Basic Vista question

I have to buy a laptop -- I want to put Vista on it.

What flavor of Vista would you recommend for usability, plus chasing a Vista certification or two?

Thanks!

Obdurate

Comments

  • CompuTron99CompuTron99 Member Posts: 542
    Obdurate wrote: »
    I have to buy a laptop -- I want to put Vista on it.

    What flavor of Vista would you recommend for usability, plus chasing a Vista certification or two?

    Thanks!

    Obdurate

    If you are going with Vista, and depending on the specs of the notebook - I would go for Vista Business or Ultimate. I would recommend as much memory as possible to either of those.
  • bgrablinbgrablin Member Posts: 86 ■■□□□□□□□□
    Forget Vista, if you buy a laptop make sure it comes with the Windows 7 Free upgrade coupon. I'm using the Beta Windows 7 64-bit with 6gb of memory and it is MUCH better than vista.
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  • veritas_libertasveritas_libertas Member Posts: 5,746 ■■■■■■■■■■
    If you are going with Vista, and depending on the specs of the notebook - I would go for Vista Business or Ultimate. I would recommend as much memory as possible to either of those.

    Get one that has a free upgrade to Win7 since it is so close to the release date.
  • TalicTalic Member Posts: 423
    I agree with getting Windows 7, Vista is old news now. I'd look at getting Windows 7 Pro or Ultimate.
  • CompuTron99CompuTron99 Member Posts: 542
    I was under the impression that Obdurate wanted Vista installed in order to prepare for the certification.

    I've been using the RC2 of Windows 7, and I might actually look into a new notebook myself.
  • JDMurrayJDMurray Admin Posts: 13,093 Admin
    I'm upgrading all of my Vista laptops to Windows 7. I've pre-purchased Windows 7 for several desktops and will have it on all new desktops that I buy too. I really like Windows 7. It's much easier to use than Vista and the installation is a dream compared to that of XP.
  • ipconfig.allipconfig.all Banned Posts: 428
    If you are going to buy a Windows Vista copy for certifications I recommend that you buy the Ultimate version of Windows Vista since it has all of the features.
  • t3ch_gurut3ch_guru Member Posts: 166
    Yeah definitely go with Windows 7. If you want to learn vista just get a VM running Windows Vista Ultimate.
    Knowledge is Power.
  • Hyper-MeHyper-Me Banned Posts: 2,059
    JDMurray wrote: »
    It's much easier to use than Vista and the installation is a dream compared to that of XP.


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  • jamesp1983jamesp1983 Member Posts: 2,475 ■■■■□□□□□□
    t3ch_guru wrote: »
    Yeah definitely go with Windows 7. If you want to learn vista just get a VM running Windows Vista Ultimate.

    x2. Download VPC or something similar and throw Vista on that.
    "Check both the destination and return path when a route fails." "Switches create a network. Routers connect networks."
  • deyin.chendeyin.chen Member Posts: 9 ■□□□□□□□□□
    I recommand you try windows 7 out. As we know, Vista is really slow, with windows7, you can experience the XP speed and Vista theme.
    David Chen
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  • msteinhilbermsteinhilber Member Posts: 1,480 ■■■■■■■■□□
    deyin.chen wrote: »
    As we know, Vista is really slow, with windows7, you can experience the XP speed and Vista theme.

    I'll agree with the majority and be sure that whatever you purchase includes the Windows 7 upgrade voucher. But the Vista being slow is non-sense, I like a lot of the improvements in Windows 7 and run it exclusively on all of my machines but I can't say that my Vista experience was terribly slow post SP1.

    If you're going to make a purchase prior to Windows 7 shipping with the hardware, I would look for Vista Business (voucher will upgrade to Windows 7 Professional) or Vista Ultimate (voucher upgrades to Windows 7 Ultimate).
  • JDMurrayJDMurray Admin Posts: 13,093 Admin
    But the Vista being slow is non-sense,
    I agree. I've never had performance problems with Vista running on modern hardware. People who have insisted on installing Vista on machines over three years old have experienced such problems, but I would expect that from a newer, beefier MS OS. I don't know if W7 is any more tolerant with older hardware, but as it's 80% Vista, I would expect not.
  • shadown7shadown7 Member Posts: 529
    JDMurray wrote: »
    I agree. I've never had performance problems with Vista running on modern hardware. People who have insisted on installing Vista on machines over three years old have experienced such problems, but I would expect that from a newer, beefier MS OS. I don't know if W7 is any more tolerant with older hardware, but as it's 80% Vista, I would expect not.

    I agree 100%... I've never had any major issues with Vista.

    I'm running Windows 7 Pro on a Dell Latitude D610 with 512MB of RAM and it works just fine. That laptop is 4 years old.
  • veritas_libertasveritas_libertas Member Posts: 5,746 ■■■■■■■■■■
    I agree, with modern hardware and a reasonable amount of RAM Vista runs fine. The original systems that came with Vista installed were pretty rediculous. 1GB of RAM on Vista makes the thing run horribly.
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