|
| 
enlarge | From: Microsoft Category: Software
List Price: £210.99 Buy New: £177.95 You Save: £33.04 (16%)
New (4) from £177.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 700
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Xp, Windows Me, Windows Nt, Windows 98 Media: CD-ROM Operating System: Windows XP Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 8 x 1.9
MPN: 956484 UPC: 805529831438 EAN: 0805529831438 ASIN: B00061H588
Release Date: March 3, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW/FACTORY SEALED - BUY NOW & INCREASE YOUR PRODUCTIVITY...
|
| Customer Reviews:
Not bad for MS but that's not saying much ... June 2, 2007 25 out of 28 found this review helpful
Windows dominates the OS market for the same reason that Starbucks dominates the coffee shop market. It's everywhere. And just as Starbucks don't make very good coffee compared to many of its local and global rivals, Microsoft doesn't make good OSs compared to the competition.
I've tried really hard to find an area in which XP beats any of its rivals but to no avail. Yes, it's best for playing games but does that have anything to do wth the qualities of the OS or is it just because XP has the market share and that's what developers target. Furthermore, games are meant to be an aside not the primary selling point of an OS. MS continues to dominate the OS market for one main reason - it comes installed on every PC out there. This is not likely to change in a hurry. Unless Apple starts to sell its OS separate from its hardware.
MS do make quality products. Whatever the anti-MS geek brigade will like to inform us, the truth is that MS Office and even Outlook are very good at doing what they do. XP just isn't one of its better products. For those who are interested in computing and who want a stable, flexible and open alternative, of course, Linux is the best bet (in any of its numerous guises). However, for those who want a true user-friendly alternative, the Max OSx is a must. It's stable, has the security of Unix under the covers and yet offers best OS user interface fine tuned over many years.
The real flaw of XP (like all versions of Windows) is its security. I cannot tell you how many times I've been frustrated by waiting after booting up my work laptop or desktop for the virus scanner to finish doing its thing. It's just so frustrating and so unecessary. The argument that there are so many exploits out there because MS Windows is such a bigger target is really only partial truth. The greater truth is that Windows is based on flawed security principals that encourage exploits. Windows allows non-trusted users of the OS too much access. An OS and its content shouldn't need to be constantly scanned for vulnerabilites. It's just such a bizarre situation the mass public has got itself into when it accepts that this is normal behaviour.
This acceptance takes me to my final point. There is only one explanation for this acceptance. The lack of awareness of what other alternatives there are. Until you've given something else a good go, it's hard to know how different things can be. Put simply, I've never known a Mac OSx user convert back to Windows but I've known plenty go the other way. There must be a reason. Yes, it involves a leap of faith. No new technology can be picked up immediately but, once the initial teething period if overcome, there can be so much reward. It's the same for phones. When you first change to another brand, it's hard to forget the old habits from the last manufacturer and adapt to the new but it can be very worthwhile. Operating Systems are no different in this respect. There are better ones out there and they're cheaper. Two pretty good reasons to consider the alternatives.
BEWARE the anti-MS/personel platform fanatics (AKA 'Mac/Linux fanboys') March 9, 2007 7 out of 27 found this review helpful
To make a good choice you at least need objective balanced information, free from bias, on which to base your decision and in real life things are rarely so (widescale) 'black and white', hopefully you have noticed that the inferences in some of the reviews below are directly contradictory to this axiom. Firstly its of central importance to be aware that the market share of OS use is acutely polarized with Windows used on all computers (currently XP by far the largest proportion) except for a few percent share of the rest which Mac and Linux are the biggest of these miniscule several percent groups. So for whatever reasons that is the current situation and since the explosion of win98 use, MS have never had any serious challenge this market dominance.Given such a ubiquitous nature you probaly know of other people using the windows platform. Do the majority of them have endless terrible experiences with it?Do they mostly think XP has nothing but negatives without any redeeming features? Is computing such an ordeal for them they only use a Win computer out of neccessity? Do the views of a couple of the reviewers below really seem balanced and non-judgemental? If windows + winXP is as unappealing + hopeless as they both describe i wonder why virtual Win OS software is gaining popularity with certain other OS platforms??? Could it be for all the granted advantages of Mac OS + Linux, that to some parts of the population Win does offer advantages over other platforms ?? Thats not to say that the Win platform is free from problems or that MS is some idylic magnaninmous entity...CLEARLY NOT! In a capitalist society financial income provides a gigantic incentive for motivation but unfortunately for creation of greed aswell.
Bearing the structure of our society in mind,consider Mozilla's Firefox browser as a secure alternative to regularly breached MS's IE. Though IE still has a lions share of the market Firefox has consistently gained popularity over the years to a point where it has about 10% of the market now. However ironically though its marketing drive has been its superior security, as it has become more popular it security has increasingly been breached.With increased popularity it has become a bigger and more attractive potential financial/emotional incentive, so while it may have offered increased security before how much of this was due to not being an appealing/worthwhile target in contrast to the bull's eye/chance of making a killing that Wins massive audience provides. One of the draws Linux and Mac OS is their alledgedly superior intrinsic resistance to threat + breached security compared to Windows but given they never experience anywhere near the intensity of battering Windows does due to its market dominance is this really a fair criticism? - Hackers always seem to crack a security measure sooner of later ( MS premium content security was claimed unbreakable especially since so much money had been spent on it...untill ONLY a couple of months after Vista's circulation a hacker's anger at ironically the system shutting him out from trying to play legally purchased premium content, broke the system so he could succesfully play his movie) - A more popular target means increased attacks so increased chance of security breach....though a bigger target helps to buffer the probability of an individuals chance of being attacked.
However that is another side of the coin when it comes to popularity and the potential for increased financial gain (as with being target for attack ).The amount/variety/diversity of software,utilities etc available for the Win platform in ENDLESS, competition is intense so while their will be countless inferior products the chance of finding superior products is also increased, also competition reducing prices and keeping up with demand UNLIKE the Linux setup where users freely make software,drivers for hardware etc in an (at least theorectically) altruistic communuity - generally they don't have the degree/size of incentive that finance can create - resulting in a longer lag than Win to keep up with new hardware and advances.....AND you don't have to learn the language of a new platform to get free software if you search carefully + persistantly enough, it is available - you might need to work harder to find it, there may not be the choice/diversity for your particular requirement/personal choice but it will be FREE!
So at the end of the day the advantages of one OS platform mirrors the drawbacks of another and vice-versa. What matters is which +VE traits you value the most, balanced with which -VE traits affect you the least. Perhaps that's why there is an attraction to use more than one OS on the same comp ( or outside the PC world, 'Intel Macs') to get the 'best from different worlds'.....
Mediocrity shines through Windows XP Home September 23, 2006 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Operating systems (OS) are difficult. An ordinary app (application) is hard enough to get right but at least it has a limited scope. OS don't have this luxury. They must cover areas the size of Russian steppe. This makes them bug riddled. If you have ever studied programming you will know how hard, how confusing and how encrypted writing anything in Microsoft's C++ or Visual Basic is. This in turn via the unintuitive, anomaly filled Interactive Development Environment (IDE) will only allow for a slow, torturous, production of a software program. Once we consider the interests of business in rushing out the final product we begin to see a little of the reason why many software products are found wanting by some users. OS suffer more than simple apps in this respect. Most markets are not affected by: 1.No competition 2.Crippled components making the product (Language and IDE)
This is what gives rise to all the whining about 98/ME/XP/Vista. The OS market is unique and clearly does not follow the constraints of other markets. Any sort of software can still fail by virtue of another trait in that creating software is not a purely technical exercise. Wording, dialogue box layout and error messages i.e. communication with the user, all have a significant impact on the effectiveness of the OS. In XP the dialogue box layouts are similar to win98 although some changes have been made. Still, setting up an internet account you encounter poor wording, duplication and hardly optimal dialogue boxes at one point trying to connect to a long defunct US server. Communication with the user is still poor. Start Outlook Express the mail program and the following error might appear:
The host 'zzzz.zzzz.net' could not be found. Socket Error: 11004, Error Number: 0x800CCC0D.
No reference is made to the `Remote Access Connection Manager' service which if enabled solves this problem. The fact that a consistent descriptive error system is not present makes this OS very hard to deal with. Programming languages suffer from this problem also. An unexpected error has occurred. Size is another problem with XP: It's too big. System properties have elements that are in the control panel and these are all linked spaghetti fashion. I want a single reference to any function. XP also encompasses the idea that the OS should provide all manner of functions that I consider to be outside the scope of the OS. Media player, CD/DVD burning and a whole host of other packages that don't perform anything like 3rd party apps you can buy. So users will end up with 2 CD burners, 2 media players, 2 zip compression programs. The inability to disable or delete the OS provided functions means wasted disk space and more importantly the risk of crashes due to conflicts. XP therefore becomes like a boom box hi-fi which is OK as long as you're not a purist who wanted a separate amp etc. A lot of elegance is lost by not having a passive OS that concentrates on its function. If you go to the control panel/add or remove programs/add or remove windows components you are presented with a strange dialogue box. Presented is a list of Windows apps and to their left is a check box and to their right a memory size. Many of the memory sizes are 0.0MB! So these apps are here to stay regardless of what the user might require. That Media Player, Outlook, or Internet explorer is considered a vital component of an OS is ridiculous. Microsoft has shifted the user/OS balance with XP firmly in favour of the OS. XP is a little disobedient. Set the Cryptographic Service to disabled but it starts of its own accord. Go to the task manager and stop this service, then wait a while until it restarts. Don't like movie maker, delete all the files, wait and all the files you deleted reappear! XP is quite devious in the way it subtly resets values and adjust things to its liking. Like all software there are multitudes of tiny elements that drag the system down. Go into a window and select File/New folder is at the top, later on it may be halfway down the list. Select a read-only file and another, which is not read-only, then view their properties - it lists them as read-only. The list of these `lack of thought' items must go into the hundreds. Then there's the search facility that has difficulty finding anything. The annoying bubbles that keep popping up. Using the troubleshooters is a waste of time usually, very rarely and only with simple problems will this line of enquiry help you. There are some positives to this OS but the negatives outweigh these. All this wouldn't be so bad if this were an inexpensive package. I have found the perfect analogy for XP. You might have heard of the Republic P-47, an enormous, heavy WWII fighter-bomber. This aeroplane was devised (like XP) on the more is more principle. More fuel tanks, more armour, more machine guns, and more cylinders. In the unlikely event you ever manage to manoeuvre something into your gunsight it will make mincemeat of it. A program designed with a single purpose. One thing's for certain - it's no Bf-109.
For: Looks good Relatively easy to use Large array of software available
Against: Lacks elegant simplicity Interfering and disobedient software Poor communication with the user Sluggish Its foundation in programming language Expensive
XP is Excellent...If. November 13, 2005 51 out of 70 found this review helpful
With the greatest respect to those who have remarked that XP is not what it should be. I find that the majority of reviewers who did not like XP, had either had little experience of computer "housekeeping" ie: They installed over the top of exising O/S. or they had not installed ALL the Windows updates, or did not have full virus/adware/ etc: protection. or had too many TSR (terminate and stay resident) programs running in the background. Some of the Gamers who install multi games on computers, incapable of handling the content of the game on a computer with very low specifications and resources. However having said that there are some very advanced technologically experienced Gamers. Recently with the introduction of "Validating" Windows XP to help stop copying & pirating, has brought out The " I hate Windows XP" users. If they don't like it, then go for the "Open source" ie: Linux etc:, which are good....otherwise don't use Windows XP, and dont buy it then make remarks that "They hate it" In my opinion,MS has brought to users; a system that millions enjoy, I say purchase a licence for each computer you own (remembering that you DO NOT OWN XP, you are only licensed to use it...on ONE computer. The Amazon site has access to "Market Place where you can buy Windows XP at competitive prices, but read the sellers details carefully, as some of them are selling "genuine XP" licensed to other companies ie Delletc; , remembering that MS state " licences are not transferable" . Once a licence is issued to a company or an individual IT CANNOT be transferred to anyone else.
Yuk November 11, 2005 23 out of 39 found this review helpful
MS does it again. Constant reboot after reboot and memory for so many reasons. Well known memory corruption still there from back in even win98 days. Very frustrating operating system to deal with. Im not sure how it ever got popular. Still think Win2000 is the best out of MS and if they dont get there issues straight then someone else is bound to eat up lots of market base. Probably Linux or MacOS.
|
|
| Thank you for shopping ExcelBookstore.co.uk! | |