Author Topic: Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro  (Read 503 times)

Offline DREDIOCK

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Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro
« on: August 06, 2015, 05:47:02 PM »
Which 64 bit version should I do?
Any benefit to having professional over Home version?


And before anyone suggests it
"No" to Windows 10 for the moment. Im not liking what I'm seeing about it.
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Offline streakeagle

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Re: Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro
« Reply #1 on: August 06, 2015, 08:39:58 PM »
I use Windows 7 Home at Home and Pro at work. The only difference I can think of given the way I use PCs is that Pro supports Windows Server Domains and XP mode.
This goes into all the important details beyond my experience: http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/article/386085/windows_7_home_premium_vs_windows_7_professional/
I haven't ever needed a Pro function at home. I have yet to use up my 16 GB of RAM (max for home).
So unless you need one of the missing features or you just have money to burn, I can't imagine why you would pay more for Pro.
Of course, if you were a real man (or nerd) you would buy ultimate!

As for Windows 10, I am going to wait a while to see how it goes. I don't like what I am reading about how MS is going to use the free OS to drive users into subscription fees. Depending on what others report, I may stick with Win 7 until some game, hardware, or other vital aspect requires Windows 10.

At work, there is no question, I will be staying with Win 7 as long as possible. Our software barely survived the migration to Win 7, and some actually still requires Win XP mode. Our control systems for water and waste water plants are extremely stable right now and we aren't going to do anything that will rock that boat.
« Last Edit: August 06, 2015, 08:45:01 PM by streakeagle »
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Offline eagl

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Re: Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro
« Reply #2 on: August 06, 2015, 09:47:55 PM »
Price difference is negligible for win7 home or pro if you get the OEM license.  We're talking about maybe $30 difference when they're on sale, less than a tank of gas or case of good beer.

Pro has features like backup to network storage instead of just locally attached drives, remote login, drive/folder encryption, etc.  And *eventually* you'll probably end up with win10 anyhow, so you may as well get the win7 pro to make sure your upgrade translates to win10 pro.

There aren't any downsides to pro vs. home, except the marginal cost difference.  As for 64 bit vs. 32 bit, there's no reason to not get 64 bit and if you go 32 bit you're stuck with no more than 4GB ram.

Every one of my computers that haven't gone to win10 already has win7 pro.  I had one computer that I was building "cheap" and I got a steal on win7 home 32 bit, but the little features that weren't available bugged me and then I had one session where I exceeded 4GB memory use and it started swapping to the hard drive, so that computer got a fresh install of win7 pro the next day. 

As for winXP mode... Its easy to automatically set it up with win7 pro but in my experience it totally sucks compared to the latest free versions of VMware.  I tried winXP mode for a handful of programs and old games that won't run on win7, and almost none of them worked with winXP mode.  Most DID work with VMware using images other people have built and put out there for download, and the rest ran on dosbox.  So you don't really *need* win7 pro for virtual machines unless you just want to play with winXP mode.

I finally only ended up using winXP mode for TOR, but even on a fast core2 quad with 8GB ram, the winXP mode was slow as heck.  Horribly slow, and I couldn't find out why.  It won't use even 25% of a single cpu core, and I spent a week or two trying to chase that down and never could find out how to give more cpu cycles to the winXP mode VM.  So that made using TOR in the winXP VM painfully slow.  But, I wanted to try out a few things without risking my main machine's drives and installation, so using a VM was the obvious choice.

« Last Edit: August 06, 2015, 09:55:52 PM by eagl »
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Offline Drane

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Re: Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro
« Reply #3 on: August 07, 2015, 04:42:03 AM »
Here's the wikipedia.org comparison chart for windows 7.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_7_editions#Comparison_chart
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Offline TequilaChaser

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Re: Ok Windows 7 Home or Pro
« Reply #4 on: August 07, 2015, 05:45:20 PM »
I recommend you pick up a oem copy of Windows 7 Pro SP1 64 bit, DRED...... you might not need more than 16 GB of System RAM now or even for a year or several, but the way computers and software and how fast things progress these days, it's my opinion that 32 GB of system ram will soon be the norm in the next couple/few years on a standard PC build whether it is a DIY built PC or a Name Brand Pre-Built PC......

guess I am a "Real Man" or "Nerd", I have been using Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit since day 1  of it's release after what was it 2 years of beta testing Windows 7? before they released it to the public ( actually needed it in the line of work I was in........ I don't really need it now since I've retired involuntarily.....lol )

edit: eagl posted some things about what the Pro version has over "Windows 7 Home Premium" <--- noticed I typed "Home Premium" not "Windows 7 Home"....... there is a difference between the "Windows 7 Home" and the "Windows 7 Home Premium" as well.....

I haven't bothered with wiki link, Drane posted...... it probably is similar if not the same as what Microsoft has on Microsoft's Windows 7 Versions comparison chart

hope this helps

TC
« Last Edit: August 07, 2015, 05:49:52 PM by TequilaChaser »
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