Tannin
Storage? I am Storage!
I was posting here and dithering about switching over from NT 4.0 to 2000? It was a fair while back - indeed, it may well have been before there was a Storage Forum - i.e., perhaps it was on the old SR pre-MBF.
Well, I switched my home machine, and I have to hand it to the guys at Microsoft, they got W2K right. Well, as right as they ever get anything, which isn't very. But tonight I bit the bullet and started a fresk W2K install.
My original install here at home was getting a bit wonky and starting to have applications fall over now and then - usually IE6, which I barely use at all - that was Tea's browser: I prefer Opera or Mozilla.
Err ... where was I? Just replaced my install, and the old one lasted ... er ... two and a half years? Something like that. W2K SP 2 was just out a few weeks or months before.
Partly I was prompted by several assorted things (besides it getting a bit cheesy), some of which may be worth mentioning. In no particular order:
I bought Opera 7 the other day. I've been happy with a combination of Opera 6.06 and Mozilla for ages, but Opera 6 is showing its age now: there are quite a few pages that break it or at least make it go a bit pear-shaped. I need at least two or three different browsers for best results and it seemed to me that Opera had probably had enough time to fix up all the problems (and there were a lot of problems) with 7.0. The short answer: yup - they have fixed all the problems (or all the ones that matter to me), and added lots of nice new stuff. Some of it is actually useful. I'm going to have to put quite a bit of time into rewriting the menus though. On the bad side, they are bloated and poorly organised by comparison with the superb Opera 6. On the good side, you can customise everything. No point in dong that just before I nuke the install, so why not bite the bullet now?
Mutiah sold me his beautiful litte 18GB X15-36LP the other day. A perfect opportunity to do a fresh install on a nice new drive. Is it faster? I guess so, but it's hard to say on this clean install. Is it quieter? Louder! (But only because I have them both plugged in at present and the lid off the case - I imagine it will be slightly softer when I (eventually) take the old Mark 1 X15 into the shop to become the new drive for the showroom system.
While I was at it, I decided to take the plunge and upgrade my CPU. The XP2400 seemed a little old-hat. So I ordered a 2800 (last almost sensible Athlon). No stock. Hmmm.... A 3000 sir? WTF? OK. Ten minutes later, I sold the 3000 to a bloke who walked in just as I was wondering why I'd wasted all that money. sHOULD I buy another one? Hmmmm ..... Now I've had another attack of stinginess and upgraded anyway, but just to a 2500
Having a notebook here is another thing that makes reinstalling bearable. Without an instant system to fall back on - and one that is already customised to my particular fetishes, courtesy of coming on the trip with me - makes upgrading so much less scary.
Bad things:
I hate the stupid W2K install routine that simply cannot succeed without a floppy drive for the SCSI drivers. That's so bloody pitiful an excuse for an install routine that I don't believe it. Here I am sitting in a room with 2 computers, a network, 4 hard drives, two CD-ROMs and a DVD - and it insists on having a floppy drive. Worse, because the stupid laptop does not have a floppy drive, it took me nearly an hour to start the install. (Get stuck, download drivers, remove new drive because it doesn't have an OS yet, copy drivers, swap hard drives, discover need different drivers, reboot, swap back, round and round and bloody round. Pitiful.
Buggered if I know how to get my PC-Cillian 2000 registration back. As far as I can tell, the rego ran out 8 months ago but it's still downloading updates. Huh?
Junkspy doesn't work. The new 3.0 version won't install because I only have the 2.0 registration key, and 2.0 won't install because it doesn't believe me when I tell it the number? Huh? Hopefully, my new 3.0 key will arrive soon - otherwise I simply won't be able to get email.
Thank god for programs that don't need install routines! Things like PMMail are great - you just drag the folder over, drag a shortcut wherever you want it, and it works right away. No looking for install discs, no buggerising about with emails and registration keys, just drag, click, function. (With, of course, all emails and server details still intact.) There ought to be a Government Health Warning on programs that are not self-contained enough to operate without arcane install routines.
Gahhh....
I'm going to bed.
Well, I switched my home machine, and I have to hand it to the guys at Microsoft, they got W2K right. Well, as right as they ever get anything, which isn't very. But tonight I bit the bullet and started a fresk W2K install.
My original install here at home was getting a bit wonky and starting to have applications fall over now and then - usually IE6, which I barely use at all - that was Tea's browser: I prefer Opera or Mozilla.
Err ... where was I? Just replaced my install, and the old one lasted ... er ... two and a half years? Something like that. W2K SP 2 was just out a few weeks or months before.
Partly I was prompted by several assorted things (besides it getting a bit cheesy), some of which may be worth mentioning. In no particular order:
I bought Opera 7 the other day. I've been happy with a combination of Opera 6.06 and Mozilla for ages, but Opera 6 is showing its age now: there are quite a few pages that break it or at least make it go a bit pear-shaped. I need at least two or three different browsers for best results and it seemed to me that Opera had probably had enough time to fix up all the problems (and there were a lot of problems) with 7.0. The short answer: yup - they have fixed all the problems (or all the ones that matter to me), and added lots of nice new stuff. Some of it is actually useful. I'm going to have to put quite a bit of time into rewriting the menus though. On the bad side, they are bloated and poorly organised by comparison with the superb Opera 6. On the good side, you can customise everything. No point in dong that just before I nuke the install, so why not bite the bullet now?
Mutiah sold me his beautiful litte 18GB X15-36LP the other day. A perfect opportunity to do a fresh install on a nice new drive. Is it faster? I guess so, but it's hard to say on this clean install. Is it quieter? Louder! (But only because I have them both plugged in at present and the lid off the case - I imagine it will be slightly softer when I (eventually) take the old Mark 1 X15 into the shop to become the new drive for the showroom system.
While I was at it, I decided to take the plunge and upgrade my CPU. The XP2400 seemed a little old-hat. So I ordered a 2800 (last almost sensible Athlon). No stock. Hmmm.... A 3000 sir? WTF? OK. Ten minutes later, I sold the 3000 to a bloke who walked in just as I was wondering why I'd wasted all that money. sHOULD I buy another one? Hmmmm ..... Now I've had another attack of stinginess and upgraded anyway, but just to a 2500
Having a notebook here is another thing that makes reinstalling bearable. Without an instant system to fall back on - and one that is already customised to my particular fetishes, courtesy of coming on the trip with me - makes upgrading so much less scary.
Bad things:
I hate the stupid W2K install routine that simply cannot succeed without a floppy drive for the SCSI drivers. That's so bloody pitiful an excuse for an install routine that I don't believe it. Here I am sitting in a room with 2 computers, a network, 4 hard drives, two CD-ROMs and a DVD - and it insists on having a floppy drive. Worse, because the stupid laptop does not have a floppy drive, it took me nearly an hour to start the install. (Get stuck, download drivers, remove new drive because it doesn't have an OS yet, copy drivers, swap hard drives, discover need different drivers, reboot, swap back, round and round and bloody round. Pitiful.
Buggered if I know how to get my PC-Cillian 2000 registration back. As far as I can tell, the rego ran out 8 months ago but it's still downloading updates. Huh?
Junkspy doesn't work. The new 3.0 version won't install because I only have the 2.0 registration key, and 2.0 won't install because it doesn't believe me when I tell it the number? Huh? Hopefully, my new 3.0 key will arrive soon - otherwise I simply won't be able to get email.
Thank god for programs that don't need install routines! Things like PMMail are great - you just drag the folder over, drag a shortcut wherever you want it, and it works right away. No looking for install discs, no buggerising about with emails and registration keys, just drag, click, function. (With, of course, all emails and server details still intact.) There ought to be a Government Health Warning on programs that are not self-contained enough to operate without arcane install routines.
Gahhh....
I'm going to bed.