Is Vista really slower than XP?


Recommended Posts

Welcome to the technology world, just like software, hardware should eventually be upgraded too. Technology is a constantly advancing field in all aspects, you can't expect old hardware to always be able to run the newest software. You also can't bash every OS that comes out in the next 50 years because you are too stubborn to upgrade from your 200Mhz IBM thinkpad.

Welcome to the technology world, just like software, hardware should eventually be upgraded too. Technology is a constantly advancing field in all aspects, you can't expect old hardware to always be able to run the newest software. You also can't bash every OS that comes out in the next 50 years because you are too stubborn to upgrade from your 200Mhz IBM thinkpad.

Condescend much?

XP may be marginally faster. Some apps open up faster on XP, but some don't. (especially Firefox, it's sometimes faster on Vista)

What really got me back to Vista on my laptop was the clumsy wireless experience in XP:

A balloon says: Wireless networks not available.

Me: The wireless switch's off, you idiot.

A balloon says: Local Area Connection's not connected.

Me: Because I'm on a wireless network, you idiot.

A balloon says: Now connected to (home wireless network).

Me: ...

:pinch:

On top of that, no isolating networking settings between different networks.

Also contrary to what I thought earlier, the FPS drop for games in XP and Vista wasn't as high as I thought it was. I was going by benchmarks of Half Life 2 in XP. Then I saw how low the FPS was in Vista for Portal and thought it was Vista's fault. :p

Well on my rig with Vista sp1 it smokes my XP partition. The only thing slow, is the boot time. I always leave my computer in standby so its not an issue unless I have to reboot for patch Tuesday. I have now moved away from XP all together except for in VM land where I strip drm off songs I bought. =P

Edited by Mikee4fun

At work we deal with many hardware specs. I have machines that are 300mhz with 64Mg ram to C2D running at 2.33Ghz with 2Gb ram.

Vista SP1 makes a huge difference.

I run the following:

Home:

Intel C2D E8400

Gigabyte P35 DS3

4 Gig Patriot 800mhz

NV8800GT

Vista Ultimate x64

Laptop:

Dell Latitude D630

Intel C2D Memron @ 2.13

Intel P965

2 gig Kingston 667mhz

Vista Ultimate x32

Laptop2:

Dell Latitude D620

Intel C2D 2.13

Intel 945

1gig Kingston 667

Vista Business

My home machine screams. There it runs everything as fast or faster than XP

Laptop is fast I have no complaints everything is responsive and I wait for nothing on it.

Laptop2 is the shocker... It is the fast machine I have vs specs. It runs vista surprisingly fast. Having only 1 gig of ram does not seem to effect its performance at all. It actually "feels" faster than my main laptop with 2 gig ram.

I believe that vista has some built in scaling or self tuning for speed and specs. I was astounded when I installed vista on laptop 2 and its performance was = to a laptop that was a year newer and had double the ram. I will admit that Vista pre SP1 was not that great but SP1 did make a huge difference. Ive run side by side comparisons on identical hardware vista sp1 vs xp pro sp3 and found that vista performed on par and in some regards it was faster than XP. What I have found to be even better however is Server 08 converted to work station. It out shines them all. It runs better on my various platforms better than vista and XP both. It out performed XP on my athlon 3200+ workstation with 2gig ram which really surprised me. The only reason I don't run it completely is that certain multimedia plug-ins don't work in the server OS yet, wont even install.

and Bobbytomorow... Ill put my vista gaming rig up against any equal machine running XP. Tuned my vista gaming rig is a beast... I play lots of CSS and un-tuned under stress test... 292 fps: in game @ 1680x1050 all settings high with 8xaa 16xaf I average 160+fps and will top out at 299fps

and Bobbytomorow... Ill put my vista gaming rig up against any equal machine running XP. Tuned my vista gaming rig is a beast... I play lots of CSS and un-tuned under stress test... 292 fps: in game @ 1680x1050 all settings high with 8xaa 16xaf I average 160+fps and will top out at 299fps

Funny that Vista out performs XP for you yet every other benchmark on the web says otherwise. Its also common sense that an os with a much higher overhead will perform slower on the same hardware configuration as an os with a low overhead. Its not rocket science.

btw I run Vista Ultimate and Business as well as XP across a variety of configurations myself.

Funny that Vista out performs XP for you yet every other benchmark on the web says otherwise. Its also common sense that an os with a much higher overhead will perform slower on the same hardware configuration as an os with a low overhead. Its not rocket science.

btw I run Vista Ultimate and Business as well as XP across a variety of configurations myself.

Omg the intarwebz sez XP is faster!!1

Yes, if you have the right machine (modern and in the last 1-2 years), you are pretty much set to run a great Vista machine (though, XP might just run faster on certain tasks).

That is my only other complain about not running Vista, old hardware (my PC) would be slaughtered if I ran it. My other is that I'm just familiar with XP (which is my main reason), and I know where almost everything is and how to tweak it to my liking.

Vista's not bad (I've used it, liked it, but also had really aggravating experiences with it, though I'm sure I can tweak it to my liking if I had the chance). Always could be better.

Vista's memory and process management, from what I know, is just different. With more, the better and efficient the system is. With less, it is buggy.

I just really hope Windows 7 is optimized with 32-bit single cores, for those who are coming from the early XP ages. (Hoping for a separate version dedicated to us.) I want to keep up to date, but with how things are looking, I might just have to stick with XP (not bad until 2014) and work around with *nix environments afterwards...

I simple test i did to prove it, I have a Dell Optiplex GX 260 with Pentium 4 2.00Ghz and 768MB ram. Under XP it runs fine, under vista boot time was around 5 minutes. Point proven.

To be honest, that only "proves" a specific setup. I would expect to see similar results on other systems < 1GB of RAM. Especially if some is removed by shared memory for video.

And boot time, while a good indicator here, is not a very good metric for a booted, running OS. Some benchmarks can be run to get a better idea.

Testing on a quad-core 64-bit system with 8GB+ of RAM would also be interesting - even if such systems are not "mainstream" today, in another 5 years, I think those will be pretty common.

I simple test i did to prove it, I have a Dell Optiplex GX 260 with Pentium 4 2.00Ghz and 768MB ram. Under XP it runs fine, under vista boot time was around 5 minutes. Point proven.

All that proves is that the PC you installed on needs a newer BIOS, chipset driver or just isn't a good candidate for Vista. Honestly, the 2.0gHz P4 is from August of 2001, not shocking it doesn't run a new OS as fast as it ran XP SEVEN years ago.

Now if you ran XP on your Core 2 Duo and it was snappy, but Vista took 5 minutes to boot you might have a point.

vista is only slow if you got dog hardware but if vista has pretty new hardware it will perform better than xp,i like the fact that vista does not slow down afterawhile unlike xp which does.

MaximumPC just did an apples to apples comparison of XP and Vista...

overall XP SP3 was faster on 90% of the tests -- goto Maximum PC

I would have thought this was common sense - but apparently people are not as smart as I give them credit

Like mentioned above, more overhead = slower performance -- no way to get around that

If XP is "slower" at something than Vista -- there is another factor youre not considering - plain and simple

MaximumPC just did an apples to apples comparison of XP and Vista...

overall XP SP3 was faster on 90% of the tests -- goto Maximum PC

I would have thought this was common sense - but apparently people are not as smart as I give them credit

Like mentioned above, more overhead = slower performance -- no way to get around that

If XP is "slower" at something than Vista -- there is another factor youre not considering - plain and simple

Honestly I did a quick search and found no such comparison. I have tested XP SP3 and Vista SP1 on my laptop. Difference is negligible in all tests assuming you actually do apples to apples. Meaning you don't test Vista with all its services enabled. Added functionality ALWAYS comes at a price. Enable the same services as the ones you have in XP and Vista will perform the same. You can even enable most of the useful features and still see almost no performance difference. Remember unless the difference is >5% it is within the margin of error.

With Vista drivers having matured to a point where their quality is comparable to their quality under XP, we see Vista performing (under apps such as games) pretty much the same as XP (give or take a frame here and there).

Proof: http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,2845,2302500,00.asp

Personally, I find Vista to be much snappier than XP was on the same hardware. It may not be "faster" but it responds much better to user input. This is because XP liked having free RAM, which was desirable back when RAM was expensive. Vista doesn't like having free RAM, because RAM is cheap.

With Vista drivers having matured to a point where their quality is comparable to their quality under XP, we see Vista performing (under apps such as games) pretty much the same as XP (give or take a frame here and there).

Proof: http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,2845,2302500,00.asp

Personally, I find Vista to be much snappier than XP was on the same hardware. It may not be "faster" but it responds much better to user input. This is because XP liked having free RAM, which was desirable back when RAM was expensive. Vista doesn't like having free RAM, because RAM is cheap.

+1

One thing vista is defiantly faster with is the time from inserting a new removable device (like a thumbstick) to when its ready to be used.

Xp takes a 20 or so seconds, vista is almost blink!.

Vista is also a ram ###### in a good way. It loves ram. Given that Ram is 100x faster than your hard drive, why not store everything in ram if you aren't using it. I have Vista 64bit with 5 gigs of ram and once everything is up and running there is Zero slow downs. Every application is blink!. or as Steve jobs would say "And Boom!"

One thing vista is defiantly faster with is the time from inserting a new removable device (like a thumbstick) to when its ready to be used.

Xp takes a 20 or so seconds, vista is almost blink!.

Vista is also a ram ###### in a good way. It loves ram. Given that Ram is 100x faster than your hard drive, why not store everything in ram if you aren't using it. I have Vista 64bit with 5 gigs of ram and once everything is up and running there is Zero slow downs. Every application is blink!. or as Steve jobs would say "And Boom!"

agreed !!! im loving vista more and more now that sp1 is out. i look forward to sp2 & windows 7 too.

I find Vista just as fast, if not faster than XP, with comparable equipment. My apps load faster on Vista, thanks to the

tweak they did with prefetch. What's the use of having tons of ram, if you don't use it?

I can't remember when I've had a blue screen on Vista, or XP for that matter. Just as those "Mojave" commercials

show, Vista (at least now) is getting a bad rap. But I still say it is overpriced. :yes:

people need to move on from xp, it won't be supported forever. vista is very fast & stable on the right pc or laptop.

+100. I was a vista hater to the tenth power before SP1. It was slow and clunky. But then HP came out with a chipset drivers update and then SP1 was released at the same time that Vista IS worth the time now.

my only con to vista right now is, it takes up too much harddrive space. the kernel is like 15GB if memory serves me.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Media Player Classic - Home Cinema 2.7.3 by Razvan Serea Media Player Classic - Home Cinema (MPC-HC) is a free and open-source video and audio player for Windows. MPC-HC is based on the original Guliverkli project (which is no longer maintained) and contains many additional features and bug fixes. As the continuation of the original Media Player Classic, MPC-HC isn’t flashy but it works with nearly any media format. MPC-HC uses DXVA technology to pass decoding operations to your modern video card, enhancing your viewing experience. And MPC-HC supports both physical and software DVDs with menus, chapter navigation, and subtitles. Overview of features A lot of people seem to be unaware of some of the awesome features that have been added to MPC-HC in the past years. Here is a list of useful options and features that everyone should know about: Dark interface Menu > View > Dark Theme When using dark theme it is also possible to change the height of the seekbar and size of the toolbar buttons. Options > Advanced Video preview on the seekbar Options > Tweaks > Show preview on seek bar Adjust playback speed Menu > Play > Playback rate The buttons in the player that control playback rate take a 2x step by default. This can be customized to smaller values (like 10%): Options > Playback > Speed step Adjusting playback speed works best with the internal audio renderer. This also has automatic pitch correction. Options > Playback > Output > Audio Renderer MPC-HC can remember playback position, so you can resume from that point later Options > Player > History You can quickly seek through a video with Ctrl + Mouse Scrollwheel. You can jump to next/previous file in a folder by pressing PageUp/PageDown. You can perform automatic actions at end of file. For example to go to next file or close player. Options > Playback > After Playback (permanent setting) Menu > Play > After Playback (for current file only) A-B repeat - You can loop a segment of a video. Press [ and ] to set start and stop markers. You can rotate/flip/mirror/stretch/zoom the video Menu > View > Pan&Scan This is also easily done with hotkeys (see below). There are lots of keyboard hotkeys and mouse actions to control the player. They can be customized as well. Options > Player > Keys Tip: there is a search box above the table. You can stream videos directly from Youtube and many other video websites You can stream videos directly from Youtube and many other video websites Put yt-dlp.exe or youtube-dl.exe in the MPC-HC installation folder. Then you can open website URLs in the player: Menu > File > Open File/URL You can even download those videos: Menu > File > Save a copy Tip: to be able to download in best quality with yt-dlp/youtube-dl, it is recommended to also put ffmpeg.exe in the MPC-HC folder. Several YDL configuration options are found here: Options > Advanced This includes an option to specify the location of the .exe in case you don't want to put it in MPC-HC folder. Play HDR video This requires using madVR or MPC Video Renderer. After installation these renderers can be selected here: Options > Playback > Output Ability to search for and download subtitles, either automatically or manually (press D): Options > Subtitles > Misc Besides all these (new) features, there have also been many bugfixes and internal improvements in the player in the past years that give better performance and stability. It also has updated internal codecs. Support was added for CUE sheets, WebVTT subtitles, etc. Media Player Classic - Home Cinema 2.7.3 changelog: Updated LAV Filters to version 0.82 Updated MPC Video Renderer to version 0.10.4.2550 Updated MPC Audio Renderer A few crash fixes, bug fixes and small improvements. Download: MPC-HC 2.7.3 (x64) | Standalone | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) Download: MPC-HC 2.7.3 (x86) | Standalone Links: MPC-HC Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft will finally let you sign in to Edge with a Google account by Usama Jawad As things currently stand, Microsoft Edge only allows you to sign in to the browser with a Microsoft Account (MSA). This allows you to sync your browser settings and other data across other devices, as long as you sign in with the same account. However, Microsoft is now modifying this mechanism in a way that will likely please many users. In an update to its Microsoft 365 Roadmap, Microsoft has indicated that it will soon let users sign into Edge using a Google account from the profile menu and the Edge sign-in screen. This will be in addition to the MSA login option, and it opens up new doors for people who prefer using Edge, but cannot be bothered to configure a Microsoft account. This brings several advantages such as the ability to sync your data across devices using just a Google account. It may even facilitate flexible single sign-on (SSO) experiences where you can quickly login to websites and services through a single Google account that is presented as the preferred sign-in option. Up until now, Microsoft allowed customers to indirectly use a Google account, by configuring a Google account as a Microsoft account, or by setting up a one-way sync option between Edge and Chrome. This is a rather interesting development, especially considering that Google Chrome still limits you to a Google account sign-in, but it will be interesting to see if the company reciprocates Microsoft's gesture in the future. This is not the only recent instance in which Microsoft has extended a handshake to Google via Edge. In April 2026, it began tracking the development of a work search banner for Google Search queries, just like the one present in Edge. However, if we go back almost seven years, to January 2020, Microsoft had emphasized that it had no plans to "integrate Google services into Microsoft Edge by default", in response to people requesting Google sign-in services on Edge. Fast-forward to today, and Microsoft is planning to release this feature in July 2026, with IT admins having the option to control its availability on Windows and macOS through the NonMicrosoftAccountSignInEnabled policy.
    • If they ever come out and say the AI is no longer accessible to the gen pop people aren't going to know how to tie their own shoelaces.
    • It's hard not to when they are shoehorning Ai into EVERYTHING. Some are active users by choice, I bet a lot of them are because it's shoved in their face the entire time.
    • Thunderbird 152.0 by Razvan Serea Thunderbird is a free, open-source, cross-platform application for managing email and news feeds. It is a local (rather than a web-based) email application that is powerful yet easy-to-use. Thunderbird is clean and elegant by default, but easily customizable to match your workflow and visual preferences. It is loaded with unique and powerful features. Thunderbird is developed, tested, translated and supported by the folks at Mozilla Corporation and by a group of dedicated volunteers. Thunderbird gives you control and ownership over your email. There are lots of add-ons available for Thunderbird that enable you to extend and customize your email experience. Thunderbird gives you IMAP/POP support, a built-in RSS reader, support for HTML mail, powerful quick search, saved search folders, advanced message filtering, message grouping, labels, return receipts, smart address book LDAP address completion, import tools, and the ability to manage multiple e-mail and newsgroup accounts. Thunderbird 152.0 changelog: SecurityDevices enabled in enterprise policies One-click account setup for Thundermail accounts What’s Changed Use 'Add' instead of 'New' for account, calendar, address book creation buttons GMail OAuth updated to use PKCE Mail server hostname also checked when detecting address books and calendars Updated about:rights to replace local with hosted url 'Hide completed tasks' now also hides cancelled tasks What’s Fixed New mail alerts appeared on wrong monitor in three-monitor setup Spam messages triggered new mail notifications before being moved to Spam folder Filtered IMAP or NNTP subscriptions were lost after closing Subscribe dialog 'Download Headers' dialog for newsgroups failed to open Messages nested deeper than 255 levels disappeared from threading view Performing Delete followed by Undo on thread parent message could corrupt view Single messages still appeared collapsible after thread members were deleted Updated threads remained misordered until folder refresh or resort Non-threaded subject sorting separated 'RE:' replies from original messages BCC recipients were included in signed email headers Filter search on Body missed draft messages containing German umlauts Thunderbird could crash during local message search Blocked file warning showed without 'Unblock File' button in compose window Forwarding/Redirecting Exchange messages failed with NS_ERROR_OUT_OF_MEMORY Compose window closed early and send progress dialog hung after NNTP failure Compose window stayed open after sending when mailnews.sendInBackground set Microsoft OAuth2 failed when HTTPS localhost redirect was not intercepted Pasting contact photos stopped working when photo button had focus Filter dialog lacked focus ring and had poorly distinguishable buttons Subfolder kept stale accessibility unread count after unread messages were deleted 'Edit as New Message' and inline 'Forward' not possible with PGP-signed messages Various MIME improvements EWS messages could go missing from folder view IMAP "Show only subscribed folders" could not be changed without restart Unable to delete more than 1000 messages at a time on Microsoft 365 EWS folders in Trash were moved to Trash again instead of being hard deleted IMAP notifications repeated for emails read on another device after sleep wake POP3 deadlocked when server went silent without closing socket Calendar acceptance no longer distinguished between single occurrence and series Transparent popups on macOS made calendar event editing difficult Duplicate attendees were added to invitations instead of being filtered out Task percentage complete was not preserved separately from status in tooltips Visual and UX improvements Security fixes Download: Thunderbird 152.0 for Windows (EN/US) | 32-bit | ~70.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Thunderbird 152.0 for Mac OS (EN/US) | 145.0 MB Download: Thunderbird 152.0 in other languages View: Thunderbird Website | Screenshot | Release Notes Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Vincian earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      Jocimo earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      suprememobiles48 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      Prasann earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      509
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      172
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      89
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      76
    5. 5
      neufuse
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!