![]() Look, I’m a Windows user and when I look at these new Vista screenshots, I’m just hoping that they have an option to turn the Win32 classic theme back on. While Xgl and XEGL (or whatever the Redhat version’s called) are great and will make way for more functionality in free desktop systems as well as providing smoother, snappier free desktop systems, many people will not switch over because their windows programs will not run on Linux/*BSD/whatever else. This part is in the comments on MiniMsft as well. Like, they automated a lot of testing, really creeping the responsible testing department/division. I would say that Windows Vista has many cool aspects that will make a great sale, but they haven’t been paying attention to some of the infraestructure. The best way to describe Windows Vista, if they don’t work really hard on it, is that Windows Vista does indeed seem like a fork of the Windows 2000, XP and 2003 base, because otherwise they shouldn’t be having half of the issues that they are having. There is this one also in the case of the help: ![]() Some of this stuff is in the comments on MiniMsft. I’m not sure, but I interpreted some data correctly, it seems that only 40% of some compability tests are going ok for Windows Vista, and they probably need that number closer to 100%. I gave him a fair quote that required pre-payment (fix or no fix) which was declined.Because they are having problems with app compatibility and they have changed the old help system of applications to a new one. Unfortunately, his installation efforts resulted in a general hardware failure, and he then asked me put everything back to rights. Some years later he bought another computer with a DVD drive with view to copying commercial DVDs, and when that didn’t work, tried to fit another DVD that came with “copying” software. Sadly, the alternative computer had a faulty HDD (Fujitsu), and all the data was only recovered by using an expensive recovery service. After I quoted on a system, he chose another supplier because of a slight price advantage. That poor guy had a very fraught history with computers. The misunderstanding was from a good while ago, and the user had assumed that all DVDs could be copied, just like any other medium. I assume that Windows DVD Maker – like the long-discontinued Mac program iDVD – was for authoring home movie discs, not for making copies of commercial DVDs. One guy assumed that there was a hardware problem, and trashed the computer as he attempted to fit a different DVD drive that would do what was required. ![]() I remember selling computers with CD/DVD drives, and the new owners were disappointed that they weren’t able to make pirate copies of commercial DVD movies. "DVD Maker", or any other DVD authoring program, was never needed to read/write regular files from/to optical discs. This was a DVD authoring program used to create the DVD-Video file structure, which is the same as used in commercial DVD movie discs. I'm not sure why you're now bringing up the long-discontinued "Windows DVD Maker". In Microsoft Store, search for an app with the features you're looking for" ![]() Select the Start menu and then choose Microsoft Store. To create DVD-Video or Blu-ray discs compatible with home-theater components, try using an app. " Windows DVD Maker isn't supported on Windows 10. ![]()
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