Planet Descent

Community => Mess Hall => Topic started by: -<WillyP>- on November 30, 2012, 05:38:39 AM

Title: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on November 30, 2012, 05:38:39 AM
Two new machines here, was thinking of getting Windows 8 but I have seen a lot of complaints about the UI being difficult, not intuitive.

I'm currently using XP, would like to move to a 64 bit OS to get more memory.

Both machines have AMD 6300 processors, and 16 gb of memory. Video cards are GTX 550 Ti.

What do you think?
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: CrazyEnzo03 on November 30, 2012, 07:42:37 AM
For almost everything, Windows 8 performs so close to the same as Windows 7 that the only thing you really need to decide is if you would rather deal with the features of Windows 8 or the features of Windows 7.

You might get  0.01% increase in performance with Windows 8 over Windows 7 for most things while every now and then you might run into something that simply cannot run well on Windows 8 because of compatibility issues I guess.

I would rather get Windows 7 simply because the UI is tried and true.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on November 30, 2012, 07:44:24 AM
I upgraded one of my machines from 7 to 8; it's a big UI change (mostly, people don't like the touch-oriented Start screen instead of the Start Menu).  Other than that, they're very similar "underneath the hood" (e.g. out on the desktop, in apps).

Coming from XP, though, I'd suggest going to 7.  It's just more mature and familiar.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Scyphi on November 30, 2012, 07:47:25 AM
Yeah, if you're hesitant about Windows 8, go for 7. I've used 7 for long enough now to know that I have pretty much no complaints about it. It's a good, stable, OS.  8)

I can't vouch for Windows 8 as I haven't used it yet, but I too have heard similar comments about it, so I am seeing something of a trend here.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on November 30, 2012, 03:58:14 PM
Not so much 'hesitant' about 8, it's just I don't have any experience with either.

My son has just pointed out that Shores of Hazeron lists a download for 7, not 8. Advantage of 8, it's cheaper than 7.  At least for now. For two of 7 it'll cost me an extra 60 bucks. And it's newer, but as someone pointed out, 7 is more mature. I've read somewhere that there is a mod for 8 that returns the start menus to more like 7.\

Edit: same price now.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Matthew on November 30, 2012, 10:35:42 PM
There should be an upgrade from XP to 7 still.

WillyP you play SoH? Go figure. Anything that has a download for windows 7 will work on windows 8. If it runs on windows, it runs on windows, period. Bar some bizarre compatibility/driver issues.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 01, 2012, 05:00:27 PM
It didn't work on XP. I played it when it was first released, but haven't played it since. My son wants to play it.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: VANGUARD on December 01, 2012, 06:31:34 PM
From what I heard, if you don't have a touch screen, get 7. If you do, be prepared to use 8 like a tablet.

Checking out amazon reviews, or other places can help out as well.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 02, 2012, 08:43:55 AM
You are right Van, and that was my main concern about 8, that I had read that a lot of people found the UI inconvenient without a touchscreen.

Anyway, I decided on 7, for that, but largely because my son wants to play SoH, and also my other son has a laptop with 7, and getting familiar with 7 will help me be able to answer his questions.

I have also learned that 7 home can only address memory up 16gb... I have 16gb plus video, which is 1gb in one machine and 2gb in the other. For that reason I chose the Pro version.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: VANGUARD on December 02, 2012, 01:16:33 PM
going back a ways, but speaking from a non windows person, I was quite impressed with Windows XP 64bit Pro.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Alieo on December 03, 2012, 12:50:47 AM
All I have to say is, if we've ever learned anything from the release of Vista, it's that we should wait to see how stable it is based on public opinion. I've ranted about how much I hate Windows in the past ever since my XP got killed by a virus in April of 2011, but I've been using a Windows 7 64-bit laptop, and the thing is just fine. I've even had a couple of virus issues that I was able to eradicate pretty simply. I'll say it... I like Windows 7...  :-X
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: VANGUARD on December 03, 2012, 04:07:53 AM
I used Windows 7 at work. Can't say much because what I did on that was not enough to say if it's good or bad. It literally was like one thing I did, sort of like using the calc. or just the camera. yeah, one thing only. It seemed to work fine.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Scyphi on December 03, 2012, 07:18:03 AM
As I said before, I've been using Windows 7 long enough to know that it is remarkably stable and works smoothly. Any and all problems I've had while using 7 usually concerns more the computer itself or the individual programs I'm attempting to run within 7 than the OS itself. I don't recall having ever used any other Windows OSs that gave me such little grief.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Pumo on December 03, 2012, 10:15:14 AM
IMHO, Windows 7 is the best OS released by Microsoft. Period.

It's pretty stable, easy to use, has great performance and reliability in general, and along with an anti-virus and firewall, is pretty safe. :)

I would highly recommend it.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 03, 2012, 10:27:29 AM
I have also learned that 7 home can only address memory up 16gb... I have 16gb plus video, which is 1gb in one machine and 2gb in the other. For that reason I chose the Pro version.

FYI, the video memory is addressed separately from the main RAM, so it wouldn't have been a problem to go with the Home version.  With that said, the Pro version does come with some nice extra features, and you'll be fine if you upgrade memory again in the future.  :)

Hope it's working well for you!
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 07, 2012, 04:12:30 AM
Hmmm. I had done some research on editing XP to unlock more than 4gb, and from what I read I concluded that video ram shares addresses with main ram. This was given as the reason why, if you have 4gb of ram, windows will report less than 4gb, because it does not report video ram.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 07, 2012, 08:08:17 AM
In systems with integrated GPUs (e.g. on-the-motherboard), yes, the GPU shares the main ram.  But from your description of the machines, my understanding was that you had a separate graphics card in each, and those have their own non-shared memory.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 07, 2012, 10:51:12 AM
I see, that makes sense. Yes the cards are separate. I'll have to find what I read and re-read it.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Matthew on December 09, 2012, 12:50:09 PM
I though Video memory (even on discrete cards) still shared the same addressing limits as the main system RAM? At least that's what I was told when I was still using 32-bit Vista.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 10, 2012, 10:40:27 AM
Yes, the addressing limits are the same (e.g. a 32-bit address space = 4Gb minus overhead), but I believe they're still separate.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 10, 2012, 03:04:52 PM
Ok i have done some further research and have a better understanding of How It Works.

While video memory is kept separate* from main ram, it still needs to be addressed, and there are only enough addresses in a 32 bit OS for 4gb. Windows allocates those addresses first to the video ram, then to main ram. So, my 16gb main ram plus 2gb video system with a 32 bit os, is running as 2gb main and 2gb video. Windows 7 home 64bit has an arbitrary limit of address space for 16gb, so it would be like having 14gb main ram and 2gb video. Pro raises this cap, allowing 192gb addressing, still a bit shy of the theoretical limit of 16exobytes for a 64 bit machine... But then there are physical limits also, but I think 16gb plus the 2gb video will suffice for a long time to come.

*separate in this case means data intended for main ram cannot be stored in video ram, and vice-verse.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 10, 2012, 04:07:36 PM
Windows allocates those addresses first to the video ram, then to main ram.

Really?  I didn't think that was the case.  I thought they were kept in separate address spaces (i.e. a 32-bit OS could theoretically have a 4Gb ram space and a 4Gb vid-ram space, each minus overhead of course).

Now I'm really curious; would you mind pointing me to that info?
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Matthew on December 10, 2012, 07:07:07 PM
Windows does NOT count video RAM against the main system RAM total, as it's only an arbitrary licensing limit and not a limit of the technology.  Only in 32-bit windows will you run into that issue (Unless you've managed to construct the world's first system to have multi exabytes of memory, and hacked windows to remove licensing restrictions.)
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: TechPro on December 12, 2012, 05:45:09 AM
It is my understanding that the only time video RAM is counted against (or "in" if you will) is on hardware that uses shared RAM which is a technique used by some manufacturers to artificially increase video RAM without increasing hardware costs, typically only done with 'integrated' video.  Actually a pretty common practice among low cost or 'budget' systems.  I have a couple systems that do that. Typically the amount of video RAM is small enough to be not too significant against the total ram left over for the OS.

Systems where the video card has it's own physical RAM (and that RAM is on the video card) do NOT do that. 

Either way, ANY 32bit OS really can only address and use about 3gb of RAM (I forget the precise number) but can show 4gb exists ... But does not actually use all of it without some memory tweaks. ... The 32bit OS is incapable of mathematically computing that high in order to use it. Thus 4gb and higher is only actually usable by 64bit OS systems.

I too would be interested in seeing the info WillyP got ahold of.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 12, 2012, 06:18:09 AM
Windows does NOT count video RAM against the main system RAM total, as it's only an arbitrary licensing limit and not a limit of the technology.  Only in 32-bit windows will you run into that issue (Unless you've managed to construct the world's first system to have multi exabytes of memory, and hacked windows to remove licensing restrictions.)


We are talking about the limit in 32 bit OS, specifically XP. Or originally I guess we were talking about 7, in this context Home (32bit) vs Pro (64bit) Sorry, I didn't make that clear in my earlier post. There are 32bit OS's that address more than 4gb, even some Windows products, mostly intended for servers. I believe Linux generally has no arbitrary software cap, though that may vary with flavor.

As far as a source, I Googled and got a lot of hits. A lot of argument was made for both views, but the most credible information, in my opinion, was that there are 'x' number of addresses (4gb, minus overhead) in a 32 bit system running XP, and they are allocated, by the OS, to video first, main ram second. Pointer to the ram on a video card are installed in the main ram, thus a portion of main ram is not usable.

And yes, of course it is a license limitation, if you do the math IIRC 32bit = 128gb. There are hacks I have read about that allow XP to address greater than 4gb, but that was way over my head.


I just Googled these up:
[Solved] Memory in Windows 7 - Graphics-Cards - Graphic-Displays (http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/279895-33-memory-windows#t2066921)
TechNet Blogs (http://blogs.technet.com/b/markrussinovich/archive/2008/07/21/3092070.aspx)
64 bit - Why does installing NVidia 9600GT graphics card, take 1GB of RAM away from Windows? - Super User (http://superuser.com/questions/122891/why-does-installing-nvidia-9600gt-graphics-card-take-1gb-of-ram-away-from-windo)

The bottom line is, every device needs a unique address. That applies to memory, whether it happens to be on the motherboard or on a video card.


Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 12, 2012, 08:47:53 AM
...if you do the math IIRC 32bit = 128gb.


No.  "32-bit" = 2^32 unique values = 4,294,967,296 = 4Gb.  That's all a 32-bit space can address.

[Edit: Ah, I see where the 128Gb comes from, in that TechNet link.  That's actually a virtual address spacing system that certain versions of Win Server 2003 32-bit uses.  It essentially uses the first 980Mb of the system ram to create a "map" into a larger-than-32-bit address space.]

There are hacks I have read about that allow XP to address greater than 4gb, but that was way over my head.


Maybe there are hacks for certain apps, but XP 32-bit simply cannot address a space more than 32 bits, or 4Gb.

----------

Okay, so I took a look, and found a very good WDDM doc for Vista/7/8: http://download.microsoft.com/download/9/c/5/9c5b2167-8017-4bae-9fde-d599bac8184a/graphicsmemory.doc (http://download.microsoft.com/download/9/c/5/9c5b2167-8017-4bae-9fde-d599bac8184a/graphicsmemory.doc)

Basically, there are two scenarios:

1. Discrete graphics adapter (e.g. PCIe) ram, separate from system ram.  These are two separate memory spaces, and the OS will map some portion of system ram to gpu ram (how much seems to depend on the os and graphics drivers, but it does not have to be the entire size of the gpu ram) for transferring data.

So, for example, if you have a machine with 2Gb system ram, and a discrete gpu with 1Gb ram, the system can use 2Gb minus whatever it allocates for the transfer-mapping (could be the full 1Gb, but it's often more like a couple hundred meg for transferring textures, etc.).


2. Built-in graphics adapter (e.g. on-board), where the system and gpu both share the same memory space.

So, for example, if you have a machine with 2Gb system ram, and the gpu takes 1Gb, then the system can only use the remaining 1Gb.


...Does that make more sense?
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 12, 2012, 05:54:29 PM
Close enough for me!  ;) I am pretty sure I am wrong about whatever I said.

Anyway, I'll be picking up a check tomorrow, as soon as it clears I am going to order, I have decided on W7 Pro.

And a new chair too. This one sucks. And I think I'm going to get one of these: Unicomp, Inc. Ultra Classic Black Buckling Spring USB (http://pckeyboard.com/page/UKBD/UB40P4A)
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 13, 2012, 09:49:15 AM
Nice!  :)
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 14, 2012, 05:25:34 PM
Strangely enough, my son got a new laptop yesterday with Windows 8. He hates it, but hasn't really tried to figure it out. But you know, shouldn't have to. I kinda like the tiles having active content in them, but then you have to scroll sideways to see them all. Not good! So trying to figure out how to do this or that and it seems like the whole theme is a thick layer of sugar coated prettiness designed purely to keep you from changing the setup it came with. But I haven't screwed with it much, my wife is trying to figure it out. So I don't know whether it really is as unclear and unintuitive as it at first seems, or if it's just a case of learning how to use it.

She just figured out how to get Norton to run a scan, so there is hope.  ;D Of course, it would have been nice had she figured out, or been told by Norton, to update virus definitions first.

He had gotten a laptop with 7, but the video wouldn't run Minecraft at all. So my wife got him a new one, and the Geek Squad said this one would run Minecraft, so it must be true...  ::)

Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 17, 2012, 07:59:38 AM
One my one Win8 box, it took a little while to get used to the tiles.  Once I did, though, I found that I enjoyed it a bit.  Most of the time, I'd just hit the "Desktop" tile to get to the Win7-style area, but otherwise it was nice to arrange (and color) my tiles the way I wanted them.  I got tired of the side-scrolling, so I cut it down to just the tiles I *really* wanted, which fit on one page.

You're right, it's definitely a layer of saccharine prettiness, but it's not too bad.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 18, 2012, 05:22:07 AM
Ok then. My wifey has the Win8 laptop figured out so it can't be too bad. Win7 Pro was shipped yesterday and my butt is on a brand new chair from staples so life is good!
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: DarkWing on December 18, 2012, 05:46:11 AM
Oy.  I just had this mental picture of you leaving your butt on the chair while you left to run some errands...  :o
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Scyphi on December 18, 2012, 08:10:04 AM
Minds can think of the darnedest things if you don't supervise them. :P
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 18, 2012, 03:29:28 PM
I think I'm going to take the upholstery off the seat and add some more pad.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Foil on December 18, 2012, 03:35:56 PM
I just have to figure out a way to keep my cat from clawing the seat I have.  She's put scratches all over it.  :/
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 18, 2012, 03:42:17 PM
We had that problem to with the killer kitten. These are leather. So far, no sign of clawing these. If you want to stick with fabric, some fabrics are better than others. We had two old chairs and the back of one was thoroughly shredded, the other showed little evidence of damage. I can't say for certain whether it was a preference on the part of the cat, or durability of the fabric.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: Matthew on December 18, 2012, 05:55:38 PM
We had that problem to with the killer kitten. These are leather. So far, no sign of clawing these. If you want to stick with fabric, some fabrics are better than others. We had two old chairs and the back of one was thoroughly shredded, the other showed little evidence of damage. I can't say for certain whether it was a preference on the part of the cat, or durability of the fabric.
Probably preference on the part of the cat. Cats can shred anything they want to, much like a dog will destroy any toy you give it.
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 23, 2012, 02:35:03 PM
Ah! two new chairs acquired, and W7 installed on two machines. A third chair on it's way, along with a new keyboard, slated to arrive Monday.

Now, I have just noticed that neither Firefox now IE will play the mp3's in the gallery. I had this problem before but I don't recall what I did to fix it. I installed Foobar2000 and VLC Media Player, and both work fine, but it won't play in the browser.

edit:
Firefox blocked Java because it was out of date, d/l'ing update now.
edit2:
Flash! I didn't have Flash plugin installed!
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: TechPro on December 24, 2012, 05:37:55 AM

edit2:
Flash! I didn't have Flash plugin installed!
Curses!
Title: Re: Windows 7 or 8?
Post by: -<WillyP>- on December 24, 2012, 02:27:44 PM
The third chair and the keyboard arrived and I love the clicky keyboard. No software, no glossy advertising in the box, just an old-school keyboard in a plain, brown cardboard box. Very similar to the Packard Bell keyboard on the kids machine, that I've had since a Pentium 200 with MMX was state of the art. It's older than the kids are!

The first two chairs, I felt like I was sitting on plywood after a while, so I took the upholstery off the seat of the third and added two layers of re-bond carpet padding under the foam.