Yeah but I didn't realise that when I first installed Windows 7 lol!AWAR said:Seriously now, i cant see the problem with UAC since you can turn it off..
Yeah but I didn't realise that when I first installed Windows 7 lol!AWAR said:Seriously now, i cant see the problem with UAC since you can turn it off..
tyrannus007 said:Christ, I feel way behind the times. I've still got Vista 32-bit. I would upgrade to 7, but I hear it wipes everything off the drive.
As long as you're sticking with the same CPU type (x32 or x64) the upgrade from Vista to Windows 7 should be nearly painless, and you won't lose a thing. The only problems you might run into are if you have some older, incompatible programs - that's pretty unlikely though.Danny Ocean said:It does. In order to change operating system you need to reformat your hard drive(s). This is what wipes all the data.
I've been quite happy with Vista, and it was definitely a nice upgrade from XP. But the benefits that Vista had weren't really there for gamers, and if that's what you mostly use your PC for XP was a better option. Vista is definitely a better OS for working though, and we all use our PCs for that here too.Trivun said:So it seems that even some of the good staff of The Escapist, who use computers on a day-to-day basis with extreme regularity and necessity for work as well as play, prefer Vista.
I've upgraded from XP 32 bit to Windows 7 64 bit, and I gotta say all your concerns have been met. The upgrade is far from just cosmetic, it is a very sleek and has a much more efficient UI with clutter going to a complete minimum and with the "Aero" features making orginization much easier and simpler, making things a lot quicker, but the best part about it is that it takes up just as much resources as XP - which is obviously dramatically less than vista. The compatibility mode is much better too and I can run older games like Neverwinter Nights and Total Annihilation.Icehearted said:Still an XP user. It's not that my machine can't handle 7 (it can handle Crysis while running a ton of tasks in the background), I just don't bloody care for the new OS. It offers nothing I need, and practically nothing new. It looks pretty? Oh joy! That's so much better than a something that isn't a bloated resource hog. I know it's basically a better Vista, but I think it's still way too new and not very impressive enough overall to make me want to fork out money to replace something I already have that works pretty darned good.
I don't want a big bulky OS I'm constantly aware of, I want something sleek and fast and nimble that will do it's job without fuss, nag screens, or software compatibility issues.
http://www.Ninite.com/Gildan Bladeborn said:While I like Windows 7 a good bit more than Vista, neither has yet provided me with a compelling reason to upgrade given how much time and effort it would take getting all my stuff reinstalled.
I'll probably only upgrade if an when something catastrophically breaks, Microsoft stops updating XP, or software developers stop releasing games for it.
You can install Win7 on a different partition and keep your old operating system for backup. You can then run alot of programs out of Win7 without reinstalling. Most programs need a proper setup procedure only to install registry keys and stuff so that the uninstaller and future updates know where it is located, but often they are not essential for the program itself to run.John Funk said:I've thought about upgrading for a while, but I'm hesitant to do so because reinstalling everything would be a real *****. What about you? Have you upgraded yet?