Most XP users hate Windows 7!!!

Speaking of all this, does anyone remember when XP first came out, and had compatibility problems left and right, and was considered by many to be a horrible excuse for an OS? Windows 98 was the "golden standard." Ironic...

I seem to recall SP1, SP2 and SP3.

List of fixes for 1
List of fixes in Windows XP Service Pack 1 and Windows XP Service Pack 1a

List of fixes for 2
List of fixes included in Windows XP Service Pack 2

List of fixes for 3
List of fixes that are included in Windows XP Service Pack 3

Wanna count 'em? I don't.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell and Custom
OS
Systems 1 and 2: Windows 7 Enterprise x64, Win 8 Developer
CPU
System 1: i7 [email protected], System 2: AMD FX-4100 Zambezi 3.6G
Motherboard
System 1:Dell 06NWYK System 2: ASUS M5A97 AM3+
Memory
System 1: 8GB System 2: 8GB
Graphics Card(s)
System 1: ATI FirePro V4800 System 2: Radeon HD 6850
Sound Card
System 1: onboard System 2: onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
System1: Viewsonic HDMI 24"
Screen Resolution
System 1: 1920x1080 System 2: 1920x1080
Hard Drives
System 1: Mirrored .5B drives System 2: Seagate Barracuda ST1000DM003 1TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s
Case
System 1: Dell System 2: Cooler Master
Internet Speed
10 MBPS
Speaking of all this, does anyone remember when XP first came out, and had compatibility problems left and right, and was considered by many to be a horrible excuse for an OS? Windows 98 was the "golden standard." Ironic...

I seem to recall SP1, SP2 and SP3.

List of fixes for 1
List of fixes in Windows XP Service Pack 1 and Windows XP Service Pack 1a

List of fixes for 2
List of fixes included in Windows XP Service Pack 2

List of fixes for 3
List of fixes that are included in Windows XP Service Pack 3

Wanna count 'em? I don't.

I remember seeing tons of software and hardware with big stickers saying "NOT COMPATIBLE with Windows XP".

Windows 7 SP1 is little more than a compilation of previous updates, it doesn't "fix" any major issues. So which OS is truly better? ;)
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware X51
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium x64
CPU
Intel Core i7-2600 @3.40GHz
Memory
8.00GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 555 w/1.0GB RAM
Monitor(s) Displays
BenQ XL2420TX
Screen Resolution
1920x1080@120Hz
Hard Drives
1TB
PSU
330-watt
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless Illuminated Keyboard K800
Mouse
Razer Orochi
Internet Speed
Campus Internet

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 32-Bit - Build 7600 SP1
CPU
Intel Core i3-2120 3.30Ghz
Motherboard
Asus P8Z68-V LX Intel Z68 Socket H2 ATX
Memory
Kingston 4 GB DDR3 1333 mhz
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon HD6670
Sound Card
Sound Blaster Audigy SE 24-Bit
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus VE228
Screen Resolution
1440 X 900
Hard Drives
OCZ Vertex 3 120 GB Sata 3 SSD ==
Kingston SH103/S3 120 G Hyper X 120 GB SSD ==
Western Digital 500 GB Caviar Green 7200 RPM ==
PSU
Corsair CX600M == 600 Watt
Case
NZXT Apollo - Silver with Clear Side Panel
Cooling
Three 120 mm Fans
Keyboard
Microsoft Natural 4000
Mouse
Microsoft Custom Optical 3000
Internet Speed
AT&T Fiber Optic Wireless Network
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome
Other Info
120 mm Blue LED Fan -- Three Blue LED Lazer Light Sticks
I would not have switched to 7 from XP just to switch. All the years of tweaks, and programs, and all I didn't want to lose. But, I wanted a screaming new PC, and I wasn't going to be stupid and install an older OS on it. Since it had gotten almost universal good reviews, I knew 7 was good. Happy as can be, no looking back. Besides, got to come to Seven Forums, case closed, lol. :D

A Guy
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 10 Home x64
CPU
INTEL Core i5-750 Quad-Core 3.37GHz
Motherboard
ASUS P7P55D
Memory
HyperX Fury Black Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 1866Mhz
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA GeForce GTX 750 Superclocked 1GB 128-Bit GDDR5
Monitor(s) Displays
LG 32MA68HY 32" IPS
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 Evo 120GB, SEAGATE 500GB Barracuda® 7200.12, SATA 3 Gb/s, 7200 RPM, 16MB cache
PSU
ANTEC TruePower New TP-550, 80 PLUS, 550W
Case
ANTEC Three Hundred Illusion
Cooling
COOLER MASTER Hyper 212 Plus, 4 x 120mm 1 x 140mm Noctua's
Internet Speed
85 + Mbps
Antivirus
Avast
Browser
Vivaldi
I don't think the conclusion can be drawn that that "most XP users hate Windows 7". There may be plenty of people that don't want to switch for whatever reason but I doubt "most" users hate Win 7.

Personally, I've purchased only 1 computer that came with Win 7 installed but have converted 6 other computers in my house from XP to Win 7 and have no desire to switch back!
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built desktop, Dell G15 5511 Gaming laptop,MS Surface Pro 7 tablet
OS
W10 Pro desktop, W11 laptop, W11 Pro tablet (all 64-bit)
CPU
3.7Ghz 8700K i7, i7-11800H, i7-1065G7
Motherboard
ASUS TUF Z370-Pro Gaming in desktop
Memory
16G desktop, 16G laptop, 4G tablet
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon RX580, RTX 3060, Intel Iris Plus
Sound Card
High Definition Audio (Built-in to mobo)
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung U32J59 32" (2x), 15.6", 12"
Screen Resolution
3840x2160, 3840x2160, 1920x1080, 2160x1440
Hard Drives
500G SSD for OS; 2T, 10T & 15T HDDs for Data on Desktop, 1TB SSD laptop, 128G SSD tablet.
PSU
Corsair CX 750M
Case
Antec 100
Cooling
CM 212+
Keyboard
IBM Model M - used continuously since 1986
Mouse
Microsoft Pro IntelliMouse
Internet Speed
400M down 8M up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
FireFox
Other Info
Built my first computer (8Mhz 8088cpu, 640K RAM, 20MB HDD, 2 360K floppy drives) in 1985 and have been building them for myself, relatives and friends ever since.
I used to have XP years ago before Vista, and, after using W98SE, I thought it was great. Then along came Vista and now Windows 7. Each new release I felt was an improvement over the last. Where I feel that many people have problems is not the OS persay, but rather its idiosyncrasies and different ways to achieve the same thing. In other words, people get frustrated when the method that they have got used to using in achieving something in an older OS no longer works, or only partially works, in a newer OS. The solution there is patience and learning the new way of doing things. Then there is the totally new features that didn't previously exist. The UAC is a classic example. This did not exist in XP, was introduced in Vista and greatly improved in Windows 7. Of course, it is not perfect, but I haven't had trouble with it at its default settings.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dwarf Dwf/11/2012 r09/2013
OS
Windows 8.1 Pro RTM x64
CPU
Intel Core-i5-3570K 4-core @ 3.4GHz (Ivy Bridge) (OC 4.4GHz)
Motherboard
ASRock Z77 Extreme4-M
Memory
4 x 4GB DDR3-1600 Corsair Vengeance CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9B (16GB)
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GeForce GTX770 Gaming OC 2GB
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition on board solution (ALC 898)
Monitor(s) Displays
ViewSonic VA1912w Widescreen (VGA)
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Hard Drives
OCZ Agility 3 SSD 120GB SATA III x2 (RAID 0)
Samsung HD501LJ 500GB SATA II x2
Hitachi HDS721010CLA332 1TB SATA II
Iomega 1.5TB Ext USB 2.0
WD 2.0TB Ext USB 3.0
PSU
XFX Pro Series 850W Semi-Modular
Case
Gigabyte IF233
Cooling
1 x 120mm Front Inlet 1 x 120mm Rear Exhaust
Keyboard
Microsoft Comfort Curve Keyboard 3000 (USB)
Mouse
Microsoft Comfort Mouse 3000 for Business (USB)
Internet Speed
NetGear DG834Gv3 ADSL Modem/Router (Ethernet) ~4.0 Mb/s (O2)
Antivirus
Avast! 8.0.1497
Browser
IE 11
Other Info
Optical Drive: HL-DT-ST BD-RE BH10LS30 SATA Bluray
Lexmark S305 Printer/Scanner/Copier (USB)
WEI Score: 8.1/8.1/8.5/8.5/8.25
Asus Eee PC 1011PX Netbook (Windows 7 x86 Starter)
To be fair, the article referred to was written in January 2009, a good 9 months before your "average" XP owner would have been able to legally get their hands on it. So how did the writer know people wouldn't like it if they haven't seen it (beta testers excepted)??
I would not have switched to 7 from XP just to switch. All the years of tweaks, and programs, and all I didn't want to lose. But, I wanted a screaming new PC, and I wasn't going to be stupid and install an older OS on it....
Same boat here, made my own theme etc. and knew exactly where everything was.
The "very occasional" system re-install would be due to user error, usually trying to remove Outlook (with a 20Gb system HDD, removing everything that I thought was "bloatware" was essential!). But to re-install the system and all my stuff took at most an hour.
WinPatrol, ESET, Mbam instantly took hold of any naughty boys, gave them a good slapping and showed 'em the door.
Then my old (and it was second hand to me) Packard Bell was finally showing its age so it was time to buy a new PC, but that was back in June 2009 and like A Guy I wasn't going to install an old system on a new PC. I waited until December 2009 to see what feedback Windows 7 was getting from "real people", not Beta testers.

And I was impressed, so I took the leap.
Am I still impressed? Yep. 98% of the time.
 

My Computer

OS
Win7 HP 64bit
Windows 7 is better than xp in so many ways,but i dont know why they hate it so much...
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Time to quote him and tell him why he is wrong.... (IMO of course ;))
One of the biggest complaints that XP users had with Windows Vista was its hardware incompatibilities. Older printers, scanners, network cards, and other peripherals simply didn't work with Vista. Here's the bad news: They won't work in Windows 7, either, because Windows 7 uses the same driver model as Windows Vista. So XP users will be out of luck.
I can understand wanting to keep your tried, trusted, and true hardware, but there comes a point where it is obsolete. In the technology world, much more than 5 years and it is old.

XP users also tend not to be fans of Vista's Windows Aero and other interface enhancements that they dismiss as so much frou-frou. Guess what --- there's even more frou-frou in Windows 7, such as a new taskbar and a nice new feature called Aero Peek. (For more details, see "Review: Windows 7 Beta 1 shows off new task bar, more UI goodies.") Those features won't make XP users happy.
Windows Classic (or basic) theme for the win...

Some XP users I know simply don't like change. They'd like the old Windows Explorer back, or the Run box back, or would have liked to have seen the same desktop icons in Vista that were in XP. Even though Vista lets them customize it so that it had some old XP features, it was still different enough that they weren't happy.
Run box is still there, just a little deeper in the menu.
I don't know why desktop icons are an issue, they work exactly the same :sarcastic:

Anyways, in the end it is a new OS, why SHOULDN'T it be different? Would you drive a car that was made in 1950 because you think it works better than one made in 2009? The safety features alone should make you think twice...

~Lordbob
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hera
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Mint 9
CPU
Intel i5-2500k
Motherboard
ASUS P8P67 Pro
Memory
2x 4Gb Corsair VENGEANCE DDR3-1600
Graphics Card(s)
NVidia GeForce N260GTX Twin Frozr
Sound Card
Realtek HD OnBoard Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
ASUS 24" Monitor
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
G.SKILL Phoenix Series 60GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD)
SAMSUNG Spinpoint F3R 1TB 7200 RPM 32MB Cache SATA II
PSU
Cooler Master Real Power Pro 750W
Case
Cooler Master Haf 932
Cooling
Fans
Keyboard
Razer Tarantula
Mouse
Razer Lachesis
Internet Speed
not fast enough
I like LordBob's car analogy, except, a car from the 50's (like my Dads '55 Chevy) still looks cool and is nice to drive once in a while. After figuring out 7, doing anything in XP just seems harder. The Run box was easier to find in XP, but I've almost completely replaced it with Windows search. Besides, saying that people that primarily use one OS, don't like the other, is like saying most people that have only used desktop computers, don't like using laptops. Yeah its true, but that doesn't mean that laptops don't have some advantages over desktops.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Toshiba P775-S7100
OS
Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i5-2450M @2.5 GHz
Memory
6 GB DDR3 1333MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD 3000
Monitor(s) Displays
Built-in 17.3" LED; 22" Insignia NS-L22Q-10A
Screen Resolution
1600x900; 1360x768
Hard Drives
750 GB Hitachi
1TB Seagate FreeAgent External
Internet Speed
Verizon DSL Speed(Down/Up): 3360 Kbps / 800 Kbps
Antivirus
MSE and MBAM Pro
Browser
IE10
I like LordBob's car analogy, except, a car from the 50's (like my Dads '55 Chevy) still looks cool and is nice to drive once in a while. After figuring out 7, doing anything in XP just seems harder. The Run box was easier to find in XP, but I've almost completely replaced it with Windows search. Besides, saying that people that primarily use one OS, don't like the other, is like saying most people that have only used desktop computers, don't like using laptops. Yeah its true, but that doesn't mean that laptops don't have some advantages over desktops.
+1, thanks for taking it farther.

~Lordbob
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hera
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64, Mint 9
CPU
Intel i5-2500k
Motherboard
ASUS P8P67 Pro
Memory
2x 4Gb Corsair VENGEANCE DDR3-1600
Graphics Card(s)
NVidia GeForce N260GTX Twin Frozr
Sound Card
Realtek HD OnBoard Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
ASUS 24" Monitor
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
G.SKILL Phoenix Series 60GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD)
SAMSUNG Spinpoint F3R 1TB 7200 RPM 32MB Cache SATA II
PSU
Cooler Master Real Power Pro 750W
Case
Cooler Master Haf 932
Cooling
Fans
Keyboard
Razer Tarantula
Mouse
Razer Lachesis
Internet Speed
not fast enough
I liked XP when it was the newest & greatest os. Then when Vista came out, I liked it (except for the bugs), but I still used XP. Then when 7 was released as RTM, I liked it and finally retired XP. I found that both Vista & 7 are more stable than XP in a PC repair bench. Our XP box would seem to crash whenever I tried to fix a corrupted hard drive, whereas, the Vista (7 wasn't even beta at the time) box would not.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
ATX Custom Build 2012
OS
Windows 7 Enterprise x64 SP1
CPU
Intel Core i3-2100 @ 3.10GHz
Motherboard
Intel DH67CL desktop ATX
Memory
10 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Asus EAH5450 series (Radeon)
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 226BW, Samsung Syncmaster P2450H
Screen Resolution
226BW: 1680 x 1050 & P2450H: 1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Western Digital 320 GB sata (boot), Samsung 640 GB sata, Seagate 2 TB sata (data)
PSU
Cooler Master Extreme Power Plus 500W
Case
Thermaltake V3 Black Edition
Cooling
stock cooling with added intake fan
Keyboard
HP Wireless Elite Keyboard Wireless Keyboard
Mouse
Microsoft Touch
Internet Speed
Comcast Cable business class <=18Mb {averages 12Mb}
Other Info
Optical drives: LG SuperMulti Blue, HP DVD 1260T
Other: Kensington Bluetooth Receiver
Network: Buffalo Wireless N USB, DLink N router/DLink Ethernet Switch/DLink Xtreme N wireless bridge
Printer: HP Photosmart Plus, HP Officejet Pro 8600 Plus
PCs: HP dv6-3040us (7 x64 SP1), HP DM4-2165dx (7 x64 SP1), HP Pavilion zv6130us (7 x86), Apple Macbook Air (Lion)
************
Bissonette__Todd__72_Dodge_Dart_Swinger_2.jpg


Lexus-LF-A.jpg
 
This is quite the surprise to me. I remember setting up Vista on a friends laptop because it was what he wanted and after seeing it I did not really care for it for quite a few reasons but saw it had some good stuff as well.

I was one of the BETA testers for Windows 7 and liked what I saw there a great deal as they took the better portions of Vista and not only expanded upon them they were far superior.

I loaded W7 Professional 32 on a nearly 6 y/o DELL XPS laptop with 60Gb HDD, a CD-RW, 2 Gb RAM and a 128 Mb ATi 9700 GPU, the CPU is a 3.4GHz extreme. This system ran like a top for all the time I owned it with a hiccup of the keyboard going fluky after 5 years so I just replaced it and we were off and running.

Once W7 Pro 32 was loaded it was not only running flawlessly, it surpassed the way it ran with XP Pro and I ordered a new 160Gb HDD for it and when I loaded W7 Pro 32 on it that was the OS, no XP and I find XP a bit clunky now when I had never had that issue before W7, I guess we're all different.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL XPS Studio 435T
OS
Vista 64 Ultimate, Windows 7 64 Ultimate, Ubuntu 9.10
CPU
i7 975 3.3 GHz Extreme (Factory OC'd to 3.6 GHz)
Motherboard
DELL provided
Memory
18 Gb Tri-Channel 1066
Graphics Card(s)
ATI 5970 2048 Mb
Sound Card
X-Fi Extreme Gamer
Monitor(s) Displays
Vizio 37" HD-TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
1.5 Tb HDD
1.5 Tb HDD
2.0 Tb Network Drive
512 Gb Crucial SSD
PSU
DELL Provided 475 watts
Case
DELL
Cooling
3 fans
Keyboard
Logitech Performance K350 Wireless
Mouse
Logitech Performance MX Wireless
Internet Speed
3 Mb up 750 Kb down
Other Info
Bamboo Fun Tablet, Belkin N+ Wireless router, Pioneer Dolby System Wireless Headphones, Bose 5.1 Dolby Surround Sound System, LifeCam VX 3000 Webcam, Blu-Ray/Hi Def DVD +RW combo and Blu-ray +RW,l 15 in 1 media card reader, Logitech Rumblepad 2, Hauppauge 2250 DTV Tuner with MS Media Center Remote

Laptop:Alienware M17x, Q9100 CPU, 8Gb RAM, 1920x1200 WUXGA LCD driven by 4870's in CrossFireX, Bl
I will install 7 and use it in a dual boot config with XP. I do everything in XP (except on my 7 netbook), but will slowly shift to 7 as I get used to it.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Dimension 8200/Personal Build
OS
Windows XP Professional SP3/Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Pentium 4 3.06GHz Northwood/Intel Core i7 3770K
Motherboard
North Bridge:Intel Tehama i850(E)/Asus P8Z77-V Deluxe
Memory
2 Gb RDRAM Dual Channel/GSkill 32GB DDR3 1866
Graphics Card(s)
ATI ALL-IN-WONDER X800 XT AGP/MSI GTX 660 Ti PE
Sound Card
Voyetra Turtle Beach Santa Cruz PCI/Onboard Realtek HD
Monitor(s) Displays
Viewsonic VP230mb ViewPanel
Screen Resolution
1600x1200 32bit
Hard Drives
Western Digital 500Gb IDE drive (main drive) (XP PC)/Samsung 512GB 840 Pro Series SSD main+Western Digital Caviar Black 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache as 2nd internal (Win 7 PC)
PSU
Dell OEM/Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 850W TPG-850M
Case
Dell OEM/Corsair Obsidian 650DW-1 Midtower
Cooling
Dell OEM/Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Dell Multimedia keyboard
Mouse
Logitech Cordless MouseMan® Optical M-RM63

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Dimension 8200/Personal Build
OS
Windows XP Professional SP3/Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Pentium 4 3.06GHz Northwood/Intel Core i7 3770K
Motherboard
North Bridge:Intel Tehama i850(E)/Asus P8Z77-V Deluxe
Memory
2 Gb RDRAM Dual Channel/GSkill 32GB DDR3 1866
Graphics Card(s)
ATI ALL-IN-WONDER X800 XT AGP/MSI GTX 660 Ti PE
Sound Card
Voyetra Turtle Beach Santa Cruz PCI/Onboard Realtek HD
Monitor(s) Displays
Viewsonic VP230mb ViewPanel
Screen Resolution
1600x1200 32bit
Hard Drives
Western Digital 500Gb IDE drive (main drive) (XP PC)/Samsung 512GB 840 Pro Series SSD main+Western Digital Caviar Black 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache as 2nd internal (Win 7 PC)
PSU
Dell OEM/Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 850W TPG-850M
Case
Dell OEM/Corsair Obsidian 650DW-1 Midtower
Cooling
Dell OEM/Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Dell Multimedia keyboard
Mouse
Logitech Cordless MouseMan® Optical M-RM63
Your source for the statement most XP users hate win 7?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP Pavillion dv-7 1005 Tx
OS
Win 8 Release candidate 8400
CPU
[email protected]
Memory
4 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia 9600M
Sound Card
HD built-in
Monitor(s) Displays
17" Wxga
Screen Resolution
1440x900
Cooling
none
Internet Speed
45Mb down 5Mb up
When I first got my Vista computer it was right when SP1 was released and all the complaints that my friends who ran XP at the time about the Vista OS just didn't materialize on my machine because so many improvements had been made by that time.

Flash forward 2 years and all of us are now running Win 7! This latest and greatest Windows OS has brought us all together on the same computing platform for the very first time and I haven't heard one of them complain yet with the exception that they are convinced that Win 7 Aero has a back door!

~Maxx~
.
da59fa57.png
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP HPE 270f
OS
Windows 7 x64 Home Premium
CPU
Intel Core i7 930 @ 2.8 Ghz Socket 1366 LGA
Motherboard
Pegatron Truckee v1.04E41
Memory
8 GB 1366 Mhz DDR3 (PC3-10700) RAM
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon 5770 1 GB DDR5 RAM
Sound Card
Realtech High Definition
Monitor(s) Displays
32" Sony Bravia
Screen Resolution
1366 X 768
Hard Drives
Intel 25nm 120 GB Series 320 SSD HD Tune- 265 MBps Read/ 130 MBps Write

LaCie 1TB + 1TB RAID 0 eSATA Drive HD Tune- 160 MBps Read/ 90 MBps Write
Keyboard
Logitech Illuminated
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution
Internet Speed
36.4 Mbps Maximum on a 37 Mbps Motorola SB501 Modem
Hi there
to me the original statement - especially without decent facts to back this up is just a load of "Little round Objects" or more bluntly Pure Bovine Scatology.

True some people hate change and there are little niggles such as (but please don't start a thread on this again) the old Classic menu vs the newer interface but once people have got used to W7 and embraced a lot of the new features then I can't see the statement ringing true at all.

Lack of a decent email client (Outlook express was 100% fine for users who just wanted a simple no nonsense email package without all the bells and whistles such as Outlook has) and no decent equivalent to Netmeeting are probably the biggest gripes I've heard when people upgrade.

Neither of these problems are insurmountable in themselves but removing functionality that people are VERY comfortable with is likely to cause the biggest grumbles from NON technical users when an upgrade is required.


Most people (including me) who one way or another are still running some XP systems whether on real or Virtual machines do so because of particular issues such as legacy hardware / corporate software etc.

I and I'm sure most other users wouldn't find it a problem when the day finally arrives to ditch XP completely.

Cheers
jimbo
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom built, several laptops HP/ASUS
OS
Linux CENTOS 7 / various Windows OS'es and servers
CPU
Intel i7 Intel i5
Memory
8GB, 16GB
Graphics Card(s)
On Motherboard
Sound Card
Realtek HD audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Apple Cinema display, Samsung LCD
Screen Resolution
1920 X 1080
Hard Drives
4 X 1TB SATA
Mouse
Toshiba wireless laser
Internet Speed
> 20MB up
Hi there
to me the original statement - especially without decent facts to back this up is just a load of "Little round Objects" or more bluntly Pure Bovine Scatology.

True some people hate change and there are little niggles such as (but please don't start a thread on this again) the old Classic menu vs the newer interface but once people have got used to W7 and embraced a lot of the new features then I can't see the statement ringing true at all.

Lack of a decent email client (Outlook express was 100% fine for users who just wanted a simple no nonsense email package without all the bells and whistles such as Outlook has) and no decent equivalent to Netmeeting are probably the biggest gripes I've heard when people upgrade.

Neither of these problems are insurmountable in themselves but removing functionality that people are VERY comfortable with is likely to cause the biggest grumbles from NON technical users when an upgrade is required.


Most people (including me) who one way or another are still running some XP systems whether on real or Virtual machines do so because of particular issues such as legacy hardware / corporate software etc.

I and I'm sure most other users wouldn't find it a problem when the day finally arrives to ditch XP completely.

Cheers
jimbo

Regardless of how special you think Netmeeting was, tell me, are there other programs out there that would be considered to "compete" with it from a business standpoint? If so, then they removed Netmeeting for the same reason that they removed Outlook Express / Windows Mail. They removed those things (also Movie Maker and Messenger) because of antitrust threats. In Europe, where the antitrust situation is even worse, they even had to remove Internet Explorer (even though every other OS comes standard with one default browser).

I don't want to turn this into a debate on such things, but I do think that they were forced to make several basic features (like email) a little harder for the novice user, to avoid being sued by companies that thought it was unfair to include any competitive software in Windows. (I guess those companies aren't concerned about Windows DVD Maker, Desktop Gadgets, or Paint, for some reason.)
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware X51
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium x64
CPU
Intel Core i7-2600 @3.40GHz
Memory
8.00GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 555 w/1.0GB RAM
Monitor(s) Displays
BenQ XL2420TX
Screen Resolution
1920x1080@120Hz
Hard Drives
1TB
PSU
330-watt
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless Illuminated Keyboard K800
Mouse
Razer Orochi
Internet Speed
Campus Internet
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