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The Everyman's Operating System?
By James
Anthony
Special
Deal: $38 off XP Upgrade
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XP will
give you a tour of all the major functions
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Sometimes having a computer
is like a horror movie. It starts off fine, all hunky-dory and then
little things start to go awry.
You get the feeling something isnt quite right and then before
you know it your blasted PC is chewing up more time and money than
it warrants as you struggle to keep it doing all you want it to
do.
Time to upgrade your machine? Or maybe look at your software?
One of this chaps PCs had a 1.8Ghz processing speed that
was cruising along until just the other month, when it partially
gave up computing and decided to be an empty plastic box.
So, a reinstall of the ancient Windows 98 was done and very little
joy obtained. It was still sick and sorry for itself and
the sound had died big time.
As a last resort it was off to the local PC doctor who looked at
it doing everything I had done but at $40 an hour
and the prognosis was delivered Windows has died.
Why?
Dunno, it just happens.
Thinking very nasty thoughts it was decided to try a new operating
system and Windows XP was the choice.
As all PC owners will know, changing a system is done with a cool,
calm head or else one brought on by desperation and
it was definitely into the latter camp that this fellow fell.
Having made the decision a leap of faith was made, trusting that
the anti-Microsoft media bias was just that and that perhaps Bills
Mob would deliver the goods for this individual.
Now, when it say trust I use that word as a journalist
trust no-one and so therefore I took precautions and printed
out just about every bit of analysis done on the system what
will work and what may not and then backed-up all the crucial
programmes and data on to CDs.
That done, I pressed the button.
The XP analysis of my computer worked a treat and I had very few
hassles. You can choose a total install (for new PCs or ones you
want to clean completely) or the upgrade. Installing the upgrade
was a breeze and took about 40 minutes and I was very pleasantly
surprised to find almost everything worked straightaway.
The graphics card check.
Website programmes check.
The CD burner check.
The printer check.
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XP incorporates
simplified image viewing tools,
allowing for more intuitive photo albums/libraries
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The ADSL modem needed a reboot, but considering the bazillions
of things that could have gone wrong, nothing did.
My sound lost from the pootah since the Great Crash of 2003
worked again with a sonorous tone that was welcomed with
something akin to exultation.
It wasnt magic, well sorta, but Im presuming it came
about via the massive driver database that XP has in its workings.
This is a boon for anyone who has a niggling system problem and
has wasted hours upon hours trying to fix what should be a simple
problem. Yup, me.
A colleague had earlier told me that XP would make navigating and
getting things done on the system a lot harder because you had to
find a whole new way to do things.
Im glad to report that this did not occur and there is a
logical approach to finding things and tackling system options,
the control panel and so on.
There is a softer form to the interface and everything gets done
if not in the blink of an eye, then in a gentle wink. And, if you
are an Internet demon, then the look will almost certainly appeal.
There are two choices for how your desktop looks the classic
way with lots of icons splattered across your desktop (albeit with
the new style) or a new way, in which you get around via
two large columns that centre on functions rather than specific
applications.
The left-hand column covers Internet access, email and your most-used
programmes, while the right side covers your usual system folders,
control panel and search.
Your task bar does take a bit of getting used to as there is a
fair bit of action going on down there as you open and close applications.
And, if you happen to be a mad "new-window" opener (like
me) then it takes a little more time as you adjust to the taskbar
opening up to include each open window for that software.
Whichever way, the look of XP has a friendly semi-cartoon feel
to it and there is a seemingly fluid change to the information presented
on screen.
Windows XP offers fairly brisk boot up and from here you can then
set up five different accounts on the one computer, complete with
personal settings and backgrounds for all. To switch between users
it is simply a matter of clicking a button saying Switch User and
then you go back to your entry page and click for your own settings.
Kids love this part because they can have their own background
images and look. I have yet to work out all the differences between
the Users queues.
The initial load times after booting up are quicker on XP
due to the parallel loading of less-important programmes
and my gut feeling is that all applications have shorter loading
times on XP.
Other features include a much better media player, easy access
to Microsofts Passport and instant messaging has been built
in. But above all, what XP offers is stability. If you are used
to your system being a bit shaky, then XP will settle things down
beautifully.
As mentioned before the driver database is a godsend, but so is
the expanded .dll library. In the past those little rotters have
caused chaos because you could only have one .dll name operating
in your system. This meant that if new programmes overwrote the
old one then hello chaos.
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Windows
XP: More drivers than
a V8 Supercar meet 'n greet
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XP allows each programme to operate its own batch of dlls
and do so concurrently without any dramas.
And in another mini-breakthrough, XP allocates memory brilliantly,
so while your system may slow during hard-drive crunching times
it wont throw in the towel or spit the dummy.
My machine has been running solidly for three weeks now with neer
a hiccup or murmur. In fact, the recalcitrant brute has taken on
a new lease of life and is now very unlikely to receive an axe blade
through its tower case. Under Win 98, that was an almost daily temptation!
Now there have been some reports of older applications and games
causing a few headaches and not working on XP, but I havent
found any problems whatsoever with my all-important Dreamweaver,
Fireworks, or other web and image-related software.
If there are known problems with certain programmes then XPs
system seems to know in advance what may create havoc and you will
be warned not to install them. And, so far, there have been no problems
running Vet anti-virus software.
My old collection of strategy games also work a treat, as do more
modern efforts, and there are some additional time-wasters in the
Games menu, such as 3D Pinball.
If you happen to be lazy (like me) or not wishing to delve too
deeply into techno-babble (like me) or even are too busy to manually
check for daily anti-virus updates (like me) then you can do it
all automatically by telling your XP to do it for you.
Now, if there is a downside to Windows XP it is the fact that you
need to activate your copy with Microsoft within 30 days. If you
dont youll be locked out. Basically the activation logs
various aspects of your system video and network cards, hard
drive and other things and plonks on them a 25-digit code
that means that you and those components can use XP. If you upgrade
often, then youll need to muck about with Microsoft.
The upside is that it is a Net surfers dream. XP comes with Internet
Explorer 6, firewall protection, a Flash plug-in, five levels of
cookie stopping and a bazillion other Net-related things.
So, if you are toying with the idea of upgrading to XP then I can
recommend doing so but to be on the safe side back-up all
your precious items such as in-progress novels, email contacts lists
and the like. It is unlikely things will go BOOM, but it is better
being safe than sorry.
If I were buying a new computer would I have XP installed? Undoubtedly.
Apparently its performance is even better with a clean install and,
it must be said, XP has saved me thousands in therapy bills too.
Product: Windows XP
Online: Yes
Price: $463 (Upgrade: $237)
Developer: MS
Distributor: Microsoft
Rating: 85%

(Ratings
Key/Explanation)
Windows XP is on the shelves now.


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