Anyway this is some lay down I've read about win XP :
The Upside :
As stable as the Rock of Gibraltar - or at least not nearly as crash prone as previous ersion of windows; all users of a single PC have to log in to their customized desktop; simpler and easier to use than old Windows.
The Downside :XP is really the first easay to use, built from scratch OS for PC users. It narrows the ain't computing fun gap with the Macintosh platforms.
- you also have to register online or by phone to activate XP, and the messages on the task bar are forever bugging you to sign up for Passport, the company's controversial online wallet system - it's a little too creepy.
The installation took an hour unlike previous upgrades, you actually have to sti there for most of it answering questions. Also you can install XP only on one machine. If you have other PCs you will need to buy more copies.
I was running with network before installing XP. But after I upgraded to XP's hoem network, my connection to the Net disappeared. I had to spend 90 minutes on the phone with Microsoft's pros untangling the thing - a courtesy that civillians won't get
Well, Is this sounds like monopoly in its' purest ?A number of prgrams didn't work - from Microsoft's competitors. The AOL connection refused to recognise the cable modem and try to connect via phone line, something Microsoft says AOL will "fix" in it's forthcoming 7.0 release. Liquid audio, a popular music player had the dubious distinction causing my machine to gag. And Java progs now require you to find, download and install a special piece of software.
[ 09-15-2001: Message edited by: KidD01 ]