• marcos@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          ME had that thing where you didn’t need to constantly fuss with autoexec.bat and config.sys to use different software. That was an insane amount of added value…

          But the rest of the system was so bad that nobody liked the tradeoff. Even today I’m in awe about how MS could make this tradeoff negative. It takes a serious amount of dedication.

          • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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            12 days ago

            I stayed with NT/2000 and my gf had ME on a junker Compaq display model her rents picked up at Circuit City maybe.

            I think I switched it back up 98SE so she could write papers without it crashing or lagging all the time. She’d play the Money Python Holy Grail game, but it always would crash at one specific point. I gotta ask her what it was and see if I can find a copy to run in a VM.

          • RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            12 days ago

            Longer ago than the others though. And there hasn’t been a single version of Windows that didn’t make me bite my desk. Windows 95 jammed itself up so often that my friends and I kept a fresh install in a separate directory to at least skip installation when setting it up from scratch.

      • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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        12 days ago

        Vista doesn’t deserve the hate it gets. There was very little difference between it and 7 which everyone loves.

        Vista was a giant upgrade from XP, it was like going from GemOS to win95

      • einlander@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        Vista was fine.ir was just sold on underpowered PCs because Microsoft let them, and it was the first windows os to actually enforce user levels.

        • marcos@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          Vista was replaced piecewise through years until most things started working. By that time, W7 was already out with all those changes packed-up from the beginning.