Here's the teaser from the San Jose Mercury News...Little things matter.
Vista, the new computer operating system from Microsoft, is a collection of little improvements that will save you a lot of time and grief in your daily computing.
Microsoft is billing Vista as making it ``easier, safer and more fun'' to use your PC. Nobody can be sure that Vista delivers on this until it's battle-tested in the real world, but early tests by millions of guinea pigs so far suggests Vista meets its goals. It's the first real makeover of Microsoft's Windows operating system for computers since Windows XP debuted in 2001.
Consumer versions of Vista debut Jan. 30: Home Basic for $199 and Home Premium for $239. Ultimate, for $399, is for power users or small businesses. I've played around with Vista on four different machines and know enough to say what I like about it.
It hasn't crashed on me. On reliability, compatibility or security, it should be better than previous versions of Windows, says Joel Durham, author of ``Windows Vista Ultimate Bible,'' (Wiley, 2007) an upcoming book on the most expensive version of Vista. We'll find out for sure once hardware and software companies finish shipping thousands of ``drivers,'' or programs that ensure Vista works with the computer's hardware. When I asked Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates how he felt about developing Windows Vista over five years, he said, ``Best $6 billion I ever spent.'' Is it worth your money? Well, lucky for Bill, it is.