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#26
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There's a CPU performance hit with PAE - it's not an objectively good thing for every situation. Generally the tradeoffs make sense.
But if a machine has 4GB of RAM or more it's very likely it has a 64bit capable CPU in which case it should really be running a 64bit OS.
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#27
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I'm think you're a bit confused. You can use Windows 7 with any monitor just like in XP. The resolutions available depend on what the connected monitor supports. Quote:
Unless you were using most of your available RAM before upgrading, then the extra RAM will be of little benefit. For many XP users, just 1 gig of RAM will be plenty. Windows 7 uses more RAM than XP, so having 4 gigs of RAM does make sense for running Windows 7 64 bit.
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#28
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I'm not sure what you mean, but if you're referring to the taskbar being taller, you can make it shorter like in Vista or XP by selecting "use small icons" in the settings. I do that on my netbook, which only has 600 pixels of vertical resolution, and I'd probably do it with 1024x768 as well. Regarding installation, I like how Windows 7 is easier to install with certain modern disk drives. It will automatically align the partition for a SSD, and it will install in AHCI mode. XP won't align the partition, and for AHCI, you have to press F6 and use a third-party driver, or install it in IDE mode and change it later. |
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#29
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Maybe it was the monitor. Saw Win7 on a 'non-landscape' size monitor & it looked disdtorted and 1028x768 setting was not a choice. But it was a very quick tour I must admit. From what I could gather seemed liked an improved version of XP. I expected more. But that said, I like it.
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SB | AG | LnS | EAM free | MR free Last edited by AaLF : October 9th, 2012 at 11:12 PM. |
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#30
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Maybe the correct video driver was not loaded, this would seem to be the cause of that. If everything is working okay, then Windows 7 will identify all the resoultions that the monitor supports.
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#31
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The main improvement I notice is the look and feel of it. XP just looks so dated now.
Aero-snap feature is great. Proper 64-bit support. I need 64-bit to take advantage of the hardware (e.g. 16 GB of RAM), yet 64-bit Windows XP (with SP2) wasn't properly supported, for example, Microsoft Office 2010 doesn't work on it.
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Main machine: Samsung laptop, i7 QuadCore, 16GB RAM, SSD, USB3.0, Win7 Home Premium 64-bit (main), Mint 12.4 (linux newbie) Software: Comodo Internet Security, KeyScrambler, Keepass w/ Dropbox to sync, Sandboxie, Peerblock, Drive Snapshot, a2cmd, EasyBCD for custom boot, AutoHotkey. |
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#32
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Win 7 is just another "bloatware" pretty face
just more bloat that needs to be striped out I guess by the time we get to Win 12 it will be a 15,000,000GB program XP has a lot of bloat too the best Windows was Win 2000 but that sure not saying much |
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#33
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I disagree. In my opinion Windows 7 is a huge advancement of XP. I'm not sure what bloat you are talking about. Sure, Win 7 does use more disk space and RAM than XP, both are rediculously cheap these days it's not much of an issue, unless you have an old motherboard which severely limits the amount of RAM you can add. At least with Windows 7 you don't need a more powerful CPU tu run it than XP.
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#34
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People have an issue understanding that code isn't free - every feature you add takes up disk space, any new running service takes up RAM. There are more features in Windows 7 therefor there is more disk space used and more RAM used.
Really very very little when you think about it. The minimum requirements for 7 are 1ghz single core CPU and 1GB of RAM. You need a good 128MB of RAM for XP so it's about 900MB of RAM more. 900MB is not a lot of data. bool: 1 bytes char: 1 bytes wchar_t: 2 bytes short: 2 bytes int: 4 bytes long: 4 bytes float: 4 bytes double: 8 bytes long double: 8 bytes A single program can have thousands of variables, structs, arrays, etc. So no, I don't think it's fair to call it 'bloat'.
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#35
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I always set aside a cDrive partition for XP. My habit with XP is 50Gb Cdrive. Of course XP with xtras is only 10-15GB. A question for Win7ers': How much space does Win7 plus extra programs take up & how much elbow room to leave? All will fit comfortably inside 50GB??
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#36
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Why only a 50GB C:? Personally I never partition hard drives, I prefer to have everything on C.
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#37
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Space on the hard drive has not a thing to do with it as far as I am concerned
nor how much memory you need It's the useless junk in the system in the first place All you need is a Micro System to control the computer, it's just a interface anyhow and then let the consumer decide what extra's they want to install My system is Windows XP and the size on the install CD is less than 100MB this was created by using nlite and a few other tricks and I've lost count on how many tweaks This also has the side effect of most mareware is stop in it's tracks because what it is attacking or needs to run has been removed from the system I will admit this does cause some programs not to be able to run on my system, but not that many and when I find one that won't you can usually find a substituent that will Last edited by Critter2 : October 11th, 2012 at 11:43 PM. |
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#38
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4.7gig xp pro running on 40gig hd all my programs are portable on external 300gig hd
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#39
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I don't know why you'd want have a cut down Windows which does not run some software.
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#40
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""you can usually find a substituent that will""
SPEED Security easy, very usable system no worrying about updates anymore "to the system that is" when my friends and family see my system everyone of them are chopping at the bits to get theirs setup the same way Some have threw Win 7 to the wind because this system runs circles around it Last edited by Critter2 : October 12th, 2012 at 12:16 AM. |
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#41
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Each to their own. Personally I'd rather sacrafice a bit of speed to increase compatibility. But then again, I'm someone who is never content to leave their system as it is, and am continually installing new software.
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#42
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fair enough
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#43
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80-120 GB should be fine. My C: partition is 120 GB of which 40 GB is free. I only use a small page file (1GB pagefile.sys + 2GB for eBoostr), hibernation is off (no hiberfil.sys), and system restore is off (so System Volume Information folder is empty). Microsoft Office takes a lot of space (but I keep MSOCache off C: drive), and I place other large programs, like Adobe Master Collection, as well as videos, documents, downloads, etc. on a separate data partition. My Windows folder itself is about 37 GB. You can certainly fit windows 7 on a smaller partition, even a 50 GB partition, but over time it balloons and you may be in trouble. Plus I think you should have plenty of free space on the system partition for smooth functioning and defragging if you do that.
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Main machine: Samsung laptop, i7 QuadCore, 16GB RAM, SSD, USB3.0, Win7 Home Premium 64-bit (main), Mint 12.4 (linux newbie) Software: Comodo Internet Security, KeyScrambler, Keepass w/ Dropbox to sync, Sandboxie, Peerblock, Drive Snapshot, a2cmd, EasyBCD for custom boot, AutoHotkey. |
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#44
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Here's my C: Drive with all programs installed
I keep all my data on USB Drives My Windows folder is 1.01GB |
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#45
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Quote:
Which windows do you use?
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Main machine: Samsung laptop, i7 QuadCore, 16GB RAM, SSD, USB3.0, Win7 Home Premium 64-bit (main), Mint 12.4 (linux newbie) Software: Comodo Internet Security, KeyScrambler, Keepass w/ Dropbox to sync, Sandboxie, Peerblock, Drive Snapshot, a2cmd, EasyBCD for custom boot, AutoHotkey. |
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#46
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I use Windows XP
"BUT" this is not a stock release it has been extensively modified ALL Windows systems in their stock form are bloatware |
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#47
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Win7 is more stable, safe and beautiful. Though I don't mind working on XP.
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#48
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Win XP is a lot smaller and therefore faster in many ways, but I still prefer Win7 on computers with better hardware (lots of RAM, SSD, quad-core CPU, ...). I've seen and used "performance edition" or "mini" XP and 7 windows and they are small. I use them on USB sticks for portability or VMs testing, but there's lots of inconvenience involved with the smaller size. For my main system I really need about 40-60 GB for XP or 80-120 GB for Win7. That's what you need if you use Microsoft Office, .Net Frameworks, and all the other normal stuff.
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Main machine: Samsung laptop, i7 QuadCore, 16GB RAM, SSD, USB3.0, Win7 Home Premium 64-bit (main), Mint 12.4 (linux newbie) Software: Comodo Internet Security, KeyScrambler, Keepass w/ Dropbox to sync, Sandboxie, Peerblock, Drive Snapshot, a2cmd, EasyBCD for custom boot, AutoHotkey. |
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