The short answer: No. If you were scheduling your next PC purchase
around the release of Vista, then this isn't the first time you've had
to adjust your plans. You won't find a Vista-equipped PC under the tree
this year, but you should be able to bring one home shortly after the
new year. Microsoft's latest Vista delay is more likely to cause
chuckles than anguished cries from consumers who've been following
Vista's rocky road toward release. (Those shedding tears are the PC
vendors whose holiday selling season suddenly looks a lot less merry.)
If you're fed up with the delays, there's no reason to wait; the
hardware exists today to run Vista.
If your PC is on its last legs and you (or a friend) are comfortable
installing an operating system, you need not wait for Vista's eventual
release before buying a new PC. Plus, nothing says this latest delay
will be the last. To ensure that the PC you buy today will run Vista
when it's released, familiarize yourself with the suspected
requirements. Microsoft has yet to finalize the requirements for Vista,
but
this page on its site offers some guidance. From
what we've heard, to run Vista, your PC should feature a 64-bit
processor on a current chipset, a bare minimum of 512MB of memory
(though 1GB is a safer bet), and a DirectX 9-class graphics card (or an
open x16 PCI Express slot for a future graphics upgrade).