Geeze dhlucke, you really have one hell of a chip on your shoulder. Perhaps you should learn to not generalize so much. The word 'all' encompasses everyone you know...
You guys are all fanboys. I'm really interested to see how this thing does. It would be nice if Apple was competative again.
<i>All?</i> Uh huh. That's why I've been saying things like "<i>However with the G5 this will do a LOT to put Macs back on line with PCs.</i>", because I'm a fanboy.
Come on everyone, raise your hand if you were using AOL back in 1995. Yeah, that's what I thought: All of you.
Again, <i>all</i> of us? Besides the fact that anyone under eight years old can't even fit into 'all' without having done some time travel, there is also the fact that in 1995 <i>I</i> wasn't even on the internet. For the first half of the year I was still using local BBSs, most of which were run by friends. For the second half of the year I was in the military and never even saw another modem again until the summer of '96 when I bought my Pentium 133 box.
I have never seen a single person on Earth who could go a year or more on Win98 without crashing. I don't even think Crashman would claim that.
I've had my Celeron 500 box running Win98SE for almost two years straight now without so much as a crash, BSOD, or shutdown problem. It has good drivers. (Despite being mostly comprised of crap hardware.) It has a more than adequate power supply. It has great cooling for it's heat output. (Even if I did have to drill holes in the case and cut away a little plastic for the front intake fan because the case was crap and had no place for a front fan.) It has been one of the most stable PCs that I've ever owned.
And before that my Pentium 133 box was incredibly stable for years and years too. Except for when playing Earthsiege (which had a bug in it that would occasionally reboot a PC no matter what OS it ran under) it never had any BSODs or crashes when it ran DOS6 or Win95b. The only problems that I ever had with it was it stopping in the middle of a shutdown, which didn't really matter since it was before shutting down turned the PC off on it's own, so I always had to manually power it down anyway. It's a shame that the hardware finally deteriorated into multiple components breaking down and it becoming a waste of money to keep running.
But basically nine out of ten of the problems that I've ever helped people with regarding 'Windows' instability is actually either bad drivers, an insufficient or flaky power supply, insufficient cooling, or dust buildup. And none of those have anything to do with M$'s OS. They're hardware and firmware problems. Windows itself has been a pretty stable product.
Don't put words in my mouth.
Why not? You put words into our mouths. Turnabout is fair play.
"<i>Yeah, if you treat them like equals, it'll only encourage them to think they <b>ARE</b> your equals.</i>" - Thief from <A HREF="http://www.nuklearpower.com/daily.php?date=030603" target="_new">8-Bit Theater</A>