Well, I installed the 32-bit version of Vista last night. I popped the new 500GB hard drive and 550w PSU into my existing rig and removed the RAID adapter, four 80GB SATA drives, the 431w PSU, and four pounds of dust.
After fighting like crazy for two hours to get my old Via KT880 motherboard to recognize the new SATA3 hard drive, I eventually had to give up and move the drive to the onboard ALi SATA RAID ports. These are slower than the other two ports because they use a secondary chip instead of the KT880 Southbridge, but the difference seems to be negligible. The Via KT880 just won't recognize the SATA3 drive, even when I use a jumper to force the drive into SATA1.5 compatibility mode.
I installed Vista Ultimate 32-bit so I could get an idea of how it runs on my old system before upgrading in February. For what its worth, Vista itself seems to run fairly well. I haven't installed any applications or games yet so I can't really comment on the difference in performance, but so far everything seems to be running smoothly.
I haven't tried out Windows Aero, Flip 3D, or BitLocker yet, so I'll comment on those later. I'm really curious to see how big of an impact Aero and Flip3D have on system performance.
I did have a chance to play with ReadyBoost, though, and I have to say that it's a really cool technology. ReadyBoost uses cheap USB flash drives as a form of secondary RAM. Since flash drives have much higher access speeds than hard drives, ReadyBoost can cache files into a USB flash drive once RAM is full. This results in faster application responsiveness.
I've got a brand spankin' new 4GB SDHC card that came with a USB flash drive that I bought for the Wii and my DVD player. Of course, after I bought it, I found out that neither system supports SDHC, only the older SD standard. ReadyBoost, here we come!
I've got a slightly different model with an annoying flashing blue LED that is brighter than the sun, but this is a pretty close match.
Once you insert the drive, you can select the ReadyBoost tab in the drive properties to turn the feature on and select how much space on the drive you want to dedicate. This screenshot is stolen from some random website, but I've dedicated the entire 4GB to ReadyBoost. I'll run some benchmarks with and without ReadyBoost later on to see how much it really helps.
I do have a few complaints, though. First, Vista seems to thrash my processor like crazy. I realize that my Athlon XP 3000+ is nowhere near the fastest processor on the market these days, but there's really no reason why an operating system with no applications running should be using 100% of a 2.164GHz processor. It doesn't seem to be killing my system performance, though, so I'll have to wait and see how it affects applications and games.
On the other hand, Vista doesn't seem to be nearly as big a memory hog as most people complain about. Again, I'll see if this changes once I enable Aero and Flip 3D.
Disk Defragmenter has been completely overhauled, and I can see both pros and cons with the new program. On one hand, scheduling automatic defrags is much easier and can be done within the program, instead of using Task Scheduler. On the other hand, you can no longer pull up a report of fragmentation before or after the scan, and you have no visual indicator of the progress of an ongoing scan. That really blows, because you've got no idea how much of a scan has been completed!
As I suspected, UAC is still extraordinarily annoying. I disabled it almost immediately. Every time you try to do
anything, I had to confirm it with UAC. Delete an item off the start menu? UAC! Change your display properties? UAC! Defragment your hard drive? UAC! Please, tell me why it's necessary to use UAC to confirm a defragmentation? Is Microsoft worried that some violent hacker is going to maliciously defragment everybody's hard drives?
-b0b
(...will definitely post more as he thinks of it.)