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Tag Archives: Vista

Get yer Vista hotfixes

Posted on October 3, 2007 by Steven Hodson
1 Comment

Windows Vista No this isn’t the much wanted; and desperately needed, SP1 for Vista but rather as Long Zheng calls them the freshest wonder patches. According to Long Microsoft has released four sets of these wonder patches which apparently claim to improve Vista features across the board, along with Windows Media Player 11 and Media Center.

From what I read nothing listed is a fix for my major pissin me off point regarding Vista’s exceedingly bad copy/move over networks behavior but for a complete list of what they are suppose to fix along with download links head over to istartedsomething.com where Long provides all you need to know.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: hotfixes, Vista, windows

How bad is Vista’s move/copy – try this bad …

Posted on October 2, 2007 by Steven Hodson
24 Comments

As much as there are parts of Vista that I like the biggest screw up I have seen to date with this OS is when it comes to moving or copying multimedia files across a network. To illustrate just how bad this is; even after installing the pre-SP1 hotfixes, here is a screen grab of one such copy I tried to do today

vista_network_copy

I took the screen grab after sitting there for almost 10 minutes of nothing happening.

The scenario behind the screen grab is this:

  1. 9 video files being copied from my Vista machine over a network to a mapped network drive on an XP Professional machine.
  2. screen grab taken approximately 10 minutes after dialog was first displayed.

The real kicker of this is that I can be on the XP machine and copy the same files from the Vista machine to the XP in less time than it took me to wait and grab the screen capture of the above dialog.

I sure hope that the upcoming service pack for Vista fixes this problem or I will very seriously be considering moving back to running XP on this machine because to put it bluntly – this is a intolerable situation considering that Vista is suppose to be the best Microsoft OS yet.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: copy files, move files, Vista, windows

Windows: Lean & Mean Edition

Posted on September 27, 2007 by Steven Hodson
6 Comments

Windows Vista It never fails.

With every release of a Microsoft operating system the dogs of doom and gloom come out in full force baying at the moon about how this and that is all wrong, how Microsoft has screwed the pooch or it just plain sucks. I have seen it happen from Windows 3.11 right through to the newest whipping boy – Vista.

Sure sometimes the bitching has been well intentioned and does lead to improvements, other times though a lot of it is more from our nature to luxuriate in stagnation and what has become comfortable. It is hard for us to step outside of what we perceive as our comfort zone and this is especially true when it comes to our involvement with technology of any kind.

While Vista has never delivered on the promised WOW factor it has on the surface moved us from our comfort zone of XP and other previous Windows versions. So it isn’t surprising that its reception has been exceedingly lukewarm; but I wouldn’t declare it a failure like Don Reisinger of c|net has or consign it to the archives alongside Microsoft Bob.

What I do think though is that Microsoft needs to seriously take some time to reconsider its unfailing belief that operating systems the size and complexity of Vista is the future. Don’t get me wrong – even with its current failings I like Vista and while most of the improvements that Microsoft has done under the hood of Vista don’t get the credit they are due I do believe that the days of bloated operating systems need to be seriously examined.

This is going to take an incredible change in mindset within Microsoft – one I’m not sure if they are ready to take given that the company; not the employees but the company itself, is more interested in maintaining a position of power over innovation. As Hugh MacLeod quoted Hamish Newlands of saying:

Truly disruptive innovation does change the world, but I am not sure where MS is trying that these days. That’s not to say that the company is not clever, motivated, hard-working or whatever, but the goals have not changed significantly for some time.

As long as Microsoft remains committed to this path of bloat and marketing fluff I don’t see anything disruptive on their’s or our horizon. While some of the more forward thinking MS teams may have taken Hugh’s Blue Monster to heart the powers that be are only interested in solidification.

How they are going to break themselves out of this safe harbor of the biggest distribution base of any software I am not sure. Maybe it will take the increasing inroads that Mac and Linux is making or maybe it will be the realization of what Hugh is saying – that it is the relationships not the software that will ensure Microsoft’s dominance forward:

From my own, strictly non-techie perspective, I see Microsoft’s future less in terms of their two big cash cows [Windows and Office], and more in terms of their relationships with their 750,000 partners. These relationships are the Golden Goose, not the commercial bundles of ones & zeroes. The latter just enable the former etc.

Personally here is some of the things I would like to see happen with Windows:

  • Next version to strictly support 64bit with legacy support kept to a bare minimum. In conjunction with this extend the life support for XP indefinitely as the 32bit path for Windows. Apple is well known for setting standards of support – hardware and software – for its operating system. This action has never cost them customers and we would benefit with a smaller and faster windows.
  • Split Windows into 2; possibly 3, separate entities. 1: Core – this being just the OS with no desktop UI. Even get to the point that the core OS install is nothing more than a commandline process with the minimum of questions. The Vista install shows how simple the install can be. 2: Either have a separate Desktop division or legitimize the 3rd party developer efforts in the Shell community. Whether it be a company like Stardock; with they already have a relationship with in Vista, and their Object Desktop environment or any number of the other shells out there like geoShell, LiteStep or winStep. Linux has proven that this path does work.

We don’t need bloated operating system. In fact I believe that they are becoming more of a detriment on the road forward. Give us a small, fast and secure base from which to build on. Build on the incredible base of 3rd party Windows developers for the tools that sit on top of that; many of whom build better tools than Microsoft does.

I realize that something like this is as about as likely to happen as Microsoft Bob coming back to life but Microsoft is going to have to do something because the native are getting more restless with each passing day. The computing landscape is no longer the same beast that gave birth to Windows but I don’t think that Microsoft has realized that yet; at least not in the boardroom.

It would be nice to see what Hugh says come to pass as we would all win.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: Blue Monster, Microsoft, Stardock, Vista, windows

DreamScene is nothing but a waste

Posted on September 26, 2007 by Steven Hodson
4 Comments

Windows Vista I’d really like to know who in Microsoft thought that the idea of having an animated desktop; whether it be video files or animated wallpapers, was a great and cool idea. Okay I’ll give you the cool … for maybe about 5 minutes as your resources are being sucked dry but c’mon let’s get serious here.

The idea that this was suppose to be a part of the WOW factor for those of us that were sucked into buying the Ultimate edition of Vista might have been great from a marketing viewpoint but the reality this coolness is as about as useful as the proverbial tits on a bull.

Besides the fact that the final version of DreamScene comes pretty well two months after any final work was done on it; as pointed out by Long Zheng over at istartedsomething.com, I think it proves how much Microsoft has become more interested in the fluff as a way to market Windows than it is in bringing a truly revolution operating system to market.

I don’t say this as any reflection on the Windows team who I am sure would love nothing better than to flex their development muscles and live up to the Blue Monster philosophy; but rather as a condemnation of the Microsoft leaders and shareholders who care more about their stock options than making any real difference.

The idea that having a resource guzzling animated desktop even passing the laugh test as a usability feature is ludicrous at best. Besides the fact that 99% of the time open work spaces would be occupying screen real estate why would seeing the same video or animated graphics over and over again do anything to improve your workflow. Even ActiveDesktop was minimally useful but this is DreamScene thing is stupid and a waste of time.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: DreamScene, Vista, windows
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