Hi Folks
Sl4yer wrote:Sorry Paul, but I fail to see how this product is better in Vista than XP.
It will be marginal at best, WITH the latest DX10 hardware.
Features like bloom and water perform substantially better under the DX10 codepath.
Sl4yer wrote:By the way, the spec on the box is as follows:
MICROSOFT wrote:OS:Windows XP SP2 256MB, or Vista 512MB
Processor: 1GHz
Hard drive: 15GB
Other: DirectX9 hardware compatibility and audio card with speakers and/or headphones
Video card: DirectX 9.0c compliant video card with 32MB of RAM and support for hardware transformation and lighting
Note: The above are the specifications a computer must have to run the game. Increased performance will be noticed on more powerful systems.
OK then. Deep breath...
Are you seriously suggesting that the above spec is in any way acceptable to run FSX?
Yes.
Note the bit now in bold.
I beta'd the FSX base product on that processor & ram spec,
and it performed more than adequately.
Just doesn't have the bells & whistles.
You need to set your expectations to match your hardware.
A model T Ford is not going to win a Formula 1 race.
Sl4yer wrote:XP will boot to more than 256MB, and Vista to more than 512MB.
Only if they're badly configured.
You can configure XP to use less than 128Mb at boot.
Sl4yer wrote:A DirectX9 video card MUST support T&L, or it isn't compliant!
Hw TnL has been around at least since Windows 2000, (definitely pre 2002)
In fact Hw TnL is that old,
that in Acceleration & SP2 it's no longer even supported.
Sl4yer wrote:My system with a P4 3GHz falls into PerfBucket6 (out of 7 as I recall).
Yet on the first run after installation, it returns between 13 and 20 FPS!
First run OOTB is not a suitable base for comparison of any product.
Your PerfBucket will set the config sliders as to your machine's capabilities.
If you overstep them,
your FPS will suffer accordingly.
I got better FPS on the previously quoted machine.
Just doesn't look pretty.
Your machine is obviously a far higher spec than my primary, (perfbucket3),
so you should get better FPS.
As I said previously -
BASys wrote:Aside from the variations in individuals
hardware, os, running processes & applications, fragmentation state, etc.
and thats before even starting FSX,
there's all the variations in config settings, tweaks applied, addons being used, a/c models & areas being flown.
so the definition of acceptable performance is also extremely subjective.
Sl4yer wrote:I can't imagine what a 1GHz system would do.
I'd refer you to some old threads, but PAI unfortunately lost their entire archive. :-(
Sl4yer wrote:But how many gullible customers will have purchased based on the specs on the box?
Would my system do better under Vista? (PLEASE don't say yes - I've been there, believe me!

)
You haven't posted your specs,
but given your current boot mem useage
I would definitely say no,
unless you get round to removing the cr*p.
Sl4yer wrote:Your experience might be fairly rosy now.
I assume you're part of the beta team, and already have the benefit of SP2.
But it will be some time away for the rest of us, while MS cash in on the expansion pack.
As if it's a 6 week 'problem' for Microsoft to package and release some fixes which have already been sent for pressing in another product!
Sorry, but I don't believe it.
It hasn't even been tested yet.
Phil Taylor wrote:Yes, there is a reason for the delay, even if bits are done.
Acceleration and SP2 are separate products.
By putting SP2 into Acceleration we get additional test coverage on SP2. So not having SP2 in Acceleration would actually delay SP2.
Then there is test, setup, and International.
We ship in 8 languages, English+7 more. So we have to get thru those for Acceleration before we can even get onto SP2. We have 1 test and release team, these are not parallelizable activities.
And then there is setup for SP2 and its associated SDK. So with Acceleration that is 4 setups our single setup developer has had to create for this fall. So that activity is not parallelizable.
And then we have international for SP2.
So there is a reason for the delay. It is not as easy as it appears from the outside.
HTH
ATB
Paul