Vista recalled?

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  • kass
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • Nov 2007
    • 3

    Vista recalled?

    Is it true that Vista is being recalled the first part of 2008? Does anyone know for certain?
  • browneye
    jack of all trades - master of some
    • Mar 2007
    • 54

    #2
    I see no indication that Vista is being recalled at any time.

    Comment

    • cynthia
      Super Moderatress
      • Jan 2004
      • 14278

      #3
      They promised to release SP1 in that period - so why should it be recalled?

      Comment

      • MilesAhead
        Eclectician
        • Nov 2006
        • 2615

        #4
        Vista has been called a lot of things. But it hasn't been recalled.

        Comment

        • Chewy
          Super Moderator
          • Nov 2003
          • 18971

          #5
          If they didn't recall windows me, there's little hope for vista

          actually the 2 have a lot in common, I have never seen so many people wanting to downgrade

          maybe a service pack option to turn vista into vista lite instead of a RESOURCE HOG!

          Comment

          • MilesAhead
            Eclectician
            • Nov 2006
            • 2615

            #6
            Originally Posted by Chewy
            If they didn't recall windows me, there's little hope for vista

            actually the 2 have a lot in common, I have never seen so many people wanting to downgrade

            maybe a service pack option to turn vista into vista lite instead of a RESOURCE HOG!
            Chewy you should be more optimistic!! After all, it's only been since April
            and already I almost have it tamed to where my HD doesn't
            run on all the time!! I think I have it now so the HD stays quiet but the
            booting time is reasonable. I have to log everything I do so I don't forget
            how I got it here though!!

            Comment

            • Jensen
              Better to be pissed off than pissed on!
              • Aug 2007
              • 127

              #7
              Originally Posted by MilesAhead
              Chewy you should be more optimistic!! After all, it's only been since April
              and already I almost have it tamed to where my HD doesn't
              run on all the time!! I think I have it now so the HD stays quiet but the
              booting time is reasonable. I have to log everything I do so I don't forget
              how I got it here though!!
              Yeah I would like to see that log. I havent had too much problems with my Vista, but its still new to me.

              Comment

              • MilesAhead
                Eclectician
                • Nov 2006
                • 2615

                #8
                you are here->

                Originally Posted by Jensen
                Yeah I would like to see that log. I havent had too much problems with my Vista, but its still new to me.
                I would start here: http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tuto...torial134.html

                and turn off everything that idexes, shadow updates files on other
                computers on the Lan, any Media Player stuff that scans your
                drive for media files etc..

                then I'd google for detailed Services descriptions and see which you
                can turn off.

                The other thing I recommend if you haven't already is to kill automatic
                defragging.

                Things I do manually:
                run locate32 update databases
                disk cleanup - to get rid of old restore points
                disk defrag - I use Auslogics free one but that's cuz I'm cheap

                How I set up my system is for how I use it. For instance I don't
                run a swapfile. But then again, I don't use big office applications
                either. I like to use small lightweight apps whenever possible.

                The main thing I tried to get rid of were those sneaky file indexing
                thingies hidden all over Vista. That's why you should read through
                that features list. Even though I never run Windows Media Player
                other than media player classic, and don't have a "media library"
                set up,I found out WMP was indexing all the files on my drive even
                though I had the Windows Indexing Service disabled(it doesn't get
                the hint apparently.. so much for AI in the new age!!)

                So, if you use WMP you might want to leave that on but I'd say
                change one thing at a time and log it and watch your system
                for a while. If all of a sudden it takes 5 times longer to boot,
                you might want to undo the last change. Watch the HD light
                and listen for that little clicking noise!!!

                Comment

                • Jensen
                  Better to be pissed off than pissed on!
                  • Aug 2007
                  • 127

                  #9
                  I talked to a guy in India today, who recommended that auto-defrag should stay on. I proceeded to argue with him about too. I would think if your not moving huge files or apps on and off your hdd that you would not need to defrag each week. But he persisted and I agreed to shut him up (hp tech support). He sent me something that somewhat " Helps ", a tutorial to shut off apps that run in the background, and Windows Aero. Apparently it takes up resources alot too. Thats the one thing I liked about Win Vista, "Gosh!!" (N.D.) lol . I dont know though, your just talking about start up and shut-down, what other problems have you noticed with vista? I have only seen minor stuff, which I think is due to using uncompatible software with vista.


                  Jensen
                  Last edited by Jensen; 30 Nov 2007, 09:46 AM.

                  Comment

                  • MilesAhead
                    Eclectician
                    • Nov 2006
                    • 2615

                    #10
                    As I mentioned, if you can tune your PC like mine depends if you use
                    it like I do. AFA defragging goes, I defrag manually probably 3
                    times a week on average. But, I tend to keep my drives 70% free space
                    or better. So defrag only takes about 20 minutes max. (If I have large
                    files on the drive I wait until I'm done with them, delete 'em, then defrag.)

                    I don't know if other people would call it a problem but if I'm
                    waiting on my computer instead of it waiting on me, then to me it's
                    a problem. I don't like my HD running on for no purpose.

                    Unfortunately out of the box Vista has a bunch of stuff hooked into the
                    scheduler. However, unlike a "real multi-user operating system" it only
                    looks at CPU usage to find out if the machine is "busy." So, when I first
                    got this thing I was running a third party defragger when, guess what?
                    Windows defrag came on!!! Please!!! If you're going to schedule stuff
                    during slack times, make sure the hardware you're going to use isn't being
                    worked before you take it over!

                    Another example is Lan shadow, monitor, sync whatever you want to call
                    it. If I'm working in an office on the company network, then I probably
                    would want the system to automatically browse around on the network to
                    see if the file I'm using is the latest version or scan for files in
                    shared folders and see if they change. If I'm at home, I'm the one
                    changing the files, so I don't really need a service to keep running
                    my HD to find out if a file has been updated... and yada yada..

                    I guess I'm an older timer "control freak" PC user type. I like to
                    control the PC rather than the other way around.

                    Comment

                    • Chewy
                      Super Moderator
                      • Nov 2003
                      • 18971

                      #11
                      I have been studying up a little on vista, ran accross the superfetch where vista tries to
                      anticipate your program use and preload some of them, they claim alto it uses a heck of lot of ram than vista instantly releases it for other uses, seems like a quick launch on steroids, but gone amock.

                      And that use of a usb drive for readyboost feature where vista makes a ram drive on a 5MB/s thumb drive is about the craziest thing I have ever heard of.

                      because it has been shown that small random reads and writes on flash RAM can be 8-10 times faster than caching them to one of your hard drives.
                      Bullhockey

                      Comment

                      • MilesAhead
                        Eclectician
                        • Nov 2006
                        • 2615

                        #12
                        Originally Posted by Chewy
                        I have been studying up a little on vista, ran accross the superfetch where vista tries to
                        anticipate your program use and preload some of them, they claim alto it uses a heck of lot of ram than vista instantly releases it for other uses, seems like a quick launch on steroids, but gone amock.
                        I agree. The last settings modifications I tried out were disabling
                        ReadyBoost and Superfetch. The ReadyBoost was no problem
                        but I found that if I disabled Superfetch my boot ups took a lot
                        longer. Turns out in the Windows\Prefetch folder there's a subfolder
                        called ReadyBoot. So what I've been doing for the last few days
                        is set Superfetch on Automatic and let it run when I first boot up.
                        Then after a while if I know I'm going to be doing intensive stuff
                        I just stop the service using the Services applet and leave it off.
                        That way the next time my machine boots Superfetch starts up
                        and I have a smooth bootup. That scheme seems to be working
                        very well.

                        The other thing I noticed was even though I did the registry hack
                        to reduce the wait time for services to close on shutdown to
                        8 seconds, my shutdowns were still taking between 20 and
                        30 seconds. Since I've been running with no swap, the
                        shutdown takes about 5 seconds consistently. I guess
                        somebody was impressed with Linux caching of everything
                        under the sun but a swapfile apparently isn't as efficient
                        as a swap partition. It seems like Vista is compelled to
                        rummage around in the swapfile doing something or
                        other for 20 seconds if you have one or else it isn't
                        happy. What it does with what's in there I have no
                        idea.

                        Comment

                        • Chewy
                          Super Moderator
                          • Nov 2003
                          • 18971

                          #13
                          Miles,
                          You seem way ahead of the game for someone who has a HP media center pc, are you running a dual boot? Do you have a secondary hard drive? Sooner or later we'll need a vista power user guide, altho that's a "contradiction in terms".

                          An old super power user trick is to have a swap file set up in a dedicated partition on a seperate hard drive/controller/cable from the system partition. That might be the way to set Vista free to do what it needs to efficiently

                          Comment

                          • MilesAhead
                            Eclectician
                            • Nov 2006
                            • 2615

                            #14
                            Originally Posted by Chewy
                            Miles,
                            You seem way ahead of the game for someone who has a HP media center pc, are you running a dual boot? Do you have a secondary hard drive? Sooner or later we'll need a vista power user guide, altho that's a "contradiction in terms".
                            (I won't say "like military intelligence" because I don't want to be shot!)

                            Heh. I'd like to have a hot machine. I'm thirstin' for one of the quad core
                            PCs to be honest. I guess from back when PCs were very expensive I got
                            in the habit of being "one step behind" the curve so as to get reasonable
                            performance for an affordable price. But, after I watch these quad core
                            PCs come out for a while I don't think I'll be able to hold off. Esp. if I was
                            to earn some extra money somehow.

                            An old super power user trick is to have a swap file set up in a dedicated partition on a seperate hard drive/controller/cable from the system partition. That might be the way to set Vista free to do what it needs to efficiently
                            I knew someone who serviced and configured mini-computers and his
                            rule of thumb was one physical HD for executables, one for data, and one
                            just for virtual memory. I wish I had 2 physical drives so I could experiment
                            but I think there is some glitch in Vista because that slow shutdown is just
                            bizarre. The other thing that disappeared when I eliminated the swapfile
                            was that "calculating time to..." hanging dialog when doing file drag & drop.
                            Something is definitely weird.

                            I sort of have an unusual setup in that I've been using a Gateway monitor
                            and speakers from a Gateway Pentium III machine I had. I got a Belkin kvma
                            switch to save space on the desktop and run 2 machines on Lan.
                            When I buy a new machine I throw out the oldest. The new "old" machine
                            has most downloaded junk on it instead of the new "new" machine. So
                            I guess that's how I got in the habit of keeping my HD with a lot of free
                            space. I don't know how useful my guide would be since most people run
                            one machine(maybe not in this forum though I dunno') with 80% or more
                            disk space occupied?

                            Maybe something along the lines of "I'm doing this on my system and it
                            hasn't blown up yet" kind of informal tips might be good? I'm open to ideas.

                            Comment

                            • MilesAhead
                              Eclectician
                              • Nov 2006
                              • 2615

                              #15
                              To answer your question on dual-boot... right now I'm in "run 'em as they are preinstalled mode." I used to do a lot of multi-OS setups on my machines but
                              I got into an "endless reinstall every 2 weeks" syndrome that got very tedious.
                              After that the feeling was "been there done that."

                              Comment

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