Hello, the unstability with windows in your case was probably a jaws issue more than anything else. Freedomscientific needs to rewrite Jaws completely, there is so much old code dating back to Jaws 3.0 I've had a windows machine with regular usage up for about a month and a half, I just has to log out and log in again periodicly to fix little memory issues. I still think windows 2k runs more smoothly than xp. On 3/9/2007 at 13:54 Lorenzo Taylor said -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I guess it's all a matter of how much a Windows XP user uses the computer. I have heard that Windows XP can run for weeks at a time, but it never happened for me. I once got XP to run 5 days straight, but that was a once-in-a-lifetime occurrance for me. I guess it's because I kept my computer on all the time like I do now. I was trying to run a very small web site with very few hits, an ftp server with just a few files on it and very few hits and a personal mail server just to get my own mail. This was actually running on XP pro and rarely ran for 2 days before crashing and burning. This is why I just can't recommend using Windows of any kind in a server environment. My problems decreased when I switched from an aging computer to the latest AMD Athlon XP 1800+ with 512 MB of RAM which was pretty much top-of-the-line at the time, but they didn't go away completely. At that point the system didn't bomb every time I tried to access the mail server's web page, but it still crashed about once every 2 days or sometimes more often. And JAWS even brought that computer to a very slow crawl after it had been running for more than about 2 hours using about 95% of system resources. My only remedy for this was to quit JAWS and restart it, which usually brought the system back to life for another 2 to 3 hours, but usually less the more I did it. Now on Linux I do a lot more. I run actually 4 different web sites, still small with few hits but more of them and I also run an ftp server with many more and bigger files on it than I ever had running Windows XP. I also run a personal mail server to send and receive my own mail on 3 addresses with the ability to add an unlimited additional number of addresses. I also run an NFS server to allow me to copy my files to and from my laptop. And not only do I run Speakup, but I also run Orca with the full Gnome GUI and sometimes I even use FireFox 3.0 with the latest Orca to browse the web. It's quite nice, BTW. After all this and more, it is still possible for my system to be up for 2 months or more without a single crash or other problem that necessitates a reboot. And this was true on my old Athlon XP system with 512 MB of memory as well as it is true on my new AMD Athlon64x2 system with 1GB of ram. Most reboots were caused by my desire to live on the bleeding edge and always upgrade to the latest kernel. Of course to use the new kernel, the system must be rebooted. But I have learned to tame down that desire somewhat and for the most part I just use Ubuntu and upgrade/reboot on the new release. This means it may actually be possible to reboot my computer only once in a 6-month period. WOW! In Windows XP that was unheardof. Just my own personal experience for what it's worth, your mileage may vary. Lorenzo - -- I've always found anomalies to be very relaxing. It's a curse. - --Jadzia Dax: Star Trek Deep Space Nine (The Assignment) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (GNU/Linux) iD4DBQFF8bZfG9IpekrhBfIRAkk5AJjekEAu2mhtolPBi5ez6/UcyppsAJ4pEGxY IXgvm6HgAgBq6fD6u+ix/g== =KExw -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup at braille.uwo.ca http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup