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PC stickers are fuzzy on what computers are really Vista capable |
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Written by Brandon M. Langston
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Thursday, 09 November 2006 |
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To all the stickers that encrust the average PC - the ones advertising
their processors, graphics cards and potential to inflict
repetitive-stress injury - you can add one more. It's a version of the
familiar Windows XP logo that proclaims the computer "Vista Capable."
This emblem is supposed to answer what should be Topic A for most
computer shoppers: Now that Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system
is less than three months from arriving in stores, can a new XP machine
make the move to Vista when it arrives?
That word "Capable"
promises a straightforward, reassuring answer of "yes." But in
practice, it can mean anything from "absolutely" to "maybe" to "not
really."
Even as Microsoft is revving up its Vista marketing
campaign (it just announced a set of discounted upgrade offers for
buyers of new PCs), customers can only guess which computers will give
them the advertised Vista experience.
Part of this mess stems
from Microsoft's decision to develop five versions of Vista: Home
Basic, Home Premium, Business, Enterprise and Ultimate. (Customers in
developing countries will have a sixth option, the stripped-down
Starter Edition.)
Even though most home users will only have to
pick between the Basic and Premium flavors, those two alone have
significantly different features and requirements.
Vista Home
Basic, a $100 upgrade from Windows XP, will include the same security
and file- management upgrades as other Vista editions. But it leaves
out most of the features Microsoft has been talking up in Vista: its
3-D Aero Glass user interface, "Media Center" software to turn the
computer into a home theater, and DVD-burning tools.
Those and
other features require buying Vista Home Premium. It costs more, $159
when upgrading from XP, and demands a great deal more hardware.
Here's where those little stickers lead you astray: Microsoft defines a
"Vista Capable" computer as one that can run Vista Home - not Premium.
And these entry-level requirements are so lenient that most PCs sold in
the past few years can meet them.
To get the Vista features
you'll probably hear the most about, you'll need a machine satisfying
Microsoft's "Premium Ready" requirements
(www.microsoft.com/windowsvista/getready/capable.mspx). And so far,
there is no standard logo advertising this higher level of
compatibility, only such jargon-soaked fine print as Microsoft's
description of an Aero Glass-compatible graphics card: "Support for
DirectX 9 graphics with a WDDM driver, 128 MB of graphics memory
(minimum), Pixel Shader 2.0 and 32 bits per pixel."
That means that the manufacturers have to tell you which models meet the Premium spec. And most of them are botching the job.
At Dell's website, individual models' listings don't indicate their
Premium readiness, or even link to the page elsewhere on the company's
site that does spell out which PCs meet that higher requirement.
Hewlett-Packard repeats that mistake on its site; Gateway's site
implies that the company doesn't sell any Premium-ready computers.
Toshiba, despite having one of the worst websites of any computer
manufacturer, at least provides a link labeled "Get Windows Vista
Premium Ready" to steer you to the right laptops.
The situation
in stores is even worse, to judge from recent visits to local Best Buy
and Circuit City stores. Most computers on display carried a "Vista
Capable" sticker, but finding evidence of Premium compatibility
required careful inspection.
For every manufacturer's
reasonably prominent "Premium Ready" label - for instance, Sony's -
there were others in small type, covered by inventory stickers, or
already rubbed away by the palms of shoppers trying out laptop
keyboards.
You'd have to ask a salesperson for help - and hope
he or she had memorized which computers were at which level of Vista
readiness.
This isn't the first time customers have had to
puzzle through complicated technical decisions in the face of
misleading marketing. "HD-ready" high-definition TVs, thanks to their
lack of digital tuners, can't receive any actual HD broadcasts; the
"PlaysForSure" label on many digital-music devices doesn't stop them
from failing to play some Windows Media downloads.
But when
Microsoft and its partners have so much at stake - their biggest
transition since the arrival of Windows XP - you'd think they'd work
harder to steer customers straight.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 26 August 2007 )
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