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What is wrong with WinME?


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Guest letterman@invalid.com
Posted

I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

They say it's buggy.

 

What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

 

Thanks

Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

> What is really wrong with ME?

 

Simple. It's old and unsupported.

--

Mike Maltby

mike.maltby@gmail.com

 

 

letterman@invalid.com <letterman@invalid.com> wrote:

> I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

> Thanks

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Letterman asked :-

> What is really wrong with ME?

 

Nothing!

> Where are the bugs?

 

There aren't any (other than those inherent in other Win9x OS's).

 

Many of us in these WinMe Newsgroups have been running WinMe trouble free

(Finger trouble excepted, of course) from its release in June 2000 - and so

long as you look after WinMe, it will look after you!

 

The *major* upside in WinMe being System Restore - and better USB support.

 

The downside - like all Win9x OS's - is that it is relatively slow (compared

to say XP) and is now more than 8 years old, unsupported and obsolete.

 

However as :-

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

 

Then stick with Win98, - but bear in mind that when any Win9x system crashes

(and they do so fairly regularly) it can be a laborious process to reboot

and get going again. XP however is (in my experience) far more tolerant

(very rarely crashes) and recovers instantly on re-boot.

 

Good luck

 

Mart

 

 

<letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

>I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

> Thanks

>

Guest letterman@invalid.com
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 10:59:54 +0100, "Mart"

<mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

>Letterman asked :-

>

>> What is really wrong with ME?

>

>Nothing!

>

>> Where are the bugs?

>

>There aren't any (other than those inherent in other Win9x OS's).

>

>Many of us in these WinMe Newsgroups have been running WinMe trouble free

>(Finger trouble excepted, of course) from its release in June 2000 - and so

>long as you look after WinMe, it will look after you!

>

>The *major* upside in WinMe being System Restore - and better USB support.

>

>The downside - like all Win9x OS's - is that it is relatively slow (compared

>to say XP) and is now more than 8 years old, unsupported and obsolete.

>

>However as :-

>> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

>

>Then stick with Win98, - but bear in mind that when any Win9x system crashes

>(and they do so fairly regularly) it can be a laborious process to reboot

>and get going again. XP however is (in my experience) far more tolerant

>(very rarely crashes) and recovers instantly on re-boot.

>

>Good luck

>

>Mart

>

>

><letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

>news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

>>I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

>> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

>> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

>> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

>> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

>> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

>> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

>> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

>> They say it's buggy.

>>

>> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>>

>> Thanks

>>

>

 

I know WinME is obsolete, but so is most everything when it comes to

computers these days. Buy a brand new computer today and it's

obsolete tomorrow. I use what works for me. I am not out to impress

others by using the latest technology. For what I do, I dont need

more power or features.

 

I asked this question because over the years I have had quite a few

people tell me to avoid WinME. They said it was full of bugs. Yet,

it looks and works darn near the same as Win98. I would upgrade to ME

solely for the better USB support. I was not aware of the better

system restore, but that would be desirable too.

 

Aside from that, I have never seen why MS even released ME. It's the

same thing as Win98se (unless there are other features I missed).

Yep, I know the defrag is faster, and I presently run ME defrag under

98.

 

I have never had any major problems with 98. If it got screwed up, it

was generally my fault, or spyware. I go to dos, clean things up, and

it works fine again, with no data loss. I've seen what happens when

XP fails to boot, and that was a total nightmare, ending with all data

lost. I wouldn't touch XP or Vista for any reason.

 

I do have Win2000 on my laptop. That's ok, I only have it because of

my Wifi card (requires 2k or above). Otherwise, I'd prefer having

Win98 on that puter too.

 

I dont find 98 to be slow. XP seems much slower. Of course it all

depends on the hardware being used. I think 98 would run faster on my

old laptop, which was designed for 98. This desktop cpmputer came

with 2K installed, but I removed it and installed 98se. 98 runs

faster on here.

 

Thanks for the advice.

 

LM

Guest dlsayremn
Posted

RE: What is wrong with WinME?

 

As the others have said there is really nothing wrong with ME. Used to have

crashes quite often, but then figured out that they were occuring everytime a

certain AV program updated. Stop using that about 2 years ago. Have had two

crashes since. Both my fault, not the systems.

 

"letterman@invalid.com" wrote:

> I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

> Thanks

>

>

Guest Corday
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

It seems you're not "computer depdent" for work and are happy with what you

have. The solution will arrive when a major hardware component "goes" and

you'll be ready to spring for a new unit.

--

I mastered Wordstar graphics!

 

 

"letterman@invalid.com" wrote:

> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 10:59:54 +0100, "Mart"

> <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

>

> >Letterman asked :-

> >

> >> What is really wrong with ME?

> >

> >Nothing!

> >

> >> Where are the bugs?

> >

> >There aren't any (other than those inherent in other Win9x OS's).

> >

> >Many of us in these WinMe Newsgroups have been running WinMe trouble free

> >(Finger trouble excepted, of course) from its release in June 2000 - and so

> >long as you look after WinMe, it will look after you!

> >

> >The *major* upside in WinMe being System Restore - and better USB support.

> >

> >The downside - like all Win9x OS's - is that it is relatively slow (compared

> >to say XP) and is now more than 8 years old, unsupported and obsolete.

> >

> >However as :-

> >> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> >

> >Then stick with Win98, - but bear in mind that when any Win9x system crashes

> >(and they do so fairly regularly) it can be a laborious process to reboot

> >and get going again. XP however is (in my experience) far more tolerant

> >(very rarely crashes) and recovers instantly on re-boot.

> >

> >Good luck

> >

> >Mart

> >

> >

> ><letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

> >news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

> >>I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> >> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> >> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> >> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> >> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> >> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> >> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> >> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> >> They say it's buggy.

> >>

> >> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

> >>

> >> Thanks

> >>

> >

>

> I know WinME is obsolete, but so is most everything when it comes to

> computers these days. Buy a brand new computer today and it's

> obsolete tomorrow. I use what works for me. I am not out to impress

> others by using the latest technology. For what I do, I dont need

> more power or features.

>

> I asked this question because over the years I have had quite a few

> people tell me to avoid WinME. They said it was full of bugs. Yet,

> it looks and works darn near the same as Win98. I would upgrade to ME

> solely for the better USB support. I was not aware of the better

> system restore, but that would be desirable too.

>

> Aside from that, I have never seen why MS even released ME. It's the

> same thing as Win98se (unless there are other features I missed).

> Yep, I know the defrag is faster, and I presently run ME defrag under

> 98.

>

> I have never had any major problems with 98. If it got screwed up, it

> was generally my fault, or spyware. I go to dos, clean things up, and

> it works fine again, with no data loss. I've seen what happens when

> XP fails to boot, and that was a total nightmare, ending with all data

> lost. I wouldn't touch XP or Vista for any reason.

>

> I do have Win2000 on my laptop. That's ok, I only have it because of

> my Wifi card (requires 2k or above). Otherwise, I'd prefer having

> Win98 on that puter too.

>

> I dont find 98 to be slow. XP seems much slower. Of course it all

> depends on the hardware being used. I think 98 would run faster on my

> old laptop, which was designed for 98. This desktop cpmputer came

> with 2K installed, but I removed it and installed 98se. 98 runs

> faster on here.

>

> Thanks for the advice.

>

> LM

>

Guest dlsayremn
Posted

RE: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Forgot to add, also have two other machines one running 98SE and a new one

with Vista.

Biggest difference between ME and 98SE is USB. ME machine has 5 USB ports

and no PS2. 98SE has only two USB ports. However, using a 4 port I am able to

run Boston USB digital speakers (own power supply), USB keyboard and mouse,

USR USB wireless adaptor, USB camera, and when the Vista is down it is hooked

up to the HP printer. All except the Boston speakers can be hooked up to the

ME and except for the dispals can't tell any difference. Change that, ME may

be faster than 98SE, but has fewer programs.

 

"letterman@invalid.com" wrote:

> I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

> Thanks

>

>

Guest Joan Archer
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

I see you've had plenty of answers to this, I still have a WinME machine

here running, granted it's not turned on every day now since my daughter

left at the end of last year.

 

She used that machine every day did all her school then college work on it

plus lots of photo work, never had any real problems with it and any she did

have were probably down to her.

 

When my husbands XP machine fell over he used it to keep up with his forums

so I think if you look after it there is nothing wrong with WinME, apart

from being out of support and no more patches for it. <g>

 

--

Joan Archer

http://www.freewebs.com/crossstitcher

http://lachsoft.com/photogallery

 

<letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

> I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

> Thanks

>

Guest LoneStar
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

 

<letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

 

 

Adding my words to the crowd, there is NOTHING wrong with Windows ME, other

than the elitists who decry it for a number of irrelevant reasons. True,

Windows ME is unsupported for security patches; however, the idiot hackers

are focusing their perversions on Vista, XP, Macs, and even Linux. For good

Internet security, use Firefox with Windows ME and you'll be just fine.

 

I've got 3 ME systems (along with 2 XPs and 1 Vista) and they are solid as a

rock.

 

EW

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Letterman wrote :-

> I am not out to impress

> others by using the latest technology.

 

I would guess that pretty much applies to most who still run WinMe, but

remember that some hardware like parallel printers for example, are becoming

obsolete and cannot be replaced (sure, they can be replaced by USB kit) but

WinMe - and Win9x - drivers are no longer being written for these items.

However, it is amazing just how you can find a 'work around' when needs

must. I guess another worry for owners of 'old kit' will be availability of

IDE HDD's as they appear to be being phased out - SATA's seem to be taking

over.

> ... over the years I have had quite a few

> people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They said it was full of bugs.

 

Don't believe everything you hear <g>

> I was not aware of the better

> system restore ..

 

SR is a quantum leap from scanreg /restore - and sadly, grossly under-sold.

(And it doesn't exclude scanreg /restore in an extreme emergency - the more

tools in the box, the better!!)

> Aside from that, I have never seen

> why MS even released ME

 

I believe (amongst other things) it was the start to break away from (Real

Mode) DOS and to introduce SR - as a precursor and incorporated in XP and

Vista. 98SE introduced better USB handling than 98 - but this improved with

WinMe.

> ... I've seen what happens when

> XP fails to boot, and that was a total

> nightmare, ending with all data

> lost. I wouldn't touch XP or Vista for any reason.

 

My own experience of an XP box (catastrophically) failing to boot was when

the HDD died - so can't really blame it on XP. But have to admit that trying

to recover data from an NTFS HDD was "difficult" - Soon learnt to use a

backup regime after that!

> I don't find 98 to be slow, etc., ....

 

Perhaps I should have qualified that in as much as more recent 'updated'

(bloated) application releases are not particularly Win9x friendly. And I'll

leave you to guess which (of the many) applications I'm referring to. <g>

 

But by now you will have seen several other views aired in this thread which

hopefully will help dispel any misinformation about WinMe.

 

BTW - There is an option - if you choose - to be able to restore back to

Win98 if you decide to try the WinMe upgrade and then find that you don't

like it. (N.B. - You shouldn't leave it too long to revert, i.e. don't

install too many extra programs or change too many settings whilst you are

making up your mind - for (fairly) obvious reasons)

 

Why not give it a try?

 

Mart

 

 

 

<letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:d15ua41el6fn4ch7akp7l8q4o11hfvb5di@4ax.com...

> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 10:59:54 +0100, "Mart"

> <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

>

>>Letterman asked :-

>>

>>> What is really wrong with ME?

>>

>>Nothing!

>>

>>> Where are the bugs?

>>

>>There aren't any (other than those inherent in other Win9x OS's).

>>

>>Many of us in these WinMe Newsgroups have been running WinMe trouble free

>>(Finger trouble excepted, of course) from its release in June 2000 - and

>>so

>>long as you look after WinMe, it will look after you!

>>

>>The *major* upside in WinMe being System Restore - and better USB support.

>>

>>The downside - like all Win9x OS's - is that it is relatively slow

>>(compared

>>to say XP) and is now more than 8 years old, unsupported and obsolete.

>>

>>However as :-

>>> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

>>

>>Then stick with Win98, - but bear in mind that when any Win9x system

>>crashes

>>(and they do so fairly regularly) it can be a laborious process to reboot

>>and get going again. XP however is (in my experience) far more tolerant

>>(very rarely crashes) and recovers instantly on re-boot.

>>

>>Good luck

>>

>>Mart

>>

>>

>><letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

>>news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

>>>I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

>>> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

>>> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

>>> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

>>> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

>>> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

>>> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

>>> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

>>> They say it's buggy.

>>>

>>> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>>>

>>> Thanks

>>>

>>

>

> I know WinME is obsolete, but so is most everything when it comes to

> computers these days. Buy a brand new computer today and it's

> obsolete tomorrow. I use what works for me. I am not out to impress

> others by using the latest technology. For what I do, I dont need

> more power or features.

>

> I asked this question because over the years I have had quite a few

> people tell me to avoid WinME. They said it was full of bugs. Yet,

> it looks and works darn near the same as Win98. I would upgrade to ME

> solely for the better USB support. I was not aware of the better

> system restore, but that would be desirable too.

>

> Aside from that, I have never seen why MS even released ME. It's the

> same thing as Win98se (unless there are other features I missed).

> Yep, I know the defrag is faster, and I presently run ME defrag under

> 98.

>

> I have never had any major problems with 98. If it got screwed up, it

> was generally my fault, or spyware. I go to dos, clean things up, and

> it works fine again, with no data loss. I've seen what happens when

> XP fails to boot, and that was a total nightmare, ending with all data

> lost. I wouldn't touch XP or Vista for any reason.

>

> I do have Win2000 on my laptop. That's ok, I only have it because of

> my Wifi card (requires 2k or above). Otherwise, I'd prefer having

> Win98 on that puter too.

>

> I dont find 98 to be slow. XP seems much slower. Of course it all

> depends on the hardware being used. I think 98 would run faster on my

> old laptop, which was designed for 98. This desktop cpmputer came

> with 2K installed, but I removed it and installed 98se. 98 runs

> faster on here.

>

> Thanks for the advice.

>

> LM

Guest webster72n
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

 

Now that I find time to reply, everything and more than I wanted to say,

already has been said and I totally must agree with your assessment of the

situation,

LoneStar: WinME may be obsolete, but because of it may be much less affected

by programs which try to destroy your system, especially if using Firefox.

Besides SR the scandisk feature, used when the start-up disk is needed,

seems to be the most valuable tool for me, in case of a freeze-up or even.a

crash.

All in all, WinME is 'o.k.', if you are operating 'on a shoestring' and your

demands are 'limited'.

My personal opinion: it is slightly above Win98(SE).

 

Harry.

 

 

"LoneStar" <e_wyatt_rem_@excite.com> wrote in message

news:g8nchq$cuh$3@news.datemas.de...

>

> <letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

> news:3u0ta4597s1gc5li5edh6gg3i8pdv1mhha@4ax.com...

> >

> > What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

> >

>

>

> Adding my words to the crowd, there is NOTHING wrong with Windows ME,

other

> than the elitists who decry it for a number of irrelevant reasons. True,

> Windows ME is unsupported for security patches; however, the idiot hackers

> are focusing their perversions on Vista, XP, Macs, and even Linux. For

good

> Internet security, use Firefox with Windows ME and you'll be just fine.

>

> I've got 3 ME systems (along with 2 XPs and 1 Vista) and they are solid as

a

> rock.

>

> EW

>

>

Guest letterman@invalid.com
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 13:07:03 -0700, Corday <10Swinner@net.net> wrote:

>It seems you're not "computer depdent" for work and are happy with what you

>have. The solution will arrive when a major hardware component "goes" and

>you'll be ready to spring for a new unit.

 

All I do is use this at home to go online, edit and store photos and

run some basic office programs. I have had major hardware failures

several times. Used older computers are cheap. I have moved this

same hard drive to at least 6 different computers. Several times I

cloned it, to get more drive space. Several more times I repaired the

computer, like when this one had the power supply die last winter.

that is the thing I like about Win98. Harddrives can be moved to

another computer. I tried that with a drive that had XP on it. Xp

would not even boot. Drives formatted with that NTFS format are near

helpless once the OS cant be booted. With a FAT partition I can

always boot to dos and save data. Win2000 seems to work ok with a

FAT32 format, but not XP. I hear vista is even worse. I wont trust

my data to an OS that relies on the actual OS having to boot in order

to access data. With Win9x and earlier, it's easy to use a boot

floppy to get the data saved.

 

What really irks me too, is that everytime a faster computer is

developed, MS slows it down with more of their bloat. Thus we never

get any faster. It's like this: I can go grocery shopping with my old

chevy or I can buy a limosene with all the bells and whistles. Both

will get me to the store and back just as fast, but the limo costs 25

times more and uses 3 times more gas. I'll still encounter the same

traffic jams, and pay the same for my groceries, and since I'm

driving, I wont be able to enjoy the bells and whistles anyhow.

 

MS seems to think we need all this bloat, when in the end, we all see

the same websites, type and print a document the same way, and nothing

else changes, except the new computer will cost more to run for both

purchasing and electric usage, as well as taking more time to use

because there are too many unneeded functions getting in the way.

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

LM, although I certainly wouldn't argue with your appraisal of the direction

of MS, bloatware and some of the other issues you raise, none of them are

WinMe specific and could be debated ad-nauseam.

 

From your subject title, you inferred that you believed there to be major

issues with WinMe in particular. I hope that in this thread, the various

contributors have helped dispel some of those myths, explained some of the

advantages and perhaps added a little optimism into your views and

understanding of WinMe.

 

But if Win98SE works for you, suits your needs and you are happy with it,

then stick with it. There's no point in changing just for the sake of it.

 

Mart

 

 

 

<letterman@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:fcrua4pnqmbmgfkrsio9kkb4gbjkkmcuo1@4ax.com...

> On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 13:07:03 -0700, Corday <10Swinner@net.net> wrote:

>

>>It seems you're not "computer depdent" for work and are happy with what

>>you

>>have. The solution will arrive when a major hardware component "goes" and

>>you'll be ready to spring for a new unit.

>

> All I do is use this at home to go online, edit and store photos and

> run some basic office programs. I have had major hardware failures

> several times. Used older computers are cheap. I have moved this

> same hard drive to at least 6 different computers. Several times I

> cloned it, to get more drive space. Several more times I repaired the

> computer, like when this one had the power supply die last winter.

> that is the thing I like about Win98. Harddrives can be moved to

> another computer. I tried that with a drive that had XP on it. Xp

> would not even boot. Drives formatted with that NTFS format are near

> helpless once the OS cant be booted. With a FAT partition I can

> always boot to dos and save data. Win2000 seems to work ok with a

> FAT32 format, but not XP. I hear vista is even worse. I wont trust

> my data to an OS that relies on the actual OS having to boot in order

> to access data. With Win9x and earlier, it's easy to use a boot

> floppy to get the data saved.

>

> What really irks me too, is that everytime a faster computer is

> developed, MS slows it down with more of their bloat. Thus we never

> get any faster. It's like this: I can go grocery shopping with my old

> chevy or I can buy a limosene with all the bells and whistles. Both

> will get me to the store and back just as fast, but the limo costs 25

> times more and uses 3 times more gas. I'll still encounter the same

> traffic jams, and pay the same for my groceries, and since I'm

> driving, I wont be able to enjoy the bells and whistles anyhow.

>

> MS seems to think we need all this bloat, when in the end, we all see

> the same websites, type and print a document the same way, and nothing

> else changes, except the new computer will cost more to run for both

> purchasing and electric usage, as well as taking more time to use

> because there are too many unneeded functions getting in the way.

Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

The biggest problem that I have seen in the past eight years with Win Me

has been some of its users ranging from those who didn't like DOS being

hidden, although there are a number of hacks that can restore that

functionality, through to those who complain because it won't run on the

latest hardware, hard drives, etc. etc.. Once one accepts that it is

neither Win 98 nor XP with a number of additional features to those in Win

98 although not yet as mature as those same features in XP then the user

should be OK to go. The OS itself has few major problems and on the right

hardware and will serve the sensible user well.

--

Mike Maltby

mike.maltby@gmail.com

 

 

Mart <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

> LM, although I certainly wouldn't argue with your appraisal of the

> direction of MS, bloatware and some of the other issues you raise,

> none of them are WinMe specific and could be debated ad-nauseam.

>

> From your subject title, you inferred that you believed there to be

> major issues with WinMe in particular. I hope that in this thread,

> the various contributors have helped dispel some of those myths,

> explained some of the advantages and perhaps added a little optimism

> into your views and understanding of WinMe.

>

> But if Win98SE works for you, suits your needs and you are happy with

> it, then stick with it. There's no point in changing just for the

> sake of it.

Guest Pogle S. Wood
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

> My own experience of an XP box (catastrophically) failing to boot was

> when the HDD died - so can't really blame it on XP. But have to admit

> that trying to recover data from an NTFS HDD was "difficult" - Soon

> learnt to use a backup regime after that!

>

 

 

The one most people run into like into a brick wall is the failing to boot

due to the HCL or autochk or NTDETECT or similar not being found and,

usually, in my experience, that is due to an incorrect boot.ini. And apart

from the fact you can correct that via booting with a BartPE disc - though

that is quite a lot of effort to make in the first place - you can edit

boot.ini via BootItNG (unregistered). Burn one to cd (especially since odds

are you won't have a floppy drive anymore!) and there is no need to update

it. With SATA and RAID (and NT6.x as well as NT5.x) I still use a BING cd

from 2006, and it can be a godsend. Of course, if you make a copy of

boot.ini and leave it in the root you don't even need to edit, just rename.

 

 

P.

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

A big AMEN to that Mike!

 

Mart

 

BTW - have you disabled your 'usual' email address recently Mike? I've sent

you some over the past couple of weeks. They've not bounced and I've not had

a response. Maybe you're just busy <g>

 

 

 

"Mike M" <No_Spam@Corned_Beef.Only> wrote in message

news:%23oAN5ARBJHA.4816@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...

> The biggest problem that I have seen in the past eight years with Win Me

> has been some of its users ranging from those who didn't like DOS being

> hidden, although there are a number of hacks that can restore that

> functionality, through to those who complain because it won't run on the

> latest hardware, hard drives, etc. etc.. Once one accepts that it is

> neither Win 98 nor XP with a number of additional features to those in Win

> 98 although not yet as mature as those same features in XP then the user

> should be OK to go. The OS itself has few major problems and on the right

> hardware and will serve the sensible user well.

> --

> Mike Maltby

> mike.maltby@gmail.com

>

>

> Mart <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

>

>> LM, although I certainly wouldn't argue with your appraisal of the

>> direction of MS, bloatware and some of the other issues you raise,

>> none of them are WinMe specific and could be debated ad-nauseam.

>>

>> From your subject title, you inferred that you believed there to be

>> major issues with WinMe in particular. I hope that in this thread,

>> the various contributors have helped dispel some of those myths,

>> explained some of the advantages and perhaps added a little optimism

>> into your views and understanding of WinMe.

>>

>> But if Win98SE works for you, suits your needs and you are happy with

>> it, then stick with it. There's no point in changing just for the

>> sake of it.

>

Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Mart <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

> A big AMEN to that Mike!

>

> Mart

>

> BTW - have you disabled your 'usual' email address recently Mike? I've

> sent you some over the past couple of weeks. They've not bounced

> and I've not had a response. Maybe you're just busy <g>

 

Apologies for that Mart, I must check. I suspect that I might have read

them, marked them for reply and then forgot all about them. As you have

already suspected I've not been feeling too hot recently (a different

problem from normal) and have also been keeping myself busy with

finalising the accounts for the development where I live. I'll try and

respond later although I see I did reply to your most recent e-mail (21

August, re scanner post).

--

Mike M

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Thanks S - I appreciate your suggestion which sounds like a d**m good idea.

(Although in my case it was a failed HDD rather than just a missing file)

But I suppose I've veered a bit OT and we are in danger of highjacking LM's

thread.

 

Mart

 

 

"Pogle S. Wood" <wood.pogle@googlemail.com> wrote in message

news:%239tlc4RBJHA.4368@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...

>> My own experience of an XP box (catastrophically) failing to boot was

>> when the HDD died - so can't really blame it on XP. But have to admit

>> that trying to recover data from an NTFS HDD was "difficult" - Soon

>> learnt to use a backup regime after that!

>>

>

>

> The one most people run into like into a brick wall is the failing to boot

> due to the HCL or autochk or NTDETECT or similar not being found and,

> usually, in my experience, that is due to an incorrect boot.ini. And apart

> from the fact you can correct that via booting with a BartPE disc - though

> that is quite a lot of effort to make in the first place - you can edit

> boot.ini via BootItNG (unregistered). Burn one to cd (especially since

> odds are you won't have a floppy drive anymore!) and there is no need to

> update it. With SATA and RAID (and NT6.x as well as NT5.x) I still use a

> BING cd from 2006, and it can be a godsend. Of course, if you make a copy

> of boot.ini and leave it in the root you don't even need to edit, just

> rename.

>

>

> P.

>

Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Pogle S. Wood <wood.pogle@googlemail.com> wrote:

> The one most people run into like into a brick wall is the failing to

> boot due to the HCL or autochk or NTDETECT or similar not being found

> and, usually, in my experience, that is due to an incorrect boot.ini.

> And apart from the fact you can correct that via booting with a

> BartPE disc - though that is quite a lot of effort to make in the

> first place - you can edit boot.ini via BootItNG (unregistered). Burn

> one to cd (especially since odds are you won't have a floppy drive

> anymore!) and there is no need to update it. With SATA and RAID (and

> NT6.x as well as NT5.x) I still use a BING cd from 2006, and it can

> be a godsend. Of course, if you make a copy of boot.ini and leave it

> in the root you don't even need to edit, just rename.

 

BING can not only handle and edit boot.ini but can also use BCEdit to edit

the Vista equivalent although you will probably need to be using a later

version of BING than one from 2006.

> Of course, if you make a copy of boot.ini and leave it

> in the root you don't even need to edit, just rename.

 

Which is what I do on my XP systems.

--

Mike

Guest Pogle S. Wood
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

 

They are a mix of those who just echo what they've heard (and naively hope

no-one will catch on) and the ones they parrot, who probably feel threatened

by anything that has the potential to put them back into the 'novice'

category. It's like the way most of us stop listening to new music when we

enter middle age and thereafter deride it (I know I do!).

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

>

 

While System Restore is not a failure, it does have a bug in that case is

not restored and after restoring using it there is a good chance you'll find

numerous file names now all in uppercase (which I for one found really

annoying! In the end I'd rather restore 'last night's image' than go through

the file system rewriting dozens of names. Mind you, 'The Rename' is bloody

wonderful for automating that!).

 

There is an issue with manipulating large no.s of files - notably when

deleting them (mind you, that isn't so very different from operations in

Vista - though possibly that has been corrected in SP1). If you have a

folder containing a few thousand files and you want to delete them, or

Recycle Bin contains a few thousand files, it will likely be quicker to

select them a few hundred at a time. So for instance you go into the Recycle

Bin, highlight 500 files and click 'delete', rather than 'Empty Recycle

Bin', then do it again. And again.

 

Of course, there is the Scandisk and Defrag continually restarting (that led

to the development of ScanDefrag).

 

WinME's Spider Solitaire has a strange bug - that not everyone seems to have

found - whereby the dealing slows to a crawl (and stays that way for ever

after). This can be worked around, but the workaround varies and it may be

you have to experiment until you find it. For one, selecting 3D cursors

cured it. For another it was having Outlook Express running in the

background.

 

Can't think of anything else offhand. Many who do not deride WinME still

prefer 98. I prefer ME over all other 9x versions but figure this is just a

matter of taste.

 

The notion that what you have to look out for are hackers - who are only

interested in XP, Vista - even Linux - is naive. If you go online with an NT

system and no firewall you will be infected, not because some particular

hacker is sitting there watching, but because the malware is out there, in

the wild. The network is infected. There are trojans out there to exploit

vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer 5.1/5.5/6.0, some of which will require

an NT system to run on; but far from all of them. And as we surely all know,

the no. of signatures our AV software has defs for these days is well over

the 100,000 mark.

 

Those who think 9x is so old as to be below the radar are the gamblers. Me,

I don't gamble: I can spot an idiot, just like the malware writers in the

pay of the criminal gangs can. And the data is just syphoned away, silently,

without any messages coming up on the screen gloating at you. If there are

still hundreds of thousands of users with 95/98/ME, then stealing from them

is still big business.

 

P.

Guest Pogle S. Wood
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Yes, well with the backup regime you're pretty well safe and everyone should

back up religiously regardless of which OS they use anyway. I just want to

make the point that *I* used to think XP had this boot file corruption

problem that would require a reinstallation from time to time - but while it

was a fairly regular occurance in the beginning, I haven't seen it for

several years - except where it has been this easily correctable boot.ini

issue. Possibly it always was this boot.ini thing (which is probably much

more rare if you only have one partition - though backing up is that much

more troublesome, so less likely to be done, which is why one big C: will

always be birdbrained!).

 

Certainly I once thought XP was far from as trouble-free as they were making

out; now I think it really takes an effort to break it! It *is* the best OS

MS have made. Though they still haven't fixed their Activation procedure.

 

P.S.

 

I forgot what I was going to say.

 

 

Mart wrote:

> Thanks S - I appreciate your suggestion which sounds like a d**m good

> idea. (Although in my case it was a failed HDD rather than just a

> missing file) But I suppose I've veered a bit OT and we are in danger

> of highjacking LM's thread.

>

> Mart

>

>

> "Pogle S. Wood" <wood.pogle@googlemail.com> wrote in message

> news:%239tlc4RBJHA.4368@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...

>>> My own experience of an XP box (catastrophically) failing to boot

>>> was when the HDD died - so can't really blame it on XP. But have to

>>> admit that trying to recover data from an NTFS HDD was "difficult"

>>> - Soon learnt to use a backup regime after that!

>>>

>>

>>

>> The one most people run into like into a brick wall is the failing

>> to boot due to the HCL or autochk or NTDETECT or similar not being

>> found and, usually, in my experience, that is due to an incorrect

>> boot.ini. And apart from the fact you can correct that via booting

>> with a BartPE disc - though that is quite a lot of effort to make in

>> the first place - you can edit boot.ini via BootItNG (unregistered).

>> Burn one to cd (especially since odds are you won't have a floppy

>> drive anymore!) and there is no need to update it. With SATA and

>> RAID (and NT6.x as well as NT5.x) I still use a BING cd from 2006,

>> and it can be a godsend. Of course, if you make a copy of boot.ini

>> and leave it in the root you don't even need to edit, just rename.

>>

>>

>> P.

Guest Pogle S. Wood
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

Mike M wrote:

> Pogle S. Wood <wood.pogle@googlemail.com> wrote:

>

>> The one most people run into like into a brick wall is the failing to

>> boot due to the HCL or autochk or NTDETECT or similar not being found

>> and, usually, in my experience, that is due to an incorrect boot.ini.

>> And apart from the fact you can correct that via booting with a

>> BartPE disc - though that is quite a lot of effort to make in the

>> first place - you can edit boot.ini via BootItNG (unregistered). Burn

>> one to cd (especially since odds are you won't have a floppy drive

>> anymore!) and there is no need to update it. With SATA and RAID (and

>> NT6.x as well as NT5.x) I still use a BING cd from 2006, and it can

>> be a godsend. Of course, if you make a copy of boot.ini and leave it

>> in the root you don't even need to edit, just rename.

>

> BING can not only handle and edit boot.ini but can also use BCEdit to

> edit the Vista equivalent although you will probably need to be using

> a later version of BING than one from 2006.

>

 

Yes, I can see that. I shall have to try it. So far the only time I took a

look at BCEdit, I ran away screaming!

 

 

P.

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

> I did reply to your most recent e-mail (21 August, re scanner post).

 

No rush Mike - however I didn't get your reply, above. Odd?

 

Hmm .. I had been getting a couple of "hanging server" issues (Code 5 -

whatever they mean by that) again earlier in the week. Yahoo seem to have

got yet another rogue server which was playing-up. Just checked again and

there's nothing stuck with my ISP. Definitely not my end though!!

 

Mart

 

 

 

"Mike M" <No_Spam@Corned_Beef.Only> wrote in message

news:OJlZsBSBJHA.4316@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...

> Mart <mart(NoSpam)@nospam.nospam> wrote:

>

>> A big AMEN to that Mike!

>>

>> Mart

>>

>> BTW - have you disabled your 'usual' email address recently Mike? I've

>> sent you some over the past couple of weeks. They've not bounced

>> and I've not had a response. Maybe you're just busy <g>

>

> Apologies for that Mart, I must check. I suspect that I might have read

> them, marked them for reply and then forgot all about them. As you have

> already suspected I've not been feeling too hot recently (a different

> problem from normal) and have also been keeping myself busy with

> finalising the accounts for the development where I live. I'll try and

> respond later although I see I did reply to your most recent e-mail (21

> August, re scanner post).

> --

> Mike M

>

>

Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

PSW ended with :-

> P.S.

>

> I forgot what I was going to say.

 

Thank goodness that its not just me. These 'senior moments' are becoming

more prevalent.

 

Mart

 

<snipped>

Guest N. Miller
Posted

Re: What is wrong with WinME?

 

On Fri, 22 Aug 2008 04:20:11 -0500, letterman@invalid.com wrote:

> I have been running Win98SE since 1998. I have a WinME Cd. I tried

> it in a spare harddrive. I saw no problems with it, but I only played

> around with the OS. Never ran any real applications. I have

> considered upgrading to WinME many times. I strongly dislike Win2000,

> and XP. Not to mention that my computer is likely too slow to run XP.

> I am fully satisfied with Win98, so I see no reason to upgrade.

> However, I know that ME has better USB support and a few other

> improvements. Yet, I have had many people tell me to avoid WinME.

> They say it's buggy.

>

> What is really wrong with ME? Where are the bugs?

 

Nothing, that I know of. None, that I know of. One major difference between

Windows Me and Windwos 98SE, that I have observed: System Resources. With

Win98, if you drop to around 30% free System Resources, the system crashes,

hard. Time to cycle the power (and wait for the "File System Integrity

Check" to run on reboot!) With Windows Me, I could recover with as little as

10% free System Resource, by closing applications until I could restart the

system.

 

The main problem had with Windows Me was running Mercury/32, an MTA, on it.

Every time I opened the Mercury control console, it would use up a few more

of the System Resources. Until I was down to about 15% free System

Resources, and had to restart the system. Not a fun way to run a mail

server. Windows XP does not have that issue with System Resources (it is

inherent to Win9x systems only). Since the old HP Pavilion 6745C that came

with Windows Me was barely adequate to run Windows XP, I upgraded to Windows

XP Home Edition. Fresh install of the upgrade version, on new NTFS file

system. 700 MHz Intel Celeron processor and 256 MBytes of system RAM. Slow

to boot, slow to start applications, but, once it is up and running, it

stays that way.

 

As currently configured, that old Pavilion does the job; but it was becoming

slug with the things I wanted to do, and newer hardware meant getting the

newer OS, as well. Windows Me on that old Pavilion is an OEM install, and

the license ties it to the hardware.

 

--

Norman

~Shine, bright morning light,

~now in the air the spring is coming.

~Sweet, blowing wind,

~singing down the hills and valleys.

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