Requirements: Windows Vista's Weak Point?

Found on Playfuls.com on Saturday, 20 May 2006
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As many experts had already announced, Windows Vista will require much from the PCs where it will be installed when it comes to resources. For minimum functionality, Windows Vista will need an 800 MHz processor, at least 512 MB of RAM, a 20GB HDD and at least 15GB free, as well as a SVGA- and DirectX 9- compliant video card.

However, the users who want to be thrilled by the Aero interface experience – presented as one of Windows Vista's biggest innovations – will have to own a PC with a processor of at least 1 GHz, 1GB or RAM memory, a video card with 128MB, a HDD of at least 40GB and an internal or external DVD-ROM.

After their promised OS set a new record for the most postponed Windows in the history of the company different release dates were also set for companies and for regular users, now Microsoft comes up with system requirements which aren't even met by more than half of the computers in a company's labs.

And, as experience taught us with the last Windows version, the offiical system requirements are really minimum, so those who'll want to run other software applications as well aside from Windows Vista will need to add even more RAM, processing power or a better video card.

All that for just an interface, overloaded with eyecandy, which is supposed to be one of the biggest innovations? No thanks. It might just be me, but I think an operating system should be resource friendly, leaving them to the actual applications. I don't need a system that hogs up everything and leaves the rest crawling.