Tag: ecosystem

Top Six Vista Application Incompatibility Reasons

May 25, 2008 by Jason

Application incompatibility is one of the aspects that have managed to deliver extensive damage to the adoption rate of Windows Vista. However, as Vista matured throughout 2007 and with Service Pack 1 in 2008, so did the ecosystem of software solutions orbiting around the operating system. Despite this, the actual perception of application incompatibility managed to survive, especially in corporate environments. If one end user can deal with a program that is incompatible with Vista rather easy, the same cannot be said about an enterprise dependent on a specific business application with tens of thousands of machines.

“Part of this is perception based on fact - Windows Vista is built on a new architecture that promises tightened security and reliability. Consequently, the applications that ride on top of Windows Vista need to communicate with the kernel in different ways. So what has helped fuel current perception around application compatibility? Why did many applications ‘break’ in the migration from Windows XP to Windows Vista?” Microsoft asked rhetorically. Read More»

Windows Vista: Tips, Tricks And Rib-Ticklers

March 21, 2007 by Jason

I’ve recently written an essay that discusses the impact Windows Vista will have on semiconductor suppliers to the PC ecosystem; both in PCs themselves and in tethered peripherals and LAN peers. When it’s published, I’ll give you a heads-up here in this blog, and I’ll welcome your feedback.

However, in the process of researching it, I collected an assortment of Vista suggestions that I thought you might find useful nearer-term. First off, however, a welcome update. Back in October of 2005, I alerted you to Microsoft’s then-plan to offer a degraded OpenGL graphics API experience under Windows Vista. Read More»