Microsoft might become a victim of the company's own success, how ironic. Service Pack 3 for Windows XP is rumored to not only be a significant improvement to XP, but also makes XP at least twice more powerful than Windows Vista. Now in the past I have written about how useless the upgrade to Vista really is, but Microsoft is forcing me to work here.
The results of benchmark testing on a Windows XP system running Service Pack 3 beta and Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 beta by Devil Mountain Software of Florida were published on TechNewsWorld. The tests reveal that Windows XP had twice the advantage over Vista in performance. Both systems were tweaked to gain maximum performance. Vista fell short of its older brother.
Craig Barth, who is the chief technology officer at Devil Mountain Software, discussed the results with TechNewsWorld:
Craig Barth, chief technology officer at Devil Mountain Software, was surprised by the test results, particularly because he believed SP1 for Vista was going to dramatically improve the new OS's performance.
"We were as shocked as everybody is," Barth told TechNewsWorld. "They [Microsoft] talked up the whole thing [the complaints about Vista] saying, 'If you're not happy with Vista, don't make any comments until SP1 comes out.'"
Now with Service Pack 1 of Vista, it simply appears that Vista is becoming the Windows ME of competing technology. All this with the exception being that you can revert back to Windows XP. There is some irony hidden in all of this. It all seems like a big joke, but the catch is that this is real.
Now "obsolete" might be a harsh word to describe Vista, but all the unpleasing performance benchmarks, bad press, and failures in the public relations department leads me to question if Microsoft Vista is exactly that. Eye candy can only stand for so long before people realize what they have gotten into. Driver compatibility and performance would have been a better thing to focus on, but Microsoft just can not get this right.
Some might say that it is the fault of software and hardware developers; however, Linux is making more strives in recent times than Vista in regard to compatibility. Microsoft has no excuse, and the company can not place the blame on developers who feel that software for Vista is unreliable and unworthy of being ported to the new OS. It is Microsoft's job to provide a better experience for their users.
Things become even more dramatic when you throw in the fact that Vista is going to be replaced by Windows 7 in a few short years. Fueling the fire of the media to question if Vista is a worthy upgrade has unfortunately been something that Microsoft has done well. Windows 7 can not come soon enough to end this nightmare that is Vista, and I only hope that it is not as bad.
