Tholek wrote:This is
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Would I have a better, overall, experience with upgrading from XP Pro to Vista Business on a laptop that (supposedly) can't support Aero?Thanks for any advice.

Welcome. Good questions. I have 3 ThinkPads; a R51, R52 & T43p. Using separate hard drives, I can switch over to my choice of XP or Vista on either machine.
This has helped me to compare the two OSs. My findings are, no real reasons to switch to Vista....XP is doing very nicely for me for the time being. Maybe in a year or two I will change my mind if Vista improves that much, or if XP gets orphaned by Microsoft.
The R51 has one gig of ram, the other two sport 2 gig. Chips are around 1.6 and 1.8 or 2.0. Speed isn't a problem on any of them...they don't bog down at all.
The R51 will not run Aero, the other two will. Aero is merely a transparency, and that doesn't serve any real need for me as a user. The Flip 3D is a way of switching thru a series of windows on the desktop. Flip works fine on the R52 and the T43p. That's OK for jumping from program to program, but ALT+ESC will do the same thing.
I run "Classic" view in both XP and Vista, because the computer doesn't have to use up as much power to simply show me a desktop in that mode. Additionally, the more visually complex Vista UI makes the brain and eye work harder when you navigate around the desktop because you have to look at more and process more as you work. That can make one more tired sooner. Therefor, the Classic view is less wearing.
Your machine will run about 5% to 20% slower in Vista, and it will run about 2 to 5 degs hotter. This is because Vista is a busier OS and is doing more things.
Indexing in Vista can be a pain while it thrashes the hard drive creating the data base, but you can always opt out some of the folders that you don't care about. Unlike XP, Indexing cannot be turned off in Vista, which is really dumb.
Boot up will be nearly the same, especially when the Super Fetch in Vista "learns" your system.
Sleep and Hibernate work ok for me on all three machines in Vista. If your computer has special programs or features make sure you can download and install them from their site. Drivers should be available from them, too.
Vista has a nice "clean" look (with Clear Type turned on), but then so does XP. Using the Classic mode in Windows Explorer is cleaner and less confusing to the eye, so I prefer that, too.
If you have a spare hard drive install Vista on it so you can switch back and forth, or use Acronis or some other imaging application and go back and forth that way.
One important thing: Copy and Paste in Vista is slower than hell. This is a known bug and people get very frustrated as the dialog box goes thru some sort of stupid process with lots of annoying delays while it "calculates" how long the copy job will take. The "calculations" are always wrong and the whole process is infuriating when you just want to get some basic work done!
If you have hundreds of megs to copy or worse yet, a few gigs, it will make you crazy. This horrid bug alone, is enough to make you want to stay away from Vista, unless you learn to use the really fast Robocopy for the copy jobs. Robocopy does not have the slowness problem.
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