[Infowarrior] - Vista's 11 Pillars of Failure

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Thu Apr 24 06:05:38 UTC 2008


http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2286065,00.asp

Vista's 11 Pillars of Failure
ARTICLE DATE:  04.21.08
By John C. Dvorak

While the public's attention seems to be swinging toward Windows 7 (the next
iteration of the OS)‹a topic I'll address in the weeks ahead‹the fact of the
matter is that Vista remains. And it seems that the OS now has two distinct
groups of users. One group happily uses Vista, with few concerns or
complaints. In fact, many of them are baffled by all the grumbling. The
other group is the fist-shaking Vista bashers who condemn each and every
flaw the OS exhibits.

The latter group is by far the most vocal and easily drowns out the former
group. Its complaints stem from the anti-Microsoft backlash, which reflects
dissatisfaction with the company's history, business practices, tactics, and
bogus announcements. Much of the disgruntlement, however, can be attributed
Vista itself‹and the poor marketing job done by Microsoft.

I mention the bogus announcements above because, at some point, you do get a
little tired of Microsoft making exaggerated promises and then never coming
close to delivering the goods. In the case of Vista, it has to do with the
three "pillars" that were announced early on. The OS really delivered on
only one of the pillars, and that pillar was nothing but Windows dressing:
Aero, the resource hog and performance sapper.

With the "pillars" in mind, I decided to take a look at the 11 reasons why
Vista remains on shaky ground:

    1)Market confusion. From the beginning, everyone moaned about the fact
that there were simply too many versions of the OS for sale. Who needs all
the variations? It's stupid‹plain and simple. What you want is the one best
version, not a slew of namby-pamby ones. This happened because the folks at
Microsoft know only how to merchandise and, seemingly, not how to market.

    2)Code size. I've got two words for you: TOO BIG. Enough said.

    3)Missing components. Yes, WinFS, the promised file system and a core
pillar of Vista, isn't there. The promises regarding the development of this
file system go back to 1991. And Microsoft cannot make it a reality? Why?

    4)Laptop battery-life drain. This was supposed to be fixed with special
code and hybrid hard disks (HHD). Still, users have to resort to expensive
silicon drives.

    5)HHD fiasco. I'm still irked about being told by the HD industry that
the benefits of the new generation of hard drives will "make people flock to
Vista." That was over two years ago, and suddenly there's silence about the
whole thing. One of these days, someone will tell me what really happened.
My guess: It never worked correctly, and no one could make it work.

    6)Bogus Vista-capable stickers. Microsoft's "Windows Vista capable"
campaign was an incredible marketing botch. Computers were sold with an
indication that they were "Windows Vista capable" when they were not. This
did wonders for goodwill.

    7)Missing drivers. It seems incredible that all of the Windows drivers
that worked with XP did not necessarily work with Vista. How does that
happen?

    8)Conflicting advice. There was no consistent advice for users about
implementation, and Microsoft did nothing to help. Some people said that you
should get a new computer only with Vista preloaded and not upgrade. Others
said upgrades were fine. Others upgraded and complained. Microsoft should
have put up a specialized Web site that could test machines remotely and
tell users whether it would be a good idea‹or not‹to upgrade. A
promotional/test CD-ROM that could boot Vista (like those Knoppix Linux
disks) would have been a good idea, too.

    9)XP mania. You'd think that the world was in love with Windows XP.
Everyone wants to keep it on the market, and this makes Vista look even
worse. What's more, there were far too many reports about people reverting
to XP after an "experience" with Vista. If Microsoft had the testing service
that I mention above in place, this would never have happened.

    10)Mediocre rollout. Unlike other rollouts of important Windows
products, Microsoft did not put on much of a show with Vista. While there
were some weird posters placed in subways and maybe a few TV commercials,
none of it compared with the rollouts from a few years back, where the
company got worldwide attention. By comparison, the company seemed almost
sheepish or embarrassed by Vista, something that was also reflected in the
recent lackluster rollout of Server 2008‹a total snooze. This sent the wrong
signals to users and may have made them hypercritical.

    11)Performance. You're not supposed to deliver a new operating system
that's been in development for more than four years yet performs worse than
the previous OS. Performance should be at the top, not the bottom, of the
to-do list. You get the sense that Microsoft just piles code on top of code
and somewhere in the middle of it all is MS-DOS 1.0.

I could probably put another dozen items on this list. The point is that
it's a big list already. With all the resources in the world at Microsoft's
disposal, you have to wonder why the company cannot get everything right
even once.

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Copyright (c) 2008Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.




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