Reply 140 of 238, by VivienM
kingcake wrote on 2023-10-29, 04:10:VivienM wrote on 2023-10-28, 01:43:Funny thing is, by 2000, 9x was so unstable that any reasonable person wanted NT anyways except for gaming (and even then... at least some game developers had passable support for 2000).
Are you referring to Millennium Edition when you say 9x codebase in 2000? If so, I agree. If you're referring to Windows 98, I disagree.
I'm referring to 98SE. I could literally boot up Windows 98SE on my PIII 700 with an always-on Internet connection, in summer 2000, open a standard set of applications (ICQ/AIM, a web browser, email client, newsreader, etc) and it would be at <20% system resources and start getting unstable in 30 minutes if I wasn't careful. Even being careful, I'd say you needed a reboot every 2-3 days due to system resources issues.
Once I undid my mistake ordering that machine with 98SE and installed Win2000 6 months later, same workflow, the machine could stay up for a month or two without a reboot. The only thing was... 128 megs of RAM turned out to be a little on the low side, but another 128 megs (which had become cheap) and it purred.
Once you got to above, oh, I don't know, 64 or 128 megs of RAM, the system resources thing became a huge, huge, huge problem. If you had 16 megs of RAM, who cares, you'll be swapping to your HDD like mad long before you run out of system resources, but with 128 megs of RAM, that's not the case anymore.
It's actually one of those things that astound me, how most people's nostalgia for 98SE isn't tainted by bad memories of system resource issues. Maybe it's a timing issue - if you went from a ~1998-era computer running 98 to a ~2002 computer running XP, you might have avoided the worst of it. Or maybe it has to do with people not having always-on high-speed Internet - if you were still on dialup, well, you can't run as many Internet applications at the same time and you wouldn't have them running all day. And if you turn off your system at night, that would have helped too.
For me, I still think the 98SE -> 2000 upgrade was the most consequential Windows upgrade ever. You went from a world of "can I open this program without the resource meter going to low and everything going wonky and reboot time" to not needing to think about reboots for weeks/months. No other upgrade was that dramatic - 3.1 -> 95 had a lot of benefits, especially for recent Mac converts, but it just wasn't that level of dramatic in terms of usability.