With Microsoft's Windows Vista finally released to manufacturers and
on the verge of making its way to retail, we can at last get down to
the business of examining precisely how well the new OS performs. In
our first tests, we discovered that while Vista's hardware requirements
may be steep, it should run just fine--even with the Aero bells and
whistles active--on machines that meet Microsoft's Premium Ready
specifications (1GB of RAM, and a DirectX 9-capable graphics board with
at least 128MB of dedicated memory).
We installed the RTM (release to manufacturing) Vista Ultimate code on desktop and notebook systems of varying specs and ages, and then we ran a series of benchmarks to answer several key questions about Vista's impact on performance. Our main findings:
Our conclusions here aren't the last word on Vista performance, however: When we conducted our tests in November, graphics companies were still fine-tuning their drivers (for example, we decided to drop our Doom 3 gaming tests because ATI's drivers didn't yet support that game's OpenGL graphics API). |
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With Microsoft's Windows Vista finally released to manufacturers and
on the verge of making its way to retail, we can at last get down to
the business of examining precisely how well the new OS performs. In
our first tests, we discovered that while Vista's hardware requirements
may be steep, it should run just fine--even with the Aero bells and
whistles active--on machines that meet Microsoft's Premium Ready
specifications (1GB of RAM, and a DirectX 9-capable graphics board with
at least 128MB of dedicated memory).



