Articles, tutorials and other stuff related to my many doings at Stardock.
A short review of Windows Vista build 5536
Published on August 26, 2006 By GreenReaper In Windows Vista

As the developer in charge of Stardock's Vista labs, I'm one of the few who gets to "play" with the new builds right away. Up until now this has meant several hours of reinstalling software over the top of a fresh install. This time I tried an upgrade from 5472 to 5536, and as it's the way many of you will be introduced to Vista I thought I'd share the results with you. I also wanted to see whether or not I agreed with blogger Robert McLaws, one of those who has been playing around with the interim builds and who has been predicting great improvements ( http://www.longhornblogs.com/robert/archive/2006/08/24/Windows_Vista_Pre_RC1_Is_Available_Now.aspx ). Is he right? Read on for my take . . .

Impressions of 5536...

The setup has started to include the "info cards" - in this case, little messages promising that you, too, can be a great director, famous (PowerPoint) presenter, or maybe even pilot the space shuttle with Windows Vista. Again, Microsoft is trying to push the "experience" on you - and giving you something to look at while you wait for its performance ratings to complete. I'm told a clean install is not that bad, but you have to wonder how many end users are going to be doing a clean install. In truth, the upgrade didn't take more than around 45 minutes for me, though I've had others say it took them over an hour. I could see upgrading from XP taking longer, if only because most upgrade candidates will have big registries and more cruft for the installer to sort through.

So what's the score once you're upgraded? On my dual-core E1505 laptop (labeled "Windows Vista Capable" by Dell, though that's pushing it for their lower models), it takes about 30 seconds from the start of the Windows booting process, 50 to the desktop and 1:00 to the Welcome screen . . . and after that it's hard to tell because other things kick in, but you can start working straight away. It's not slow, though I suspect this relies significantly on having half a gig of memory around to throw at the boot process. My total boot load was a shade over 550Mb, which compares less-than-favourably with the 230Mb of XP on the same laptop. Admittedly, I'm not running the Tablet PC service on that (nor will regular Vista users have to), and it trimmed about 50Mb off the working set over time. Still, I wouldn't want to actually use Vista in less than 1Gb, particularly since every single open window carries the cost of the DWM's buffering.

One of the things that really does keep going is Windows Defender and the Windows Firewall. They appear to make significant disk accesses totaling (on various boots) 50-100Mb by the first five minutes just after loading up the desktop. Security! The joke that the second core was added to check up on the first one is getting a little too close to truth, though the real cost is waiting for the disk. Good thing I got a 7200 rpm disk. On the whole, though, performance is definitely far closer to that which I'd expect from an operating system that's meant to be released in, yes, two months.

There's a few nice little user interface tweaks that make things just a little bit more friendly; for example, the way the "other logoff options" button is actually large enough to hit this time around. Progress remains to be made: on my laptop's high-DPI screen (an upgrade which I readily recommend) all the column headers in were incorrectly sized, making it harder to see what was actually being displayed. If Microsoft expects its ISVs to expend the effort to solve such problems, it needs to get its own software following best practices first. And yes, Windows Media Center looked great - except I didn't have a cursor!

Some things seem set to remain obscure to most users with Vista, like how badly your disk is defragmented (requires use of a command-line tool in administrator mode), and exactly how much help that USB key is as a ReadyBoost device. Perhaps that's for the best, considering Vista's main target market, but "you don't need to know" still rankles to a techie like myself. Worse, I've heard they want to make the logon sound mandatory ( http://scobleizer.wordpress.com/2006/08/24/the-startup-sound-in-vista/ ). Guess what, Microsoft? It's our computer, and you're the guest. Learn to live with that restriction on your branding efforts, and put in a usable "off" switch, or we'll do it for you.

Drivers remain an issue, too. At least now there are drivers for most components, though some features are lacking (including Vista-compatible help for Device Manager itself). OpenGL still isn't all the way there, even though my X1400 drivers were built just 10 days ago. This is partly Microsoft's fault, because they didn't finalize a high-performance interface for OpenGL until it was almost too late to have one at all. Maybe they were concentrating too closely on DirectX 10, overlooking all the great consumer applications that make use of the competition - like, oh, Second Life, which still bombs out in this build.

That wasn't the worst flaw. On a hunch, I shut the lid. 7 seconds to sleep - not bad, though it could be better. I opened it back up, and . . . whoops. The screen powers up, but it's not showing anything, and the system is non-responsive. Scratch one for the RC - this is a laptop, it needs to be able to sleep. Others here at Stardock have had other serious problems that appear to be linked with display drivers, and it's clear we're going to continue to need to see significant improvement in this area. I'm sure the driver crews are working flat-out at NVIDIA and ATI AMD.
Edit: As of 2 September, ATI has released drivers that fix this problem.

The company has been dragging its heels for a while, pushing little features into the product to make up for all the big names (remember WinFS?) that didn't quite make the cut. It seems they've mostly gotten past that, though you know they're going to want to spring a feature or two on us for the RC (Virtual PC Express, for a start - http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/index.php?p=2649 ). Speaking on behalf of the development community, I'm glad to be entering the finishing straight. We need a stable set of features to build our own programs on.

The Verdict

So are the latest builds really any better? Despite the problems, a I'd have to say a qualified yes. It's about time - there's precious little of it left to fix the very real bugs that remain, let alone the "features" being forced in by Microsoft Marketing. We're going to need a release candidate out soon in order to find all the niggling little compatibility issues. That requires Vista to be solid enough for beta testers to want to use it as their main OS, and from my experiences it's not quite there yet.

Microsoft's developers have a little over two months to deliver on what they've promised - a next-generation operating system that can provide a solid base for years to come. This build is a sign that they may finally be in gear: but I worry that it may be too little, too late. Will they rise to the challenge, and deliver something they can be proud of? For all our sakes, I hope so.


Comments (Page 2)
2 Pages1 2 
on Sep 11, 2006
I think what many fail to realize is that many computers consist of Hardware that is not a member of Microsoft’s HCL (hardeware compatability list). So hardware fails and Microsoft is blamed when in many instances it is shabby driver coding by the 3rd party vender. XP was a pretty unstable operating system (home especially) up until SP1 was due to be released. Even then Sp1 caused 3rd party driver failure and apps failing just like sp2 but with the added updates xp sp 2 is now, well I game to say is a STABLE os. VISTA looks grand, remembering it is still in it's beta/test stages so there are bound to be issues. Most Venders probably will not code drivers until the final version is released.It appears to me the beta is in basic form! I think all things we have either found missing or poorly presented will be all good and well with the release of the real deal. One thing is for certain though Vista will need RAM! There is no doubt about it! I am questioning if 1.5gb to 2gb will be required for the os to run smoothly with all apps installed. I will not upgrade to the next generation os until it has been out for a good 6months. Primarily because of the issues I saw with 2k and XP. (Ok to be honest it will take 6months to get another duel processor machine) By that stage many of the glitches will hopefully be dealt with. I can't wait to see what vista brings to the gaming arina. Xbox and Play station have been boasting for a while now.... perhaps, like always the next generation of pc games will leave a scar on us all. I ran vista on my on the 3rd primary partition of my workstation.(the partition size was 50gb) It ran well though it chuck a spit with many antivirus and ad-aware apps. The burning software i tested, nero and roxio did not work to well. Perhaps updates have released to use this software with vista. I didn't really install much more. I tried some games which all crashed. Personally I’m happy to stay with 2k and xp for now. Vista is good to look at and to play with but that’s really all at this stage i think. Oh i forgot to mention that finally it looks like Microsoft has added new games to it's list YEY! I played the Vista Chess for hours.... it's actually quite good if u like chess
on Sep 11, 2006
My laptop is brand new. It comes with a sticker saying "Windows Vista™ Capable". It should work - and it does, mostly, with the new ATI drivers.

Most vendors had better get their act together. Vista is coming up fast, and given our own experiences in writing non-driver code, they're going to have to make a fair few changes.

DirectX 10 will be a sea change, but it will not have significant impact for a few years yet. People are still getting used to DirectX 9, and DX10 will require new and beefier cards.
on Sep 11, 2006
A question of curiosty........... is any1 really keen to get vista-OEM/RETAIL asap??
on Sep 15, 2006
XP unstable? Not compared to windows 95. 95 crashed when it's kernel dumped. Also crashes when game crashed, wind blew across computer, when exactly NOTHING crashed.
on Sep 22, 2006
clean install on my e1405 as well. With the sidebar disabled, boot is the same speed as with xp.. i do sleep modes instead of powering off, tho, so i typically open up and am back to work in just a few seconds. As promised.

Did a great job detecting my hardware. I even installed the synaptics touchpad driver for XP that works great on vista, and i got my 'enhanced touchpad options' back.

Install took around 20 mins.

On my dekstop? not so great. Update took 3 hours with a cuople freezes. After it was done, things ran extremely slow, although all of my hardware worked properly. Removed, and installed clean - 30 min install, however none of my hardware works, and certain things eemed to run slower than they should. This was a 1.53 ghz athlon xp.. gig of ram. was very dissapointed desktop will go on vista next spring... so far, lappy is loving vista.
on Sep 25, 2006
I've signed in the Beta-testing program from Microsoft long time ago, which means that I got my hands on every copy of the Windows Vista OS until now. The latest was RC1 (there is a newer build but didn't download it yet). Anyways, I have done a crazy move by upgrading one of my home main systems to Vista Ultimate, by "upgrading" I mean keeping all programs and adding them to the new Vista RC1 OS registry base.

Here is the real truth: Vista is amazingly compatible with every program I have! Every single program worked just fine. some programs needed backward compatibility which Microsoft made available in the Vista RC1, so I chose the operating system I want from the list and poof, the program is actually working just fine.

The programs that I use are:

Adobe: Premiere 2.0, Illustrator 12, Photoshop CS2, Audition 2.0, After Effects 7.0. (All worked 100% fine)
Microsoft: Office 2003, Office 2007 Beta, OneNote 2003. (All works 100% fine, I had one problem and got resolved)
Games: all of the games had some problems due to the VGA driver lack, which will of course not be a problem after the release of a driver fully compatible with the new OS. (I'm using Nvidia 7800)
All other programs worked fine. Little hangs were present in some programs, but all got fixed after the first use.

My impression of the Vista RC1 is super high, I never thought that Microsoft will actually listen to us at all, but shockingly enough they did listen, and the huge improvements between Beta 2 and RC1 show lots and lots of potential. I love the fact that when you close a program in Vista it'll shut down emedietly, clearing the used RAM at the spot, which means no slow system after exiting a game or so, just sweet. I also used my flash stick memory to check out the new system boost feature, god oh god how true and cool it is! I have a 1 GB flash memory so the Vista system pops up an auto play menu and asks me if I want to boost the system, so I did, and damn I have more RAM now on the fly. in other words if you are a Graphic design freak like me, you'll differently love this new feature, especially when you are empty of RAM to open one extra project on Photoshop!

All in all, I'm definitely moving to Windows Vista as soon as it is out, and to say the truth, I kind of work on Vista most of the time now, it's clean, neat, and seriously made me confident about working with my PC.
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