Posted May 17, 2011
ChaunceyK
https://bit.ly/2kvQ45K
ChaunceyK Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jun 2009
From United States
Elenarie
@tweetelenarie
Elenarie Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2008
From Sweden
Posted May 17, 2011
ChaunceyK: I speak of the various Windows O/S's of the past 20+ years. Win7 is actually pretty stable for me...so far. ;-)
95 / XP / Vista / 7 user here... I skipped 98, 2000, and ME. 95 was fine when I was using it, I doubt I saw crashes back then. XP and Vista were bad in the beginning, yes, but mainly due to lack of driver support. So far, they haven't failed me... well, Vista hasn't failed me actually, XP pissed me off so hard once when it started fucking up itself for no good reason (had to reset the motherboard to fix it)).
I had problems with 7 the first few days after its release, but after finding the proper drivers for the laptop, don't know if I've had more than a dozen crashes so far (at least half of them were because of Stardock's crappy ObjectDock).
8 is looking good so far, implementing more of the Metro design philosophy, and also it has tighter integration with Windows Live, something which I applaud, since I use the service on my phone too.
EDIT: But no matter what exact OS we use, the OSs will only get better in time as the code is being optimized and cleaned up more and more, and various outdated features that can cause problems are being removed.
Post edited May 17, 2011 by KavazovAngel
ChaunceyK
https://bit.ly/2kvQ45K
ChaunceyK Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jun 2009
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
I went through TRS-Dos (TRS-80), MS-Dos, Win3.1/95/ME/XP/7. I'd say XP was pretty good to me, but 7 so far is my favorite for stability. And I agree, OS's do seem to be getting better (as evidenced by XP & 7 being the only ones I was really happy with).
hedwards
buy Evil Genius
hedwards Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Nov 2008
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
ChaunceyK: I went through TRS-Dos (TRS-80), MS-Dos, Win3.1/95/ME/XP/7. I'd say XP was pretty good to me, but 7 so far is my favorite for stability. And I agree, OS's do seem to be getting better (as evidenced by XP & 7 being the only ones I was really happy with).
They're definitely getting better, the issue is that it seems to take MS so long in order to get things that other OSes have gotten right previously. It should not have taken until Vista to get a set up where you don't have to be admin all the time in order to just use your computer. And, MS has yet to make it convenient to install an OS to multiple partitions the way that other OSes do, which makes it a real pain if you want to reinstall or upgrade the OS without having to transfer the profile. I've messed around a bit with the various programs they've provided, but none of them work as well as tarring up a home directory and transporting it to a new system does on Linux or *BSD.
acare84
RazorMan
acare84 Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2008
From Turkey
Posted May 17, 2011
Damn Microsoft is supporting only 30 countries in the world for GFWL enabled titles and if you are leaving in that countries you can't play multiplayer sections of the games and also you can't get support. Valve is worldwide for Steamworks enabled games for multiplayer. Also GFWL is consolish and sucks but Steam is good for real PC gamers. You can't even have realtime chat in GFWL but you can Steam. GFWL is console fanboys but Steam is for PC gamers that is why I love Steam and hate GFWL.
And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
Post edited May 17, 2011 by acare84
Elenarie
@tweetelenarie
Elenarie Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2008
From Sweden
Posted May 17, 2011
acare84: Damn Microsoft is supporting only 30 countries in the world for GFWL enabled titles and if you are leaving in that countries you can't play multiplayer sections of the games and also you can't get support. Valve is worldwide for Steamworks enabled games for multiplayer. Also GFWL is consolish and sucks but Steam is good for real PC gamers. You can't even have realtime chat in GFWL but you can Steam. GFWL is console fanboys but Steam is for PC gamers that is why I love Steam and hate GFWL.
And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
The subject here is not GfWL or Steam, but the integration of one of these two with a console equivalent.And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
Pheace
New User
Pheace Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2010
From Netherlands
Posted May 17, 2011
acare84: Damn Microsoft is supporting only 30 countries in the world for GFWL enabled titles and if you are leaving in that countries you can't play multiplayer sections of the games and also you can't get support. Valve is worldwide for Steamworks enabled games for multiplayer. Also GFWL is consolish and sucks but Steam is good for real PC gamers. You can't even have realtime chat in GFWL but you can Steam. GFWL is console fanboys but Steam is for PC gamers that is why I love Steam and hate GFWL.
And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
KavazovAngel: The subject here is not GfWL or Steam, but the integration of one of these two with a console equivalent. And yes Steam is DRM, and it is the best and problemless DRM in the world.
Yet, far as I can tell, barely anyone's complaining about GFWL live's PC-Console integration?
So ... end of discussion?
Post edited May 17, 2011 by Pheace
MichaelPalin
A Gamer
MichaelPalin Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Oct 2009
From Spain
Posted May 17, 2011
lukipela: DRM would not exist if piracy was not so rampant. Does it hinder piracy? No. But a company has to make an effort or else they are negligent towards their shareholders.
IT'S NOT BECAUSE OF PIRACYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!! Sorry, but people must understand that DRM, at least for the most part, exists because it gives control to the publishers over the games they publish. Yes, that control hinders piracy to a point, but it also hinders second hand sales, which are probably more important and many other things. Another example, look at XBL to follow the thread a little bit. Why are Xbox users forced to use XBL exclusively for their online gaming? Think of the PSN outage, why have the PS3 and PSP users been left without online gaming for 22 days, when they could have used alternative servers like PC games have done before Steam became popular? The reason in the case of XBL is that it is filled with advertisement and opportunities to waste your money in irrelevant virtual items. The more you are in XBL the more money will Microsoft get. If the Xbox 360 could be connected to any independent server for the online, Microsoft would stop making a lot of money, so the console is bound through DRM to connect only through XBL.
MichaelPalin
A Gamer
MichaelPalin Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Oct 2009
From Spain
Posted May 17, 2011
lukipela: Not at all. I am pointing out the reasons for it. The site is not devoted against DRM. The site is devoted to making older games available to the public when they would not otherwise be available. The lack of DRM is just a sales pitch. The fact that the company that owns the site, CDPR, has DRM on their latest game should make that easy enough to understand.
Until developers and shareholders are able to agree on what the market can stand, you will see DRM.
Actually, The Witcher 2 has no DRM in the version that can be considered published by CDProject, the gog.com version. And I'm pretty sure they pushed Atari as much as possible for the Enhanced version of "The Witcher" to not have DRM either. My opinion is that it's Atari to blame that CDProjekt games have DRM. And, think of it, a game with DRM in gog.com would be unthinkable, I consider it an important motivation for the existence of gog.com, not just a sales pitch.Until developers and shareholders are able to agree on what the market can stand, you will see DRM.
Sogi-Ya
<- OLD.
Sogi-Ya Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2009
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
MichaelPalin: The reason in the case of XBL is that it is filled with advertisement and opportunities to waste your money in irrelevant virtual items. The more you are in XBL the more money will Microsoft get. If the Xbox 360 could be connected to any independent server for the online, Microsoft would stop making a lot of money, so the console is bound through DRM to connect only through XBL.
steam does the same thing, 90% of what the client does is try to rope you into buying more crap only from steam. Keep in mind that Valve was formed by a bunch of managers from microsoft.
Datajack2050
Om nom nom
Datajack2050 Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2008
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
I have no experience with the Steam/PS3 systems despite owning a PS3. I'm indifferent to the whole matter. I like Steam, but I'm no fan boy. I actually despised Steam when I was forced to use it over WON, since it was incredibly unstable on launch.
Xbox Live is a nice system. It's smooth, streamlined, and everyone can access every part of it with ease. Games for Windows Live is absolute shit. Everything it tries to do Steam does 10x better. If you want an example of how poor of a system GFWL is, get a disc based version of Fallout 3 and see how long it takes to patch it, IF GFWL doesn't crash on download, or doesn't let you log in. It took me 6 restarts last time because GFWL client kept updating every time.
Xbox Live is a nice system. It's smooth, streamlined, and everyone can access every part of it with ease. Games for Windows Live is absolute shit. Everything it tries to do Steam does 10x better. If you want an example of how poor of a system GFWL is, get a disc based version of Fallout 3 and see how long it takes to patch it, IF GFWL doesn't crash on download, or doesn't let you log in. It took me 6 restarts last time because GFWL client kept updating every time.
Tulivu
Surndr & Die
Tulivu Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Nov 2010
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
I wasn't familiar with this development before reading this thread and have learned alot.
+1 to the community :-D
+1 to the community :-D
S-r-ex
New User
S-r-ex Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Nov 2010
From Norway
Posted May 17, 2011
My hate for M$ is primarily directed at their "Media Transfer Protocol".
1: This screwed up my MP3 in XP. It would stay connected for a few seconds and disconnect for no good reason. And only on my computer.
2: Cameras. Previews from my camera in explorer is very low-res in 7. In XP, cameras were treated like they had 24 images at most like 35mm film systems, or at least it wasn't updated to care for those with 500+ images on the memory card; One tiny window that couldn't be resized and only showing 16 thumbnails or so at once. But if I use a memcard reader instead, problems solved!
Using explorer to select-drag-drop is so much easier than half-assed software supposed to make the most basic computer operations, well..."easier".
1: This screwed up my MP3 in XP. It would stay connected for a few seconds and disconnect for no good reason. And only on my computer.
2: Cameras. Previews from my camera in explorer is very low-res in 7. In XP, cameras were treated like they had 24 images at most like 35mm film systems, or at least it wasn't updated to care for those with 500+ images on the memory card; One tiny window that couldn't be resized and only showing 16 thumbnails or so at once. But if I use a memcard reader instead, problems solved!
Using explorer to select-drag-drop is so much easier than half-assed software supposed to make the most basic computer operations, well..."easier".
Post edited May 17, 2011 by S-r-ex
Metro09
Your Ad Here
Metro09 Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2009
From United States
orcishgamer
Mad and Green
orcishgamer Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jun 2010
From United States
Posted May 17, 2011
orcishgamer: There has been, but I hear Win 7 is really solid, our upgrade at work from XP went flawlessly. I use Ubuntu because i'm one of those crazy guys who can support himself, but most people just need crap to work and not get in their way. It seems Win 7 does that at home and at work.
hedwards: I've heard that, but at this point, I refuse to give MS anymore money. Which is a pain given that it's bundled with most computers and apparently you can no longer refuse the EULA without returning the computer. Metro09: Call me a geezer but I don't use my phone for playing games... I use it for... making phone calls.
Geezer!:) Okay on a serious note, these phones have better processors than desktops had years ago. You can buy a stripped down flip phone if you want, but it's no surprise this is happening (i.e. people are trying to use this awesome hardware).
Yep it's much more about killing the second hand market than piracy. Piracy is just a great whipping boy.
Post edited May 17, 2011 by orcishgamer