Tuesday, February 24, 2009

La vida con Vista (part 4) - “Ciao baby!”

My “Life with Vista” series ends here with a “good bye” and some helpful instructions for anyone else feeling like abandoning the Vista ship. I’ve written two how-to documents giving step by step instructions for replacing Vista with Windows XP or Ubuntu, a Linux distribution intended for desktop users. These are available at http://mairs.ca/tom/papers/VistatoXP.html and http://mairs.ca/tom/papers/VistatoUbuntu.html respectively.

This does come with a caveat or two, however. MS Vista is the current operating systems offering from Microsoft and as such they no longer support anything with Windows XP. Going back to XP means the possibility of not being able to find drivers for new hardware. It also means that the 17 year old “tech” at future shop won’t know how to help you if you ask questions because they may have never actually used it before. On the other hand, it also means faster operation, less cryptic weirdness and familiar (yet still useless) error messages.

Moving to a Linux based operating system (Ubuntu) is not for the faint of heart either. This is a community supported, open source set of packages and as a result, not everything… well, actually nothing… is guaranteed to work. What is available has been built by geeks who built their own drivers and interfaces and made them public for you to use as you see fit. This has the benefit of variety, but also there is the lack of quality assurance. For instance, there may be 5 different drivers for your video card and you will need to pick which one is best based on research. People who are used to Linux are okay with this because it only takes a few minutes to do the research and most Linux users are gear heads or programmers anyway. Ubuntu does a pretty good job of picking the best driver for your hardware, but some things are still hard to find – like the finger print reader on my Dell Studio 1735 notebook.

Which way you choose to go depends on how comfortable you are with computers. If you are a geek or wanna-be geek, then try out Ubuntu, you may be surprised at how good a Linux desktop OS can be. If you are a typical user specifically looking for MSN Messenger, Media Player, and other Microsoft specific tools, then you should probably follow the XP path. Either way, don’t dive in without being prepared.

I’ve done both routes and I personally prefer Ubuntu. My wife preferred the XP route. In either case, MS Vista got the boot – “Ciao Baby!”

I hope you get value out of the how-to documents posted here, even if it is to make the decision to keep working with Vista - someone has to keep Microsoft in business.

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