Vista 7 Crashes on Certain Hardware, Stifles Samba Compatibility
Dr. Roy Schestowitz
2009-11-28 00:30:15 UTC
Modified: 2009-11-28 00:30:15 UTC
Summary: Vista 7 has more of the same problems as its predecessor, Windows Vista, namely issues with compatibility
THE reality behind Vista 7 continues to unfold. Some weeks ago we showed that Intel P55 chipsets are not playing nice with Vista 7, which sometimes leads to freezes [1, 2]. More Intel issues are appearing, which completely prevent upgrades:
Windows 7 upgrades fail because of Intel driver
MICROSOFT MUST BE FURIOUS after software upgrades from Vista to Windows 7 failed on some machines because they had an Intel storage driver.
[...]
When people try to upgrade they get a an error messsage: "\$windows.~bt\windows\system32\drivers\iastor.sys. Status: 0xc0000359. Windows failed to load because a critical system driver is missing or corrupt."
This time, with Windows 7, only half of Samba stops working.
It was the same with Vista (maybe worse), but Microsoft is now obliged by the EU not to mess things up.
Free Software Daily summarises this article by saying that "Bringing Windows 7 clients into your Linux network is exactly what the fine Samba server is made for. But every Windows release comes with new interop roadblocks, and Windows 7 is no exception. Charlie Schluting shows how to get past the latest ones."
Jeremy Allison's recent Samba powwow with the SFLC covers some of these issues that are associated with compatibility, as well as great revelations and insights. When Jeremy Allison spoke to FLOSS Weekly two years ago, he said that had heard Microsoft tells its programmers to “f*ck with Samba”. In the newer show from last week he sets apart programmers and managers. ⬆
"What we are trying to do is use our server control to do new protocols and lock out Sun and Oracle specifically"
--Bill Gates
Comments
Yuhong Bao
2009-11-28 02:42:36
Here is a quote from one of the article cited:
"Microsoft is not intentionally breaking Samba support, they are simply forcing the Windows Server world to upgrade and deploy more secure mechanisms."
And Samba compatibility has been discussed on Raymond Chen's blog:
http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2006/03/30/564809.aspx
http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/archive/2007/02/01/1573160.aspx
your_friend
2009-11-28 16:53:07
Yes, Microsoft always lies about their crimes and blames their victims. I think that was one of the findings in the DRDOS lawsuit 20 years ago. "Security" is something they have also been promising since the early days of DOS.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-11-28 19:13:28
To whom? Shareholders? [financial security]
Yuhong Bao
2009-11-29 20:49:58
Indeed, networking did not come with DOS at all.
Yuhong Bao
2009-12-05 06:41:01
"Vista 7 has more of the same problems as its predecessor, Windows Vista, namely issues with compatibility"
And so did XP and all older versions of Windows. OK, the amount varied, but they always had existed.
To those of us (over 99.999% of people impacted by this) who do not work at the EPO the misuse of words like "products" (monopolies are not products) should be disturbing
Comments
Yuhong Bao
2009-11-28 02:42:36
your_friend
2009-11-28 16:53:07
Roy Schestowitz
2009-11-28 19:13:28
Yuhong Bao
2009-11-29 20:49:58
Yuhong Bao
2009-12-05 06:41:01