Head to Head: Windows 7 vs Windows Vista

By Benny Har-Even,
Rating:
Security
When it comes to security, Microsoft has a rather ‘patchy’ reputation, if you’ll excuse the pun. The improved UAC slider control in Windows 7 means that users will be less likely to feel like they have to turn it off, which should, in theory anyway, add a layer protection that might otherwise not have been there.
Windows Vista got brownie points for introducing BitLocker – which added file level encryption to the operating system itself, which was a good move. Windows 7 took it a step further with BitLocker to Go – bringing it to portable devices such as USB flash drives.
The Firewall in Windows 7 is also more flexible. You can use network profiles to offer different levels of blocking for incoming connections depending on whether you’re at home, at work, or in public.
Most of the major work under the hood in terms of security was done in Windows Vista so it deserves recognition for that. It’s just the over the hood visual stuff that made it all easier to use in Windows 7.
Neither has any built in anti-virus but after you install Window 7, it makes it easy to find a compatible free suite from a variety of vendors, while Microsoft itself has done a better job with its Security Essentials than it did with its Vista era OneCare suite.
Winner: Windows 7
Performance
Windows Vista’s performance troubles have been well documented. The operating system required much more hardware than XP did and if you performed a straight upgrade without new hardware you were asking for trouble. 1GB of RAM became the new realistic minimum, but really you needed 2GB of RAM to stop Vista from being a pain in the proverbial.
Once the system was clogged start up and shut down times dropped behind that of XP and moving around Vista compared to XP always felt sluggish. The worst aspect though was file copying on Vista. On its initial release, many users complained of very poor performance when copying files from one location to another. For a basic function of the operating system this was a serious issue. It was particularly bad over networks which, as home and office networks developed, was far from ideal. Many downgraded or shunned Vista for this very reason.
Microsoft eventually addressed the file copying issue in Service Pack one, but for many the damage had already been done.
Windows 7 fortunately does not suffer from any bizarre basic quirks such as this and also benefits from the fact that hardware has become more powerful and more affordable since Vista was released. What Microsoft has to take credit for is making Windows 7 even lighter on its feet that Windows Vista, which is the first time Microsoft has ever managed to achieve this with a new operating system.
Upgrading from Vista to Windows 7 with no hardware changes will provide the same or possibly better experience, particularly if you perform a clean install. It’s even comfortable on low-power netbooks.
Windows 7 also enjoys better startup and shutdown times thanks to minor low-level tweaking, and though it’s only a minor improvement this sort of enhanced responsiveness is always welcome.
More intelligent power management also means you can eke out more battery life from your laptop or netbook - another great productivity boon.
Winner: Windows 7
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I am running Vista Ultimate and feel...
ripped off by Microsoft because ... [we] never received the extras we paid good money to get," said "Hellfire" in a long comment. "The very least that they should do is offer a heavily-discounted upgrade to Windows 7 Ultimate to those that have lost money by purchasing Vista Ultimate.... (quote itworld)
By JaKowal on Wednesday Nov 4
Lack of drivers & problems with older applications
I bought a new machine and dual booted with XP and Vista 64. XP wouldn't install on SATA only system and had to slipstream (combine drivers and services packs onto a DVD). Vista 64 wouldn't work with some of my perpherials like a serial A4 graphics tablet and there where no update drivers for scanner and film scanner and no support for video and TV hardware. The support came for some things 18 months after launch, but was lacking for others. In upgrading to Windows 7 (leaving XP alone) it hung for 4 hours with no indication of what it was doing. All the software had to be installed again, even though this was W7 64 Ultimate over Vista 64 Ultimate. Most of the software to be installed would not run. There are no SCSI drivers, even for current Adaptec cards, no drivers for a current HP printer and it is hard to find a method to enable installation as Vista 64. Having installed and fixed compatibility to XP SP2 the application prompts for permission everytime it is run. Never did that in Vista. The background for Vista was okay, neat. The W7 is terrible. I have switched it to plain, making it more like my XP screen. Over all this was the hardest upgrade to install since Windows 3 days before drivers where on the internet. It would seem the age old advise for products from M$ remains true - don't get any until at least the first service pack.
By Ip_gfge5146c4406 on Friday Nov 6
No version of Windows can be purchased
@Benny Har-Even: "with its relative affordability, free alternatives have lost some of their lustre..." Let's get this straight once and for all, one can only buy a *licence* to run a copy of a Windows OS, one can never *own* a copy. In contrast to this abomination, a user always *owns* their copy of the "free alternatives" to which you refer.
By 6tricky9 on Friday Nov 6
No drivers?
For those having trouble locating Windows 7 drivers for SCSI cards and the like, it can be worth taking a look at the Windows Server driver offerings, as they often work. I've now got Windows 7 running on a Dell PowerEdge 2600 server, the fiddly bit being the driver for the onboard PERC4/DI RAID controller. If I recall correctly the Server 2003 driver worked a treat. Older HP printers have a generic driver, but for some unfathomable reason Microsoft then decide, if you have two such printers (e.g. a Color LaserJet 4500 and a LaserJet 5000), to hide one behind the other, making switching between printers a pain.
By MartinP on Tuesday Feb 22