Hi voirin
Ok, I see your main reason is performance.
That makes reverting to XP a logical step.
I have installed W7 on a few older computers and it runs equally fast to XP.
W7 is not more demanding on a CPU or mainboard than XP, on the contrary.
It uses resources a lot more efficient than XP.
The only thing that is a speed factor is the amount of ram, and especially the graphics card can spoil the fun.
Win7 has it spread out like this: WE1 | WE2 | FF1. XP, however, would arrange it in order of temporal execution: WE1 | FF1 | WE2. Hence W7 groups items, even when spread out.
I really don't understand how this is a minus?
I would think it is an improvement over XP, it makes oversight much more logical.
It was actually one of the XP quircks that thousands of users have asked MS to fix.
Um, this is a post about "What
don't you like about Windows 7?"

All I did was mention the things I didn't like about Windows 7,
You're right, point taken.
Maybe it's because I don't like these negative threads.
Not that I can't take criticism on W7, it's not my baby,
but this thread and threads like these are initiated for the soul purpose of negative comments,
and are in no way constructive.
Most criticism can be written off to user's own mistakes and ignorance.
(this doesn't apply to you)
I'd rather see constructive posts about how we can get the best out of
this OS that hasn't even been released to the general public yet,
and certainly needs a few fixes.
People should realize that every new version of any OS, software, game or what ever,
brings new features, and removes some old features.
In W7's case I would say the pros totally outweigh the cons.
The only thing left for us to do, is to get used to it,
and give it a fair chance, like we had to to do with XP.
With every OS we had to adapt to the new features, as with every new car we buy.
XP needed hundreds of updates, fixes and 3 SP's to become what it is today.
I assure you this won't be the case for W7.
Greetings.