San Francisco (CA) - Graphics drivers developed for Vista, Microsoft’s next generation operating system, will be far more stable than their Windows XP-based counterparts, and not crash the operating system anymore, an executive of graphics chip developer ATI told Tom’s Hardware Guide.
Ben Bar-Haim, vice president of ATI’s software division, told us consumers will be able to identify graphics cards supporting Vista by way of a "Vista ready" logo, which will likely appear in multiple flavors indicating different feature levels. The release of Microsoft’s new operating system may still be at least one year out, but hardware manufacturers, including ATI, are already gearing up for yet another certification and logo round: "Vista ready" will be the catch-phrase promoting hardware products as a safe investment.
Tom’s Hardware
» The Whole Industry Disappointed with Windows Vista - Acer Boss
» ASUS Announces Four New Vista Edition Motherboards
» Vista Will Create Twice the Wealth in US as in Europe
» Zune Incompatible with Windows Vista - BSOD Pic Causes a Stir
» Vista Launch Not Too Late for ATI’s RD600
» Vista is a Notebook Killer
» Microsoft Partners to Offer New Windows Vista-Ready Products for Holidays
» NVIDIA Partners and Customers Get Ready for Microsoft Windows Vista
» ATI Ready for Vista with Latest Catalyst Drivers
» Microsoft reveals Vista media features
» Windows Vista Capable PC hardware guidelines
» Microsoft to Omit Anti-virus from Vista
» NVIDIA Products Bolster Graphics Capabilities of Microsoft Windows Vista
» Microsoft ‘Will not Change Windows’
» ATI MVP Mobos to be Priced Lower than SLI Boards
Published in: Microsoft on 2005-09-23


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