So...on a T60 with a Core Duo 2GHz, should I go with XP, stay put and re-install Win 7, or, which is likely the silliest move, to Win 8?
Thank you to my fellow T6x compadres. It's good to be back and it's even better to see y'all are still around.
W7 only came out in July 2009, so I doubt your above statement has any value...Crunch wrote:I have Win 7 Ultimate running on my GF's T60, which has not seen a fresh installation of a new OS in 3 1/2 years!



I am the biggest Vista fan on this forum. However, considering the limited specs of this T60 and the fact that XP will be phased out in just a year, I think staying with 7 (which is a tiny bit faster than Vista) would be the best among these three OS's. If you can get Windows 8 to work, that would be even better than 7 but I suspect there would be driver issues.ilakast wrote:Between XP or 7, I would say Vista![]()

Unless he upgraded in-place.RealBlackStuff wrote:W7 only came out in July 2009, so I doubt your above statement has any value...Crunch wrote:I have Win 7 Ultimate running on my GF's T60, which has not seen a fresh installation of a new OS in 3 1/2 years!
Actually, you can generally user drivers from as far back as XP (or sometimes even 2000) on Windows 8. Anyway, I'll +1 with Windows 7.pianowizard wrote: I am the biggest Vista fan on this forum. However, considering the limited specs of this T60 and the fact that XP will be phased out in just a year, I think staying with 7 (which is a tiny bit faster than Vista) would be the best among these three OS's. If you can get Windows 8 to work, that would be even better than 7 but I suspect there would be driver issues.
I have Vista 32 Ultimate on my T60P and never have had a single issue with it...and it boots quickly.pianowizard wrote:
I am the biggest Vista fan on this forum...

"Quick" or "slow" is subjective.taichi wrote:I have Vista 32 Ultimate on my T60P and never have had a single issue with it...and it boots quickly.
When compared with XP, 7 and 8, Vista has the best user interface. In my hands, it's also more stable than XP and 7 (haven't use 8 long enough yet to know how stable it is). It's much more secure than XP and is functionally almost as modern as 7.taichi wrote:Why do you like Vista? (Given the army of haters.)

An interesting statement regarding stability.pianowizard wrote: In my hands, it's also more stable than XP and 7 (haven't use 8 long enough yet to know how stable it is). It's much more secure than XP and is functionally almost as modern as 7.
Indeed. It's somewhat surprising and saddening that Microsoft leave TRIM out of Vista, even though they backported almost every important core feature of Win7 back to Vista eventually (WDDM 1.1, DirectX 11 spring to mind).ajkula66 wrote:Vista's biggest downfall in my usage scenario is lack of native TRIM support.

The browser freezing problem that dr_st mentioned is one example. Another problem that annoys me is that on both of my HP Elite desktops, Windows Explorer needs to restart way too often, like a couple times a week. On my Dell Optiplex 9010, 7 sometimes has problem ejecting USB drives or shutting down, kind of reminding me of Windows 98. On all three computers, I am using the factory-installed Windows 7, so it could be HP's and Dell's fault rather than 7's. I haven't used XP in such a long time that I don't remember exactly what its problems were, though I certainly remember the occasional blue screen.ajkula66 wrote:I've had zero stability issues with W7 which is not something I could ever say about XP. Would love to know how W7 failed you in this respect when compared to Vista...seriously.

IMO, back in 2007, the biggest complaint of Vista was that it was a resource hog. I did get a taste of that through an X61 tablet bought directly from Lenovo in Dec 2007. That tablet had Core2 Duo, 1GB DDR2 RAM and an 80GB 5400rpm HDD, and Vista was so slow that the tablet was a major pain to use (and back then I was used to slow outdated computers, like running XP Pro on a 300MHz Thinkpad 240!). After that experience, I bashed Vista and avoided it like the plague for 3 years, until I rediscovered it in early 2011. So, I was actually an early adopter and hated Vista just like most other people. It's a shame that so many people have continued to refuse to give Vista another try. Even on computers that already have a Vista COA, many people would still downgrade to XP, one year before support for XP expires!dr_st wrote:I think you just jumped on Vista late enough to avoid all the problems faced by early adopters. The core OS is just fine, but Microsoft did not do a good enough job of preparing the OS for release together with the rest of the hardware and software vendors. Hence a lot of the initial backlash, complaints about instabilities and glitches.
Good point. In fact, I believe you and I have discussed this point before, and I shared my thoughts on it, so I will not repeat them here.pianowizard wrote:IMO, back in 2007, the biggest complaint of Vista was that it was a resource hog.
Imaging whatever Windows version you install would be a good idea. The best way to "troubleshoot" deteriorated Windows installs is to blow them away. With preparation that's no problem at all.my GF's T60, which has not seen a fresh installation of a new OS in 3 1/2 years!
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