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Tag Archives: Vista

Things I miss from Vista

Posted on December 25, 2007 by Steven Hodson
2 Comments

Windows Vista Well I now have had Windows XP installed for the last few days or so and while I don’t regret switching back; especially as I can now do the one thing that Vista wasn’t letting me do – that being move or copy large video files across my home network, there are some features in Vista that I miss. The thing about Vista is that as cool as they made things like Areo and DreamScape sound it was the little things that made it a good upgrade from XP and as it turns out some of the stuff I miss the most.

For example as useless as I considered the Sidebar to be now that I don’t have it I consistently find myself looking to the second monitor and for the calendar or clock that were standard issue for it. The other thing I find I am missing and being a little more on the functional side of things is the screen shot widget that I used a lot. now I am going to have to sort through the free alternatives that are out there to replace it with.

As well I gave Windows Explorer a lot of flack over it not being able to apparently remember its screen position between uses and nor did it seem to like remember its viewing styles. Even here though there were a couple of the little things that I liked about using it and miss on XP. The first as silly as it sounds is that you can create a new folder from the tree view (left pane) display of the folders instead of always having to do it from the listing view. The one other thing that I liked as well was when you selected to rename a file it would only highlight the part of the file name up the the file extension.

While both of those things may not seem all that earth shattering as far as improvements go they are what I would call incremental productivity improvements which we can all use.

As far as aesthetics go I do miss the vastly improved look of the icons especially for the desktop. No longer do the desktop icons look like crap at any resolution above 48 x 48 pixels.

The one feature which a lot of other folks have mentioned in reviews of Vista that they liked was the revamped Start Menu with it’s built-in search. Personally I never used the feature to any great extent but from the times I did I have to agree it can be quite a time saver when looking for stuff like files and programs.

One other improvement that folks who like to keep on top of what is running or how the system is performing will like the what has been done to the venerable Task Manager. A big complaint in previous versions of Windows and Task Manager has been the generic fashion in which it reports what programs and processes are running. With the improved Task Manager it now displays active system processes in more of a plain English manner. This may not seem like a lot but between this improvement and others system info junkies will definitely like what they see.

There are definitely a lot more of these types of user oriented improvements to go along with the ones you don’t see but for for me and my experience with Vista it definitely is the little things when added together that made the OS enjoyable to work with. Which by the way I still like as an upgrade for XP and would still be using if it wasn’t for the one major problem I had with it. Does this make it worth the prices being asked for if you are looking for anything above the Home Pro version?

Windows XPMy answer for that would have to be a definite no. For the average user looking to upgrade to Vista I don’t see anything that the other editions of Vista make it worth spending the a small fortune for. That said and because of the problems I have had I would also suggest waiting until the service pack Microsoft is testing for Vista is available before even thinking of upgrading from XP.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: Microsoft, Vista, windows, XP

Prediction for 2008: consumers say goodbye Microsoft – Hello Apple

Posted on December 21, 2007 by Steven Hodson
12 Comments

changing the rules of the game. This is going to be a long term prediction much like the one that Dave Winer made with Martin Nisenholtz of the New York Times about RSS but I think that the possibility of 2008 being the beginning of when Microsoft will start to feel the shift of consumers away from both the operating system and Office suite.

While their enterprise market share will be safe for a very long time the same cannot be said for the general consumer market and while Google Apps may be the winner on the web side of things I believe the really big winner will be Apple.

I’ve been around for computers for a very long time and of that Microsoft has been my only platform; other than the occasional foray into the different flavors of Linux, for that time. I remember when Apple was declared dead and buried. I remember as well all the snickering when it was announced that Steve Jobs was returning to bring Apple back from the dead and here we are at the end of 2007 and Apple is far from being dead and buried.

As MG Siegler points out in two posts today on his ParisLemon blog Apple has sold 5 million iPhones in six months and that he believes this is just the first step to mobile computing exploding in 2008 with Apple leading the way. This may be true; and I don’t doubt that the iPhone will make us rethink the whole mobile computing landscape, but I also think that we will see a growing movement to the Mac as a preferred consumer desktop.

For this Microsoft only has themselves to blame and for a number of reasons other than the typical anti-Microsoft fanboy type of nonsense. The main reason though is because of the concentration on their enterprise business and the cash cow that it is the consumer has begun to feel like an over used hooker on a Friday night with nothing other than some bloated eye candy to show for it.

But the real blow to Microsoft had to be the release of Vista this year and the great big thud that was heard echoing everywhere in the weeks after the WOW campaign failed to get Windows users all hot and bothered. It even got to the point that Microsoft had to back step on its usual policy of killing off the previous version of Windows to OEMs. At the point when XP should have been marking its retirement date on the calendar Microsoft had to breathe some more life into it.

During all this Apple brings OS X Leopard to the marketplace and even though it too had its problems the anticipation for it was palatable with just about everyone in the tech blogosphere talking about it. This was one of the first times that I had ever seen such interest outside of the Mac community over a release.

The other big thing that has worked in Apple’s favor is the fact that with recent versions of the OS X platform the ease of being able to run Windows and all its applications from within OS X has never been simpler. No longer are users feeling tied to running just Windows in order to do what they want. Along with this is the rising popularity of the Apple laptops which have seen the largest increase in sales in the laptop market.

While Microsoft may consider its core business being corporations and their massive workforces Apple is all about the consumer. From the iPod right through to the MacBook Apple has shown that the consumer wants more than just a collection of parts that runs the latest flavor of Windows on it. Granted you can’t blame Microsoft for the ugliness of the typical PC box that gets shipped out but that doesn’t change the fact that people want something more than a utilitarian desktop.

The consumer market may only be the gravy for Microsoft’s business but that gravy is starting to seriously look elsewhere. Sure Vista maybe a stellar product but the fact is that people are coming to realize that it isn’t the only kid on the block anymore. they are beginning to see that like the iPod they can have function and form and not be consistently gouged in the pocketbook for forever growing bloated software.

They are beginning to see that they have an alternative and that is one that doesn’t require running Windows. So while Microsoft continues to chalk up its volume licensing deals with corporations the consumer is beginning to step out from the weight and expense of Windows. This consumer marketplace is Microsoft’s to lose and I only hope is that MinWin (Windows 7) is where the real WOW is and that it comes to market before the shift become more substantial.

Oh and yes I am a once Vista but now XP user and have been a faithful Microsoft customer since my first day on a computer.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: Apple, Google, Google Apps, Leopard, Microsoft, OS X, Vista, windows, XP

Vista copy/move – The Service Pack 1 RC1 Follow-up

Posted on December 15, 2007 by Steven Hodson
37 Comments

Windows Vista For anyone who read this blog you will probably remember my posts regarding Vista’s apparent inability to copy or move over an network to an XP machine. You will also probably remember how I said I wouldn’t be going anywhere near the Release Candidate of Vista’s Service Pack 1. Well …. what can I say … the irritation of not being able to use my machine the way it is suppose to got to be too much and as you can tell from my post earlier about the new Microsoft Download Center Beta I bit the bullet and grabbed my very own copy of what would hopefully be my salvation.

After what has to be the longest install of a service pack that I have experienced; and yes I know it’s only a release candidate so I accept the time spent, I was all ready to get to the business of finding out if the problem had been fixed. So from a fresh reboot and with nothing else running as far as using the network I proceeded to open up Explorer and drag the first victim video file from its folder on my Vista machine over to the mapped folder that resided on the XP machine in the next room.

And waited …. and waited …. and waited ….

Then all of a sudden I had this wonderful dialog box being displayed:

What happens when trying to copy from a Vista machine to a networked XP machine

I gotta admit this one still makes me scratch my head in wonderment after all the file was on my machine … the one I was sitting at .. the one I was trying to copy from and here Vista was telling me it couldn’t access the file and that I should check check the network setting that was already letting me access the XP machine through Explorer on Vista.

So being the hopeful optimist – hey it happens once in awhile – I clicked on the Try Again button hoping that maybe it just need a few minutes to figure out what was going on. This is the dialog box I got in return for my optimism:

and this is the reward I get for being optimistic

Needless to say I wanted the file copied before I died so I canceled out of this state of ridiculousness shaking my head wondering just what Microsoft was thinking when it came to Vista.

Not wanting to be totally depressed over the whole situation I decided to do some experimenting and see just what would copy between the two machines and this is where it gets really strange.

First I wondered if I could copy a video file from the XP machine to the Vista machine from the Vista machine and to my bewilderment it worked like a charm. Mind you it wasn’t the speediest experience but hey it worked. So I rightfully concluded that if that would work so would any other file and so it wasn’t a problem to do with XP and the network.

With that thought in mind I picked a text file in my Documents folder on Vista and dragged it in Explorer over to another mapped folder of the XP machine … damn the copy dialog box didn’t even display and the file was where I had copied it to.

Well that worked like a dream so next up was a JPEG graphic file .. drag … drop … presto there it was in the folder on the XP machine. Wow … that was as fast as the text file. So what to try next .. oh ya … an MP3 file … let’s give that a shot.

So selecting the lucky file in Vista I dragged it over to the mapped folder on the XP machine and let go. Lo’ and behold the Copy dialog box displays and the progress bar indicated that the file is being copied over. Wow .. it was copying … amazing.

The end result of all this?

Well it would seem that the Service Pack hasn’t made one bit of difference to the problems I was experiencing despite what had been listed in their published changelog that Long Zheng was good enough to publish. I realize that some will say that this is just something I am experiencing and must be related to my setup. The problem with that wishful thinking is that it is just that – wishful thing – especially considering that more than few forums around the web are reporting exactly the same; or very similar, problems.

Where does this leave me?

Well as far as I am concerned considering my needs – pretty well screwed. Yes I could wait until the RTM version of the Service Pack is available but that’s in the new year and I really don’t know if I have the stamina to wait that long. So I have to very carefully consider saying good-bye to Vista and actually make the plunge back to XP. I can tell you this though – if I do go back to XP I won’t be having anything to do with Vista and even though I’ve been bitten badly by Vista I’ll be waiting for any OS upgrades until Windows 7 goes Gold.

In the meantime Microsoft has left a really bad taste in my mouth and I am feeling just a tad bit ripped off considering that a core functionality of an OS is so badly borked and they still took money from loyal customers for a faulty operating system. I hope Bill and all those shareholders are happy because I know a shitload of customers aren’t.

As for migrating back to XP – well I’ll let you know how it goes and maybe prepare a list of all the things to make sure you have in place for those folks looking to make the same move over the coming months – which I am sure is going to happen.


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Categories: Technology | Tags: copy files, Microsoft, move files, Service Pack 1 RC1, Vista, windows

Another happy Vista user

Posted on December 11, 2007 by Steven Hodson
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I'm gonna kill that Orb thing

I couldn’t resist especially when Mr. Gorgeous gave me the title.

Picture Creds to: Nothing To Do With Arbroath


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Categories: Technology | Tags: cat, mouse, Vista, windows
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