Windows Vista Launch, UAC, and the First Month
Windows Vista launched to retail on January 30, and the usual mix of excitement and complaint followed immediately. Retail boxes promise security, search, and Aero glass. Forums fill with UAC prompt screenshots, driver complaints, and games that stutter on borderline hardware. Two weeks in, both sides look partly right. What Vista Gets Right User Account Control pushes installers toward proper permissions — even if users click Yes too often Windows Defender bundles baseline anti-spyware awareness BitLocker matters on business laptops with TPM chips (less on home PCs without it) Improved networking UI helps non-experts join Wi-Fi without breaking DNS Windows Search indexes documents faster than XP’s slow companion ReadyBoost offers a flash-drive speed boost on RAM-starved machines — modest, but noticeable What Frustrates People Prompt fatigue — UAC trains some users to click through everything without reading Performance on 512 MB–1 GB RAM systems feels sluggish compared to XP Driver hunting for printers, scanners, and older peripherals Games needing patches before they match XP smoothness Edition confusion — Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, Ultimate — each with different feature sets The “Vista Capable” vs “Vista Premium Ready” sticker mess does not help. Machines that can run Vista often cannot run Aero, and buyers feel misled. ...