I have eased into Vista over the last couple of months. I had too many critical programs on my old system to risk an upgrade. I had my data backed up, but I could not risk the chance of some of my applications would not be able to handle the upgrade.
I did a fresh install on a machine with 2 GB of RAM. I moved my good video card over with both of my monitors. So far I have had very few problems, but there is one thing I can’t solve. I can’t get VNC to wake my machine up if the screen is locked. I run VNC and Hamachi on all my computers. The free version of RealVNC (my favorite flavor) isn’t compatible with Vista. I tried Ultr@VNC and it worked until my password protected screen saver kicked in. Once that happens, there is no response from Vista. I don’t have hibernate turned on, but the screen password seems to kick the machine into a different video mode that cuts the VNC connection.
There are some huge positives in my short Vista experience. I love the Start menu. I click the Windows-Key and a letter or two of the program I want to start and Vista finds it. It does the same with documents. Actually, it works with anything.
I do a lot of file renaming. F2 still does the trick, but Vista doesn’t automatically highlight the file extension. If I rename a file, the OS assumes I still want those last three letters to remain the same. It takes an extra click to highlight the extension to change it (which I rarely do). This is more efficient for me about 99.44% of the time.
I use the Sidebar with a few widgets. I like the quick loading calendar that pops up with Windows-Space Bar.
The snipping tool is great for quick screen captures.
The user directories are much better. Everything is in a folder called “users” instead of “documents and settings” (what a dumb name). All the “my” prefixes are gone too. Now it’s “Documents”, “Pictures” and “Videos” instead of “My Documents”, “My Pictures” and “My Videos”. Vista also included a “Downloads” folder. This is something I have manually created on all my computers for years. Where else would anyone store downloaded programs? Finally it is built in and pre-programmed to communicate with applications that download files.
The “User Access Control” isn’t nearly as bad as the Apple commercial would have you believe. I get beeped once a day at most. As I get my machine tweaked, I will hardly see it at all.
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