quote:
Originally posted by -=Solaris.M.K.A=-:
Personaly I have never had a problem with winME in fact I found it more user friendly and more stable than XP, you just have to add a LOT of ram and reasonably good hard ware.
Comparing one windows to another, really is kinda stupid. I mean its the same thing, over and over again. Spyware, bloatware, crashware.....
No matter what version it is, and future versions are gonna be no different. The only difference I see is that the whole OS is getting more and more restrictive..... But what else is new.
Bullshit. They aren't all the same. Win9x is a 32-bit app that runs on top of a 16-bit OS. Win9x isn't even what you could consider an OS. DOS is the OS. A 32-bit enabled app running on top of a 16-bit OS is sure to cause reliabilty/stability issues.
Windows NT based OSes are really an OS. They don't run on top of anything. They are truely 32-bit, they have true pre-amptive multitasking, etc. Adding a ton of Ram to ME doesn't help anything really. I have 512MB in this comp. If you run Win9x(any of them) with more than 512MB the damn thing will crash..no if's ands or buts. Why? Because Win9x is an application that can't address more than 512MB. Windows NT based OSes on the other hand can handle tons of Ram(up to 4GB out of the box).
In most cases if you experience instability with a NT based OS you have dodgy hardware, a dodgy hardware driver or some corruption in your filesystem(corruption that can be fixed easily if you use NTFS). NT based OSes tend to be alot more stable on NTFS partations too. If you try using an old dodgy and junky legacy filesystem(like FAT) with an OS that is designed to run on a better filesytem you are likely to cause stability issues.
A dodgy filesystem that gets errors every time you turn around(like FAT) will corrupt files and will cause stability problems. To be honest, the only time I've ever had problems with XP is when I tried to use it on FAT32. Not only is the filesystem un-reliable but it is prone to fragmentation as well. When you add and move data on FAT it is so ignorant that it scatters bits of the data everywhere. NTFS manages to keep data rounded up as close as possible(NTFS doesn't need to be defragged very often). Fragmentation causes performance degradion and instability as well.
Another thing that hurts FAT is slack. FAT32 uses 32k clusters. It takes 96k to store a 65k file on FAT32. With 4k NTFS clusters it takes 68k to store a 65k file. It takes exactly 65k to store a 65k file using NTFS 512byte clusters, however even though 4kb clusters use a little slack the signifigantly outperform 512byte clusters on large drives. The slack difference between FAT and NTFS adds up quick when you are talking Megabytes, Gigabytes, etc.
(EDIT)Heh, speaking of using reasonably good hardware with your OS. I don't have a lick of trouble out of XP on my P4 on i865 chipset(XP doesn't give me trouble on any of the all Intel based systems I've tried it on either). A P4c w/Hyperthreading is more than reasonably good....it is practically top of the line. I bet ME would crash on it though.
This K6-2 that I'm using right now does suck balls but I don't think it is the cause of ME crashing so much because other Win9x OSes are running fine on it.
[ September 26, 2003: Message edited by: Viper ]