You're saying that Hackers will base their exploits on Beta code?
Why not? It makes sense - the final work will be the beta code or an updated version of the beta code, yes? A few will probably get started early, with more coming in as we go, and once Vista's out the floodgates will open. If it can resist, brilliant. Then it'll deserve OS of the year.
There is one major update that everyone is forgetting about Vista. No longer will anyone be able to permanently be logged in as Administrator, therefore most exploits and spyware, will be useless on Vista.
It's a major update alright, since OS X has had it for a while... but anyway. Microsoft has already had to plug one possible exploit with User Account Protection that let malicious code circumvent the query. Currently, the feature is more annoying than useful since it throws up a billion dialog boxes in even simple tasks (and that's not even considering the fact that most Windows applications assume you have full admin rights - lots of boxes there). Microsoft will have to cut those right down (which I'm 100% sure they will) if they want to keep customers.
Don't get me wrong, I know Microsoft's putting everything into security for Vista, and features like User Account Protection are a good (if late) move. The moment of truth will be once it's finally out and being probed by thousands of hackers worldwide. Then we'll know whether it's up to snuff.
Back on topic, breaking, what's the new MacBook like to use?
I_F