Forum Moderators: phranque
I'm upgrading my 'business' PC soon and I'm not sure what OS to go with. Obviously, all new packages are bundled with XP, but my limited experience with XP (my wife's computer, bought in 2001, has XP Home and it's the snarliest peice of c*!p I've ever had the misfortune of patching, hard drive scraping and reinstalling) makes me want to avoid it all together. My current machine runs Win98 like a buttery dream and I'm terrified of getting an XP machine and suddenly finding all my work time ate up by fighting to get XP into line.
DOes anyone have any thoughts on this? Has XP improved enough to be worth using? Are there compelling reasons NOT to stick with 98 (like, can 98 still handle the vanguard technology?).
Also, how is XP as a production environment for web design and programming? ANy compelling WEBMASTER reasons (there, I made it on topic) to choose one way or another? What about XP Pro?
Thanks a bunch for any responses you might post.
Unless you want to play games, XP Pro is the best choice (for Windows). XP Pro also installs Apache very nicely in the background, running as a service. Perl is simple to install. But PHP and ASP, I have no experience, so I don't know how simple they are to install.
Two other options worth considering are Apple Macs or Linux. Apple are expensive, Linux is more difficult to find drivers for hardware and if you run specialist software, you may find it difficult to replace with an alternative.
It usually takes me about 1 hour to setup xp so it is useable, so much stuff has to be turned off or disabled, but I always miss a few things.
windows 98 is fast, but it's barely able to do real multitasking, crashes a lot more in general unless under very expert hands.
I'm retiring 8/26. Right after the long weekend, the first thing I'm doing is backing up EVERYTHING, wiping my hdd, repartitioning and installing XPPro plus a dual boot to linux. And THIS time, I AM going to make linux stick. Which is the point in dual-boot - stuff that HAS TO HAPPEN NOW can still do so (from XP, Firefox, etc.) while I'm trying to get comfortable with linux.
I'll report in eventually if anyone cares.... I'm fairly machine and software savvy, but I've never been able to get comfortable with linux (ONLY a programmer could love it!), but knoppix has shown me that linux is different now from 10 years ago....