Originally posted by AtW
View Post
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
Vista SP1
Collapse
X
-
Kernel panic's are rare, a power cut on any running OS is asking for trouble. A re-install would likely do the job but a UPS is a much better solution. -
Well, unless an HDD is damaged by powercut I expect OS to boot at least in safe mode - a sudden loss of power should only affect cached in memory data that was not written to disk, and OS boot structured should never be affected.Originally posted by Cliphead View PostKernel panic's are rare, a power cut on any running OS is asking for trouble. A re-install would likely do the job but a UPS is a much better solution.
I had lots of time Windows XP box had power shutdown - it can boot up back just fine, so I am afraid I am not impressed with Linux.
The other issue is that it was not me who installed it, and all related to Linux apart from simple command lines is just way too painful to me - it is alien thing and I don't want to spend time trying to learn obvious thing that are just way too fking hard there. So, no, for me cost of Windows is well paid for the easy of use it provides and I can focus on either posting drivel here or doing something useful. Right now I am going to do something useful
Comment
-
To be honest with numerous power cuts where I live (and no UPS), I haven't yet had any issues with the Linux boxes running at the time booting back up normally, I guess you just got unlucky.Originally posted by AtW View PostWell, unless an HDD is damaged by powercut I expect OS to boot at least in safe mode - a sudden loss of power should only affect cached in memory data that was not written to disk, and OS boot structured should never be affected.
I had lots of time Windows XP box had power shutdown - it can boot up back just fine, so I am afraid I am not impressed with Linux.
The other issue is that it was not me who installed it, and all related to Linux apart from simple command lines is just way too painful to me - it is alien thing and I don't want to spend time trying to learn obvious thing that are just way too fking hard there. So, no, for me cost of Windows is well paid for the easy of use it provides and I can focus on either posting drivel here or doing something useful. Right now I am going to do something useful
As for learning Linux, I've been involved almost from the start so know it very well and no other OS comes close in terms of reliability and functionality both server and desktop. I'm not pushing one OS over another, it's all down to what you're comfortable with.Comment
-
Tell me about it. I bought a new laptop the other day. Dual core, 633 Mhz bus straight through, 1 Gb Ram, etc. Goodie I thought as I started it up this is going to burn it up. Jeez it's slower than my old XP no-name, made in China CPU laptop I run now. Memory red-lining, CPU loading 50% average, 30Gb of disk space gone. And that's out the box, nothing installed. Except Vista. How do they do that? It's like X-windows circa 1998, except much, much worse.Originally posted by Cliphead View PostI won't ever move to Vista on a production / development PC. So far Linux is doing about 90% of what I need with the last 10% coming soon. I'll keep an XP PC around for nostalgia but the full move away for MS is almost there.
I'm gonna get one of those little RAM only laptops with Linux.Bored.Comment
-
If you ignore DRM crap, drivers issue (better now than year ago though), and incompatibilities, then the striking thing is why the heck they use so much more RAM? It is just recently when memory prices/OS requirements became good so that I use 2 GB in my box and XP runs very very nicely, and suddenly Vista appears and requires a lot more for no reason - it's not a major change in OS ffs - they could stick their shiny 3D GUI where sun does not shine.Comment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- The 3 highest-paying software contractor jobs right now, and what they actually pay Yesterday 03:52
- The beginning of the end for Boox ‘MSC’ contractors has begun. Check back in 2031 Jun 24 06:25
- Andy Burnham as prime minister ‘would cut both ways for self-employed contractors’ Jun 23 02:18
- The 3 highest-paying software contractor jobs right now, and what they actually pay Jun 22 15:52
- Taxman tells contractors that only four new tax avoidance schemes needed avoiding in Q2 Jun 22 05:47
- VAT compliance checks are changing — here’s what contractors need to know Jun 17 07:30
- As HMRC steps up VAT compliance activity, how should company directors prepare? Jun 16 06:52
- Hiring of IT contractors returned to growth in May 2026, following 33 months ‘in the red’ Jun 15 06:02
- Zero Hours Contract Reform: A key consultation for recruiters, employers and contractors is finally here Jun 12 04:43
- Bills of Exchange: Here’s what caught my attention as an umbrella compliance expert Jun 11 03:46


Comment