Chewy509
Wotty wot wot.
Hi Guys,
Work has purchased a new laptop for me (I got to choose the model, it had to be a HP however, since the company I work for is a HP reseller), and it came with Vista Business x64.
Specs: HP 6710b, Intel C2D T7500, 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD, DVD-RW, etc. IMHO it's a pretty sweet laptop, except for the integrated gfx (Intel 965G Mobile).
A quick credit to HP. The only preinstalled sofware was NortonAV, PDF Creator and Roxio DVD Creator. Other than that, not a sign of bloatware in sight! Got rid of PDF Creator and NortonAV, but kept Roxio. Office2007 and Antivirus is supplied by the company volume license, so didn't purchase those with the laptop.
Starting the laptop was a similar experience to Piyono's, however with none of the sensory overload by a heap of things starting at start-up.
The first item was joining it to the company domain... After digging for about 5mins, found the required wizard in the control panel, and had no issues. Onced logged on for the first time, I created a "Identity Profile" for the built-in Thumb reader for logging into systems. (It's works as advertised, no issues encountered so far with the system, and it's cool to show off logging into your laptop just using your fingerprint).
The default UI is a vast change from WinXP, however after a few clicks in the "personalize" desktop, had the system looking and acting like WinXP. I did try out Aero, in particular Flip3D, etc. Well, nice eye cany, but I use my system for work... So out goes Aero.
So far I've encountered no real problems, except for:
* Disappearing LAN adapter. (Up to LAN Connection 3, in 24hrs).
* Legacy apps not playing nice. (Battlefield 2 crashes to desktop on startup).
* Significant pauses when using menu items in explorer, or other applications.
* The inbuilt firewall from what I can tell does no filtering on the IPv6 protocol, but locks down IPv4?
* No default security templates for the "Security Configuration and Analysis MMC Snap-In".
* And that's about it.
RAM usage is about what other people are reporting (about 900MB of start-up), however loading up some large Word/Excel documents, I can see Windows is releasing RAM (it's used for caching) back to the applications.
I did try to run with UAC for a while, but turned it off. UAC seemed to be doing the right thing, but found that it was crying Wolf a couple of times when trying to move documents about. (When importing my old profile from my old laptop to the new one). Basically I found UAC too aggressive in reporting privilege elevation requirements.
I've been looking for a few things, and everytime I went to 'Help' I found the answer I was looking for quickly and effeciently, in regards to finding where MS decided to relocate configuration items.
Initial for me, Vista is just another "Windows". Sure it has it quirks, but overall there's nothing for me to say "Go get it".
Note: I am in the process of installing Windows XP SP2, within a Virtual PC session so I can gain access to some legacy applications.
Work has purchased a new laptop for me (I got to choose the model, it had to be a HP however, since the company I work for is a HP reseller), and it came with Vista Business x64.
Specs: HP 6710b, Intel C2D T7500, 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD, DVD-RW, etc. IMHO it's a pretty sweet laptop, except for the integrated gfx (Intel 965G Mobile).
A quick credit to HP. The only preinstalled sofware was NortonAV, PDF Creator and Roxio DVD Creator. Other than that, not a sign of bloatware in sight! Got rid of PDF Creator and NortonAV, but kept Roxio. Office2007 and Antivirus is supplied by the company volume license, so didn't purchase those with the laptop.
Starting the laptop was a similar experience to Piyono's, however with none of the sensory overload by a heap of things starting at start-up.
The first item was joining it to the company domain... After digging for about 5mins, found the required wizard in the control panel, and had no issues. Onced logged on for the first time, I created a "Identity Profile" for the built-in Thumb reader for logging into systems. (It's works as advertised, no issues encountered so far with the system, and it's cool to show off logging into your laptop just using your fingerprint).
The default UI is a vast change from WinXP, however after a few clicks in the "personalize" desktop, had the system looking and acting like WinXP. I did try out Aero, in particular Flip3D, etc. Well, nice eye cany, but I use my system for work... So out goes Aero.
So far I've encountered no real problems, except for:
* Disappearing LAN adapter. (Up to LAN Connection 3, in 24hrs).
* Legacy apps not playing nice. (Battlefield 2 crashes to desktop on startup).
* Significant pauses when using menu items in explorer, or other applications.
* The inbuilt firewall from what I can tell does no filtering on the IPv6 protocol, but locks down IPv4?
* No default security templates for the "Security Configuration and Analysis MMC Snap-In".
* And that's about it.
RAM usage is about what other people are reporting (about 900MB of start-up), however loading up some large Word/Excel documents, I can see Windows is releasing RAM (it's used for caching) back to the applications.
I did try to run with UAC for a while, but turned it off. UAC seemed to be doing the right thing, but found that it was crying Wolf a couple of times when trying to move documents about. (When importing my old profile from my old laptop to the new one). Basically I found UAC too aggressive in reporting privilege elevation requirements.
I've been looking for a few things, and everytime I went to 'Help' I found the answer I was looking for quickly and effeciently, in regards to finding where MS decided to relocate configuration items.
Initial for me, Vista is just another "Windows". Sure it has it quirks, but overall there's nothing for me to say "Go get it".
Note: I am in the process of installing Windows XP SP2, within a Virtual PC session so I can gain access to some legacy applications.