There are some nasty as well as nice things about Windows XP. Speed is definitely not * not * not impressive. XP may not break every hour or so like 98 did - in fact some days I was lucky if I got an hour out of 98, it couldn't take a licking and keep on ticking - but I would liken XP to a tank. It's big, it's got a big ass, and 40+ tons of metal just doesn't move very fast. I'm running XP Pro. I just installed it a couple of days ago so I'm not that familiar with it yet. I am impressed with the stability of XP, and it seems to manage memory much better. Music even sounds better. But I've already seen some specific areas where XP is as slow as a tank mired in deep mud.
One of them is in dealing with UNC, universal naming convention. That means as many of you will know that you can reference a drive as \\computer\label instead of with a drive letter. XP just flat refuses to acknowledge that a RAM disk exists when I reference it with UNC, but it has no problem with it if I reference the drive with a letter. And now it takes the Winbatch DirExist() function about 15 seconds just to determine whether 4 UNC-referenced directories exist. On a 1.2+ GHz computer that's appalling. On a LAN, it's important to be able to use UNC, and those drives should be accessible as quickly as when you use a drive letter.
Some of you were suggesting: add more RAM. I have a full GB of 133 MHz RAM in this machine, on an Asus A7V133 mainboard. It's not memory, or the board.
Another example. It took XP nearly *two hours* to create just over 300 shortcuts to folders, which are *not* UNC-referenced. (The shortcut includes the size of the directory in MB.) Win 98 did the same task in about 2 minutes. Now it takes nearly 2 hours??? 1 hour 50 minutes. The other 3 machines on my LAN are still running 98, so that *may* be a contributing factor. Still, Microsoft should have ensured compatibility.
There are obviously some very serious flaws in XP. The speed issue - which I consider to be a major problem - makes me wonder if my "upgrade" wasn't actually a downgrade.
But like a slow-moving tank, XP won't break! It'll just get stuck.
