Interesting. I'm not sure how effective those benchmarks are in representing real world usage though. I mean, I don't copy files that often. I found the boot time thing surprising. I'm running Ubuntu 8.10 x86, Vista x64, and 7 x64, and 7 clearly boots quicker than the rest on my system. Same for install. Seems to vary, but yea.
yeah i dont agree that this tests Real-world testing, i think it just tests performance...
Interesting.
Quite early in the days of the forum, I began throwing dispersions on the wild claims being made about 7's superiority over Vista.
I was (am) a Vista lover, and had tuned it to the hilt. Most of my amateur benchmarking came out similar to those in these charts.
I think I was going overboard, as a critic, and got heavily flamed and even a threat to be thrown off the site. Well - there you go.
But this is still a beta, although Microsoft say it is functin complete. Unfortunately (?) I am a Windows lover and will not abandon it for any linux product. I will inevitably move on to 7.
like pooch said everyone has a opinion...
thats what a forum is here to voice your opinion
I have tried Linux on and off for years, Ubuntu many times, but it is just not as easy to keep running.
People slate MS for so much, but a tuned system, such as mine, is secure, responsive and stable. Linux is just a constant stream of work unless you have the perfect hardware. Even with the 8.10 Ubuntu release, I spent pretty much a week solid performing 'workarounds' to get supposedly supported hardware to function correctly.
Linux is not beyond me, far from it, but I like to be able to get my system how I want it and leave it at that, bar standard maintenance ofcourse. I do not wish to spend all my time keeping things going.
If I had to rate them, 64bit editions anyway, Vista was by far the slowest in pretty much every aspect, then it would be Ubuntu 8.10, and Windows 7 is currently the fastest.
Not even the fastest, it also just feels smoother to use, almost zero bottlenecks when I push it hard, the whole package just feels better.
I am not a MS fanboy, I just want to use the OS that is best for me. I am old enough, ugly enough and experienced enough to tweak the hell out of my Windows machines, no overclocking though, and side by side with identical hardware mine far outperforms 'standard' set ups.
YES try getting wacom tablet to work on a HP series with ubuntu 8.10 and Opensuse....

i was out the linux scene because my laptop was not supported at the time....
*overheating* issues it said
I think this may also have to do with the system you're running on. The system they reviewed on was a very powerful, top of the line one. From what I've heard, Seven runs better, but not humongously better, on top of the line systems. For folk like me however, with cheap and basic power computers, I think the performance gains are much more apparent
yes at some point there wont be a big difference on which OS when you have high end hardware...
its the medium and low end that you see the improvements...
You should read all the comments, his "benchmark" tests are absolutely disgusting :shock:
He has no idea how a genuine benchmark is conducted at all, at one point he says DRM affected copy copying speeds :shock: thats a complete lie and total bull****

DRM has nothing todo with anything unless your playing a drm protected song or video :huh:
He also didnt mention for the test "disk space used after install" that the hibernation/swapfile where using 6GB each for the size of his installed memory so it skewed the results towards Ubuntu :shock:
I can go on and on for awile about the amount of mistakes and things he did wrong but its not worth the effort, that benchmark is a disgrace and insulting to benchtesters worldwide
so what im thinking is that he left the linux swap partition out...:shock:
if he did then his tests are way off but also unbiased
and yes the pagefile+hiberfil are the same size as a your ram so just there you can cut
a bunch of disk usage....
well he does state this...
And, of course, there's the most important proviso of all: it is very, very likely that a few tweaks to any of these operating systems could have made a big difference to these results, but we're not too interested in that - these results reflect what you get you install a plain vanilla OS, like most users do.
Just my opinion, but the test clearly states that Windows does benchmark test for the Windows Experience Index while it is installing. It could take over 2 minutes depending on your hardware.
I think Windows Explorer is flawed somehow. I am having issues for Windows 7 on my laptop. The sleep function and hibernation mess it up entirely. I have to shut down if I travel with my laptop, because if I sleep or hibernate, Windows Explorer gets way messed up afterwards. Someone told me to do something with the wake on network function, but it didn't change anything.
you prove a point....
he should have provided a mean score....
booted a few times (not counting the first time...

)
and find the average score....
been trying vista win7 and ubuntu for some time now, and personaly i prefer win7 and ubuntu.
although benchmarks are a good test for performance,but there's one thing i still miss in these tests.
and that is how easy it is to use for normal homeusers with little computer knowledge, how easy they can use and install software , security etc.etc.
because thats whats really important.
and i think Microsoft scores good on that
yes this is what w7 is geared for...
the OOB end-user...
for that user that just wants a computer already ready...

i mean linux has come a long way from supporting niche hardware (or hardware where the whitepapers were avaible and someone with coding knowlegde can work it out...:shock

i have seen an article where it says that linux has the most hardaware support out of any OS....
Slashdot | Linux Supports More Devices Than Any Other OS
there is a catch though which a commenter touched on...
That's true, but Linux isn't where it could - or should - be. There are many antique 3rd part drivers for Linux for embedded devices and busses (COMEDI doesn't get updated often, DDC's Linux drivers for $1000+ aviation buses haven't been updated in years, VME drivers are equally badly maintained), where comparable drivers for Windows are nice, shiny and up-to-date... even though you know damn well that's not where the market is. It seems to me that some hardware vendors release Windows drivers because they know it'll look good to PHBs, but neglect Linux drivers because they don't give a rat's ass whether the hardware is usable or not after it's out the door.