Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
maddoctor
- 11 Mar 2008 14:14
- 6641 of 11003
anybody got any comments on sp3 for xp and sp1 for vista?
ExecLine
- 11 Mar 2008 15:52
- 6642 of 11003
maddoctor
- 11 Mar 2008 16:04
- 6643 of 11003
execline , Ta , thats the sort of thing i was looking for. No reason to do anything at the mo
maddoctor
- 12 Mar 2008 12:03
- 6645 of 11003
Optimist , seem to be getting different information - saw flash somewhere last week that sp1 for vista had failed in b testing and microsoft were going for windows 7 instead???
maddoctor
- 12 Mar 2008 12:45
- 6647 of 11003
Optimist , thanks for comments. The reason i keep asking questions re Vista on this thread is because sometime this year i want to replace my powerful trading computer but all this confusion over Vista etc is delaying me acting.
Kyoto
- 12 Mar 2008 12:57
- 6648 of 11003
I'd gathered that Win7 was more fact than rumour - and the small kernel re-write has been dubbed 'MinWin'
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_7
As far as backward compatibility was concerned, I'd read that Microsoft was kicking around the idea of using virtualisation to run legacy Windows applications fairly seamlessly within Win7 which would allow Win7 to be a complete re-write without the inherent need to run legacy apps per se, and therefore compromise itself through supporting all the legacy security holes with it. In the linked article the MS guy mentions embedding hypervisors in Win7 - possibly for this purpose.
hangon
- 12 Mar 2008 13:11
- 6649 of 11003
Grief, not rebooting for a week ( by which I presume the computer crashed).
Vista was intended to be the OS that allowed folk to have media centres as well as business computing etc etc. unfortunately these applications are mutually exclusive - particularly as domestic-apps require quiet. This cannot be done with the current thinking, where PC have grown ever-more power hungry. The alternative hardware has yet to be developed - it needs a radically new outlook.
I see further development where Google is going - to make available smart applications which users can "borrow" On-Line, so there is no need to buy ever-expensive software. By interfacing through the internet the computing-power is in the server. This may reduce the power needed by computers. Hopfully PC cards will be developed to take streamed data and create a "cinema-experience" visually and in sound perhaps with interaction over their broadband connection.
Furthermore any domestic OS needs to stop being PC-like and far simpler than (say) a Video-recorder/VCR - which are notoriously poor at user-interface.
Vista confused the Market by having too many versions and this looks set to continue.
- If XP does what you require, it's far better to leave well alone and wait until the next OS is started. Being "first" with an OS is plain foolhardy - it is impossible to test all combinations of hardware/software, so conflicts are bound to happen. With computers as powerful as they are now, it is "probably" better to improve your periperals, rather than upgrading the core of the process. If the computing power shifts on-line, then what we have now will meet future needs, although better screens and speakers are likely to enhance our enjoyment.
ThePublisher
- 13 Mar 2008 09:34
- 6650 of 11003
Just been pointed to
this site.
Already installed a couple of the gizmos that will save me quite a bit of time/effort.
Worth a look for the less computerate of us mob - like 'moi'.
TP
hawick
- 15 Mar 2008 20:19
- 6653 of 11003
I've noticed recently that when my computer and laptop are both off my modem 100 mtr light has been blinking a fair bit (not as much as when online though). I'm sure it didn't used to, or only very occasionally.
Anything to be concerned about, and what might be causing it? Thanks
Mega Bucks
- 15 Mar 2008 20:25
- 6654 of 11003
hawick is it a wi-fi modem and someone getting a free ride or have you got it encrypted ???
hawick
- 15 Mar 2008 20:37
- 6655 of 11003
Don't really know what sort of modem it is, wouldn't imagine it is wi-fi; had it about five years. Don't think it is encrypted. If my computer is turned off how could they access it?
It is callisto 821 Iskratel if that means anything
Mega Bucks
- 15 Mar 2008 20:41
- 6656 of 11003
How do you connect to the internet with your laptop do you use a cable or wi-fi ???
hawick
- 15 Mar 2008 20:49
- 6657 of 11003
Sorry had modem about two years. I connect laptop through router and modem, main computer just through modem. Sorry my technical knowledge and computer lingo is zilch! :o
Would they have to be within 100 metres to get 'free ride'?
Mega Bucks
- 15 Mar 2008 20:53
- 6658 of 11003
If you dont have a wi-fi point they wont be able to connect to you so that idea went out the window,it was only a thought :-) prehaps someone else could suggest something !!
hawick
- 15 Mar 2008 21:00
- 6659 of 11003
Any way to secure my router? I only have two neighbours who could conceiveably be within range and (I thought) I trusted them!!
Could they access my phoneline if i had a wifi point, which I don't think I have anyway? Is a router not a wi-fi point? I use laptop in garden (in summer lol!).
Mega Bucks
- 15 Mar 2008 21:06
- 6660 of 11003
if you have a wi-fi access point and it was not encrypted the answer would be yes they could get on line :-) how to secure the router our other learned friends would help you on that one !!!