Recommended Posts

I notice in OS X, everything is real smooth. There is little or no motion blur (can read text clearly) when you drag objects around. And scrolling with the mouse wheel in browsers is all smooth n stuff. In windows it jerks rather than float.

Is there any way to get windows to feel all clean the way OS X does? Like some kind of 3rd party desktop rendering engine? or shell? I have no idea what's responsible for this.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/769626-getting-windows-to-be-smooth/
Share on other sites

Depends. There is no alternative desktop rendering or "shell" that can improve this.

The reason why Vista's desktop management is sluggish is because of the way Microsoft implemented it. Also, Drivers and the hardware you use are a critical factor as well. If you want a smoother experience, go with Windows 7.

Microsoft really improved things in Windows 7 by cutting some fat from the bloat.

Like waruikoohii said, the "motion blur" (or ghosting) is the result of a poor refresh rate on your monitor. Nothing to do with your operating system. And to be honest, your whole clear readability complaint makes me facepalm, because Mac OS' font smoothing sucks compared to Windows' ClearType. Apple needs to stop pretending that a screen is paper and tune their retarded sub-pixel font rendering to the pixel grid.

If his video drivers arent installed correctly - or has some lame ass computer specs - it too could cause these issues. When you are using the generic VGA driver - it is horrible.

Also, if his computer is crap possibly it cant re-render the image fast enough - or like others mentioned - the LCD sucks.

Knowing the OP's system specs would help a great deal.

OS-X does have a rather simplistic rendering - Vista or even better Win7 should be used to really decide what the problematic variable is -- if any.

no no the LCD is fine, and drivers are up to par. when i use that er OS X (10.4 for intel) well ya know what i mean by that, it appears just fine. no blur, all smooth, perfecto. maybe you're right about the simplistic rendering. was just wonderin if there was something like a gdi++ type thing (made the fonts all smooth that i found in someone's thread below in this forum) but for the desktop itself instead of only the fonts :)

no no the LCD is fine, and drivers are up to par. when i use that er OS X (10.4 for intel) well ya know what i mean by that, it appears just fine. no blur, all smooth, perfecto. maybe you're right about the simplistic rendering. was just wonderin if there was something like a gdi++ type thing (made the fonts all smooth that i found in someone's thread below in this forum) but for the desktop itself instead of only the fonts :)

Your LCD apparently isn't fine if it's ghosting :p

As far as ClearType (for font smoothing)...why don't you tune it? I don't remember if Vista has a built in utility (I'm on 7, which does), but tuning ClearType will make it look better (usually...I find the defaults to actually work fine in most cases).

Oh, and make sure you're at your LCD's native resolution.

As far as Vista not operating smoothly, and 10.4 operating smoothly on the same hardware...if this is true, then your Vista drvers aren't up to par.

I wish they would fix some of those rough spots such as the fast-user switching feature which blanks the display when switching users, and it is more retarded more than ever now with locking on Vista/2008 and 7/2008R2 making it just lock and then having to click switch user which then blanks it out. Very confusing process, on Mac OS X, I always loved how it did a cube effect with your desktop switching to the other user's desktop or to the login screen, it was so much smoother IMO. Never made sense to me why they never attempted to fix this, but confuse it even more with locking and switching users... :wacko:

Depends. There is no alternative desktop rendering or "shell" that can improve this.

The reason why Vista's desktop management is sluggish is because of the way Microsoft implemented it. Also, Drivers and the hardware you use are a critical factor as well. If you want a smoother experience, go with Windows 7.

Microsoft really improved things in Windows 7 by cutting some fat from the bloat.

There is no problem with the way Aero is implemented, on any computer with a compatible graphics chip and 1GB of ram or more it works pretty smoothly. People often try to run it on inadequate hardware and then wonder why it doesn't work flawlessly.

Also bear in mind that OSX Tiger is slightly old and won't stress your hardware as much as Visdta

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Wow, imagine you dump hundreds of hours into completing things and unlocking stuff and you lose it all. Back in the day when cheats were built into games, you could at least unlock things again that way without spending hundreds of hours again. But those days are long gone for some reason as no one builds cheats into games anymore. So it's even more painful that studio that's on its 6th installment **** it up so badly.
    • Spotify finally removes the disco ball app icon in the latest update by Ivan Jenic Image: Spotify Spotify has just released an update that removes its now infamous disco ball icon. The update reverts the app icon to the familiar flat green logo after weeks of mixed reactions online. The icon arrived on May 13 as part of the company's 20th anniversary celebration and was always intended to be temporary, though Spotify only confirmed that after the backlash started. The disco ball took the internet by storm, as the reception was split. A vocal group of users called it ugly and disorienting, with some iOS users noting that the 3D glowing effect made the app look like it was stuck mid-update. On the other end, the icon picked up a following of its own. Its retro, three-dimensional look immediately stood out against the flat, minimalist aesthetic that has dominated app design for years. It even started a small movement, spawning what people started calling "discomorphism," a mashup of disco and skeuomorphism. Other brands started posting disco ball versions of their own logos, probably in an effort to ride the wave of memes that flooded the internet during late May. Spotify has had a turbulent relationship with its user base lately. Besides the disco ball icon, which certainly wasn't appreciated by everyone, the company has also received backlash for its willingness to include AI-generated music on its platform. On May 17, Spotify promised the old icon would return “in a few weeks.” And now it looks like that time has finally arrived. So, whether you liked the disco ball or it made you uncomfortable, it’s now gone for good. The next time you update the Spotify app on your phone, the old, flat-design icon will return.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      slackerzz earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      highriskpaym earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      highriskpaym earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      highriskpaym earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      FBSPL earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      520
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      197
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      157
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      84
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!