WHY YOU SHOULD STILL BE WAITING FOR WINDOWS 7
Microsoft's latest operating system made its debut this past week
and so far, it looks to be the company's best OS yet. By the time
you read this column, you've either 1, already bought and installed
it, 2, you bought it and it's still sitting there in the box or on
the download CD or 3, you don't have it yet. This column is for
those of you that fall into the latter two.
"Early adopters" are those of us who have to be the first kids on
the block with the newest toys. I'm guilty of being an early
adopter. Oh sure I could say that my job as a cutting-edge reviewer
of computer products compels me to be one but the simple fact is
that I love having the newest plaything whether I truly need it or
not. I'm lucky that it just happens to be part of my job. But being
one also comes with two prices. The first literally is the price.
You're probably going to pay close to the manufacturer's suggested
retail price since discounts and other buying incentives typically
don't emerge until the new gleam has worn off a bit. But the other
price you might be paying can be much more devastating than the loss
of a few extra purchasing dollars.
When a new computer products is released, especially one as complex
as an operating system, it's going to have bugs that need fixing. It
is the nature of software to always have problems and the only thing
that will eventually address and fix many of them is time. Software
developers like Microsoft and Apple strive to make their final
operating system releases as solid and as reliable as humanly
possible and therein lies the rub. We're all human and it is our
nature to be imperfect. Computer scientists will tell you that
technically there is no such thing as a perfect computer program.
But if we waited for perfection, nothing would ever get released. So
they do their best and release a golden master knowing full well
that there will be numerous updates and patches throughout the
lifespan of that operating system.
All the companies that make software and hardware for that OS try to
make sure their products are fully compatible. But unforeseen
conflicts can arise between theirs and other manufacturer's
products. There are just too many combinations to consider. Add into
the mix that all hardware vendors may not have fully compatible
drivers and other support software ready in time for the OS release
date. So where does that leave you when it comes to making that
important new OS installation decision?
The answer is to let things mellow for a while. Don't be the first
to rush out and install something brand new, especially something as
complex as a new OS. As the first few weeks pass by, you're going to
hear about the conflicts, the horror stories about lost data and
more importantly, how it occurred. That's the legacy of early
adopters. Their disasters carve out a safer path for the rest of us.
They will be the ones for example, that alert you to a specific
video card's driver that doesn't work correctly with the new OS, or
that your printer won't collate your documents properly and that the
printer manufacturer is working a fix for that problem.
So how long should you wait? With something as major as a new OS,
I'd say give it at least a month. After all, there's nothing so new
in Windows 7 that you just can't live without for a few short weeks.
However if you must be a number 1, be sure you make a full backup of
your computer's hard drive or at the very least make a backup of all
your data. So if the upgrade goes bad, like it did with my son in
college who didn't ask his dad for advice about whether he should
wait or purchase the upgrade on the day Windows 7 came out, you'll
be able to go back and recover. I guess the apple never falls far
from the tree.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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