It's bad enough that some upgrades from Windows XP to Windows 7 can take almost a full day. What's worse is how Microsoft tries to fudge the problem, claiming that only "super-users" will face this new education in the virtue of patience.
A "super-user," in their definition, has 650 GB of data and 40 applications. Now, take a look at your system and ask yourself, Are you a super-user? If you like music, you probably have 60-80 GB of music already stored on your hard drive. Install Microsoft Office 2007? You've probably consumed another 60 GB minimum of Microsoft's own applications. Take many pictures? If so, you're eating up a lot of additional hard disk space every month.
In other words, it's easy for the average consumer to approach 650 GB rather quickly. Computer games are notorious space hogs: World of Warcraft, for example, requires several gigs of space, just by itself.
And 40 applications? If you add up productivity tools, browsers, photo editors, the printer applications that companies like HP want you to install when you buy their equipment, video editors, desktop security applications, archiving tools, and other utilities, you're going to approach the super-user threshold for installed applications, too.
In the drive to get Windows 7 out, and restore its reputation in the process, Microsoft may not have prioritized installation and upgrade. Unfortunately, as user experience pros will tell you, those two processes define the first experience users have with a new operating system.
Last week, in the podcast, I gave a favorable review to Luke Hohmann's book, Beyond Software Architecture, since it explained why considerations like installation and upgrade are not simply the unfortunate necessity you fit into the end of the development cycle. I wonder if Luke might add the Windows 7 upgrade to a revised edition of the book.
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Posted by: data recovery services | 09/15/2012 at 12:24 PM