Author Topic: Vista  (Read 26558 times)

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Offline benny!

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Re: Vista
« Reply #20 on: November 24, 2006 »
...
On the plus side, the tiny OpenGL demos and stuff posted here still works.

Jim


That's definately an interesting news. I guess even if you do not like vista - while developing for
windows machines - it's about time to at least check if your productions works on vista.

Thanks for the info, Jim!
[ mycroBLOG - POUET :: whatever keeps us longing - for another breath of air - is getting rare ]

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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #21 on: November 26, 2006 »
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every 10th thing I click in control panel thingies either doesn't do anything at all
Fixed this one.  I had Firefox 2.0 active when I upgraded.  I think this was a bad idea.  What's happened is there was no default application set for http:// or https:// or ftp:// protocols, or .htm or .html files.  Looks like MS use a lot of html to do things.  So basically nothing happened.  I fixed that, and more things are working :D
I'm back on IE instead of Firefox again for now...IE7 seems a lot happier under Vista, and I much prefer the way IE handles streaming video - Firefox doesn't seem to handle that at all, it just downloads files entirely and plays them, which is crap.

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think I've got rid of the BSOD though
That was a modem driver that's not working properly - disabled it, no more BSOD.

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Thing I'm battling with now is two days in a row in the morning the screen's been off, deactivated, yellow LED, and it won't come back on again, despite the fact the PC's still running.
This is due to accessing the PC with Remote Desktop while the monitor is off in powersave mode.  Looks like either a Vista/RD bug or an ATI driver bug.  I'm talking to an MVP on Usenet to address that one.

Quote
'COM Surrogate Error'
Been uninstalling a lot of crap things, especially codecs.  I managed to butcher Nero 7 off the machine too, with a combination of Safe Mode and regedit and Ahead's own Nero Cleanup tool. Also ran a regclean which found about 3000 errors.  Haven't seen this bug for a couple of days now.  Yay!  Also Explorer's crashing a lot less, but really it should be crashing NOT AT ALL thanks.  Still stuck with XP Power Toys which I can't remove.

Getting there.  Still running a bit slow for my liking though - maybe I'll try de-activating Aero.  The other thing is Azureus is killing the virtual memory - Vista is taking 750Mb of RAM consistently, and I've 'only' got 1Gb in here.  Thrashing like mad.

Jim
« Last Edit: November 26, 2006 by Jim »
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Offline taj

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Re: Vista
« Reply #22 on: November 26, 2006 »
Jim,

fwiw, I got the same problem with firefox and application associaition under XP with the new PC. Which is weird because I didnt (dont) on the old PC...
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Offline Shockwave

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Re: Vista
« Reply #23 on: November 26, 2006 »
Strewth, Vista takes up a lot of memory.
Good to see that you are managing to squish the bugs one by one, there's no way I am as brave as you.. No way I'd use IE7 either, fuck that.

It would be easier to buy a mac.
Shockwave ^ Codigos
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Offline Yaloopy

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Re: Vista
« Reply #24 on: November 26, 2006 »
I shouldn't be, but I'm surprised by the amount of RAM it uses. Unreal.

Keep with the updates, Jim, it's nice to see some first-hand experiences of Vi$ta.

It would be easier to buy a mac.
Don't ever say that, man!
Fuck L. Ron Hubbard and fuck all his clones.
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Offline Shockwave

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Re: Vista
« Reply #25 on: November 26, 2006 »
Nothing wrong with macs  :o
Shockwave ^ Codigos
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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #26 on: November 26, 2006 »
Obviously doing this upgrade fragmented the disk to hell and back.  Vista still has a defrag tool in there but it has basically no UI at all.  Also defrag is scheduled to run once a week on all drives - if you did this on XP your machine would come to a grinding halt, so Vista has the defrag running at a really low priority in the background.  Well, that's a good idea, except if you've got something like Azureus running then the defrag tool will never do anything (because the disk's always in use).  I ran it for 2 days and it did nothing.
I downloaded Perfect Drive 8 Vista Beta and used that.  It's defragged everything in a couple of hours so we'll see if that makes any difference to the performance.
I had to reboot to defrag the swap file (which it grew from 1Gb to 2Gb, again indicating I've not got anywhere near enough RAM in here).  Another way to defrag the swap file is to turn it off in the control panel, reboot, delete pagefile.sys, re-enable the swap file.  Basically that'll create a brand new clean swap.

Taskman is pegged around 600Mb memory usage.  I'm running a web browser and a virus scanner.
I ran disk cleanup.  It didn't want to compress my old files HOORAY!  It also deleted "800Mb of files unused after Vista update".  Which is nice.

Running pretty smoothly now, but I've still got the Remote Desktop problem which is a real pain because I use that all the time.

Jim
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Offline Shockwave

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Re: Vista
« Reply #27 on: November 27, 2006 »
You're a brave man with more time on his hands than I have by the sound of it.
If I was to use Vista I think I'd wait until I get my next computer which won't be for a few years as I just bought this lappy.
Shockwave ^ Codigos
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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #28 on: November 27, 2006 »
I'm actually really busy, the run up to Christmas is always really busy while the salesforce realises it's spent the entire year sitting around and there're actually some sales figures to meet.

My main imperative for installing Vista is because it's my job.  I've been a Windows programmer since 1995 when Windows 95 came out.  There's no way I'm going to lose the opportunity of being 2 or 3 months ahead of everyone with this new OS.  It's a competitive edge to know the pitfalls before anyone else :)

Only thing to report today is, as we spotted with your demo, there's a problem with our PTC library, which I have in the debugger right now!

Jim
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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #29 on: November 28, 2006 »
No OpenGL support at all at the moment.  Nothing wrong with ptc, it's trying to use Microsoft's software driver instead...

Jim
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Offline taj

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Re: Vista
« Reply #30 on: November 28, 2006 »
Anther scener just ocntacted me, said hes struggling with vista: his advice was dont ever install it.
Its looking bad for mere mortals if the experts are struggling.  ??? ??? ???
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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #31 on: November 28, 2006 »
Actually, I'm really tempted to install another PC with Vista ;), this time without the upgrade - just a straight clean install.  There are obviously teething troubles.  It'd be foolish to dismiss it out of hand though.  I remember when DOS and Win95 were competing in the same market, all the people who really knew nothing were complaining about the slowness of Win95 compared with DOS, how hard it was to code, etc.
I shut a few of them up by building the same demo with VESA2 and DirectDraw running at exactly the same speed, just with the Win95 version being about 1/10th the code size.
You're going to hear the same things with Vista.  "Microsoft have broken DirectX compatibility", "Microsoft have broken OpenGL", "It's shit", etc.  I agree it's frustrating, but these things are almost certainly not true.  Everyone has to just get used to the new way of doing things.  It's really early days yet - it's only been in final release for for a week!

Jim
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Offline Shockwave

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Re: Vista
« Reply #32 on: November 28, 2006 »
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I remember when DOS and Win95 were competing in the same market, all the people who really knew nothing were complaining about the slowness of Win95 compared with DOS, how hard it was to code, etc.

My old argument of looking at old operating systems like kickstart and amigados doesn't even stack up any more which is a shame. It's still true that my old a500 with gvp a590 was much nicer to use than all the pc's in college at that time.

What pisses me off is that Microsoft have all the money in the world, you'd assume that they'd also have some of the best programmers and they are still capable of writing a so called final release that takes up  600mb of ram and doesn't work. This is typical microsoft, there's no way I'd install vista before my next computer.

It's a shame that my argument doesn't add up any more when pc's are getting more and more powerful to put up with microsoft's operating systems. Their code will get worse and worse as computers get more and more powerful.
Shockwave ^ Codigos
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Offline rdc

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Re: Vista
« Reply #33 on: November 28, 2006 »

Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #34 on: November 28, 2006 »
I agree it's disappointing in this day and age for a 'home' computer to come up with 'program has encountered an unexpected error. error code: 0x0' or 'COM surrogate error'.  That is just lazy.  Even I don't know what they mean, other than something somewhere buggered up.

Jim
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Offline ninogenio

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Re: Vista
« Reply #35 on: November 29, 2006 »
programers ehh cant live with um cant live without em  ;D
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Offline Ghost^BHT

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Re: Vista
« Reply #36 on: November 29, 2006 »
I agree with RDC - seems like the technology should be able to sort things out before the user even gets a hint that there is a problem.  I believe that in time there will be an OS that finds the problem and repairs itself. It will probably take up 10GB of whatever storage system is being used (holographic disk perhaps :) ) and take 5 GB memory minimum to run,  and Bill gates will be billions of dollars richer

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Re: Vista
« Reply #37 on: November 29, 2006 »
I love that you all have found a subject that insterest you so. I like reading the long messages as they tell so much about you. Very happy!  :clap: As for me... I am happy with XP for now. It seems when new windows programs come out they have some bugs and after awhile they get worked out, so I am in no hurry.

Offline slinks

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Re: Vista
« Reply #38 on: November 29, 2006 »
If there was a way I'd avoid vista forever. I loved 98 and nothing will ever change that. XP pisses me off, and vista sounds like an abomination. Be fine if we had a CHOICE (bill gates least favorite thing in the world) about which version of windows we can have, but no, you have to buy the latest one! Within a year, they'll stop selling XP, and we'll all be screwed.
I love semi-colons way too much ^^;
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Offline Jim

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Re: Vista
« Reply #39 on: November 29, 2006 »
What makes you rebel against Bill Gates Slinks?  I mean, his software has revolutionised the world whether you like it or not, and when you were born the Internet existed, Windows had a graphical user interface...Are you grumpy because Windows was crap for you, or are you grumpy because teen angst says you should be?

Jim
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