Microsoft admits Vista is a failure


Recommended Posts

I don't think Vista is like Windows ME. Windows ME was a 4.x version of windows released after Windows NT 5 which was clearly superior. Vista isn't that much different from XP like XP was to the previous version of NT, for example. So with some efforts, the least you can expect is vista to work like XP, and it clearly does.

Vista, if anything, has got an amount of bad press that no other mainstream product has got before. Plus, times are changing. In 2007 you can't expect people to spend between 150 and 400 bucks for an operative system when the previous one still kicks ass.

Personally i would never go near comparing Vista to ME. ME was the ultimate OS disaster. Vista is not even half as bad. For starters it works!

I think Microsoft have the ability and resources to create a decent Operating System and IF they truly feel the way they say they do, then Vista Service Pack 1 will come early, it will offer a lot of improvements in plenty of different parts of the Operating System - Vista doesnt have big flaws, it has little or nothing to offer to the first-time or inexperienced user and although its by no means a requirement the average n00b isn't going to feel compelled to waste their time experimenting.

Microsoft need to seriously take a step back and address what people are saying and identify where they went wrong (again...if they did, i quite like Vista, runs alright on a decent machine) in the process from making Longhorn become Vista. I can identify with the people i speak to who could easily mistake them as completely different projects and Operating Systems because the promised features never came.

A mix of issues not entirely Microsoft's fault make Vista not the first solution.

Slow PC's - Lack of features and too much like XP to bother switching for the money

Inexperienced Users - WHOA? WTF was that...

Price Tag - I just coughed up (insert money) for Windows XP, whats the point in BUYING?

What's all this talk about Win Me? For me Me was as stable as 98 was. Until I see Me in operation and do what lots of you claim it does (constant crashing) then I could see but until then I trust ME to be a very stable home OS. Yes, I understand Me wasn't needed as it was replaced by XP a year later.

Okay, many people are not switching to vista, whether vista is said to be superier or fancy, or easier to use because:

- Cost (too expensive) Most people will have bought a computer with Vista Home Premium or demand XP (for reasons below):

- Driver support is very limited at the moment.

- Software and game compatability is limited.

- Requires hardware upgrade in most computers. Most people have only 1GB ram and < P4 cpus

- Again Cost.

So XP is still alive and well. I have informed to my father about Vista on my computer and he says "Don't need it". He is absolutely right. Vista is just XP with Service Pack 3, no much difference. Does the excat same jobs as each other.

The article has raised some valid and some blatantly poor points.

The author refers to Vista as ME ll which in some respects could be seen as that. Vista hasn't lived up to it's 'WOW' image and I can't see how it can apart from Microsoft delivering further features in a SP. Yes Vista looks good and Yes it has some features that make it stand out from XP but the fact that a major manufacturer has decided to continue offering XP pre-installed is a sign that the customer isn't happy with an OS that still has many driver and peripheral issues.

But then the author throws his argument down the drain by linking his ME ll point to a CNet news story that isn't about Vista but XP.

The software maker will offer the $3 Student Innovation Suite to governments that agree to directly purchase PCs for students to use in their schoolwork and at home.
The suite includes XP and Office not Vista.

But then that gets me thinking why offer the XP Starter edition when they can just as easily put in the Vista Starter instead?

The author then goes on to make the following sweeping statements,

What we are seeing is an unprecedented shift of power. It is also an unprecedented admission of failure. And the funniest part about the moves made? They are the wrong things to do. Microsoft is in deep trouble

If he were to leave out 'unprecendented' and 'deep' then he would get my thumbs up for this last part.

Im still thinking when XP has come out in 2001 and it almost the same thing with vista.

Vista have more improvement than xp had so i think we have to let M$ and drivers builder make their job....

The article looks even more stupid after he has edited out Vista being bundled for $3 with the true product of XP for $3, at least before it showed a blatent error and made the author obviously clueless.

We should save articles like this so we can come back in 5 years and poke fun at him.

for all those people screaming look they are selling XP for $3... think about the economics behind this......

You now have a vista starter edition at $25

You want to make more money where people cant afford $25 so you sell an outdated version at a cheaper price, $3

You make them want the most recent version, so they now want the $25 version...

someday they decide to upgrade, spend $25

now you spent $28

XP is an older version, they can sell it for less, because they assume that they eventually will want bigger and better and the $25 vista starter is the next logical move... doesnt mean they will go there, but that is how MS is tempting them... selling XP for $3 doesnt mean vista flopped, that means they dont want to lower the price on the new version when they can throw an older one at them for cheaper

By the way, where does anyone show proof that microsoft said this? I see no citation or reference from anything tracable back to MS

just because you are launching a lower cost version of starter based on older OS's doesn't say "vista was a failure"

you have to remember that this is is the same stupid website that claimed microsoft's SQL Server developer edition mysteriously started with SQL Server 2005 and was made to axe out MySQL... last time I checked there was a developer edition for years and it was always $50... and a developer edition that isnt event set up to be used in production and isnt even licensed for use outside of a single developer isnt going to harm MySQL... and there has always been a free public version also of SQL Server... even before MySQL ever existed... remember the MS SQL desktop edition? MSDE? its now called Express and this stupid site is trying to claim that it just mysteriously poped up after MySQL to ruin MySQL... they need to pull their heads out of the sand

Edited by neufuse
The Inquirer is a fake news site... And ActiveWin has listed them as the news source.. :blink:

The Inq is an edutainment news news. It combines half-truths with rumour and humour.

I personally like them although I realize that many Neowinnians take their tech news deathly serious.

I suppose if you are trying to get information ahead of your buddies so you can appear as the expert that they are not the best source as some of their claims could come back to embarrass you.

man the more I read this the worse the article sounds... I thought it was always bad to start a sentance with "and", what happened to "In addition"

It is also an unprecedented admission of failure. And the funniest part about the moves made? They are the wrong things to do. Microsoft is in deep trouble.

And where does MS officially and literally "admit that Vista is a failure"? Because the impression I got from reading this article is oversensationalization of biased interpretation. Oh right, it's The Inquirer. Nevermind.

This "my Vista user experience sucks so Vista is a failure for everyone" game is getting really boring.

That means no Me II DRM infection lock in...

At that point, it became clear as day that this was nothing more than any poorly constructed rant from an anti-MS zealot. I'd be embarrassed if an article like that was ever posted on the front page of Neowin.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Google are hyprocrites for signing this. They have been pulling the same dirty tactics as Microsoft, only they do it on Android and ChromeOS.
    • In some countries the law has forced Microsoft to display a menu on a fresh install of Windows which asks which web browser you want and it will install that browser. This doesn't add any bloat to Windows. It simply an additional step when setting up a new PC.
    • Chrome is also a first party browser on Android and ChromeOS. And on those systems, Google is pulling the same dirty tactics as Microsoft does on Windows.
    • Unofficial script lets you install unreleased Windows 11 features without Microsoft Account by Sayan Sen Microsoft has been steadily evolving the Windows Insider Program over the years, introducing new channels and testing paths that allow enthusiasts to experience upcoming and yet-to-be-released Windows features (some interesting hidden ones too) before they reach the public. However, one long-standing requirement has remained largely unchanged as users are generally expected to enroll in the Program and with a Microsoft account. That's where a third-party tool called "OfflineInsiderEnroll" can help. OfflineInsiderEnroll is said to be a lightweight script that enables access to Windows Insider Program builds on systems that are not signed in with a Microsoft account. Essentially the tool configures the necessary Insider settings locally and hence allows users to select and switch between available preview channels while continuing to receive builds through the normal Windows Update channel. If you are wondering how it manages to do so, it is made possible by a Registry value known as TestFlags. When configured to"0x20", Windows stops communicating with Microsoft's online Insider enrollment services thus preventing locally configured Insider settings from being overwritten. This allows the script to apply its own channel configuration directly through the Registry as Windows Update does not verify whether a device has been officially enrolled in the Insider Program or not. Previously the utility has had already supported the traditional Insider branches including Dev, Beta, and Release Preview. However following Microsoft’s recent restructuring of its preview channels, the script has now been updated. The latest OfflineInsiderEnroll version, 2.6.6, adds support for the newly introduced Insider channel lineup. As such, users can now choose from several Experimental channels in addition to Beta and Release Preview options. The update also retains tools for refreshing the Insider cache, resetting Insider settings, and completely stopping Insider enrollment when needed. Keep in mind though that will need elevated privileges when running the script (run as Admin). You can get the latest version of OfflineInsiderEnroll from this page on its official GitHub repo.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Collaborator
      Asgardi earned a badge
      Collaborator
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      250
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      67
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!