal. I think most consumers wait until something forces or shocks them to change (e.g. Sidekick fiasco) rather than switching products when the latest thing comes out. I’d like to see how a product fares after significant use.

    There are differences between a reviewer’s perspective and a customer’s perspective that we should take into account when reading. For example, many reviewers have been constantly changing systems they use – whether it be the cell phone, computer, OS, or whatever is being reviewed – and are used to the upheaval. I think many folks reacted more negatively to Vista than reviews predicted because we hadn’t had any Windows OS upgrades to perform in 7 years (Win98/ME/NT/2K->XP). In fact, it had been so long between OS releases that many users had never been through an upgrade when Vista came along. Their entire computing experience had been on XP. The fact that the Vista upgrade process went drastically smoother than many prior Windows upgrades was lost on these users. We had forgotten that there is always something we’re giving up to move forward; its always painful. Sure, reviewers should try to take this difference in perspective into account but they can’t speak for everyone.

  19. sfmitch Says:

    Steve Wildstrom Says:
    October 12th, 2009 at 6:23 am
    As I wrap up another Win 7 column, thanks for reminding me that I was reasonably prescient about Vista. I would have been tougher on UAC, but I really thought Microsoft would fix it quickly. Actually, I should not have been surprised that they didn’t since I had been telling them how much it sucked since beta 1 to no effect whatever.

    Steve – you mean how reasonably prescient you were by ending the review by saying “And Vista is a big step forward; in time, you’ll want it.”

    You may want to stop patting yourself on the back, your review was overall quite complimentary to Vista and just warned about upgrading an existing XP PC rather than going out and buying a Vista Loaded PC (good advice, BTW (not being sarcastic)).

    Vista was a dog and still is a dog. For so many companies and individuals to go out of their way (and often pay more) to stick with an 8 year old OS speaks volumes about how bad Vista is.

  20. Bruce Says:

    This is a great post. More reviewers should go back and see how their predictions ended up when they encountered reality. 😉

    My only extensive experience with Vista was when I was in Japan for a week using a borrowed laptop (mine was lost in transit). I was never sure if the problems were because the interface was in Japan or because it was Vista.

  21. Bill Baker Says:

    Harry:

    Great piece. I thought you might appreciate a post on my personal blog from October 2006. Since I am generally incapable of predicting what I am going to have for lunch, I am bit proud of this one:

    http://bakercg.typepad.com/baker/2006/10/windows_vista_w.html

  22. Grapemanca Says:

    Having used 3 different machines with Vista, I can honestly say that I’ve had very few problems. Vista is smooth and fast, and has been much more stable than XP (esp. before XP’s SP2). In the past 2 years, I’ve only had 1 BSOD with Vista, and that was during my efforts to delete the wretched Office 2007 trial edition from my daughter’s HP laptop (which now runs great sans bloatware). Most of the Vista haters I know are Mac types who’ve never tried it, or are XP people who are outraged that Vista wouldn’t run on their old P4. Or, they are newbies who’ve bought a new laptop and blame Vista for all of the bloatware added to the machine by the manufacturer.

    In any case, I’ve now moved to Windows 7 – our business has been using it for a month – and I see very little difference between it and the 2 Vista machines I’m still using at home. It’s fast and stable, but then so was Vista. Some of the desktop refinements are nice, but not much of a help, to be honest. The best desktop app I’ve added recently is Fences 1.0, which has nothing to do with Vista or W7.

    When I read all the anti-Vista shrillness, all I can do is shrug my shoulders. What can I say? Vista has been good to me, and nothing like my brief but nightmarish experience with ME.

  23. uruiamme Says:

    Vista boosted both interest in Linux (see above comment), sales of Macs (great ad campaign) and kept a lot of service technicians in business. A new OS from Microsoft is like a Stimulus Plan for the tech sector… including publishers, ad agencies, software, hardware… you name it. Been watching it since the 90s and it’s always a chore to figure it out until it’s too late.

    Oh, and for Zato, come on. Ads are so… 1999. I have been blocking them with Squid and now with ADP (AdBlock Plus) since that time. But you made me look, so thanks for the laugh. My page has a mysterious blank section at the top. I figured this was the best for me and the world, since I decided not to click on ads since 97 anyway. See http://www.useit.com/alertbox/sitemaps.html for more on why I don’t look at ads even when they’re on my screen.

    Back to the peanut gallery I go.

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