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My Vista RC1 experience: first week

As I noted previously, I moved our home desktop PCs to Vista. More accurately, to dual boot on two of three PCs – I am still holding off the migration of the kid’s PC (lots of legacy games installed there), family laptops and Media Center (due to a known driver imcompatibility).


I found that my experience with Vista RC1 over the last week at home and at the office has mirrored a number of reviews I read last week, including…



Overall, I have found that many problems I ran into in builds at the office are gone, and stability is up dramatically. Seems that all of my peripherals work — scanner, MFC printer, cameras. So far so good with the software I’ve installed, including Nero 7 Ultra Edition when installed from the CD.


One change I really like: User Account Control (UAC) is far less annoying and much more user friendly. In the past, it seemed that I had to deal with UAC and approve every move I made, and even worried me the first time I encountered it: I thought something had gone wrong with my power or that my video card wasn’t Vista compatible. This is no longer the case. I can even turn off UAC when on the system as an administrator. Now, this will have to be documented clearly for consumer users (perhaps even set as a default). In a home setting with Vista Home Basic and perhaps even Premium (more details on the Windows Vista site), this would be more appropriate default, IMHO.


Next, I’ll work more with Movie Maker (and authoring a DVD) and Media Center. So far my experience has been positive with MM, as covered on the Windows Vista team blog posting on Movie Maker and in Paul Thurrott’s review of MM where he concluded that MM on Vista “is certainly a capable enough solution that can handle any home user’s needs. This is an excellent tool that many Windows users should enjoy using.”


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More on Windows Visa Upgrade Pricing

As I noted previously re: Windows Visa Upgrade Pricing, I received some spirited comments and mails. 


As I mentioned, I haven’t seen an announcement of UK or EU prices for Vista, but will post a link to them when I see them.


As for the pricing on Vista upgrades on the Windows Vista “Get Ready” site, I was glad to see that there is pricing is at parity with the XP upgrade pricing we see today: that covers our home laptops which stay in the home.


Windows Vista Home Premium includes the features of the current Media Center Edition (MCE), which is fine for our MCE PCs at home, as we don’t require the feature set of Ultimate. Home Premium also includes the the Aero UI and the DVD authoring, and features I won’t take advantage of on our desktop MCE PCs like the Tablet PC UX.


IMHO, a “Family Pack” offering for multiple PCs in a home is an interesting approach that Apple has taken with Mac OSX Tiger (which offers coverage for up to five Macs in a single home: one friend in the Valley with multiple Macs called this his “annual upgrade fee”). Just as I’m able to cover three PCs in our home with an annual OneCare protection and maintenance subscription for SRP$49.95 a year, it’s an interesting value proposition to cover multiple PCs in a home on a household annual license basis. (Note: I found OneCare on sale for $19.95 this past Labour Day weekend, after rebate.)


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Windows Vista Upgrade Pricing Announced

MSNBC reported that Windows Vista pricing is now live on the Microsoft corporate after a busy week in the press on pricing last week. You’ll find the retail details on the Windows Vista site. Overall you’ll find that the cost for a



  • Windows Vista Home Basic is US SRP$199, with upgrades to Windows XP for $99.95.

  • Windows Vista Home Premium: $239 (upgrades will be $159). upgrade for Media Center PCs to record TV and link to the Xbox 360.



  • Windows Vista Business: $299 (upgrades will be $199).



  • Windows Vista Ultimate: $399 (upgrades will be $259). This version combines the feature set you see of Premium with the features in Vista Business.

My blog report on our  move to Vista at home is delayed (imagine that) due to our need to install on our home PCs, wind down our last summer weekend, and get the kids ready for school this week. In short, most time was spent on archiving the data form the machines than on the installs.


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Dual booting Vista with XP: moving the rest of our PCs

One small step… deep breath.


This weekend I’m reimaging a couple of Windows XP-based OEM machines with the latest Windows Vista software, and I’m following the details on setting up a dual-boot system with Windows Vista., as outlined on the Windows Vista team blog. This is the same scenario as I have on a dogfood machine at the office, the different is that I’ll be moving my remaining desktops at home to Windows Vista RC1.



“[Dual booting] is a very common scenario at Microsoft and as such, I figured I’d walk you through our typical dual-boot installation procedure via the corporate network.  Many of my colleagues choose to run both operating systems simultaneously (not me — I’m all Windows Vista, all the time) by partitioning their hard drives and running a separate OS on each partition.  They do this for a variety of reasons, but in many cases it’s so they can test new builds of Windows Vista while retaining Windows XP (or another OS) on another partition.  This will allows them the flexibility to perform build-to-build upgrades more easily while retaining the original OS as an alternative should there be a blocking bug in the Windows Vista build.”


Before I do this, I’m backing up everything with OneCare as well as a drag-copy to an external drive.


Given my interest in using audio at home, I was glad to see the details from Amir on the audio subsystem advances in this new whitepaper, and this info on the improved Movie Maker and DVD Maker. 


Although I’m running Office 2007 beta on a Vista PC at the office, we’ll see how the move goes before I take the plungs at home.


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Huh? Mary Jo Foley quotes corporate user: “Vista will NEVER run on a $1000 PC”

Mary Jo Foley has an article on eweek today



“I think Microsoft may have a tougher time making the business upgrade case than the home one for Vista. Here’s why. One enterprise user, who asked not to be named, recently posed an interesting question to me (via instant messaging), regarding how Microsoft is expecting to make a business case for Vista.



MR. Biz: how are they going to make a business case for Vista?
MJF: that’s a good question…. I’m not really sure
MR. Biz: no matter how much tweaking MS does, it’s still not going to solve the resource requirements issue
MR. Biz: vista will NEVER run on a $1000 PC


Really?


One of our family members just priced a new laptop with a decent processor, >100GB HDD, memory configuration and graphics system that is touted as “Windows Vista Capable” for under $800. (OK, the price included a special $200 “coupon” promoted on the company’s web site.) When I looked today on a couple of major build to order OEM sites, I found “Windows Vista Capable” desktops starting at around $499: that took all of a few minutes to find as they systems are pre-configured.


At home, I have a system I built for, I’m guessing, under $400 that will run Vista.


IMHO, where’s the moderating comment from Mary Jo that calls this out? (All comments on the blog are my own.)


See also…


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