Macintosh

Egg anyone?

by alec on September 9, 2007

I've got a bit of egg on my face today. 

August 29th I wrote to Microsoft about Windows Vista quality.  I made some strong statements about my views on Windows Vista quality, and, it turns out that I was wrong. The problems I had with Vista were caused by a faulty 1 Gig stick of RAM.  When I pulled that stick of memory out of the PC a week ago,  replacing it temporarily with a 512M stick, everything stabilized, and I've had no problems since. 

Similarly, last week while at the Red Herring conference I had a catastrophic meltdown on my tablet.  At one point there were seven blue-screens in a 2 hour period.  I had to shut it down and put it away.  The culprit? Memory again.

In the case of the first computer, it was difficult to figure out.  The PC finally reached a stage where it would load Windows part way, and then simply blue screen and reboot.  I panicked, and put the Windows setup disk in the drive to see if I could load a fresh copy of Windows Vista and at least get access to my data.  It blue screened as well… which meant that the problem wasn't Vista, but the hardware itself.  So, I systematically started removing and replacing components, beginning with the graphics card, until I was able to boot the PC again. 

My tablet was a little easier to figure out.  It produces a log file to send to Microsoft, and on two occasions that file was corrupted.  Windows guessed that the reason was memory.

In retrospect, the only real complaint I might have had with Microsoft was that the diagnostic messages were unhelpful, or even misleading as Windows suggested on several occasions that the problem was a faulty driver.  The quality of the Microsoft software was not the issue.  Rather, it was the quality of the hardware that was the problem.

There you have it.

I did buy a new PC Saturday as well.  I did not, however, buy a Mac.  I bought the HP Pavilion DV6000, a dual core Turion 64 machine with 2G of memory, NVidia graphics, a 15.3 inch widescreen display and a 200G hard drive.  At $999 it was a steal compared to the equivalent Macbook Pro at $2199.99.  Add in the costs of obtaining Mac Office, and the headaches of integrating the Mac with my all Windows network, and it was a no-brainer.

And by the way… Windows Vista, and Office 2007… very very smooth on the dual core machine. 

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