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Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
IBM'er says Vista's RAM sweet spot is 4GB
Patrick Thibodeau
Today's Top Stories http://www.computerworld.com/news/index.jsp
or
Other Operating Systems Stories http://www.computerworld.com/action/knowledgecenter.do?command=viewKnowledgeCenterStories&taxonomyId=89
Comments
Comments (4)
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
Recommend this article
February 20, 2007
(Computerworld)
-- Configuring a PC around the minimum hardware requirements of an application or operating system is lot like agreeing to live in a basement apartment.
Sure, it will work as a place to live -- if you don't mind damp and dim living conditions.
Such may be the case for Windows Vista's
minimum requirement
of 512MB of RAM.
Microsoft's on-the-box minimum RAM requirement "really isn't realistic," according to David Short, an IBM consultant who works in its company's Global Services
Divison. He says users should consider 4GB of RAM if they really want optimum Vista performance. With 512MB of RAM, Vista will deliver performance that's
"sub-XP," he warned.
Short has been beta testing Vista for two years and was at the IBM-oriented Share user group conference in Tampa, Fla., last week discussing some of Vista's
performance requirements. His XP system has 2GB of RAM, which he calls the "sweet spot" for that operating system, but on Vista, 4GB of RAM may be closer
to its "Nirvana," he said.
That's due in part to Windows SuperFetch, which takes data from the hard drive, stores it in the available RAM and makes it readily accessible to the processor.
SuperFetch depends a great deal on user predictability and takes snapshots of user activity. If SuperFetch determines that an application is launched at
a particular time, it will have it loaded into the available RAM. With more RAM, there's more caching and better software response, said Short.
Hardware vendors, of course, will offer systems built on Microsoft's minimum hardware requirements called "Windows Vista Capable," configured with 512MB
of system memory and a processor that is at least 800MHz. But their heart may not really be in it.
For instance, Dell offers a
configuration that isn't capable of much, according to what Dell says about it on its Web site: "Great for ... Booting the Operating System, without running
applications or games."
Dell recommends 2GB of system memory.
Microsoft may be using PCs loaded with 4GB of RAM for some of its customer demos; At least that's what Ann Westerheim, president of Ekaru LLC, reports.
A Microsoft representative recently demonstrated Vista on a system with 4GB of system memory to some of its customers, and the performance was so impressive
that it drew some "ohs and ahs" from the audience, said Westerheim. The Westford, Mass.-based company provides technology services for small and mid-sized
business.
Westerheim said that for her personal use she may configure a system with 2GB RAM, only because of the cost of loading 4GB on a laptop.
Mueez Deen, director of graphics memory and consumer DRAM at Samsung Electronics, also recommends 2GB of RAM, calling that amount the "optimal density for
the complete Vista experience - economically and technologically."
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
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Hardware vendors launch powerful Vista PCs
Hardware vendors launch more powerful Vista -ready PCs
The Trouble with Vista
Read More http://www.computerworld.com/action/search.do?command=basicSearch&readMoreContentId=9011523&trackTerm=READ_MORE&searchTerms=Operating Systems
Hardware Windows and Linux PCs Microsoft Vista minimum requirements 512MB 2GB 4GB Dell Samsung
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Microsoft unleashes six Vista deployment tools
ATI looks to outpoint Nvidia on Vista gaming
Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
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Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
IBM'er says Vista's RAM sweet spot is 4GB
Patrick Thibodeau
Today's Top Stories http://www.computerworld.com/news/index.jsp
or
Other Operating Systems Stories http://www.computerworld.com/action/knowledgecenter.do?command=viewKnowledgeCenterStories&taxonomyId=89
Comments
Comments (4)
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
Recommend this article
February 20, 2007
(Computerworld)
-- Configuring a PC around the minimum hardware requirements of an application or operating system is lot like agreeing to live in a basement apartment.
Sure, it will work as a place to live -- if you don't mind damp and dim living conditions.
Such may be the case for Windows Vista's
minimum requirement
of 512MB of RAM.
Microsoft's on-the-box minimum RAM requirement "really isn't realistic," according to David Short, an IBM consultant who works in its company's Global Services
Divison. He says users should consider 4GB of RAM if they really want optimum Vista performance. With 512MB of RAM, Vista will deliver performance that's
"sub-XP," he warned.
Short has been beta testing Vista for two years and was at the IBM-oriented Share user group conference in Tampa, Fla., last week discussing some of Vista's
performance requirements. His XP system has 2GB of RAM, which he calls the "sweet spot" for that operating system, but on Vista, 4GB of RAM may be closer
to its "Nirvana," he said.
That's due in part to Windows SuperFetch, which takes data from the hard drive, stores it in the available RAM and makes it readily accessible to the processor.
SuperFetch depends a great deal on user predictability and takes snapshots of user activity. If SuperFetch determines that an application is launched at
a particular time, it will have it loaded into the available RAM. With more RAM, there's more caching and better software response, said Short.
Hardware vendors, of course, will offer systems built on Microsoft's minimum hardware requirements called "Windows Vista Capable," configured with 512MB
of system memory and a processor that is at least 800MHz. But their heart may not really be in it.
For instance, Dell offers a
configuration that isn't capable of much, according to what Dell says about it on its Web site: "Great for ... Booting the Operating System, without running
applications or games."
Dell recommends 2GB of system memory.
Microsoft may be using PCs loaded with 4GB of RAM for some of its customer demos; At least that's what Ann Westerheim, president of Ekaru LLC, reports.
A Microsoft representative recently demonstrated Vista on a system with 4GB of system memory to some of its customers, and the performance was so impressive
that it drew some "ohs and ahs" from the audience, said Westerheim. The Westford, Mass.-based company provides technology services for small and mid-sized
business.
Westerheim said that for her personal use she may configure a system with 2GB RAM, only because of the cost of loading 4GB on a laptop.
Mueez Deen, director of graphics memory and consumer DRAM at Samsung Electronics, also recommends 2GB of RAM, calling that amount the "optimal density for
the complete Vista experience - economically and technologically."
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
table with 2 columns and 4 rows
Hardware vendors launch powerful Vista PCs
Hardware vendors launch more powerful Vista -ready PCs
The Trouble with Vista
Read More http://www.computerworld.com/action/search.do?command=basicSearch&readMoreContentId=9011523&trackTerm=READ_MORE&searchTerms=Operating Systems
Hardware Windows and Linux PCs Microsoft Vista minimum requirements 512MB 2GB 4GB Dell Samsung
table end
Microsoft unleashes six Vista deployment tools
ATI looks to outpoint Nvidia on Vista gaming
Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
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Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
IBM'er says Vista's RAM sweet spot is 4GB
Patrick Thibodeau
Today's Top Stories http://www.computerworld.com/news/index.jsp
or
Other Operating Systems Stories http://www.computerworld.com/action/knowledgecenter.do?command=viewKnowledgeCenterStories&taxonomyId=89
Comments
Comments (4)
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
Recommend this article
February 20, 2007
(Computerworld)
-- Configuring a PC around the minimum hardware requirements of an application or operating system is lot like agreeing to live in a basement apartment.
Sure, it will work as a place to live -- if you don't mind damp and dim living conditions.
Such may be the case for Windows Vista's
minimum requirement
of 512MB of RAM.
Microsoft's on-the-box minimum RAM requirement "really isn't realistic," according to David Short, an IBM consultant who works in its company's Global Services
Divison. He says users should consider 4GB of RAM if they really want optimum Vista performance. With 512MB of RAM, Vista will deliver performance that's
"sub-XP," he warned.
Short has been beta testing Vista for two years and was at the IBM-oriented Share user group conference in Tampa, Fla., last week discussing some of Vista's
performance requirements. His XP system has 2GB of RAM, which he calls the "sweet spot" for that operating system, but on Vista, 4GB of RAM may be closer
to its "Nirvana," he said.
That's due in part to Windows SuperFetch, which takes data from the hard drive, stores it in the available RAM and makes it readily accessible to the processor.
SuperFetch depends a great deal on user predictability and takes snapshots of user activity. If SuperFetch determines that an application is launched at
a particular time, it will have it loaded into the available RAM. With more RAM, there's more caching and better software response, said Short.
Hardware vendors, of course, will offer systems built on Microsoft's minimum hardware requirements called "Windows Vista Capable," configured with 512MB
of system memory and a processor that is at least 800MHz. But their heart may not really be in it.
For instance, Dell offers a
configuration that isn't capable of much, according to what Dell says about it on its Web site: "Great for ... Booting the Operating System, without running
applications or games."
Dell recommends 2GB of system memory.
Microsoft may be using PCs loaded with 4GB of RAM for some of its customer demos; At least that's what Ann Westerheim, president of Ekaru LLC, reports.
A Microsoft representative recently demonstrated Vista on a system with 4GB of system memory to some of its customers, and the performance was so impressive
that it drew some "ohs and ahs" from the audience, said Westerheim. The Westford, Mass.-based company provides technology services for small and mid-sized
business.
Westerheim said that for her personal use she may configure a system with 2GB RAM, only because of the cost of loading 4GB on a laptop.
Mueez Deen, director of graphics memory and consumer DRAM at Samsung Electronics, also recommends 2GB of RAM, calling that amount the "optimal density for
the complete Vista experience - economically and technologically."
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
table with 2 columns and 4 rows
Hardware vendors launch powerful Vista PCs
Hardware vendors launch more powerful Vista -ready PCs
The Trouble with Vista
Read More http://www.computerworld.com/action/search.do?command=basicSearch&readMoreContentId=9011523&trackTerm=READ_MORE&searchTerms=Operating Systems
Hardware Windows and Linux PCs Microsoft Vista minimum requirements 512MB 2GB 4GB Dell Samsung
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Microsoft unleashes six Vista deployment tools
ATI looks to outpoint Nvidia on Vista gaming
Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
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Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
IBM'er says Vista's RAM sweet spot is 4GB
Patrick Thibodeau
Today's Top Stories
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Recommendations: 26 -
Recommend this article
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Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
IBM'er says Vista's RAM sweet spot is 4GB
Patrick Thibodeau
Today's Top Stories http://www.computerworld.com/news/index.jsp
or
Other Operating Systems Stories http://www.computerworld.com/action/knowledgecenter.do?command=viewKnowledgeCenterStories&taxonomyId=89
Comments
Comments (4)
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
Recommend this article
February 20, 2007
(Computerworld)
-- Configuring a PC around the minimum hardware requirements of an application or operating system is lot like agreeing to live in a basement apartment.
Sure, it will work as a place to live -- if you don't mind damp and dim living conditions.
Such may be the case for Windows Vista's
minimum requirement
of 512MB of RAM.
Microsoft's on-the-box minimum RAM requirement "really isn't realistic," according to David Short, an IBM consultant who works in its company's Global Services
Divison. He says users should consider 4GB of RAM if they really want optimum Vista performance. With 512MB of RAM, Vista will deliver performance that's
"sub-XP," he warned.
Short has been beta testing Vista for two years and was at the IBM-oriented Share user group conference in Tampa, Fla., last week discussing some of Vista's
performance requirements. His XP system has 2GB of RAM, which he calls the "sweet spot" for that operating system, but on Vista, 4GB of RAM may be closer
to its "Nirvana," he said.
That's due in part to Windows SuperFetch, which takes data from the hard drive, stores it in the available RAM and makes it readily accessible to the processor.
SuperFetch depends a great deal on user predictability and takes snapshots of user activity. If SuperFetch determines that an application is launched at
a particular time, it will have it loaded into the available RAM. With more RAM, there's more caching and better software response, said Short.
Hardware vendors, of course, will offer systems built on Microsoft's minimum hardware requirements called "Windows Vista Capable," configured with 512MB
of system memory and a processor that is at least 800MHz. But their heart may not really be in it.
For instance, Dell offers a
configuration that isn't capable of much, according to what Dell says about it on its Web site: "Great for ... Booting the Operating System, without running
applications or games."
Dell recommends 2GB of system memory.
Microsoft may be using PCs loaded with 4GB of RAM for some of its customer demos; At least that's what Ann Westerheim, president of Ekaru LLC, reports.
A Microsoft representative recently demonstrated Vista on a system with 4GB of system memory to some of its customers, and the performance was so impressive
that it drew some "ohs and ahs" from the audience, said Westerheim. The Westford, Mass.-based company provides technology services for small and mid-sized
business.
Westerheim said that for her personal use she may configure a system with 2GB RAM, only because of the cost of loading 4GB on a laptop.
Mueez Deen, director of graphics memory and consumer DRAM at Samsung Electronics, also recommends 2GB of RAM, calling that amount the "optimal density for
the complete Vista experience - economically and technologically."
Recommendations
Recommendations:
26
-
table with 2 columns and 4 rows
Hardware vendors launch powerful Vista PCs
Hardware vendors launch more powerful Vista -ready PCs
The Trouble with Vista
Read More http://www.computerworld.com/action/search.do?command=basicSearch&readMoreContentId=9011523&trackTerm=READ_MORE&searchTerms=Operating Systems
Hardware Windows and Linux PCs Microsoft Vista minimum requirements 512MB 2GB 4GB Dell Samsung
table end
Microsoft unleashes six Vista deployment tools
ATI looks to outpoint Nvidia on Vista gaming
Buying a new PC? 'Windows Vista Capable' barely hits the mark
February 20, 2007
(Computerworld)
-- Configuring a PC around the minimum hardware requirements of an application or operating system is lot like agreeing to live in a basement apartment.
Sure, it will work as a place to live -- if you don't mind damp and dim living conditions.
Such may be the case for Windows Vista's
minimum requirement
of 512MB of RAM.
Microsoft's on-the-box minimum RAM requirement "really isn't realistic," according to David Short, an IBM consultant who works in its company's Global Services
Divison. He says users should consider 4GB of RAM if they really want optimum Vista performance. With 512MB of RAM, Vista will deliver performance that's
"sub-XP," he warned.
Short has been beta testing Vista for two years and was at the IBM-oriented Share user group conference in Tampa, Fla., last week discussing some of Vista's
performance requirements. His XP system has 2GB of RAM, which he calls the "sweet spot" for that operating system, but on Vista, 4GB of RAM may be closer
to its "Nirvana," he said.
That's due in part to Windows SuperFetch, which takes data from the hard drive, stores it in the available RAM and makes it readily accessible to the processor.
SuperFetch depends a great deal on user predictability and takes snapshots of user activity. If SuperFetch determines that an application is launched at
a particular time, it will have it loaded into the available RAM. With more RAM, there's more caching and better software response, said Short.
Hardware vendors, of course, will offer systems built on Microsoft's minimum hardware requirements called "Windows Vista Capable," configured with 512MB
of system memory and a processor that is at least 800MHz. But their heart may not really be in it.
For instance, Dell offers a
Windows Vista Capable
configuration that isn't capable of much, according to what Dell says about it on its Web site: "Great for ... Booting the Operating System, without running
applications or games."
Dell recommends 2GB of system memory.
Microsoft may be using PCs loaded with 4GB of RAM for some of its customer demos; At least that's what Ann Westerheim, president of Ekaru LLC, reports.
A Microsoft representative recently demonstrated Vista on a system with 4GB of system memory to some of its customers, and the performance was so impressive
that it drew some "ohs and ahs" from the audience, said Westerheim. The Westford, Mass.-based company provides technology services for small and mid-sized
business.
Westerheim said that for her personal use she may configure a system with 2GB RAM, only because of the cost of loading 4GB on a laptop.
Mueez Deen, director of graphics memory and consumer DRAM at Samsung Electronics, also recommends 2GB of RAM, calling that amount the "optimal density for
the complete Vista experience - economically and technologically."
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