Windows NT/2000/XP Does it work OK with your PC
#1
Posted 30 December 2002 - 05:17 PM
#2
Posted 31 December 2002 - 03:12 AM
Gaming compatibility and eye candy are not as good as XP, but stability is far better.
The only thing I worry about is, when MS discontinues support, my only option appears to be Linux, or, XP. I'm looking at Linux builds right now. ;(
#3
Posted 31 December 2002 - 03:29 AM
Oh and NT4/2K/XP runs fine on my box...NT4 is the least trouble but is less supported and compatible, 2K is better than NT4/XP and XP just pissed me off to no end (mostly due to M$ laziness than anything else).
#4
Posted 31 December 2002 - 03:51 AM
#5
Posted 26 January 2003 - 07:20 AM
Gaming compatibility and eye candy are not as good as XP, but stability is far better.
i found quiet the opposite - XP was FAR FAR FAR more stable for me then 2k ever was! - and it should be, as it is a newer release and have some feature to help prevent b.s.o.d's
i have never b.s.o.d Xp due to XP (due to nividia drivers - yes, but not XP itself) - where as 2k i used to b.s.o.d at least once a day (and yes, i used XP and 2k on the same system)
Just my experience.
#6
Posted 26 January 2003 - 10:18 AM
Thats my biggest hate of Windows XP.
#7
Posted 26 January 2003 - 06:05 PM
Thats my biggest hate of Windows XP.
turn off the pagefile executive
#8
Posted 25 February 2003 - 05:27 PM
no format for almost two years.just upgrade.
#9
Posted 28 November 2003 - 03:30 PM
#10
Posted 30 November 2003 - 10:50 PM
i had 7 B.S.O.D's in under 10 mins when i put 2k back into a system for the heck of it - to which XP had not given me any! and yes - i was using the right drivers and all - i had 2k previously on tihs system before i got a hold of XP years back.
if anything i think it is due to incompatible hardware that pepole do not bother to check and think - yeah - i will just use 2k drivers - or something along that lines.
XP has built in crash isolation - wich prevents an applicaiton that crashes from BSOD'd the O/S as well - and this works very well - sometihng 2k does not have - not to mention more comaptibilty with many software applications and games. - more so newer ones.
Also 2k3 is the most cleanest of the NT supported flavours in my thoughts.
#11
Posted 30 November 2003 - 10:56 PM
XP has built in crash isolation - wich prevents an applicaiton that crashes from BSOD'd the O/S as well - and this works very well - sometihng 2k does not have - not to mention more comaptibilty with many software applications and games. - more so newer ones.
For the second time, this is NOT true.
Crash isolation has been there ever since Nt4. Windows 2000 has crash isolation too. windows 200 shells out proigrams such that if one program fails the others remain unaffected!
#12
Posted 06 December 2003 - 05:27 PM
XP has built in crash isolation - wich prevents an applicaiton that crashes from BSOD'd the O/S as well - and this works very well - sometihng 2k does not have - not to mention more comaptibilty with many software applications and games. - more so newer ones.
For the second time, this is NOT true.
Crash isolation has been there ever since Nt4. Windows 2000 has crash isolation too. windows 200 shells out proigrams such that if one program fails the others remain unaffected!
well iwould have to say it does not work for crap in win2k then...lol or at least it never did for me.
#13
Posted 06 December 2003 - 05:43 PM
I have had much worse luck with XP crach isolation than windows 2000.
In my opinion, Micro$oft screwed around way too much with XP and ruined the OS.
#14
Posted 12 December 2003 - 07:01 PM
i use server 2003 myself when possible - it just kick's XP in the butt
but on a serious note - 2k always BSOD'd for me when something went wrong - or it would hang for ages - or my system woudl just reboot.
it was not the hardware as when it started i went nuts finding the problems. - and in the end it was 2k it's self - i always used 2k drivers and comaptible hardware and everything i had ran fine on XP and never crashed like it did on 2k
#15
Posted 25 January 2004 - 04:57 AM
#16
Posted 25 January 2004 - 09:30 AM
As for Linux, I love Gentoo and Mac OSX (BSD core, but with all the pretty stuff on top). I went back to Windows mostly because of:
1. Visual Studio.NET (yes, it rules. I program in C# because I dig Java, well mostly... :))
2. MS Office XP, and now Office System (no, OpenOffice.org is not a viable replacement for me, and yes I used it for a long time and found KOffice to be better, but still not good enough)
3. SQL Server (if you have used it along with other client/server RDBMS options, you would know why)
4. Exchange Server (very cool, especially when linked to...)
5. Active Directory (you can get many of the same features using Linux and Open LDAP, but you have to recompile many of the apps to tie into it, such as the kernel itself and SAMBA)
6. Windows Server 2003 (it hosts all of the above, and is the fastest and most stable Windows OS ever, period)
As a desktop, Gentoo was fine if you learned how to tweak everything (like fonts, but that's mostly an art anyway). However, I had simple apps crash X-Server, which in turn crashed every GUI-reliant app you were using. I still like it a lot though, and recommend it. Gentoo with Fluxbox was the way to go.
#17
Posted 11 February 2004 - 12:20 AM

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