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So, I decided to roll my own machine according to isitreal's specs in this thread [webmasterworld.com]. I can get a dang nice machine for about $600.
Now the question is, Do I go with XP Pro or W2K Pro? The price difference for an OEM version is negligible. I have XP Pro on a new laptop, and I have to say that I just can't wrap my head around it; I seem to wander in circles anytime I have to change a setting or find the network -- again! Add to that all the things that pop up just when I'm actually trying to do something, well, I just get very frustrated.
So, would W2K Pro be a better choice for a user who just wants a system to work the way the user wants it to? Or should I just bite the bullet and try to somehow get comfortable with XP?
Having said that, my number one reason for picking XP is for Cleartype [microsoft.com]. I just hate using modern machines if they don't have anti-aliasing enabled - it is so much nicer on the eye, and if you spend a long time staring at a screen, it is much better for the eyes too. Why XP doesn't come with Cleartype enabled by default is a complete mystery to me. If you don't like the XP theme, you can easily switch back to the classic look, and other than that XP Pro can do just as much as W2K.
(Of course, I personally would always choose Linux over Windows in any case!)
If you are the only user, I think Win2k is fine. Less frills and simplified. That's how I like my computers. (Oh, and your system will run just a little faster under Win2k than XP.)
Less frills and simplified
So far that's what I want. I would really like a system I can use, that doesn't try to tell me how to use it.
Okay, so I realize that support for W2K will dry up after awhile, but with the large installed base it is still currently supported. Are there any real pitfalls if I decide to go W2K Pro not instead of XP?
Anyway. It's just my preference and my 2 cents worth. Maybe I got hooked on NT, 2k and 2003.
Native cd burning XP is utter and total garbage, based on the notoriously aweful adaptec burning drivers. The latest jpeg security holes were xp/server 2003 only vulnerabilities.
MS screwed up by making W2K too good, that's why XP didn't sell well on the corporate network sector, almost all its 'upgrades' are downgrades from a networked security standpoint, I also work a bit in a place with a large number of networked machines, and there are no XP installations allowed, by choice.
The truth of the situation is that almost all 'security issues' are a direct outcome of that classic PEBKAC [problem exists between keyboard and chair]. I have never had a real security problem on my machine, it's behind a hardware firewall, behind a decent software firewall, I never open questionable emails, I haven't used IE for years. Don't fall for the security BS, that's just something we throw out to scare newbies.
Leosghost has been running windows 98 for years now if I remember right, and he likes living dangerously, it's all in how well you know your machine and its holes, and the methods that can be used. Of course, if you like visiting sleazy porn sites then your system won't last no matter what Windows you are using, especially if you use IE.
The real problem with W2K will come when MS starts releasing products that will only work on XP, however, MS also screwed up majorly by making Office 2000 too good, so there really is no need to upgrade to XP unless you really want to. All other major apps can be expected to work on W2K for years to come, for the simple reason that W2K is basically really just the real NT5, XP is just a candied up, junked up, useless added on featured W2K. With a built in slideshow viewer...
While you can switch off many of XP's more annoying 'improvements', you can't get rid of all of them. Converting XP to more or less W2K quality takes about 2-3 hours of tweaks, 1 if you do it a lot.
However, Microsoft is releasing some new programs that won't work under W2K:
Media Player 10
Microsoft Movie Maker 2
(there's another one, but I forgot)
And from Adobe:
Premiere
The list will grow. Some say it's because of security issues, I say it's a stupid marketing strategy.
Unless you are a professional video editor/graphics person, having the latest and greatest premier is just a good way to spend a lot of money. And from what I understand, if you are a pro you aren't using premier anyway... Personally I never use media player, even the odd commercial video that might force it to open isn't going to only run on 10, so no worries there at all.
Wait for Longhorn service pack 1 [if you get the first release, you are paying MS to be their post-gold release beta testers, let other people suffer] is what I would say if you absolutely must have the latest windows in the future, W2K will do almost all users just fine. Personally I'm starting the switch to Linux now, Yoper desktop is basically as fast or faster than Windows, and it's linux, which means much more security related stuff is under my direct control, plus of course its screensavers are very cool, the melting screen is my current favorite, it's obvious where the creativity is going nowadays...
For grandma and grandpa, their teenage kids, or friends who have better things to do with their lives than learn the ins and outs of their pcs, however, I'd recommend XP, turn on its automatic update feature, install some decent AV thing, turn off XP firewall, install decent firewall, pop the thing behind a $25 router, remove or hide the outlook/IE icons, replace with firefox/thunderbird and don't tell them there is a choice, but also tell them in the most dire tones about the high risk and insecurity and danger [all things most older people don't like] of using IE or Outlook/Outlook Express, and off they go.
Thanks for the specs and hardware advice, isitreal. The stuff should be here sometime early next week and I'll let you know how it goes.
the kernel is essentially the same.
incorrect graphics drivers cannot crash the system in xp pro.
raw socket support (xp2 limits this, but it's still there)
built-in firewall (people can argue the effectiveness, but it's a lot more than w2k)
future driver support
multimedia performance is better (this really isn't arguable, but i'm sure there will be flaming hate posts about this)
better power-conservation parts compatibility
a driver-signing mechanism and rollback support
on and on and on...
and, if you want the 'speed' of desktop performance .. go into services and disable 'theme' support.
NT4 - daily working machine
W2K - production servers
W2K3 - compatibility testing only
all are the server enterprise editions.
the NT4 box was setup in 1998 and has *never* needed a re-install. it just works. the last hardware upgrade involved hoisting the drive subsystem into a newer box and replacing the video driver. the old box is earmarked for solaris/x86
There is the problem of MS not supporting it any longer, quite a few of MS W2K KB support pages currently come up as "no longer supported" or some such. But, as long as I have it and it's stable -- and I understand it -- I can live with it; there are plenty of W2K help pages out there to suffice for now.
The short Story:
- XP Pro with SP2 for laptops that connect to multiple networks.
- Stable W2k for those stay at home desktop workstations.
W2K is without a question the most stable OS I have ever seen or used, and this includes Linux and Unix variants, but the ease of managing multiple wireless connections in XP is worth the extra$.
I recommend Pro or at least SP2 to get WPA support (also requires a wireless card that supports WPA which seems to exclude the B cards). The SP2 firewall is simple and so far seems pretty good.