System Requirements guide: Difference between revisions

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''Note I am currently freezing in Lab 02 of CompSci111G so I will write it from the comfort of my own PC tonight not some awful Apple Mac''
''Note I am currently freezing in Lab 02 of CompSci111G so I will write it from the comfort of my own PC tonight not some awful Apple Mac''
                          Rapid Evolution
1989 Tim Berners-Lee begins work on the WWW project
1991 WWW operational at CERN
1992 WWW goes public
1993 Mosaic created by Marc Andreessen (First GUI browser)
1994 US Senate allow commerce on Internet
Netscape Communications formed, Yahoo! formed
1995 Microsoft Internet Explorer
1998 Netscape became open-source, developed into Mozilla
and i like this course!!!!

Revision as of 23:48, 22 March 2009

A guide to System Requirements

System requirements are often confusing things. So I figured someone should make a guide to them. Thus by tomorrow there should be a significant massive block of text below this.

The first pitfall most users seem to fall into is the difference between Minimum and Recommended System Requirements. Minimum system requirements seem to be a throwback from the 1990s where applications didn't actually need that much processing power to run and programmers could be confident that even older systems could run. The unfortunate thing is that this has changed so now minimum system requirements mean that if your computer meets them the application will either barely run with a minimal feature set or not at all. This is why the first rule of thumb is to make sure your PC meets the Recommended System Requirements.

To illustrate the point I will use my retail box of Windows Vista Home Premium.

Note I am currently freezing in Lab 02 of CompSci111G so I will write it from the comfort of my own PC tonight not some awful Apple Mac


                          Rapid Evolution

1989 Tim Berners-Lee begins work on the WWW project 1991 WWW operational at CERN 1992 WWW goes public 1993 Mosaic created by Marc Andreessen (First GUI browser) 1994 US Senate allow commerce on Internet Netscape Communications formed, Yahoo! formed 1995 Microsoft Internet Explorer 1998 Netscape became open-source, developed into Mozilla


and i like this course!!!!