Adios, Microsoft Vista!
How I Failed Twice in Trying to Scale Mt. Vista
SCOTTSDALE, July 4 - Everywhere you look at PCs these days you see Vista. “As of last week, we've had nearly 40 million copies sold, and so that's twice as fast as the adoption of Windows XP, the last major release that we've had,” Bill Gates told a Windows Hardware Engineering Conference on May 15. So I figure conservatively that Microsoft may have sold another 10 million Vista licenses since then. That would make it about 50 million by the end of June. More>>>
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Windows 7 compatibility test now available
I recommended that not too upgrade from XP to Windows 7 - especially if that PC is your main computer.
It will work? yes if you have the minimum hardare requirements. If your computer doesn’t have the minimum specs, don’t even try to install it to your computer.
Here are the minimum hardware requirements of Windows 7.
• 1 GHz processor (32- or 64-bit)
• 1 GB of RAM (32-bit); 2 GB of RAM (64-bit)
• 16 GB of available disk space (32-bit); 20 GB of available disk space (64-bit)
• DirectX 9 graphics device with WDDM 1.0 or higher driver. For XP lovers, it’s true; Windows 7’s secret new feature is XP Mode. It’s a virtual Windows XP machine—complete with a fully licensed copy of Windows XP SP3 installed on the virtual machine—that you can download which runs seamlessly in Windows 7, so you can do crazy things like run IE6 side-by-side with IE8. It’s meant for businesses that need compatibility for mission critical XP-only apps. Continue reading »
On the other hand; If you have a good healthy Windows XP don't rush because is ok it works very well and do the job as good as it gets, Windows XP will be around for a few more years. I made the transition from XP to 7 without having the pain of Vista. If you have a good OS Windows XP, Stick With It, if you have a Vista get red of it!
So Windows 7 - I recommended it's very good

The first known publication of the term "mouse" as a pointing device is in Bill English's 1965 publication "Computer-Aided Display Control". The Compact Oxford English
Dictionary (third edition) and the fourth edition of The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language endorse both computer mice and computer mouses as correct plural forms for computer mouse. Some authors of technical documents may prefer either mouse devices or the more generic pointing devices. The plural mouses treats mouse as a "headless noun." Two manuals of style in the computer industry – Sun Technical Publication's Read Me First: A Style Guide for the Computer Industry and Microsoft Manual of Style for Technical Publications from Microsoft Press – recommend that technical writers use the term mouse devices instead of the alternatives. The middle mouse button /
Mouse wheels have been commonly available since 1996. In all those years, all those millions of mice shipped, no standard convention has emerged for what it means to press the middle mouse button.
With the middle mouse button you can open all links on any browser on another tab without leaving the main page. Very soon this computer part will be obsolete