After the massive failure of windows vista, Microsoft has announced that they are working on Windows 7, and new operating system. Vista was rejected by individuals and businesses alike, and Microsoft know that they crewed up big time on it and windows 7 is an opportunity for Microsoft to breath life in windows.
Lets have a look at some (we’ll be here all week if we were to list all the problems) of the problems with vista:
Speed:
Vista was just plain slow, a lot slower than XP, even if you run XP on the same spec machine as vista with all the graphics turned off on vista, it’ll still be slower. Apparently this is due to the ridiculously large amount of code within vista and not the graphics, a whopping 50 million lines of code, I mean c’mon…even todays ultra fast multi core processors can’t over come that.
Compatibility:
One of the things that killed Vista in my opinion is that Microsoft spent so much effort trying to make it more secure with User Access Control (UAC) that it broke a lot of software in the process. The problem is that not much of the software has been rewritten and the UAC approach has not worked because users get so many dialog boxes that they just blindly click OK until all of them go away, not to mention how annoying they can be, i mean if i open network connection, i don’t need the OS asking me if i really want to open it or not, just open the damn thing. They definitely need to work on this security and compatibility issue if they want windows 7 to succeed, security is good, but too much of it just makes you product unusable.
Version release:
How many version of vista are there, its hard to keep track anymore. There were primarily two versions of XP, Home and Professional Edition, that number doubled with Vista. There was Home basic, Home premium, Business and Ultimate. I miss those days when there was just one version of windows release, life was so simple... I bet when it was release support technicians were most pissed off about having to support 4 different versions of the same operating system. I really do hope they have just one version of windows 7, which makes it easier to support, easier to purchase and easier to understand. Just like the new name suggest “windows 7” lets also make the OS simple enough. Go back to basics Microsoft!
A Word of Advice:
The old way of building and packaging operating systems in shrink-wrapped boxes that are released every few years is just not fast enough or nimble enough to meet the demands to today’s Internet-driven computing environment. It’s also counterproductive for an OS maker because you end up competing against yourself, the way XP and Vista are now competing against each other.
There’s only one Windows, and it has merely evolved over time. That’s the message Microsoft needs to drive home by making Windows 7 the last shrink-wrapped version of the OS. From here on out, Microsoft should simply make Windows a constantly evolving platform with new features and functionality enhancements added several times a year through Windows Update.
Let’s face it; the OS is not as flashy as it once was. It’s also not nearly as relevant as it was a decade ago. The Web browser is gradually usurping its position as the most important application platform, as has long been predicted.

