PPCRulez: You don't have to (nor can) install any drivers.
Oh, those are bad. Lots of the card readers we have at work don't have drivers, or even directions! Just plug it in and it works! Yeah, right. I suppose that's why 5 out of the 6 Unity Digital USB readers we sold were returned to us. I plugged mine into a Win98 box, and it kept asking for a driver.
For that kind of device, though, you'll have to clean out the device manager, and then plug it in AFTER the computer starts. Also, if you get it working, type "diskmgmt.msc" in the Start Menu/Run dialog, make sure a card is in the camera, right-click on the mass storage device, and click Change Drive Letter and Path. Without a dedicated, assigned drive letter, the device may appear and disappear for no reason. Make sure there's a card in the camera when you do this, or Disk Management will throw a tantrum (removable disks tend to do that).
fx: linux structure of files is a mess
I agree. I think it's a bit hypocritical of UN*X people to criticize Microsoft for dumping everything in the System folder. They do the same thing with the "bin" folder. Also, there's so much stuff that just goes in the "etc" folder. If you're suddenly stuck having to edit your congig files by hand (and that will happen), digging through the "etc" can be a real pain, especially from a vanilla console that doesn't use color (unless you know how to turn it on). Everything is case sensitive, too. It took me a while to figure out why "xconfigurator" didn't work, but "XConfigurator" did. God, I hate that.
I know standard I/O and pipes are useful for programming, but this is the 21st century. Why are we still bumming around with Telnet-compatible B&W shells? I miss the old text user-interfaces (TUIs) used in MS-DOS. Navigating interfaces without a mouse ROCKS.
And about the "having to reinstall the OS" problems, this has never happened to me in any OS except Windows, I usually reinstall Linux every now and then because it's grows huge with programs I'm installing and testing, but Windows has actually crashed on me once and showed a message telling me I had to reinstall windows.
Ah, the dreaded registry corruption. I've only seen that happen under Win95, though. Win2K only seems to blow up when I put on new drivers or something goes wrong with WindowsUpdate.
I haven't re-installed my A1200's HD since I ran into a filesystem mishap in 1995. ;-)
Hammer: The reason for that is simple i.e. Windows 9X's VXD drivers doesn’t work with Windows NT5.x style driver modelling.
Simple reason, but inexcusable. Just because Microsoft tidied up the driver installation GUI doesn't mean you shouldn't be able to use Win98 drivers in Win98.
One could have another cut-down installation of WinXP/Win2K to rescue the main boot drive.
What a waste of 1 gig! :-)
No one has forced you to upgrade to Win2K/XP IF Windows 98 does the work for you.
Wait, do you think I'm complaining that Win98 drivers don't work in Win2K? Of course they won't. I mean Win98 drivers won't work in Win98 because IE6 includes a new driver installation system that isn't fully compatible with older drivers (and can't be removed once installed).
I could care less since Win2K is far supirior, but my customers keep returning merchandise because it doesn't work on their computers. When I try it on a Win98 box I have lying around, I find out those products won't work on my machine, either, if I have IE6 installed. Companies shouldn't be forced to update their drivers regularly because Microsoft wants to screw around.
the_leander: I do find that a lot of the problems I've encountered is due to hardware not sticking to the standards, usb stuff especially seems to be bad for this.
I've found it's because of drivers, politics, and idiotic marketing decisions, not the hardware. USB is really good, IMO, it's the Windows USB driver model, and many manufacturers' rediculous hacks, that really suck.
ronybeck: As a result MS Word took 10-15 minutes to open a document because it kept trying to poll the printer server.
Isn't it amazing how long it takes Windows to realize that something isn't actually there? Netscape running on a Mac does the same thing. The Internet connection is down, but it will keep trying to load a webpage for 15 minutes, all the while the "Stop" button is grayed out! Doing graphic design work on the PowerMac was a horrible experience. Everything locked up the system for minutes at a time, before it realized that the device didn't exist!
No major qualms, I just like the concept behind the AmigaOS a lot more.
Most people have no major qualms with Windows, until something goes wrong. Windows is so inconsistent, that one person may have a nightmare on his hand, while other people just sit around in bewilderment, giving helpful advice, like, "I've NEVER had a problem with MY computer!"
Good for you!
I've never used Win2K really, maybe I'm missing out on something here...
A faster, lighter XP without the eye candy, no stupid product activation, and lesser game compatibility. Everything today runs fine under Win2K, so I have no reason to upgrade to XP. Also, I change my hardware a lot, so XP's anti-piracy nagging would get on my nerves.