Windows 7
reliability scorecard - looking good!
Posted by Adrian
Kingsley-Hughes
September 28th, 2009
<http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=5599>
I’ve
been running various builds of Windows 7 on a number of systems here at
the lab since December of last year. Over time, Windows 7 became my
default OS on several systems that are in daily use. During
that time
I’ve captured a lot of real-world reliability data for the OS.
I’m going to be concentrating on data gathered
from three heavily
used Windows 7 systems. I’m going to focus on Windows 7
reliability
data only for the RC (Release Candidate) and RTM (Release to
Manufacturing) releases of the OS. I have data going back much further
than that, but it’s the final release that people are most
interested
in.
So, how reliable is Windows 7?
In a word, very. Even thinking back to the earliest
pre-beta builds
that I tried, I have always been impressed by the stability of
this OS.
Not only have I considered Windows 7 betas to be more stable than
previous OS betas from Microsoft, they were at least as stable as
Windows XP and Vista. That’s very unusual for beta OS builds
(heck,
that’s unusual for the
RTM code too …). It
was obvious to me early on that Microsoft had put reliability right at
the top of the list from the beginning.
Since I installed the Windows 7 RC build, and
later the RTM
build, the OS itself has performed almost flawlessly. In fact,
after
thousands of hours of usage over several systems, I’ve had a
handful of
shutdown issues (which I have fixed by updating drivers) and some
problems with a few applications, in particular the third-party PDF
reader Foxit <http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/rd_intro.php>.
These have been harder to fix but as we edge closer to the release of
Windows 7 (due October 22nd) software compatibility is getting better.
Below is a screen grab from the Windows 7 reliability
Monitor on my Dell Studio XPS 13 notebook:

If I took Foxit out of the equation here, we are looking
at a small
number of shutdown issues having a small impact on reliability, a
pattern that I see on all my Windows 7 systems. Windows 7 seems rock
solid, and as drivers and applications become more mature (and
they’re
doing so daily), reliability will improve.
Bottom line: Windows 7 is a solid, robust OS.
Copyright
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc.
(Win7_ReliabilityScorecard.htm)
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