Windows Vista System Requirements
Spinner
Birmingham, UK
A Tech Strategist within Microsoft, Nigel Page, has gone on record to discuss the hardware requirements for Windows Vista, due out next Christmas.
View: Vista Is A Hardware Beast
"Let me just say firstly.... hahahahahahahahhaha".
Source: Bit-Tech
View: Vista Is A Hardware Beast
Submitted by: EnverexRAM: 2GB is the ideal configuration for 64-bit Vista, we're told. Vista 32-bit will work ideally at 1GB, and minimum 512. However, since 64-bit is handling data chunks that are double the size, you'll need double the memory, hence the 2GB. Nigel mentions DDR3 - which is a little odd, since the roadmap for DDR3, on Intel gear at least, doesn't really kick in until 2007.
HDD: SATA is definitely the way forward for Vista, due, Microsoft tells us, to Native Command Queueing. NCQ allows for out of order completions - that is, if Vista needs tasks 1,2,3,4 and 5 done, it can do them in the order 2,5,3,4,1 if that's a more efficient route for the hard drive head to take over the disk. This leads to far faster completion times.
"Let me just say firstly.... hahahahahahahahhaha".
Source: Bit-Tech
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Comments
What is SATA? I keep reading and seeing the name SATA but have no idea what it is/does.
And, What is Raid? I keep reading about Raid 0, 1, 2 in various threads but don't know what people are talking about.
Any explaination would be great, thanks
SATA is just a new drive conectivity method, a new style of connecting drives rather than the old PATA method you're using now with the bulky cables and slower interface.
RAID controlers let you do different things with disks. Either attach them and make the OS think you have one giant drive, or set them up so they both deal with the data at once (part each) making it faster or mirroring when data is copied to multiple drives for backup purposes etc. Then you have other modes as well as being able to mix modes (like stiping and mirroring at once). Brief but it's the basics.
Raid sounds a bit complicated....
Thanks Enverex
It never really got called PATA before SATA came along. It is now simply so it has a name to reference it by (it's also correct as SATA is Serial ATA, PATA is Parallel ATA).
This is a ridiculous statement. Pseudo-tech babble.
Wow that totally sux... WTF is HDCP anyways? Does it provide for resolutions higher than 1080P? Can you even buy a HDCP display yet?
Otherwise, an OS that pushes your hardware to the max with a graphics card intensive 3D GUI sounds sweet. It will be strange to say "WOW Windows Vista looks awesome on my new ATI Radeon Z9,000,000ZT!"
In your own quote...
It's just got a built in encoder/decoder that prevents us from doing things they don't like. It's bullsnit.
But it won't, it'll be like XP. Sucked at first, take me 2 years to work up the nerve of buying it and then fall in love with it. Though I still like Windows 2000 a bit more, the compadibility thing drives me nuts though.
Or maybe this will drive the price of RAM and HD's down substantially.
/me can dream...
I think ms is gonna regret this one. the prices of a computer will go up so much..If I have 2 gb of ram, I wanna use that for games and encoding. not renderign a ficking desktop.
Just like it should be now. GASP.
Minimum requirement in this day and age means, "Turns on, takes 45 minutes to boot, crashes a few applications, thrashes your hard disk so badly your modem dials 911 for assault, and then gives virtual memory errors after 45 minutes of use."
Windows XP with 256mb of RAM is still quite sluggish when compared to a PC with 512MB of RAM. The minimum requirement should equate to the OS and applications running well, not simply "Turning on.. Eventually.. If you give it enough time."
I hope the 512/1GB recommendation is a departure from today's minimum requirement paradigm, because it's about time people have computers that are a bit faster than a donkey eating a camel in molasses.
Prime: If you read what they wrote, 2GB was the recommended RAM, 512MB was the minimum.
I'm talking about the millions of corporate desktops (again, I hate to say it, but MS doesn't make billions of dollars off of us, and others who buy OEM or Retail) - the systems run an OS, and maybe client software for a CRM, and maybe office or even just outlook. 256 works great for this. no sluggishness.
Woulda been funnier if it was Coke.
Tex