I don't want to hijack Ray's thread so I'll leave it at this...
Administering a significant number of computers, including 7 in my home, my experience is significantly different. I get crashes quite often as I REALLY work machines. Due to the archaic virtual memory requirements of Windows, these often result in damage, and need to reinstall, the OS.
Beyond that, it is still 50 times bigger than any OS needs to be, still does not really multitask, and forces the same gui on a 3D modeling program as on a spreadsheet. Thank goodness an F-22 doesn't have to have the same dashboard as a Prius.
The last and closest to a "reasonable" Windows environment was 98SE installed in it's "compact" config, about 100 meg. It was relatively stable and met 99% of all users needs. Where is "Windows Lite" at 30.00 or so for the 95% of users who have utterly no need or use for the majority of Windows features and just need to run Works, games, and a browser and can't afford to spend more on an OS than they did for their computer?
The only reason the above things are accepted today is that an entire industry has evolved to plug holes, support, and make this monstrosity usable and only a few have been resistant enough to "the big lie" to realize the insanity of it all.
End rant, really. Back to you, Ray...
_________________ An objective is a description of a performance you want your learners to be able to exhibit before you consider them competent.
Dr. Robert F. Mager, 1962
"If you can't measure it, it's crap."
David A. Mallette, 1980
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