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29 August 2008

Microsoft admits to IE and Vista problems

By Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG news service

Microsoft has revealed that it is looking to fix the performance issues that have plagued Vista and Internet Explorer (IE), with its next generation of software.

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IE 7 and Windows Vista have had serious performance problems which has alienated users and damaged the reputations of the products. Some IE users switched to Mozilla Firefox because of IE 7's frequent crashes and performance glitches, while Vista's bugs, incompatibility problems and other issues have been well-documented.

Microsoft is paying close attention to performance in Windows 7 and IE 8 as it develops both products, the company revealed in separate internal blogs about each product, "Engineering Windows 7" and "IEblog."

"We've re-dedicated ourselves to work in this area (performance) in Windows 7 (and IE 8)," according to the Engineering Windows 7 post. "This is a major initiative across each of our feature teams as well as the primary mission of one of our feature teams."

The company has an uphill battle to improving performance, particularly with Windows 7, said one analyst.

"I'm not surprised they're going to focus on performance," said Mike Cherry, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft. "I'm somewhat sceptical how much improvement they're going to make at this point."

He suggested Microsoft consider performance for Windows 7 the way it approached security when the company decided to make that a key priority for Vista. When Microsoft decided security was integral to the OS, the company engineered Vista so "every feature has a security attribute to it," Cherry said.

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Similarly, the company should make performance such a priority that "anyone checking any code into Windows 7 not only has to make sure it's the most secure code and the most reliable code, but they'd better be addressing the performance of the code as well," he said.

While performance is made up of "many elements," the Windows 7 team is focusing on six areas of improvement in Windows 7, according to the post. They are memory usage, CPU utilisation, disk I/O, the boot-shutdown-standby-resume feature, the base system and disk footprint.

CPU (central processing unit) utilisation in particular is a problem in Vista, and could use improvement in Windows 7. Cherry said he runs a 32-bit version of Vista on a PC with a 64-bit processor and 2GB of RAM. However, when he starts his Outlook email client, it uses 100 percent of his CPU resources for more than a minute and a half. "It blows me away," he said of the problem.

Indeed, Microsoft said a key engineering goal for Windows 7 is to "keep the CPU utilization low as that improves multi-user scenarios as well as reduces power consumption," according to the Windows 7 blog post.

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zero tolerance said on Friday, 29 August 2008

Anything less than high performance, bug free, easy to use, compatible code is unacceptable.

MS is number one. Grow up, and start acting like it.

The whole article sounds like the dog ate my homework.

Ro said on Saturday, 30 August 2008

I found when I got vista a year ago it would take 15-20 minutes to start. I had to double my memory and really clear out all the crap it wanted to boot up. As for explorer it is a joke, competely unusable. It starts quicker than any other of my browsers but then takes a minute each time you try to open a new page. Safari was an improvement but that really stumbled on youtube. I have accepted vista now but for browsing firefox is the only one about which I can make no complaint.

Netbook Fan said on Tuesday, 02 September 2008

I'd look into a netbook computer. I hear some startup in 15 seconds (even with vista).
Make an educated choice...
http://www.netbookcomputers.com

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