Re: Windows 7
Posted by majinsnake on .
Windows 7 installs XP itself. It is not xp mode, its 2 OS installations.
Quote:
>Vista and the upcoming Windows 7 still offer nothing that XP can't do.
Can't argue with that. :-)
But what really gets me is the system requirements of Windows 7's WinXP mode. Doesn't vanilla XP require 25% of the RAM and horsepower that Window 7's WinXP mode requires? I get the impression that WinXP mode isn't a truly legitimate XP mode, and will cause more problems than it solves. I'm only more certain of this after reading of the User License Agreement for Windows 7, which is virtually identical to that of Windows Vista.
- Tricob.
>Vista and the upcoming Windows 7 still offer nothing that XP can't do.
Can't argue with that. :-)
But what really gets me is the system requirements of Windows 7's WinXP mode. Doesn't vanilla XP require 25% of the RAM and horsepower that Window 7's WinXP mode requires? I get the impression that WinXP mode isn't a truly legitimate XP mode, and will cause more problems than it solves. I'm only more certain of this after reading of the User License Agreement for Windows 7, which is virtually identical to that of Windows Vista.
- Tricob.
Replies:
Re: Windows 7 | Tricob -- 10/23/2009 9:05 pm UTC |