My wife recently purchased me a new laptop with Windows Vista Home Premium and I am starting to log some hours on it. I’ve a new list of pro and cons to share with anyone who may be making an OS decision in the near future. Elementally, I would say this… For the coding, file transferring, watch-a-little-tv-or-listen-to-a-little-music-while-I-work, kind of day, I need my Linux workstation. For most anything to do with multimedia, Windows Vista (Home Premium) is king. Elementally…

- In the gray area:
Mencode will encode video anyway I want it with no complaint. The Windows Movie Maker included in Vista works like a dream, whereas in Windows XP, it was terrible.
Email in Evolution (linux) is way more comfortable for me. Windows Mail, in Vista, gave me nothing but problems. Outlook 2003 does the best job filtering spam of any client I’ve tried so far.
Networking in windows is more flexible than it has been in the past, but still not as smooth as linux.
- Truths that live on:
Linux is the best fileserver hands down.
Windows is still the buttered side of the bread as far as software developers are concerned, although performance of some existing software is somewhat spotty.
If you want to turn your home videos into DVDs, and Vista is available to you, you’d be silly not to use it.
Ubuntu Linux still seems to know my new latop better than Windows Vista on a fresh install. Almost all of the hardware works out of the gate on Ubuntu whereas not much of anything gets figured out by Vista alone.
Without adding third party software to Vista, it’s pretty painful to try and code anything.
- New revelations:
Internet Explorer 7 is a pretty damn good browser. I think they’ve taken a number of lessons from Firefox and Opera. Browsers under linux could be better.
Ubuntu Fiesty Fawn is due to be released this month.
If I gave Beryl the resources I’m giving Windows, I could make my linux desktop at least as nice.
Edit: Annoyance– I’ve just tried to fax something from Vista. It turns out Vista home premium doesn’t include fax and scanner utilities. You have to pay up for Business or Ultimate edition for those privileges. Come on Microsoft…