jperl, well to continue the argument then I would say that the blame is on the software (installation). Most software just assume they run under win98, therefore making it hard to use with Win2000 (or XP by the way), because they ignore multi users support.
don't get me wrong, none of Microsoft OSes are good imo. But I do think W2K is more adequate, it is faster and more reliable than W98. As pointed out in some other threads though, W98 is enough (and the file OS itself is faster since it does so little), it takes less memory too. But it is fragile. I used it for a very long time for trading. I had to be very careful on what I installed on it or not. And horror stories are well known with it.
In fact my setup was like this : R&D on NT4 and Trading on W98 ! Because I would not install anything on the W98 mode other than trading tools and would be very careful with it. So I think I know your point.
However, recommending W98 is a stretch in my mind. If you don't know enough about computers, oddly I would recommend W2K because it will help you keep a cleaner and more reliable system.
I now using only W2K and it is fine. I try to use software which knows about proper use of windows (usually it is a sign of poor programming skills, when a software company delivers a program not multi users or not LAN aware nowadays. don't blame the OS for that. although you can blame MSFT for letting this happen for years!)
Where we all agree so far : Avoid XP for a couple of years at least.
don't get me wrong, none of Microsoft OSes are good imo. But I do think W2K is more adequate, it is faster and more reliable than W98. As pointed out in some other threads though, W98 is enough (and the file OS itself is faster since it does so little), it takes less memory too. But it is fragile. I used it for a very long time for trading. I had to be very careful on what I installed on it or not. And horror stories are well known with it.
In fact my setup was like this : R&D on NT4 and Trading on W98 ! Because I would not install anything on the W98 mode other than trading tools and would be very careful with it. So I think I know your point.
However, recommending W98 is a stretch in my mind. If you don't know enough about computers, oddly I would recommend W2K because it will help you keep a cleaner and more reliable system.
I now using only W2K and it is fine. I try to use software which knows about proper use of windows (usually it is a sign of poor programming skills, when a software company delivers a program not multi users or not LAN aware nowadays. don't blame the OS for that. although you can blame MSFT for letting this happen for years!)
Where we all agree so far : Avoid XP for a couple of years at least.