Pentium 4 and AMD Athlon XP support for instance. Windows 98 is slower on
these systems because it does not support the advanced instructions these
CPU's can process.
Umm. If you say about SSE or 3D now that I must disappoint you. Neither
98/me/xp/2000 uses them. There are too many old computers (celerons, pIIs,
old athlons) that don't have those features and system must support them.
And there is no point in creating four optimisations (for standard IA32, for
SSE, For SSE2 and 3dnow!) when one of those (ia32) fits all.
Windows 98 also does not support some of the newer chipsets, which could
also give a slight performance decrease beacuse it loads default drivers
when installing Windows 98. If your not a techie, you will probably never
realize this, and go with it.... Windows 98 works just fine, just not with
the best performance.
And XP will not support new chipsets in somewhere around 1 year from now.
What is the point in buying new OS (200$) each two years? Especially when I
need only hardware support (drivers are for free btw). There are millions of
computers with 98 installed - chipset manufacturers cannot present any major
compatibility issues for such a large group of potential customers. You will
get 98 drivers for GeFerce 10 Pro Turbo Diesel Ultra Extra OverDriven Raw
Power as soon as Nvidia Releses it.
Further, Windows 98 does not support ATA100 by default. Many modern
mainboards just tell Windows 98 it is an ATA33 or ATA66 controller, which
will work, but you are not getting the best harddisk performance.
And XP will not support ata133 or serial ata or whatever standard will
emerge in two years from now. Get some drivers. Also whe you will much more
performance boost by pugging cd-rom/cd-rw/dvd-rom on the second channel and
system hdd on primary. Also difference between ata66 and ata100 is barely
noticable (unless you transfer 100 gigs of files every day - but then get
SCSI - much faster) on today's drives (and in two years - when this will
matter - there will be Windows New Generation with even more hardware
support).
All of these issues can be resolved by downloading and installing the
proper
drivers, but again.... you need to be somewhat of a techie to even realize
that newer drivers could help improve your OS. AFAIK there are no drivers
for the Pentium 4 and Athlon XP processors which means Windows 98 will
just
see it as a really fast PIII.
Ill better spend $200 on new os - cause I'm an idiot and cannot download
drivers (and also cpu type is not important, up to date directX will detect
what is needed (SSE, 3Dnow or whatever) and even 1400 penthlon III XP is
darn fast for MS WORD since "bad" detection does not cut down performance).
The most important thing is probably stability though. XP is based on the
NT
kernel. Yes it has lost DOS, but you get a really stable OS in return. XP
really closes in on the stability of Linux, and I must give Microsoft
credit
for their achievements.... since Windows 2000 the world of stability got a
whole lot better.
DOS support was not a problem with W98. It was basing windows
("open","multiuser","multithread system") on sigle thread, closed ancient os
that should be abandoned in the eighties. Also messing with 16 and 32 bit
code on a single machine is not a very wise idea.
Also - Xp is based on Win NT, not Me that is why it is so stable - but,
there were Rock stable systems in the eighties (OS/2, UNIX with it's
multiple clones (xenix, linux), more recent - BeOS). Stability is what you
should get LOOONG time ago. A credit for M$ for finally moving their asses
to work? Not likely...
Another thing is the network support in XP. The TCP/IP stack in Windows XP
is based on the NT one, and reports everywhere clearly say that XP *does*
have a faster internet connection then Windows 98. Tests show that XP is
faster on average, using the same equipment. In the online-gaming
community
XP is very populair because of lower ping times connecting to game
servers.
True, also XP is generally faster in most benchmarks. And it runs TTD now.
But I think I will stay with WIN 98 second error, umm, edition that is
--
Adam Kad³ubek
TTD Site
http://www.ttdlx.prv.pl
GG 1511994
There is no knowledge that is not power