Experiment: Microsoft Windows Vista on an old PC
A re-post of a recent /. journal entry of mine
(for those of you who don't pay attention to my /. journal!).
Well, my University's MSDN Academic Alliance
finally put Vista available for download the other day, so I grabbed a license,
downloaded the Business Edition DVD, and will be installing it later tonight.
The catch? I'm a Mac guy, but do still have a few PC's laying around, one of
which has been running Windows XP SP2 for the last few months. And that system
is a P3-450 box from the late
90's.
Here's the
hardware:
* Pentium-3,
450Mhz
* 384MB
RAM
* 8MB ATI Rage Pro
(AGP)
* Symbios-based UW-SCSI
adapter
* 9.1GB UW-SCSI
HDD
* 40GB IDE
drive
* Sound Blaster 16 with WaveBlaster
(ISA!)
* 2.88MB floppy, 1.44MB floppy,
DVD-ROM, CD-RW, and parallel Zip-100
drives
Now back in the day, this was
one rather impressive machine. Lots of drives, and a very fast primary hard
drive. Today, however, it doesn't really have much going for it. My laptop is
three years old, and has a 1.33Ghz processor and 1.25GB of RAM, and an 80GB hard
drive.
A bit about the current software
installation (as I'm intending to do an "upgrade" installation first): XP was
installed for one reason only: to run some Atmel microprocessor development
tools for their AT90USB device. As such, the system has the following installed
on it (and nothing else):
* XP SP2
with all the latest updates
*
IE7
* Microsoft Windows
Defender
* Windows Media Player
11
* Firefox
2.0
* Open Office
2.0
* Atmel Studio and
FLiP
* Grisoft AVG Free
anti-virus
*
TortiseSVN
That's it. Most of this
software has never been used, and almost every other piece of junk XP installed
has been removed (like Outlook). I've never run OpenOffice on the machine, nor
have I ever run Windows Media Player. IE7 has only been used for Windows Update.
I don't use the system to surf the web -- Firefox is just used to read some
HTML-based documentation for the hardware I've been coding
against.
As such, this is a pretty
pristine Windows XP install. It was installed from a clean drive (previously the
system was a Debian box, but Debian and Ubuntu both started to have serious
issues with the UW-SCSI drive when I installed the 40GB IDE drive). This XP
system is probably going to be a whole lot cleaner than 99% of the XP systems
Vista would be installed over.
I'm not
expecting Aero to run (of course), but I'm curious to see how it performs
otherwise. I don't know if the Atmel tools will work on Vista, and I'm
interested to see how other items react. Will the system thrash due to only
384MB of RAM? Will other, non-Aero effects run slowly due to the 450Mhz
processor? Will this near pristine XP system upgrade
cleanly?
I don't care to run Vista -- I
think Microsoft's software design is terrible. I don't like anything they've
produced since "Decathalon" for the original IBM PC. But I am curious to find
out if things are going to be as bad for old PC owners as some people seem to
think. I'm not going to complain if my old system won't support some of the more
fancy aspects of Vista -- but will it continue to work as a workstation for my
microcontroller programming projects, and some basic web
browsing?
Stay tuned. I'm burning the
DVD tonight, and will be installing it within the next few days (as time
permits).
Posted: Thursday - January 25, 2007 at 04:38 PM