Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
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Stan Beer
Monday, 12 June 2006 19:10
The iTWire poll asked the question: Are the hardware requirements to
run Vista excessive? Of 502 respondents to the question as this article
was published, 360 (71.7%) answered yes, while 142 (28.3%) answered no.
The fact of the matter is that Microsoft having two sets of minimum
requirements would appear to be misleading to say the least. The
so-called "Vista capable PC" tag is a sham. An 800 Mhz PC with 512 MB
of RAM is not Vista capable at all since it can't even run the
operating system's new Windows Aero interface.
The other set of requirements for a Vista Premium ready PC are the real
minimum requirements. They reveal that an installation of Vista
requires at least 15 GB of disk storage, which is huge; at least 1 GB
of RAM; at least 128 MB of graphics memory; and a graphics card that is
capable of running Windows Aero. Since these are just minimum
requirements, as a rule of thumb we should probably double them to get
a system working with reasonable performance, judging by previous
releases of Windows and their specifications.
What that all adds up to is that in order to run Vista, users are
probably going to have to think about buying a new PC. And a pretty
highly configured PC at that. Add up the cost of a fully configured
desktop PC pre-loaded with Vista (which some say will cost US$400) and
it won't be cheap. Add the cost of Office 2007 and it will be pretty
expensive. Now consider what all that will cost if you want to take it
on the road with a highly configured notebook.
So what's the conclusion? Microsoft may well find that the take-up of Vista (and Office 2007) may be slower than it had hoped because it has priced itself out of the market. Most offices will stick with what they've got for quite some time. As for home users, most people would rather buy themselves a new spa bath or wide screen plasma TV than spend up big for a new PC.
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