Windows Server 2016 TP4 on Scale HC3 HC2000 Test
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@scottalanmiller said
Why would you trust the less mature 2012 R2 and not the more mature 2016? What would make you shy away from the most up to date, patched, managed, overseen and paid attention to product for one that has less development time, less oversight and less care?
Did I miss some awesomely stable great first releases Microsoft has had?
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@JaredBusch said:
Or just wait and buy 2016. Then install 2012, because VL lets you install an older version if you want, to migrate and then migrate to 2016 after that.
Granted I would not do it that way, but you can. I would go straight to current.
My issue is that I have have Server 2003 running on some ancient hardware. (I'm more concerned about the hardware than Server 2003.)
I already lost one of these servers in the past few months. (It's replacement is a desktop machine. Another reason I am looking to make a move sooner than later.)
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said
Why would you trust the less mature 2012 R2 and not the more mature 2016? What would make you shy away from the most up to date, patched, managed, overseen and paid attention to product for one that has less development time, less oversight and less care?
Did I miss some awesomely stable great first releases Microsoft has had?
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
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@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows 8 ) to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
There was not a single functionality issue with Windows 8.
Honestly, there was not a single problem with Vista either as long as your hardware worked with it. Vista had a driver compatibility problem. -
@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
There was not a single functionality issue with Windows 8.
Honestly, there was not a single problem with Vista either as long as your hardware worked with it. Vista had a driver compatibility problem.I was just going to mention this. The reason Vista had such a hard time was that it was running a brand new version of NT and they tried to port drivers from older versions to it.
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Even more telling... every subsequent release of Windows since Vista has been more stable, more secure, and more usable then the previous. That is double so for the server operating systems. Some argue that the usability of Windows 8 went down hill... but I argue that many of the features that were lackluster in Windows 7 got a huge boost. Windows Search which was so-so or ok in Windows 7 is amazing in Windows 8 and Windows 10.
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OK, point taken.
Not 100% agreed with (LOL) but taken.
But for me, personally, I don't know if I can wait that long, as I said.
Decisions, decisions...
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@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
There was not a single functionality issue with Windows 8.
Honestly, there was not a single problem with Vista either as long as your hardware worked with it. Vista had a driver compatibility problem.It's true, the Vista issues were nearly all "user impression."
That's why the myth only exists in desktop circles and not in server circles even though they are generally using the same "first release" at roughly the same time. Who had an issue with Server 2008? No one that I've ever heard. Even the NT 6 release, famously the worst in Microsoft business history, went nearly flawlessly.
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Can you make it come out NOW though?
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@coliver said:
Even more telling... every subsequent release of Windows since Vista has been more stable, more secure, and more usable then the previous. That is double so for the server operating systems. Some argue that the usability of Windows 8 went down hill... but I argue that many of the features that were lackluster in Windows 7 got a huge boost. Windows Search which was so-so or ok in Windows 7 is amazing in Windows 8 and Windows 10.
Yup, because each is roughly two more years of research, learning, improvements, patching, fixes, etc. They aren't reinventing the wheel, they are tweaks to Vista (NT6.)
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@BRRABill said:
Can you make it come out NOW though?
you can always deploy to the release candidate which is probably available soon. Sounds crazy, but when you realize how their code release happens, 2016 Release Candidate is probably already far better than whatever old OS version you are running on currently.
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@BRRABill said:
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows 8 ) to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
Well while I don't agree that it was shaky at all (and did a second release ever come?) There is a bigger issue... Windows 8 was not a first release, it was something like the eight patch release and the third minor point release of NT6. So if you had an issue with Windows 8, it completely dismantles your first release theory and just says that "it's random".
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@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
There was not a single functionality issue with Windows 8.
Honestly, there was not a single problem with Vista either as long as your hardware worked with it. Vista had a driver compatibility problem.All of the "first releases", if you can call anything since NT 3.5 a true first release - and even that, was it not a point release on OS/2?, like NT 4 and 2000 (NT 5) were quite good at first release.
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@scottalanmiller said:
you can always deploy to the release candidate which is probably available soon. Sounds crazy, but when you realize how their code release happens, 2016 Release Candidate is probably already far better than whatever old OS version you are running on currently.
Is the RC the version that comes out directly before the actual release?
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
you can always deploy to the release candidate which is probably available soon. Sounds crazy, but when you realize how their code release happens, 2016 Release Candidate is probably already far better than whatever old OS version you are running on currently.
Is the RC the version that comes out directly before the actual release?
Yes, RC = Release Candidate. Literally a candidate for final release.
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@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
- Apparently, when have they NOT? Where does this "first release" myth come from? Other than the unique case of Vista, which was a true first release of NT 6.
- This is NOT a first release, this is the latest version of NT 6. If you have concern about lower releases, then that would make you install this as this is the latest update to NT 6.
On the desktop side, I typically have always felt the first releases (like the now defunct Windows to be shaky. I do not think that is a myth.
There was not a single functionality issue with Windows 8.
Honestly, there was not a single problem with Vista either as long as your hardware worked with it. Vista had a driver compatibility problem.Well this is not entirely true. Vista also included a brand new network stack that they wrote that had TONS of holes in it. They dumped that stack with 8.1 though.