Naked Science Forum

Non Life Sciences => Technology => Topic started by: latebind on 26/03/2009 18:59:58

Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: latebind on 26/03/2009 18:59:58
Hey guys, tell me if you agree??

I am a software engineer, and I have really respected Microsoft products until the last year or so. I feel their quality of client applications is getting pretty low, let me give some examples.

1) Windows Media Player 11

Ok, so this new version of WMP scans your entire computer for music without giving you the option to tell it where you want it to look. This is a big problem, considering I have an internal 500G HD and 3 external 750G HD's. (I do a lot of development :). So my computer crashed as a result of WMP using too much memory.

Second problem with WMP 11 is that while it is scanning your computer, it shows you a a popup saying that you can close results popup to free up resources and it will continue to search in the background(I assume it meant a low pri thread of sorts). Well I tried this and it stopped searching immediately.

So I uninstalled it because it is pretty much unusable

2) Windows Vista

Lots of quality issues. My biggest problem is the fact that copying files and unzipping files is sometimes extremely slow, and Vista is just way too slow for me as well.

3) Hotmail

Wow, this is really bad. When tabbed browsers came out it was very cool for users of hotmail and other webmail products since they could open each email in a new tab. As a user of hotmail I was really enjoying the new luxury until they decided to use a javascript mechanism to open new emails (which pretty much means you cannot open new emails in a new tab) and hence they took a huge step backwards. This was really a monumental error considering that a few months earlier they made IE7 with tabbed browsing.... (This to me is unforgivable)

4) IE 8

Try IE8. see if you like it, I thought it was a load of rubbish, it could not handle a lot of pages and sometimes crashed upon opening of SSL sites, and every now and then it would just close for no reason and pop up one of those annoying messages about sending this error to microsoft.



Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 26/03/2009 22:30:41
I get endless problems with Windows Live Messenger. It keeps closing for no apparent reason then automatically signing me back in. I often leave my PC running while I go off to do something else. Messenger closes, then logs me back in, so my friends get a message saying I've just logged in. They say hello & get no reply because I'm not actually at my PC. How to lose friends!

Please don't mention IE in any shape or form. I build a lot of websites and I use AJAX on many of them. IE is non-compliant in so many areas of HTML & Javascript (JScript, Msxml2.XMLHTTP, Microsoft.XMLHTTP grrrrrr) that much of my effort is spent writing code just to handle IE.

Vista? Slow, cumbersome, unweildy. Give me XP or Ubuntu any day.

Media Player is a pain in the tweeter (I've got 2 external 1Tb disks, 1 x 750Gb & 1 x 500Gb). I use Winamp.

In fact I use as little MS software as possible. MS Office - gone. OpenOffice - in. Hotmail - no. Gmail - yes. Etc, etc, etc.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: LeeE on 27/03/2009 01:14:45
You've started to feel that the quality of Microsoft software is falling?  Lol - the quality of their software has never been one of their strong points.  To paraphrase one of their advertising slogans; 'It works, just'.

This is really the major issue I have with Microsoft software; while I like the idea of 'free' software (that's free as in liberated, and not as in beer) and the peer review that it's subject to, I don't have problems with proprietary/closed-source software.  If the software does what you want, it's worth what you're prepared to pay to achieve what you want to achieve.  However, not only is a lot of Microsoft software flawed in it's implementation but more seriously, it's also flawed in design, and in such a way that leaves it very fragile, and which is why 'It works, just' is not just funny but true.

Actually, this is not totally fair; there have been some versions of some Microsoft software that have been well designed and implemented, such as NT Version 3.51, and a few of the earlier/mid MSSQL Server versions, but they eventually managed to compromise them in later versions, where they sacrificed quality for new features.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 27/03/2009 11:33:49
And whoever dreamed up Direct-X needs shooting! Why the hell would anyone deiberately come up with something that by its very nature compromises your PC's security?
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 27/03/2009 15:16:22
It started with DOS and carried on from there.
But, without them, would so many people be experiencing the joys of computing?
(I'm not a fan, btw, having only bought Apple since 1991)
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: erickejah on 27/03/2009 16:39:33
It started with DOS and carried on from there.
But, without them, would so many people be experiencing the joys of computing?
(I'm not a fan, btw, having only bought Apple since 1991)
[:o] i was 2 years old...  [:-\]
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 27/03/2009 18:05:07
You young whippersnapper. I'd been working for ages before they brought out these new fangled PC things!
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: latebind on 27/03/2009 22:34:54
It started with DOS and carried on from there.
But, without them, would so many people be experiencing the joys of computing?
(I'm not a fan, btw, having only bought Apple since 1991)

Back in the days of DOS Microsoft was a tight and very coherent business, and Bill Gates was an amazing leader, and yes Microsoft played an important role in bringing personal computing to the masses. Apple and others certainly had their market, but Microsoft was legendary in their ability to transend the technical paradigm and focus on user centric design and quality, this is what put them leaps and bounds ahead of the competition at that time.

So what has happened? Why has their client software started to go awry? My guess is that microsoft is just getting too big, they are trying to extend their reach into many different technologies and I think somewhere that a critical internal balance between technology and users has been lost, and hence their quality starts so suffer.

This is an extremely bad time for this to happen as well, on the client side there are many open source and free operating systems that today work just as well as Microsoft, these include alot of Linux flavours and even an operating system written in my home language, Java, which I have used and it rocks!

One thing that is saving microsoft at the moment is the custom formats for office documents, people are so used to just attaching a word doc to an email and sending it off! But this will change in the future as the world has been slowly moving towards a universal document format for everything, and when this happens I'll bet that the tide violently turns ugly for Microsoft if they have not cleaned their act up by then...




Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 01:11:50
Quote
One thing that is saving microsoft at the moment is the custom formats for office documents, people are so used to just attaching a word doc to an email and sending it off!

What is saving MS at the moment is that it's almost impossible to buy a PC that doesn't have XP or Vista! Plus the fact that people like to stick with what they know. There is a whole generation who know no other OS but Windows Whatever. And, of course, general ignorance of what else is on offer. I've spoken to people who don't even realise that there are browsers other than IE available. They just get their PC home, switch it on & it does what they want. Where is the incentive to look for alternatives?
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: Chemistry4me on 28/03/2009 01:15:40
Well said mate.
We should always be out there looking for self improvement, and that includes our computers. [:)]
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: Raghavendra on 28/03/2009 08:22:39
 Well i to think that microsoft is falling ... due to Fall in economy and also in there budget..
       Engineering's are facing more problem , due to recession.

   Other companies are awaking, and there is larger production.
And there application not well presented this time?

Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 10:24:20
Microsoft (Or, rather, the collaboration between MS and IBM) was probably the best thing that ever happened to computers. It brought computing to the unwashed hoi poloi.

Prior to that, computers were the domain of businesses, home enthusiasts or people who wanted to play games that were only slightly more sophisticated than Pong. How many people back then could even install an OS? There were no install wizards, it all had to be done from a script or on the command line. Some computers had very rudimentary word processing capabilities, but you couldn't put your document on a disk and read it on a different computer because it was likely to have a different OS and different word processor that was incompatible (that's if your computer even had a disk drive!).

MS changed all that and made computers accessible to everyone. MS and the IBM XT were the real starting point; a hard drive and standardised OS & programs. People could actually start to share information other than on sheets of paper, the data from which would have to be entered manually on other computers.

MSDOS was very stable but started to get large & unwieldy quite early on. DR-DOS, for instance, would run most MS software but was only a fraction of the size. I also remember being able to phone MS if I had a problem (which I did a few times with assembler programs that used MS system calls) and they were very helpful. Oh how times change!

Windows For Workgroups was a superb OS. There were very few bugs; mainly because MS kept things fairly simple. Unfortunately subsequent Windows releases got more & more sophisticated, more & more complicated, and bugs started to creep in. MS were trying to build functionality on top of an underlying OS (they ran on top of MSDOS) that simply didn't have the capability for it. By the time XP was released, still using much of the code from previous releases of Windows, there was more code in the patches than in the original OS.

MS also vastly underestimated security considerations and plugging the holes required even more patches.

There were flaws in the original design specs for Windows. As an analyst/programmer of many years experience I can assure you that if your basic design is flawed, fixing problems can be a nightmare. The design has to be nailed down right from the start or you will get problems. Adding patches to a flawed design in order to get it to work properly is akin to using BluTack to stop a rusty old boiler from leaking; eventually there will be more BluTack than metal. What you need is a new boiler.

So MS came up with Vista. Yet still they didn't do their homework, still they underestimated the cunning and resourcefulness of malware writers. And I think that is indicative of a general malaise that has crept through MS. At 1 time MS used to employ the cream of the computer world's analysts and programmers. Very few other companies could match their expertise (Netscape was 1 that certainly could). Their analysts and designers were pretty good at knowing what the public wanted and although they were working with a flawed product, MS programmers still turned out good software. That is no longer the case. They think they know best when it is plain that they don't.

latebind cited WMP11 as a case in point, and I totally agree with him/her. To a designer sitting in his office it may seem like a good idea to automatically scan the entire system looking for media; just sit back and let the PC get on with it. But many people don't want that. I, too, want to tell my media player where to look. If I want it to scan the entire system then I want to tell it to do so. It should be my choice. OK it adds a level of user intervention, but the vast majority of users are quite capable of doing it. MS thinks everyone wants to do things their way. Well, sorry pal, not this rodent.

I've got 4 external drives with a total of more than 3Tb capacity. Only 1 of those drives has media files on it. The others have documentation, software/scripting tools & databases etc. connected with the website & development work I do. What is on those other drives is of no concern to MS or any of its products. Some of the websites have video on them that I would never want to import to a media player. That would just make media library maintenance more complicated. I need to know that they work from the webpages and that's it. (Incidentally, most of my website work is done on Linux PCs but there are some tools available for Windows that are better so I want to be able to access my work from both OSs)

En fin, it is the arrogance displayed by MS that is the root of many of Windows problems, and those of other MS products. MS has become a kind of nanny state with "experts" dictating how we should do things. They even try to dictate that we should encounter certain problems and no others. Like all nanny states, they don't live in the real world.

P.S. I don't use WMP at all. I use Winamp for music and KM-Player for videos. Both are much more fault-tolerant than WMP. If they encounter a problem with a media file they put up a nice helpful message and stop. They don't just make the whole PC freeze solid.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 10:24:52
Gawd, don't I waffle on!  [:I]
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: Chemistry4me on 28/03/2009 10:37:54
Yes.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 10:53:52
Sorry, folks, but I'm going to waffle a bit more as I've just thought of something else.

When I was a software development manager I insisted that not only should our code do what it was supposed to, but also that it did it the right way. Not only would the programs be rigourously tested but the code would be examined by a team leader or myself to ensure it was written in a way that would be easy to maintain and fix should unforeseen problems arise - and it had to be fully commented (something that programmers are notoriously lax about). And my motto was KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid). No fancy programming techniques that no-one else could fathom out. We had an MSc Computer Science chap working for us whose code was very tight and clever, but he was the only 1 who knew exactly what it did. I soon got him out of that.

I also wanted the code to be easily modifiable so that if a customer wanted it to do something a bit different it wouldn't involve a major re-write. Functions would be written once & once only then used throughout the entire system. Each function would perform just 1 specific task. Composite functions were a big no-no. All I/O and database calls were kept out of the main logic so that if we ever swapped to a different database we only had to code new functions and plug them in; the main logic of the programs didn't need to be touched.

I don't know if that's how MS do their development, but I suspect maybe not. If they did then their updates & patches would not be anywhere near as big or frequent.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 10:54:09
Yes.

harumph! You forgot to add "But it was very interesting"  [:P]
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: LeeE on 28/03/2009 22:36:17
Sorry, folks, but I'm going to waffle a bit more as I've just thought of something else.

When I was a software development manager I insisted that not only should our code do what it was supposed to, but also that it did it the right way. Not only would the programs be rigourously tested but the code would be examined by a team leader or myself to ensure it was written in a way that would be easy to maintain and fix should unforeseen problems arise - and it had to be fully commented (something that programmers are notoriously lax about). And my motto was KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid). No fancy programming techniques that no-one else could fathom out. We had an MSc Computer Science chap working for us whose code was very tight and clever, but he was the only 1 who knew exactly what it did. I soon got him out of that.

Yeah, incredibly clever source code could be impossible to maintain or amend.  Plus, in the end, it's just source code, and the compiler will optimise it anyway.

Quote
I also wanted the code to be easily modifiable so that if a customer wanted it to do something a bit different it wouldn't involve a major re-write. Functions would be written once & once only then used throughout the entire system. Each function would perform just 1 specific task. Composite functions were a big no-no. All I/O and database calls were kept out of the main logic so that if we ever swapped to a different database we only had to code new functions and plug them in; the main logic of the programs didn't need to be touched.

I don't know if that's how MS do their development, but I suspect maybe not. If they did then their updates & patches would not be anywhere near as big or frequent.

This come back to just how modular Microsoft's software really is.  Although you can write the source code in a modular manner, in many cases it still gets compiled in to a single monolithic program.  Using run-time libraries helps with this, of course, and drivers are usually implemented as modules (although in Linux you can usually compile them in to the kernel, should you, for some reason want to), but both with Windows and Linux, you end up with a monolithic kernel.

I really like micro-kernel systems, where the kernel is really tiny and basic, end where nearly everything else, including stuff that would normally be classes as system services, runs in user space using message-passing to communicate.  The old AmigaDOS and QNX are good examples of micro-kernel based message-passing systems.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 23:15:26
Quote
I really like micro-kernel systems, where the kernel is really tiny and basic, end where nearly everything else, including stuff that would normally be classes as system services, runs in user space using message-passing to communicate.  The old AmigaDOS and QNX are good examples of micro-kernel based message-passing systems.

That's the way I like it too. Keep different groups of functionality in separate modules and have the kernel as a simple control function that calls the appropriate routines as & when they are required. It may be a tad slower but with the speed of modern PCs you probably wouldn't notice it that much.

That's the way I write my programs - especially php scripts. The main program consists largely of a series of calls to class methods that are in separate files according to which part of the system they relate to. In the system I'm currently writing to keep track of all my contacts, meetings, etc I've got a class for contacts, a class for companies/organisations, another for categories, 1 for all the forms, etc. If I want to change something I only have to alter it in 1 place. It takes more planning at the start, but it's well worth it in the long run.

for instance:

Code: [Select]
if (isset($_GET['contact_select_button']))
{
switch ($_GET['contact_select'])
{
case -1:
$forms->display_add_contact_form($company, $db_calls);
break;
default:
$_SESSION['current_contact']=$_GET['contact_select'];
$forms->display_contact_details($_GET['contact_select'], $db_calls);
}
}

if (isset($_GET['company_select_button']))
{
switch ($_GET['company_select'])
{
case -1:
$forms->display_add_company_form();
break;
default:
$_SESSION['current_company']=$_GET['company_select'];
$forms->display_company_details($_GET['company_select']);
}
}

if (isset($_GET['category_select_button']))
{
switch ($_GET['category_select'])
{
case -1:
$category->display_add_category_form();
break;
default:
$_SESSION['current_category']=$_GET['category_select'];
$category->display_category_details($_GET['category_select']);
}
}

if (isset($_GET['company_add_button']))
{
$company->add_company();
}

if (isset($_GET['contact_add_button']))
{
$contact->add_contact($db_calls);
}

if (isset($_GET['category_add_button']))
{
// $category->add_category();
}

I think just about anyone can understand what's going on there. There are no forms, tables or database calls to confuse the issue so I can concentrate on getting the logic right.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: latebind on 28/03/2009 23:30:56
Nice comments DoctorBeaver.

I read it all!









Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 28/03/2009 23:37:37

I read it all!


You must be a masochist or you need to get out more!
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: nubemet on 29/03/2009 00:34:26
Microsoft's quality is not going down for the simple reason they didn't have any to begin with!
 [;D]
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 29/03/2009 13:21:57
Microsoft's quality is not going down for the simple reason they didn't have any to begin with!
 [;D]
Have you ever used Excel? Have you any concept of what an excellent piece of software it is (and has always been)? Don't make such blanket statements or you shoot yourself in the foot.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: latebind on 29/03/2009 20:16:51
Microsoft's quality is not going down for the simple reason they didn't have any to begin with!
 [;D]

The simple fact that you have access to a computer to write that sentence is because Microsoft played a big role in bringing you it! The fact that this super-cool website is accessible to nearly everyone is because Microsoft played a big role in bringing you it!

Now on a lighter note, there should be a law forbidding someone from using a computer if they have a negative IQ. So nubemet consider yourself lucky to use a computer, and thank Microsoft.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: LeeE on 29/03/2009 21:20:51
I'm with nubernet; the quality of MS software has always been very poor.  I think that both Sophicentaur and latebind are confusing features with quality.  Like I said earlier, rather than "It just works", it's more a case of "It works, just".

MS software, especially in terms of their apps running on top of their OS's, is fragile.

There's tons of rilly, rilly clever software, but it falls on it's face half of the time and only works when everything is just so.  Instead of being unlucky when it fails, you're actually being lucky when it works.  There's a huge difference between the two, for the people who have to keep it working.

Edit: correct a "your" for a "you're"
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: Andrew K Fletcher on 29/03/2009 21:22:41
Eth. Where is the best place to host a website at little or perferably zero cost?

And if I found a website design and sent you a link asking how do they do that :) could ya enlighten me a little? I have installed notetab and had a play with soms fuctions. Is there anything apart from dreamweaver, which I find too complicated, that will do the job I want.

Looking at a fairly basic info based webpage with a scroll bar on R/H.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 29/03/2009 23:07:45
Andrew - I'll send you an IM.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 31/03/2009 11:00:45
I'm with nubernet; the quality of MS software has always been very poor.  I think that both Sophicentaur and latebind are confusing features with quality.  Like I said earlier, rather than "It just works", it's more a case of "It works, just".

MS software, especially in terms of their apps running on top of their OS's, is fragile.

There's tons of rilly, rilly clever software, but it falls on it's face half of the time and only works when everything is just so.  Instead of being unlucky when it fails, you're actually being lucky when it works.  There's a huge difference between the two, for the people who have to keep it working.

Edit: correct a "your" for a "you're"
My copies of Excel, since 1992, have always run on MACOS and have been very good. Not just 'features', as you claim, but good, solid, working machines. It may well be an exception, even within Microsoft Office but it disproves the "Microsoft all bad" claim.
Excel matches Photoshop in size and strength.
Much as some people dislike Microsoft, as a matter of principle, there is a lot of alternative software out there which is really really rubbish.
So many 'enthusiasts' say how good the minority platforms are but there is only Apple who provide a serious working alternative. And, if there were only Apple, only a fraction of the population would be using computers at all.
Buy a cheap, database, drawing, w/p package from some minority source. How satisfied are you likely to be? There is a lot of non-Microsoft stuff which is total garbage.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 31/03/2009 11:16:01
I use OpenOffice. I find it at least equal to MS Office in all respects and superior in many. For a start the file sizes are much smaller. Plus I can access the data on Windows or Linux PCs.

I do agree, though, that some independent software is rubbish. I've downloaded some that wouldn't even install.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 31/03/2009 11:19:21
Open Office is good, I've heard. Where else do you find it better than MS Office?
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 31/03/2009 11:31:59
I find it faster & easier to use. The menu layouts seem more logical to me. Plus I've had a few problems with integration between different parts of MS Office in the past but none of that with OO. I also like it because it can read MS Office files. Strange that MS doesn't read OO files, isn't it.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 31/03/2009 11:39:53
Quote
Strange that MS doesn't read OO files, isn't it.
Doesn't 'choose to', possibly?
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: paul.fr on 31/03/2009 13:01:37
talking about microsoft falling apart, is this any evidence?

Microsoft kills MSN Encarta

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Wikipedia dunnit

By Austin Modine • Get more from this author

Posted in Music and Media, 30th March 2009 23:48 GMT

Free whitepaper – Putting corporate information to better use

Microsoft is pulling the plug on its MSN Encarta encyclopedia websites and software, following Wikipedia's obliteration of the online reference market.

In a message posted on the MSN Encarta website, Microsoft said the sites worldwide will be discontinued on October 31, with the exception of Encarta Japan, which will be stayed until the end of December.

Microsoft Student and Encarta Premium software will stop being sold by June 2009.

From the posting:

    Encarta has been a popular product around the world for many years. However, the category of traditional encyclopedia and reference material has changed. People today seek and consume information in considerably different ways than in years past.

Which is a bit of an understatement. According to internet tracker Hitwise, Wikipedia accounts for 97 per cent of all online encyclopedia visits from US internet users. MSN Encarta takes a very distant second with only 1.27 per cent of the market, and Encyclopedia.com is third at 0.76 per cent.

This may not be the end of Microsoft's reference offerings entirely, however. The company wrote that it believes the assets it's accrued with Encarta can be used in developing "future technology solutions."

Current subscribers to MSN Encarta premium services as of April 30 will receive a refund for services paid beyond that date. They will still have access to Encarta premium services until October, however.

The software maker has been busy axing its less appreciated departments in recent months to save costs, including its consumer antivirus product OneCare, subscription security software package Equipt, and even its successful and long-running Flight Simulator software. ®
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/03/30/microsoft_kills_msn_encarta/
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: yor_on on 31/03/2009 17:50:05
I agree to Windows up to XP pro being build on a lot of rehashing and a inferior memory handling (Dos). That's why they migrated to their NT NTFS kernel which is a Unix 'lookalike'. But what they also had in the beginning, not having any more, was an openness and willingness to integrate 'third party software' in Windows, nowadays it seems to become harder and harder restrictions for how program should be written to be compatible, and it will cost the developer money to get the tools and instructions, and the 'approved stamp'.

So once the OS of choice for all wanting to create some fun program, nowadays it's not that interesting any more. The OS have lost its 'backwards comparability' and grown to gigantic proportions. It seems to depend on what 'MS divisions' that are working with what code if it will be good or not. I have great difficulties accepting a OS of ten GB or more, just to be able to start it up, and the way they are 'locking' their OS up. Xp pro is probably the last system from MS for me :) Otherwise I think Linux is superior, even though it may not yet be a 'gamers' machine. And a strong plus is that in Linux the code is open, I wonder how many hidden 'databases' ten GB can contain?
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 31/03/2009 21:01:09
I had problems with Windows compatibility issues when Vista was first released. Where I worked we were considering migrating to Vista but wanted to try it out first. Consequently mine was the only Vista PC in the office, ther rest being XP. I couldn't read any Excel spreadsheets or Access databases that had been created on the XP PCs without converting them to the new format and that meant the XP PCs could no longer read them.

I cannot understand why backwards compatibility was not built into Vista Office unless it was an attempt to make everyone switch to Vista 100% rather than have a mix of Vista & XP PCs.

We also had repetitive problems accessing the network printers from it. They kept disappearing from the list or would appear twice (the network was set up by a Microsoft Certified Network Engineer). Often, when they did appear correctly, the whole PC would freeze while printing.

So, while you could say that Vista Office worked perfectly well, which it did, I would say that the quality of the product left a lot to be desired. Vista itself was slower than the XP PCs despite my PC having a faster processor and more memory. It took longer to shut down or boot despite not having as many programs start on boot-up. It certainly seemed to be a backwards step from XP.

Because of all the problems we ditched it & went back to XP.

I also had problems with Vista at home. There were compatibility issues with so-called "Vista ready" AOL. It simply did not work. AOL blamed MS and MS blamed AOL. Guess what... after a Vista update was downloaded it worked.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 31/03/2009 22:42:16
Use OS 10 then. It works and there are very few compatibility issues.
A Mac Mini won't cost you much and you will use it for years. You have kbd, monitor and some drives, I imagine.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 31/03/2009 22:54:54
I'm quite happy with XP & especially Ubuntu. I'm going to have a look at W7 7000 too. I really don't see any point in using Vista as it seems to have no advantages over XP and a few disadvantages.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 31/03/2009 22:55:41
You have kbd, monitor and some drives, I imagine.

Plenty
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 01/04/2009 00:35:00
Go on then - have a dabble.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 01/04/2009 10:01:26
I had a look at the Mac Mini and I'm not really that tempted. The cheapest I could find was £339 and that only had 256Mb RAM & a 40Gb drive. By the time I upped it to a decent spec the price would be almost that of an entry level iMac.

The review stated that "...the integreated WiFi isn't standard either". I'm not sure what that means.

For the same price or less, I could get a higher spec PC with monitor & kb included and put Linux on it.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 01/04/2009 22:57:19
You can forget a direct comparison between 'spec' for Mac and PC, remember. The clock speeds have always been lower on Macs but getting a job done is what counts (what's a 'Wizard for"?). The iMac is more desirable if you want it to 'look like' a Mac but the works of a mini are much the same as the works of the iMac. afaik, the mini has wifi - I sometimes use it on mine.
Also, a price comparison is misleading. They don't seem to break down. I have had an LC, a 'Beige' Power Mac, a G3 and now a Mini. The only breakdowns have been one mouse and one CD drive. I still use an old G3 iBook of my Son's (using it for this post), bought second hand, in 2002. How many PCs of that age are still working without any attention?
Opening up the sides of a tower unit and tinkering doesn't appeal to me. I have only done that for more memory or a bigger hard drive.
It's just a different world. Macs are for 'users'; they aren't for amateur 'enthusiasts', really. It's a very 'tight' Operating System and not easy to play with - but why would one want to?
Then there is the security. I have never been aware of any nasties at all, since OSX came along.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: lyner on 02/04/2009 00:26:35
DrB
I downloaded Open Office. The spreadsheet is extremely limited wrt Excel and I couldn't find any Basic for Applications equivalent- so no fancy self programming seems to be available (it's a tiny application, after all).  No 3D chart plotting either.
I think TNSTAAFL applies here.
Title: Is Microsoft's Quality falling apart?
Post by: DoctorBeaver on 02/04/2009 03:17:19
I've said that OO does everything I want it to, which is true. Yes, there are features in Excel that are missing from OO, but they're not features I would use. I only use spreadsheets for fairly basic stuff like calculating tax, and the 3D spreadsheets in OO are plenty good enough for that. I don't need 3D plots.

Lotus 123 is still the best spreadsheet I've ever used, though.