Windows XP SP3: More than a simple Service Pack
It's here! No more false alarms. No more pre-beta/release candidate/pre-release nonsense. Microsoft has finally released the finished version of Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3) to manufacturing, which means that we can finally write about it in earnest.
Of course, we’ve been doing just that (writing about SP3 in earnest) for nearly six months now. In fact, we've spent so much time speculating and pontificating -- about its impact, how it would affect
The truth is that enterprise IT is fascinated with SP3. Here we have what can most generously be described as a mundane collection of bug fixes and minor enhancements (the traditional definition of a Windows Service Pack) essentially captivating the very audience that was supposed to have already moved on to Vista. I can only imagine the frustration inside
Well, the answer to that question is (thankfully) right now. You can grab SP3 from MSDN today, and public availability is expected in a week or so. As for what to expect from SP3, the laundry list remains unchanged from the myriad pre-releases: Network Access Protection (NAP); Black Hole Router detection; Wireless Access Protection (WAP) 2 support; new cryptographic APIs; and so on. (See my March 20 guide to the Windows XP SP3 and Vista SP1 service packs.)
One of the more controversial SP3 features -- a minor (roughly 10 percent) performance boost over XP SP2 -- seems to have survived the RTM process. My informal testing on a Core 2 Duo notebook (T7200, 2GB of RAM, 7,200-rpm hard drive) showed a little better than a 9 percent improvement when I updated the system from SP2 to SP3. Again, nothing earth shattering, but still a lot more compelling than the ghastly performance loss (roughly two times, hardware for hardware) of moving to
Note: All testing was conducted using Office 2003 and the Office Bench test script, which is part of the DMS Clarity Studio solution from Devil Mountain Software.
Chances are if you're reading this you've already experimented with the pre-release builds of XP SP3. In a way, SP3 has come to symbolize the fight to preserve Windows XP availability. What would the Save XP campaign be without the promise of a potential longevity booster just around the corner?
The bottom line: Windows XP isn't dead yet. And as IT continues to voice its opinion, both through campaigns like Save XP and Web traffic to articles such as this one, Microsoft is finally beginning to take notice. It's about time.

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