I hope so. I really don't want my brand new laptop to not be able to get the best out of Vista.
I wonder if a laptop, aged this year or less, will be able to even barely run Vista.
I'm pretty sure we've had 512MB of ram for more than a year or less. Now to run all of the eye candy you need a 128MB Video card. (You can even get away with less I've heard at a small performance loss)
So, like the above: What the hell are you talking about?
Ok let's set something staight. Microsoft says that Windows XP needs a minimum of 233 MHz and 64MB of ram to run. Does that mean it will run well? NO!
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/upgrading/sysreqs.mspx
So let's compare Oranges to Oranges, Vista is a vast improvement over XP and most of the crucial OS components are in User mode. Let's also note that Vista has a redesigned Memory manager which additionally increases performance. The OS requires 512MB right now because it's in Beta stage, it is however expected to go down.
Now, get back to the original point. You stated that no laptop build before this year would run Vista, and that's wrong. Now if you want to go and say that Vista's minimum requirements are what's needed to run it at optimal performance then you need to rethink what the word "Minimum" means. Minimum means able to operate and perform tasks on.
I hear Vista requires a minimum of 512MB. Well, if this requirement is proportional to Windows XP's...you had better have more than 512MB of ram. Probably the same applies to minimum video ram and minimum CPU speed.
Like I said above, it's obvious you havn't done your homework on Vista. Like I said not only does it have a more responsive UI (Since it's in Usermode and Composited using the DWM) but it has a redesigned Memory Management.
Oh, I'm not meaning to compare XP to Vista. I'm not even picking at its design. I'm Just pointing out that running Vista, or any software for that matter, on the minimum requirement probably is far from ideal. Sort of like running XP on 233MHz and 64MB ram.
Now, let's talk about requirements and laptops.
I have no numbers, but from walking around campus and noting what friends have, I would wager that most people own laptops in this range:
1.0GHz-2.00GHz Pentium-M
512MB-1GB ram
32-64MB of video memory
40-60GB harddrive
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvista/getready/capable.mspxMicrosoft says that Windows Vista Capable requires:
Windows Vista Capable PC includes at least:
A modern processor (at least 800MHz1).
512 MB of system memory.
A graphics processor that is DirectX 9 capable.
Okay that's fine.
Now what about Vista Premium?
A Windows Vista Premium Ready PC includes at least:
1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor1.
1 GB of system memory.
Support for DirectX 9 graphics with a WDDM driver, 128 MB of graphics memory (minimum)2, Pixel Shader 2.0 and 32 bits per pixel.
40 GB of hard drive capacity with 15 GB free space.
DVD-ROM Drive3.
Audio output capability.
Internet access capability.
If my wager is correct, most people cannot run Vista Premium on their laptop. If not for ram, for video memory.
To further my argument, I have a fairly recent (January 2006) IBM Thinkpad T43.
It has the following:
1.86GHz Pentium-M
512MB of RAM
60GB harddrive
64MB of video memory
And by the way, I would consider running Vista Capable "barely" running Vista as Vista is known for its bells and whistles in graphics (yeah yeah, it has other features...nobody cares).