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View Full Version : 50 Things You Didn't Know About Windows XP


Krell
March 30th, 2003, 04:21 PM
http://www.techtv.com/callforhelp/features/story/0,24330,3355460,00.html


You can rename several files at one time within Explorer. A long overdue feature, in my opinion.

The tiles view is there for getting quick picture dimensions -- a wonderful thing for those of us who work with the Web. When you select an image, its dimensions will also be displayed in the Status bar (if it's turned on).


Check out the Details view if you have a ton of similar files in the folder. In one glance, you can view the number of pages, bitrate, details, and so on. Of course, it depends on what it is you're trying to view. ).


ClearType is a great reason to upgrade to XP. While it does have a noticeable impact on 2D performance, the view is spectacular. It's not just for LCD screens, contrary to popular belief. Font smoothing is so 20th century.


Your removable drives are automatically added to the SendTo menu. I can't figure out how to get them out of there, as I never really use my floppy or Zip drives.


EXIF support is built into the Explorer shell. This allows you to see embedded information from untouched digital photos. This is another awesome feature for shutterbugs.


Details view in MP3 folders is a must. It's very much like WiMP in the sense that you can view all sorts of song details from within the Explorer window.


Being a neat freak, I appreciated the new Align to Grid feature for the Windows desktop. Now I don't have to right-click and Arrange every time I move a stupid icon. Try as you might, you can't drag desktop icons off of the screen with this option turned on.


Man, you've got to play with the Show in Groups Arrange option. It's neat, and depending on how you have the folder set up, it will provide different sorting options (alphabetically by file type, general file type, and so on). Very, very cool.


When you see the shutdown dialog pop up, hold onto the Shift key if you want to flip energy saving modes (from Stand By to Hibernate).


WiMP will now grab cover shots and detailed information for your DVDs.


When you put in a CD with MP3s on it, XP asks you what you want to do with it. It does the same basic thing when you insert a picture CD or plug in a digital camera. Very friendly.


Icons in the System Tray are now displayed in high color. It's about time! Oddly enough, when you configure the System Tray (by right-clicking on the Taskbar and selecting Properties), in the Notification area, someone forgot to update the old icons for Paint, Network, Calculator, and so on. I get paid to notice these things, you know.


Zip file support is finally built into the OS. Yes, I know Me had it, too, but I hate that OS.


No powertoys ship with the Windows XP CD, although they will be available from Microsoft's site after October 25. They are a must for any user, experienced or not. Super Fast User Switcher, PowerToy Calculator, Alt-Tab replacement, Virtual Desktop Manager, Photo Toys, TweakUI, Command Window Here, Slideshow generator, Magnifier, HTML Generator, and TimerShot.


ID3v2 is supported throughout the OS (in WiMP 8.0 as well as in the Explorer shell). To edit an MP3's information, pull up its properties and flip to the Summary tab.


You can store/save your current Theme to the My Documents folder. On the surface, this feature appears to be backwards compatible with classic Desktop Themes.


I think I've rebooted this computer less than 10 times, yet XP's boot process (from BIOS to desktop) is faster than it's ever been. Let me time the sucker. Hold on -- this should only take a minute. I take that back! It took me 45 seconds to get back up and running again.


MSConfig is back, baby. Windows 2000 users will appreciate its return. Of course, X-Setup works just fine on XP, too.


In folders designated for pictures, the Tasks pane will give you an option to print them. Choose your images, layout, printer, and so on. If you have a photo printer, this is a spectacular feature. If you choose not to work with the Tasks pane, you can simply open an image in the Windows Viewer and print from there to get to the same wizard.


You'd be surprised at how much alpha blending of icons improves the experience. No matter what wallpaper or background color you're using, they will always look smooth.


SNTP/NTP time synchronization is now built into the Date and Time applet. With it, you can connect to any Internet time-server. Never miss a meeting again!


When Explorer crashes, the icons are restored in the System Tray. Finally. I verified this the other day when I ran into that weird gray screen problem.


XP comes with a basic slideshow screen saver -- perfect for showing off your recent vacation photos.


The Task Manager now has Networking performance indicators. Right-click on the Taskbar and select Task Manager for more.


You can now turn off thumbnail caching to save disk space (via Folder Options). With TweakUI, you can change the default dimensions of the thumbnail images.


Internet Explorer now has built-in support for Google (as long as you're using the search assistant).


They finally updated the card backs in Solitaire. Considering how many people play it on a regular basis, it's a notable improvement.


Go directly to the Start Menu properties by right-clicking on the Start Button. Switch to the "classic" Start Menu if the new one annoys you. The "Highlight newly installed programs" feature is nice for download maniacs.


XP's movie maker truly sucks; you can't do ANYTHING with it. No transitions beyond a simple fade, no export options other than Windows Media, and so on. Save your money and get a true video editor. Better yet -- use iMovie on the Mac.


Just don't think you're gonna film a businessman flying around your neighborhood and wind up producing an award-winning film using Windows XP. It ain't gonna happen with this crapplet.


Microsoft's marketing campaign is a bit misleading; you can't play DVD movies without purchasing a third-party decoder first. While MP3s can be played out of the box, ripping music into this audio format is possible only through (again) third-party software.


Even with XP's built-in Internet Connection Firewall features, I still recommend Tiny Personal Firewall (freeware).


Most of you have heard about the automatic grouping of open applications in the Taskbar (when you have several instances running, Windows will put them under the same Taskbar button). Here's something else I discovered: open Internet Explorer, then Notepad, then Internet Explorer again. Look at that. It puts the same apps next to each other, no matter the order in which they were opened.


Someone at Microsoft forgot to update the individual Administrative Tools and Offline webpages folder icons. They're still ugly. Under the "Customize" tab of the folder properties dialog, you can assign a different icon for each and every folder. Sweet!


The Windows help system has a wealth of new features. In one swoop, you can perform queries against the local database as well as the Microsoft Knowledge Base. However, I don't think the MSKB integration is working yet. For one, it doesn't return any results on basic terms. Plus, it defaults to searching for Windows 2000 specific issues. Anyway, click the last icon in the toolbar (the document with a red checkmark in it). Tweak away!


The OS only comes with three Visual Styles -- which are lame to begin with. The Plus! site may have more available in time, but who really knows?


I thought it was rather shortsighted that XP doesn't allow you to associate WMA sounds to your events. I mean, they're shoving the format down your throat in every other application. Why not here, too? Anyway, system (default) sounds have received a much-needed upgrade


In Windows 2000, you really couldn't make a boot disk. Sure, you could create a set of setup disks, but nothing like a simple boot floppy. Right-click on the Floppy drive icon, select format, then place a checkmark in the "Create an MS-DOS startup disk." The MSDOS.SYS file contains W98EBD -- which leads me to believe that the files were taken from Windows 98. This won't do you much good if you have an NTFS drive.


When was the last time you forgot your password? Uh, don't forget it for Windows XP until you create a password recovery disk. Under Related Tasks in the User Accounts Control Panel applet, click Prevent a forgotten password.


The Kodak Imaging Application that came with other versions of Windows has been replaced by the Windows Picture and Fax Viewer. It has a few built-in options, but you can't easily view the image at its full size. While this replacement is good enough, I miss the Kodak app already.


People think XP doesn't support plug-ins. That's not true -- it stopped supporting Netscape-style plug-ins, but Apple updated its QuickTime control within days of IE6's release.


Yes, you can hide inactive System Tray icons, but why on Earth didn't they line up the double-arrow indicators with those in the main Taskbar area? Another oversight by the design team, I'm certain.


Window transparency works much better in XP than it ever did in 2000. Again, this speed difference could be attributed to the video driver being used.


Microsoft should have licensed Quicktime and RealMedia decoders. Every one of these companies wants to install its jukebox on my system. Bah humbug! At least they included the classic 6.4 player (accessible by entering MPLAYER2 on the Run command line).


Passport is all over the place in Windows XP. However, you don't have to sign up for a new email account if you don't want to. Just use your current email address, and make a Passport password for it. Since I'm not sure what Microsoft plans on doing with Passport, I just used my secret Hotmail account. You can change this any time via the User Accounts applet in the Control Panel.


Managing file associations is a dream. Right-click on a file, locate the updated Open With cascading menu (which now uses a program's default icon), then click Choose Program if you want to change how the file is opened. Plus, if you don't know what program to associate a file with, there's a nice hyperlink included in the dialog to take you to a helpful Microsoft webpage.


The desktop properties dialog is extensive, but scattered. For instance, the Themes tab is the first one you see, yet you have to flip to the Appearance tab in order to change how your interface works.


The volume mixer looks weird. Call me a stickler for details, but the Main play control is not the same width as the other controls. Not to mention, they didn't replace the yellow speaker icons for the other controls. And as if that wasn't enough, you can no longer tap ESC to quickly close the window. They should have left well enough alone.


Are you the type of person who notices speed increases (and decreases)? Well, as far as file operations are concerned, this is the snappiest version of Windows I've ever used. In Windows 2000, I'd select a few files on the desktop, delete them, and then two seconds later, their icons would disappear. When I do the same thing in XP, the removal is immediate. Likewise, it takes far less time for me to open the Recycle Bin when it's filled with items now.


The default search "doggie" is annoying for power users; thank goodness the new TweakUI will allow you to easily switch back to the "classic" Windows 2000 search feature. I don't know if this is a bug I uncovered; when I browse for a folder when I'm doing a Search, it shows me two My Documents folders. They each have the same folder structure inside of them

phalkon30
March 30th, 2003, 04:53 PM
Thanks for showing us that man, a lot of those I just took for granted in xp, never noticed till now that they were never in 98

MoonMan
March 30th, 2003, 05:01 PM
I can appreciate the msconfig command since that is the most missed thing from Windows ME.... makes you wonder why they left it out of 2Kpro.

Oh yeah and the upgraded card backs on Solitare was a long overdue feature. :-P

Rahwgwar
March 30th, 2003, 05:01 PM
Thanks Krell. Very useful indeed......we should sticky something like this. And we can all add something useful to it and it will accumulate into a one-stop solution type thing.

MoonMan
March 30th, 2003, 05:07 PM
Originally posted by Rahwgwar
Thanks Krell. Very useful indeed......we should sticky something like this. And we can all add something useful to it and it will accumulate into a one-stop solution type thing.

LOL nice "now playing" file in your signature.

notbob
March 30th, 2003, 05:09 PM
but where are the USEFUL features?

like the one where NTFS corrupts almost as easily as fat16 on win95?

Krell
March 30th, 2003, 05:15 PM
I timed it, I was wondering how long to would take you to respond and bash XP.

You slowin down in your old age there notbob.

CCSDUDE
March 30th, 2003, 05:15 PM
HAHAHA....Moony now that's fuckin' funny!

Shouldn't PornMaster get one of those?

Anyway...heres another tip, Krell.

If files refuse to be cut/moved ctrl+alt+del and end task Explorer then wait a second or so...

Then File > Run > "Explorer" will get you right back. Frees up 20+ megs of memory and starts stuff off almost as if you rebooted. K++ ect even clear memory.

Also, use X-tech (X setup) to remove all that crap from the start menu. Remove "Help" And "Log off" ect and get everything looking like classic ME or whatever you want.

Mine is

Programs
Docs
Settings
Run
Shutdown

Simple....

Edit: RasPPPOE works wonders in XP....speed is good and uptime for my DSL has been killer.

notbob
March 30th, 2003, 05:27 PM
Originally posted by Krell
I timed it, I was wondering how long to would take you to respond and bash XP.

You slowin down in your old age there notbob.

futurama was on

nothing can compete with my groening addiction

phalkon30
March 30th, 2003, 05:31 PM
Originally posted by CCSDUDE
Also, use X-tech (X setup) to remove all that crap from the start menu. Remove "Help" And "Log off" ect and get everything looking like classic ME or whatever you want.

Mine is

Programs
Docs
Settings
Run
Shutdown

Simple....
Or right click on start, and go through the menus dissabling things that you don't need...I'd rather do that than install software to do the same thing :P

CCSDUDE
March 30th, 2003, 05:37 PM
Originally posted by phalkon30
Or right click on start, and go through the menus dissabling things that you don't need...I'd rather do that than install software to do the same thing :P

Try removing "Help" without Xtech or running through the reg.....

Soo.....nah nah... = P

phalkon30
March 30th, 2003, 05:51 PM
Originally posted by CCSDUDE
Try removing "Help" without Xtech or running through the reg.....

Soo.....nah nah... = P
Sure, took me 5 seconds

....next?

CCSDUDE
March 30th, 2003, 06:02 PM
Originally posted by phalkon30
Sure, took me 5 seconds

....next?

Dude, try it with "Classic".

I don't use that funky ass new menu system.

isus
March 30th, 2003, 06:12 PM
lol... good stuff, but, i still dont really care for windows.

good work, krell.

Undermind
March 30th, 2003, 06:13 PM
Originally posted by CCSDUDE

I don't use that funky ass new menu system.



THANK YOU! I'm not the only one that thinks that thing is hideous

phalkon30
March 30th, 2003, 06:20 PM
Hmm, I love it, I can place shortcuts there so I don't have to dig through menus to find them, it keeps my desktop clear

To each his own I guess, I love the new xp themes, most prefer the clasic

Krell
March 30th, 2003, 06:23 PM
I hate a cluttered Desktop, but I like the convienience of putting stuff there while publishing or working on projects.

Right Click the Desktop > Arrange Icons By > deselect Show Desktop Icons.

Boom . . . blank, but not gone.


Edit : damn phalkon we posted at the same time, I hadnt seen your post.

Krell
March 30th, 2003, 06:43 PM
my name - in many ways you are correct. W98 is much more nimble, its a smaller kernal, less threading. If you change The Typical Role of this Machine = Network Server in W98, and have the latest Direct X, high resource availablity, and proper hardware and driver installation, then you have a very nimble gaming environment.

Conversely, XP is much more stable, almost crash proof, and allows for greater multitasking.

Rahwgwar
March 30th, 2003, 06:58 PM
Originally posted by MoonMan
LOL nice "now playing" file in your signature.

I was hoping no one would see that. Being MoonMan, I knew you would be the person who would see it, lol.

Your sig says quite a lot about you, huh? hehe

[NK]Mutant
March 30th, 2003, 07:31 PM
Originally posted by MoonMan
LOL nice "now playing" file in your signature.
OMFG that is too friggin hilarious. Kudos to Moony for spotting that out. Glad I don't have one of those things in my sig...

isus
March 31st, 2003, 04:39 PM
Originally posted by Krell
Conversely, XP is much more stable, almost crash proof, and allows for greater multitasking.

almost crash proof? xp has crashed more today than my old winme set up did in a week. i think i need to reinstall soon, but i am hoping to build me next pc before i need to.

The Hunter
March 31st, 2003, 04:41 PM
Just wondering, was XP installed clean, or was it a upgrade?

Krell
March 31st, 2003, 04:58 PM
isus

If you are crashing that frequently then you have a serious problem that is outside the scope of what is expected form XP.

With your technical ability, I'm sure youre all over it. You have probably already looked at the Event Logs to see what hardware or software warnings that you have received too.

CCSDUDE
March 31st, 2003, 06:15 PM
Yeah...sadly...Krell is right. As much as I dislike XP I've had it running perfectly since I installed it and shut down all the misc services.

So as it stands with me...

95/ME/2k/XP pro are all decent.

Also, Isus if you can find some way to get those logs to me I may be able to track the bugger down and get yer system running tip top for you.

Hell, at the moment I still have over 800 megs free (up from 700 after an explorer kill). Compared to a win 9x platform I'd be down to 300kb of memory free now...lol big difference. I noticed 2k is even better with my memory...soooo I may go boot to that once XP does crash.

Winphuk
March 31st, 2003, 06:53 PM
When I was using Windows XP home version, my system was crashing more than my teenage brother's Camaro.
I tried Windows XP Pro on my friend's system and I found it to be alot more stable.
Right now I am running a Win2k Domain controller, and soon as I set up a couple of workstations around my apartment, I'll install WinXP pro on at least one of them and give it a test drive.
One thing I found about Win2k is that it is a rock solid operating system that I can keep running for days and days without reboot.
I could'nt get that from the home version of XP.
There are software incompatibilities too.Alot of shit won't run on XP that would run on win98 or win2k.

notbob
March 31st, 2003, 07:16 PM
i have a win 98 box i use as a music server that runs for weeks at a time

its a p1 @ 66mhz, (about 64 megs of RAM i think tops)and its been running for 3 weeks without a reboot

Winphuk
March 31st, 2003, 07:29 PM
Originally posted by notbob
i have a win 98 box i use as a music server that runs for weeks at a time

its a p1 @ 66mhz, (about 64 megs of RAM i think tops)and its been running for 3 weeks without a reboot

Wow
Reminds me of old windows 95 machine.

CCSDUDE
March 31st, 2003, 07:36 PM
Originally posted by notbob
i have a win 98 box i use as a music server that runs for weeks at a time

its a p1 @ 66mhz, (about 64 megs of RAM i think tops)and its been running for 3 weeks without a reboot

I've run 95 jukeboxes for months....

Thing is it's not really comparable since it's not doing much other then kicking out tunes.

Ah....I remember when 95 was my 'newest' OS and I was playing with everything in sight. Hell, I have a laptop running win 3.1 and it's been up for over a month now...it's all based on what you do and how much you do within the time period.

So uh my new list is...

DOS (gotta love DOS!)/3.1/95/ME/2k/XP Pro

And Redhat and Debian ain't to shabby....Lindow's sucks cock like all hell though. Pile of Window's wanna be shit...

Software locker...now that's a friggin' joke...they're gonna charge for Linux FREEWARE....

notbob
March 31st, 2003, 08:04 PM
it was running an rc5-72 client too, a whopping 120,000 keys/sec(my real computer does 4.2 million/sec) , and juno, and audiograbber and other music related programs, and nero (i burned 1 disc so far)

win 98 is fine, as long as your drivers are good

Theinfamousone
March 31st, 2003, 08:29 PM
Don't ask me how, but I took my hard drive from my computer I bought back in 95 with Win95 on it, and it took far longer to load on the same computer as XP. I was amazed it loaded, it must not be as processor dependant.

Anyways, my comp came with ME, I used it for 2 weeks, crashed more than my teenage sister on her first driving test (ohh dis). It was amazing how slow it would go, I'd have to reboot every 2 hours, after watching a movie, I could barely move the mouse arrow. I quickly got Windows XP Pro and it has been running amazingly ever since. I run an FTP, have had it running for weeks. Still have more than half my resources available. I have all the visual crap that supposedly slows things down and it runs as zippy as you can imagine. And it's NTFS! Since I have a DVD burner, I need to make big file sizes quite often, there's no way I could get around with crappy FAT32 and the 2 and 4 gig limits.

I don't think there is any stability differences in Pro and Home version, though I could be wrong, bascially it's just a lot of default changes in the services that you can refer to blackviper about. That is the only thing I can think of that would make any kind of stability differences.

You can check it out here (http://blkviper.com/WinXP/servicecfg.htm)

EDIT: Anyone know of a reg change that fixes the problem that CCSDUDE refered to earlier? I came across it one time, and I haven't seen it since I reformatted.

CCSDUDE
March 31st, 2003, 08:47 PM
Originally posted by Theinfamousone
Don't ask me how, but I took my hard drive from my computer I bought back in 95 with Win95 on it, and it took far longer to load on the same computer as XP. I was amazed it loaded, it must not be as processor dependant.

Anyways, my comp came with ME, I used it for 2 weeks, crashed more than my teenage sister on her first driving test (ohh dis). It was amazing how slow it would go, I'd have to reboot every 2 hours, after watching a movie, I could barely move the mouse arrow. I quickly got Windows XP Pro and it has been running amazingly ever since. I run an FTP, have had it running for weeks. Still have more than half my resources available. I have all the visual crap that supposedly slows things down and it runs as zippy as you can imagine. And it's NTFS! Since I have a DVD burner, I need to make big file sizes quite often, there's no way I could get around with crappy FAT32 and the 2 and 4 gig limits.

I don't think there is any stability differences in Pro and Home version, though I could be wrong, bascially it's just a lot of default changes in the services that you can refer to blackviper about. That is the only thing I can think of that would make any kind of stability differences.

You can check it out here (http://blkviper.com/WinXP/servicecfg.htm)

EDIT: Anyone know of a reg change that fixes the problem that CCSDUDE refered to earlier? I came across it one time, and I haven't seen it since I reformatted.

What problem would that be??

Winphuk
March 31st, 2003, 09:02 PM
My Windows 95 box had one of those Pentium 1 66mhz motherbords that was only expandable to 32 Megs of RAM.
I only had 24 megs of ram and I was stuck with it because where are you going to find a stick of 32?(why would you want one?)
The motherboard only one DIMM slot and a proprietary Compaq
:finger
33 pin (not 34) floppy drive which was irreplaceable once I trashed it.
I eventually upgraded to Windows 98 but when the hard drive finally croaked I just said fuck it and got a new system.

phalkon30
March 31st, 2003, 09:12 PM
I do have to say, win2k is a sweet ass OS, but I like the eye candy of xp, and some of the built in features

Sure, I could use 2k with some 3rd party software to make it close to the same, but why? XP will be supported for a long time, and it works well/fast with a little tweaking

CompuGeek
March 31st, 2003, 10:01 PM
You guys were spoiled running win95 on your fancy/schmancy Pentiums!

Sorry, just some repressed jealousy from my 486 days. :shy

overdo
April 1st, 2003, 05:04 AM
Originally posted by phalkon30
I do have to say, win2k is a sweet ass OS, but I like the eye candy of xp, and some of the built in features

Sure, I could use 2k with some 3rd party software to make it close to the same, but why? XP will be supported for a long time, and it works well/fast with a little tweaking

totally agree with u man. i like the eye-candy, even if it does use 0.1% of my resources. i've got a link at home that shows a comparison between 2k and XP. there is basically nothing between them and when there is, its usually XP that is better. compares both of them to ME too:mellow

Theinfamousone
April 1st, 2003, 05:30 AM
Originally posted by CCSDUDE
If files refuse to be cut/moved ctrl+alt+del and end task Explorer then wait a second or so...

Then File > Run > "Explorer" will get you right back. Frees up 20+ megs of memory and starts stuff off almost as if you rebooted. K++ ect even clear memory.

Edit: RasPPPOE works wonders in XP....speed is good and uptime for my DSL has been killer.

That was the problem I was refering to, nevermind though, I found it at TweakXP.com, nice little site. I just turned off all the fading crap and it makes worlds difference in the performance. I still have StyleXP on, I don't notice any difference when I turn it off. If you go here (http://www.themexp.org/view.php?n=695&type=vs&order=&c=5&catid=) , they have tons of random stuff you can do, hundreds of nice themes and over 10,000 wallpaper images.


If you are using XP and haven't already, I 100% recommend you right click my computer, advanced tab, performance options, then uncheck fade or slide menus into view, fade or slide tooltips into view, fade out menu items after clicking, slide open combo boxes, slide taskbar buttons, use background image for each folder type, and use common tasks.

BTW, what is RasPPPOE?

phalkon30
April 1st, 2003, 01:32 PM
Originally posted by Theinfamousone
BTW, what is RasPPPOE?
http://www.raspppoe.com/ , its a networking protocol replacement for an MS protocol

Also, I've dissabled many of the fading to, they look worse than when they're off, and just take up processor time on the video card, right now I've got a zero second wait time for menus, and with no fading, the menus open in real time to the mouse, even if I go up and down as fast as I can, they all open when I hover over them

Borgster
April 1st, 2003, 03:00 PM
the techtv guys really are geniuses. i always go to them for reviews and other stuff. one thing i wanted to switch from 2000 to xp was i was tired of the old interface, and wanted something a little bit nicer and cleaner. also windows xp is by far the best operating system microsoft has ever made. the run under mode on shortcuts is great if you have old software that demands to be run on win95/98 me, or 2k. just right click on a shortcut, then go to compatibility and choose your flavor to emulate the program under a 9x, or 2k kernel.

-glitch-
April 1st, 2003, 03:36 PM
damn, post all 50 in a thread why don't ya?

MOAB
April 1st, 2003, 03:36 PM
Great tips for Xp. I upgraded about 3 weeks ago from 98se and I have had no problems. I just "purchased" Tweak XP Pro and that's a sweet prog. I got a question...how do you get rid of that crappy movie maker that's embedded in xp? I have no use for it. I have my own stuff. I can't find an uninstall for it.
Help !!!!!!

MOAB
April 1st, 2003, 04:11 PM
One more quick question...my floppy's possessed !!! Everytime I click on something, (doesn't matter what...) it activates. I've searched XP for anything and can't find whatever it takes to turn off this possessed floppy.
Anybody got (or had) that problem?

-glitch-
April 1st, 2003, 04:14 PM
Originally posted by MOAB
Great tips for Xp. I upgraded about 3 weeks ago from 98se and I have had no problems. I just "purchased" Tweak XP Pro and that's a sweet prog. I got a question...how do you get rid of that crappy movie maker that's embedded in xp? I have no use for it. I have my own stuff. I can't find an uninstall for it.
Help !!!!!!

I think the only way is a Rollback and that sucks....

notbob
April 1st, 2003, 04:35 PM
Originally posted by MOAB
One more quick question...my floppy's possessed !!! Everytime I click on something, (doesn't matter what...) it activates. I've searched XP for anything and can't find whatever it takes to turn off this possessed floppy.
Anybody got (or had) that problem?
open up the case, unplug the drive (ribbon cable from controller)

why the hell would you need a floppy these days anyway? you can boot from cd on any computer made after 1997 or so, and you can email 1.44MB files to a web mail account to print them at school or whatever

notbob
April 1st, 2003, 04:38 PM
Originally posted by -glitch-
I think the only way is a Rollback and that sucks....

boot in safe mode (f8 while booting)

from there you can delete anything you want to--IE6, outlook express, movie maker, media player etc..

these things will keep reappearing if deleted in normal mode (SP1 gives you "uninstallers", but they just hide the programs, not delete them)

phalkon30
April 1st, 2003, 05:40 PM
Ok, I remember seeing a program recently that allowed you to remove messenger, and host of other windows programs that don't have an uninstaller, I just can't remember what it the hell it was called

I have a few guesses for the floppy thing, but no real good ones, it is something you'll want to figure out though because I'm sure your computer is slow as hell, how long ago did this start?

isus
April 1st, 2003, 08:15 PM
Originally posted by Krell
isus

If you are crashing that frequently then you have a serious problem that is outside the scope of what is expected form XP.

With your technical ability, I'm sure youre all over it. You have probably already looked at the Event Logs to see what hardware or software warnings that you have received too.

i checked the times/dates, but had nothing but security accesses. a few failed, a few didn't. but nothing at the time of the crash (according to windows uptime).

and this is a fresh install of windows, about 3 months old at most.

Theinfamousone
April 1st, 2003, 11:52 PM
If you had read my post, you would have checked out Tweakxp.com, well, anyways, 10 seconds later I found the article you need.

http://www.tweakxp.com/tweakxp/display.asp?id=671

Krell
April 2nd, 2003, 12:10 AM
Theres no such thinsg as a new car. The second you drive it off the lot, its a used car.

The only new install, is one that you havent touched yet. By the time you install a ton of software, services packs, you multitask, P2P . . . 3 months is a long time.

Right Click My Computer > Properties > Advances > Startup and Recovery > Settings > deselect Automatically Restart.

Clear your Event Logs, then watch them.


And for the record, I have a low opinion of TweakXP. It really rubs me the wrong way to see people turn to a better O/S, then butcher it with hacks, then complain about how it has problems.
90% of all the problems you guys have . . . YOU CREATE . . think about it.

Theinfamousone
April 2nd, 2003, 02:37 AM
Originally posted by Krell
And for the record, I have a low opinion of TweakXP. It really rubs me the wrong way to see people turn to a better O/S, then butcher it with hacks, then complain about how it has problems.
90% of all the problems you guys have . . . YOU CREATE . . think about it.

Truer words neve spoken Krell my friend... I may seem to have to ask you about a lot of problems I have, but a lot of people I know have 20 times the problems but don't even care about it, as long as they can check their email, they're good.

Keeping your comp clean and organzied makes worlds of differences as opposed to randomly downloading anything and not having a clue what you are installing or what it is doing to your system. Sometimes (as in the case with ES5) it's best not to think about it though.

But where would be the fun in having a computer if you couldn't tweak and "optimize" it? That's like buying a sports car that you can't put mods on.

Krell
April 2nd, 2003, 03:03 AM
I'm going to follow your lead, and get some sleep.

These hours are taking a toll.

isus
April 2nd, 2003, 05:00 AM
Originally posted by Krell
Theres no such thinsg as a new car. The second you drive it off the lot, its a used car.

The only new install, is one that you havent touched yet. By the time you install a ton of software, services packs, you multitask, P2P . . . 3 months is a long time.

Right Click My Computer > Properties > Advances > Startup and Recovery > Settings > deselect Automatically Restart.

lol... i've turned off all that bullshit... auto restart, error reporting... my pc didn't crash at all last nite. i mean, it hung a little when i was burning a cd, but since i don't wanna pay for nero, i am stuck with mmjb until i get the other apps off winmx.

^ if that was too obviously a mention of warez, then edit whatever you think needs to come out...

and these crashes, they stop the whole computer. the mouse stops moving, winamp stops playing songs, etc. permanently (until i turn it off with the power button). so i don't know if even windows knows what the hell went wrong...

CCSDUDE
April 2nd, 2003, 06:34 AM
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Contro l\Session Manager\Memory Management

Set the DECIMAL (NOT Hex Decimal) to the size of your L2 cache in this input "SecondLevelDataCache"

So if you have say a PIII EB processor you'd set it to either 256 or 512 depending on the model... IE Xeon or not.

Use this - http://www.aida32.hu/aida32.php - to get your L2 cache size.

Add that to the list of what XP lacks....the ability to correctly set your L2 cache size...least ME did it right..lol.. :mellow

Btw, I didn't add what exactly you need to do to find these inputs...it's obvious to anyone with minor PC know how...(mainly to keep newbies from fuckin' there reg up...)

Borgster
April 2nd, 2003, 03:45 PM
this is my give a tip, ask for a tip post. here's my tip, if your upgrading from windows 2000 and were used to using the old method (ctrl-alt-del to begin) of logging on or off, you can disable the welcome screen. just go to start > control panel > user accounts (must be administrator) > under pick a task choose "change the way users log on or off," then uncheck use welcome screen. doing this will disable fast user switching, but if your the only person who uses the computer it isn't gonna matter.

my ask for a tip is, how can i get rid of that annoying gray fading windows xp does whenever i go to start shutdown or logoff? i think that is lame, the fading is a waste of time cause i just want to go to that dialog box and choose logoff/shutdown without having to see any fading.

phalkon30
April 2nd, 2003, 07:04 PM
I don't think you can, its the same as when you try to change skins, it dims it down, then pops it back up, sorta like its letting you know it hasn't frozen

Didn't 98 do something similar? just without fading

CCSDUDE
April 2nd, 2003, 07:08 PM
Originally posted by Borgster
this is my give a tip, ask for a tip post. here's my tip, if your upgrading from windows 2000 and were used to using the old method (ctrl-alt-del to begin) of logging on or off, you can disable the welcome screen. just go to start > control panel > user accounts (must be administrator) > under pick a task choose "change the way users log on or off," then uncheck use welcome screen. doing this will disable fast user switching, but if your the only person who uses the computer it isn't gonna matter.

my ask for a tip is, how can i get rid of that annoying gray fading windows xp does whenever i go to start shutdown or logoff? i think that is lame, the fading is a waste of time cause i just want to go to that dialog box and choose logoff/shutdown without having to see any fading.

How about....just hitting "Restart"/"ShutDown" really fast...lol

I didn't notice the fade deal till I got a call and had to run off before I could whack the "Standby" button.