Posts Tagged ‘vista’

Turning off UAC

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Recently I was setting up a workstation and decided to turn off UAC while finalizing things. Having always worked with UAC on, the absence of confirmation dialogs was brilliant. So whilst I still think UAC is generally a good idea, there are definitely circumstances where it not only can be turned off, but should. If setting up applications and tweaking system settings is something you need to do regularly and you know what you are doing turning UAC off is a great way to save your sanity.

When I turned UAC off for the first time I thought the possible conversation between Maxwell Smart and the Chief on the topic:

The Chief: Max, turning off UAC will mean your processes will execute with your full privileges. You’ll be in constant danger of malware, viruses and trojans.

Max: And loving it.

Vista’s point of maturity

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

There’s been a lot of bad press about Windows Vista. Some of it warranted, but a lot of it seems to be just jumping on the Anti-Vista bandwagon. Let’s face it, there is a large (or perhaps just vocal) community out there that automatically dislikes anything coming out of Microsoft. Within this community it is “cool”.

I admit that I’ve been drawn to Linux in the past and I believe Linux does indeed have its place, but in the current form (and all the directions I’ve seen) I would never recommend it for general use by the community (both technical and non-technical) and would absolutely recommend against it in an enterprise environment (unless of course there were some very specific needs that Linux met better).

Working with the .NET Framework over the past 12 months I have been amazed by its richness and power. I love .NET’s generics implementation, a feature whose need becomes evident very quickly. But most importantly I have been impressed with the tools. Visual Studio 2008, IntelliSense and the MSDN library help bring joy to the activity of development. Perhaps even more importantly, they provide the opportunity to expand knowledge rapidly.

Best of all is that Microsoft is not standing still. They are rapidly advancing the .NET framework and working on new exciting developer and testing tools that will be part of Visual Studio 2010.

Microsoft has recognised its mistakes with Internet Explorer and has done incredible work with Internet Explorer 8. Bringing standards compliance to the Internet’s most dominant web browser is no mean feat and to achieve it with minimal disruption will be an outstanding achievement. I am confident that Microsoft will be able to do this and we will see more innovation in the web browser industry.

Two weeks ago I bought an Xbox 360 of my very own and have been absolutely thrilled with the console, the games and the recent improvements to the Xbox dashboard (including the ability for me to finally run my Xbox at my monitor’s native 1680 x 1050 resolution). The Xbox 360 controller is a huge improvement on the original and far friendlier on the hands than its Playstation counterpart.

Microsoft’s mice are among the most comfortable that I’ve used. Sure, they’ve had a few that don’t quite meet the mark, but I’ve been generally impressed with Microsoft’s mice for over ten years.

Then there is Microsoft Office. The 2007 release was a risky endeavour with the new ribbon UI. An interface that I feel has worked to improve most regular operations. Still, I accept that such a massive shift can be frightening for users, although not having to trawl through menu screens may provide some compensation. The ribbon UI was the most prominent new feature of Office 2007 which unfortunately overshadowed some of the great improvements to the templates which finally made it easy to create great looking documents.

And finally back to Windows Vista. Drivers were always going to be an issue, but by now this has been addressed and those manufacturer’s that haven’t updated their drivers are probably not worth dealing with (ignoring legacy hardware). User Account Control (UAC) is arguably not as big a problem as is suggested. Sure, IT professional’s are constantly tinkering with the innards of Windows, but an extra warning when I install software is perfectly acceptable. Indeed once a computer has been set up, these prompts are rare to non-existant unless you find yourself downloading software often (which is arguably a high level action anyway).

All up I’m quite happy with Windows Vista and have realised that sometime in the past six months I have shifted from being hesitant to recommend it to being confident in making the recommendation. I’m not suggesting that everyone should rush out an upgrade (most people that should probably have), but if you are buying a new computer, go with Windows Vista.

And while we’re on the subject, make sure your new system is ready for Windows 7. I can’t wait.

Windows Vista and Managed Software

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

One of my gripes with Windows Vista in the enterprise is that it simply says “Please Wait” during the startup and won’t tell you when it is trying to install managed software. Fortunately, this Group Policy change can resolve the issue:

Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\Verbose vs normal status messages

Enable this setting and you are good to go.Sure, it’s so verbose it tells you when it is playing the logon sound, but in my mind, verbose is good.

Windows Vista Dates

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

Often I see users opening up the time and date panel from the task bar to have a look at the calendar. It is fast makes it easy to work out what day of the week a date falls on. The trouble is that if you are looking in a different month you come perilously close to changing the date. Windows Vista improves on this and makes things surprisingly fast. Today I discovered that if I click on the date, it shows a mini calendar and clock, ideal for a quick calendar browse.

Windows Vista Calendar

Windows Vista Magic Keyboard Layouts

Friday, October 5th, 2007

I currently use the Dvorak keyboard layout at work. If you don’t make this setting when you first install Windows the logon screen keeps to the normal US layout. Whilst I can touch type in both layouts, things get a little bit tricky when I start putting my fingers on the keys. It is quite counter-intuitive (and to make matters worse, the letters H, F, U and J can’t be swapped on this keyboard).

Anyway, I worked around the problem by describing my password and username in dvorak terms. (So my username would be pdfol and my password, well I’m not going to tell you that…)

Today I found a link under the keyboard layouts in Windows Vista to a help topic that was the key to solving my problem: “How do I change the keyboard layout for the Welcome Screen?”. Now, Microsoft’s whole thing with Vista is “The Wow is Now” and I have to admit I did say “wow”. Finally I was able to easily copy the keyboard layout to the welcome screen and the solution (Administrative) was only a tab away.

I just wish I could change the horrible blue and green welcome screen without having to use a 3rd party tool.