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Microsoft Releases Vista Hardware Requirements 591

Digital Inspiration writes "CNet reports that Microsoft has kicked off a 'Get Ready' campaign aimed at helping customers prepare for Windows Vista. The site also includes an Upgrade Advisor tool to help people determine just how Vista-ready an existing PC is." From the article: "The marketing programs and upgrade tool are designed to ease some of the uncertainty around Vista well ahead of the back-to-school and holiday shopping seasons, the two biggest PC selling times of the year. Vista had long been expected to arrive by the 2006 holidays, but Microsoft said in March that it would not arrive on store shelves until January."
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Microsoft Releases Vista Hardware Requirements

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  • Re:Hdd requirements (Score:2, Informative)

    by Nesetril ( 969734 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @04:30PM (#15360563)
    i am pretty sure that various "windows system restore" features are set to use like at least 10% of the HD, even in XP. i don't know if we are counting the trashcan or not, but that's another 10%. what are the requirements of XP in terms of free HD space, anyway?
  • Re:Hdd requirements (Score:3, Informative)

    by Paralizer ( 792155 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @04:37PM (#15360630) Homepage
    http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/upgrading/s ysreqs.mspx [microsoft.com]
    Windows XP requires:
    * PC with 300 megahertz or higher processor clock speed recommended; 233 MHz minimum required (single or dual processor system);* Intel Pentium/Celeron family, or AMD K6/Athlon/Duron family, or compatible processor recommended

    * 128 megabytes (MB) of RAM or higher recommended (64 MB minimum supported; may limit performance and some features)

    * 1.5 gigabytes (GB) of available hard disk space*

    * Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher-resolution video adapter and monitor

    * CD-ROM or DVD drive

    * Keyboard and Microsoft Mouse or compatible pointing device
    So 1.5GB HDD space to 15GB is a huge increase. What's interesting is the HDD requirements increased 10 fold, the memory increased by a multipule of 8, but the CPU only tripled. Weird.
  • Re:Ummm... (Score:3, Informative)

    by MsGeek ( 162936 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @04:39PM (#15360645) Homepage Journal
    This is probably quite basement-level for usability. Microsoft has a history of lowballing the requirements for their operating systems.

    For example: Windows NT4 Workstation had as its low-end system requirements a Pentium with 16MB of RAM. Windows 2000 Professional (In my opinion the high-water mark for Windows) had as its low-end system requirements a Pentium 133MHz with 64MB of RAM and 2GB of HD space. XP Pro has as its low-end system requirements a Pentium 233MHz, 64MB RAM, a CD-ROM drive, 1.5GB of free HD space (that can't be right considering W2K's requirements) and a video card with 800 x 600 pixel resolution.

    Now think about it a little. NT4 on an 80MHz Pentium with 16MB RAM? XP Pro on a 233MHz Pentium with 64MB RAM? I don't have to imagine W2KPro on a P133MHz with 64MB of RAM: during study for certification I installed 2K on a machine with exactly those specs, and it CRAWLED. :P

    Believe me, you are going to need a hellified system to run Vista at this rate. Double the "Premium Ready" specs and you will have the specs you will need to actually run Vista.

    Oh yeah, and I run Panther on a 300MHz iBook with 544MB RAM and a 30GB hard drive. No those weren't the original specs. No, it isn't Tiger, even though there is a way of tricking Tiger to run on a machine without built-in firewire. And you know what? Panther is a happy camper on that machine. Go figure.
  • Re:Not Unique (Score:2, Informative)

    by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @04:53PM (#15360777) Journal
    That depends on the 'couple of applications' in question. OS X runs quite happily in 512MB with Safari, Mail, OnmiGraffle (as long as the projects aren't too big), a few terminals, and TeXShop all running (oh and preview, my Jabber client iTunes, iCal, and Address Book). If you throw XCode and X11 into the mix, then suddenly 1GB seems a bit better. Add in something like Final Cut Express, and 1.5GB feels a lot nicer.

    I recently used a G5 with 8GB of RAM, and even with a lot of things running it consistently had 6GB free. Mind you, I was more impressed by the dual 30" screens than the RAM...

  • Re:KDE Runs Well (Score:3, Informative)

    by mpapet ( 761907 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @04:54PM (#15360791) Homepage
    I grow tired of people making this reference because it's just not true.

    Now, it also stands to reason you may think this is fanboi speak which it is not. I changed to kde after starting with xfce and I see very little performance difference.

    I've done two 3.x+1 upgrades of KDE just wishing the old dog would die so I have an excuse to replace it. Surprisingly each version is noticeably faster than the last.

    Mind you the usual suspects are quite slow to start, OOO, GIMP regardless of the DE but once everything is up, it goes well.

    FYI: I'm running it on a pII 233 256mb just fine. I think your P90 reference is too harsh.
  • Re:Not Unique (Score:5, Informative)

    by payndz ( 589033 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @05:04PM (#15360883)
    I know that OS X 10.4 runs like complete ass with 512mb of RAM and a couple applications open (and don't pretend it doesn't!)

    Bull. I'm running 10.4 on a 512Mb eMac and usually have (at least) Firefox, iTunes and Photoshop running, often with Azureus busy as well, and while there's an occasional bit of HDD chug when switching between apps there's no way it can be described as running like, as you say, 'complete ass'. Unless you're running it on a 400Mhz iMac or something.

    But yes, I'll agree with you that Apple's attitude towards installed RAM has always been parsimonious in the extreme.

  • by PayPaI ( 733999 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @05:14PM (#15360974) Journal
    ...came out the same year as the G3 was introduced (1999).
    November, 1997 [wikipedia.org]
    iMac (Bondi Blue) shipped August 15, 1998.
  • Re:Bah! (Score:3, Informative)

    by syukton ( 256348 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @05:34PM (#15361126)
    I'm currently testing software under Vista Beta 2 at MS.

    I can say that 1GB is not enough. We have some Pentium 4 3.4GHz machines with 1GB of RAM and Radeon x600 graphics and they score 2 out of 5 on the system properties rating system. We have some identical machines with 2GB of RAM, and they score 3/5. I suspect that a 5/5 would involve a high-end $400+ video card and 4GB of RAM, but even though I work for one of the most powerful corporations in the world, they've refused to buy me such a machine for testing. :D So I really have no idea what it takes to score 5 out of 5, but the "recommended" specs will likely get you a 2/5 which does not provide an enjoyable user experience as far as I'm concerned.
  • by RzUpAnmsCwrds ( 262647 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @06:51PM (#15361641)
    Transparency, finally. This has already been compared above. Welcome to the late 90s, Mr. Gates.

    Windows 2000 & XP have full transparency support, and it's hardware accelerated if your GPU supports the feature (NVIDIA and ATI GPUs do)

    a program menu with a search feature, old hat for KDE

    Windows 95 had a search item in the Start Menu, years before KDE even existed.

    a more integrated browser

    Explorer has supported HTTP since 1997 (IE4's Active Desktop). Windows 98 and later support WebDAV and FTP in the browser. SMB/CIFS has been supported since Windows 95.

    15 GB for the OS, 25 GB for Office

    Vista is approx. 6.8GB on my system. Office 2003 is ~2-3GB. That's less than 10GB total.

    Stop spreading bullshit FUD.
  • Re:Bah! (Score:4, Informative)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday May 18, 2006 @07:21PM (#15361799) Homepage Journal

    Dual-boot to what, Windows 98? Linux doesn't give a damn what your other partitions look like. Just create your partitions before installing anything, make sure to allocate your /boot partition as Primary #1, and put NT next. Actually, if you use grub to change active flag and such, and maybe even hide partitions, you can put your NT partition anywhere on the disk after the /boot.

    On top of that, you can use captive-ntfs to get very good results dealing with NTFS filesystems so you can still read and write your data files to your windows partition. Or, if you just need to read them, the included driver is acceptable.

  • Yes, it's easy.

    When Vista comes out, MS won't automatically drop support for XP. If history serves, XP will be supported for at least 6 to 8 more years.

    Now, if you work for a company that needs 500 desktops (I do), you know you don't buy them. You get a leasing deal from Dell, that includes them taking your machines every 2-3 years and exchanging them with the new models. In this case, within 2-3 years you'll have new Vista-capable computers at no extra cost (yes, you'll pay for them, but in monthly lease payments that were budgeted well ahead of schedule) and, depending on your leasing agreement, they'll probably come with Vista already installed.

    So, really, nothing to see here.

  • Re:Bah! (Score:2, Informative)

    by rdoger6424 ( 879843 ) <rdoger6424+slashdot@@@gmail...com> on Thursday May 18, 2006 @09:45PM (#15362504) Journal
    not really, I saw a digg article way back when where I saw a windows box running at 4 MHz (yes, that's right 4 MEGAHERTZ. The one that is slower than the lisa).
  • It's the extent (Score:2, Informative)

    by Wootzor von Leetenha ( 938602 ) on Thursday May 18, 2006 @09:51PM (#15362528)
    Linux HW reqs [about.com]
    Mac 10.4 HW reqs [apple.com]
    Solaris 10 HW reqs [sun.com]
    In the linux article, the guy got it (don't now distro or version) running on a 33mhz machine, but with no gui.
    The mac requires a g3 or up, and 256 MB ram and 3GB HDD space, 4GB with XCode
    Solaris requires 120MHz cpu and 256 MB ram (or 512 for PXE), 2GB HDD space
  • by From A Far Away Land ( 930780 ) on Friday May 19, 2006 @12:10AM (#15363198) Homepage Journal
    I think there might be a market for maybe 5 Vista premium enabled computers.

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