Speedup Vista to the Max !


Recommended Posts

I will agree that UAC is not a speed tweak but the annoyance it may bring way be what could save you,Windows XP has been criticized for its susceptibility to malware, viruses, trojan horses, and worms. Security issues are compounded by the fact that users, by default, receive an administrator account that provides unrestricted access to the underpinnings of the system. If the administrator's account is broken into, there is no limit to the control that can be asserted over the compromised PC.

Windows, with its large market share, has historically been a tempting target for virus creators. Security holes are often invisible until they are exploited, making preemptive action difficult. Microsoft has stated that the release of patches to fix security holes is often what causes the spread of exploits against those very same holes, as crackers figured out what problems the patches fixed, and then launch attacks against unpatched systems. Microsoft recommends that all systems have automatic updates turned on to prevent a system from being attacked by an unpatched bug, but some business IT departments need to test updates before deployment across systems to predict compatibility issues with custom software and infrastructure. This deployment turn-around time also lengthens the time that systems are left unsecure in the event of a released software exploit. asking for permission allows you to decide if you trust what is allowed to run.once you get used to UAC you will like it. malware is worse now than when xp was released.

To be honest, with a decent AV (I use NOD32) and a good Firewall (comodo, personally), I've managed to avoid a serious virus issue to where I've had my main desktop running Vista for almost 2 1/2 years now, and have yet to run into issues. It's all in regular maintenance and day to day care. I defragment once a month, I scan each day, and I clean out the registry once a week.

I don't need UAC, and have never needed it. Which is why it is always disabled on every computer I use. I consider myself and advanced user, and I really do not see the benefit of it. Perhaps you devs may find it useful/need it on, but I certainly don't. If I ever badly needed something running and the fact UAC is shut off is the problem, I will not turn it on. I'll just run it in my Virtual XP machine. Not that difficult, especially when you have a bidirectional clipboard. :/

If it's all about permissions, I don't mind right-clicking and running as an admin.

And I'm not sure what you mean about it automatically controlling elevated privileges, whenever I've disabled UAC, I've never had a permission issue or an elevation issue. When i did have an issue, it was almost never solved by running as administrator or whatnot.

Were you responding to me? If so, I'm not really sure what you mean.

If you disable UAC, you are running as an administrator with full and unrestricted access to the entire system. This means that any software you run is free to make any changes it want to the whole system. If said software happens to be malware, the whole system is compromised (because the software can make completely undetectable changes to the OS) and has to be reinstalled.

With UAC enabled, you are running as a standard user (even though your user is actually set as an administrator), except when you are prompted by UAC in which case the action it is asking approval for will run as administrator. In this case, malware won't have automatic access to the whole system unless you explicitly allow it when prompted. This means that a virus/malware scan of just the files your user has write access to is enough to save the system. It also keeps files that belong to other users safe and lessens the risk of spreading the infection. It doesn't keep your files and any personal information like passwords safe though, for that you need antivirus software.

The third option is to actually use a standard user, in which case you will have to supply full credentials (like a username and password) whenever you want to do something that requires administrator access. This is the most secure option, but not as user friendly.

Not advisable for noobs, yes.

You obviously are a noob since you don't seem capable of understanding UAC's benefits as opposed to the very minor annoyance of taking a half-second to click Allow. After your system is configured properly, you should RARELY see a UAC prompt.

You obviously are a noob since you don't seem capable of understanding UAC's benefits as opposed to the very minor annoyance of taking a half-second to click Allow. After your system is configured properly, you should RARELY see a UAC prompt.

Errr.

With a good firewall, Sandboxie, and a decent AV, I can do everything I want and still say I'm secure. Most people, like me, don't have much faith in Window's built-in security tools. we are the ones who know what freeware tools exist out there, and what they're capable of vs. Windows own security measures.

If I want to be annoyed by my computer, I'll ask it to annoy me.

And there's just one thing you people don't seem to understand: What happens when you click Allow and the program really is some sort of malicious code that executes the moment it is fully running?

Like I said, I understand what these "benefits" are, but you lose them ALL the moment you click allow. Just another confirmation dialog asking you if you're sure. Arguably, it makes you somewhat safer, but only marginally so.

Once again, if you use a decent AV and a firewall, and you test all new executables in a Sandbox first, you'll be just fine. To those of us who are longtime Windows users, that's definitely worth the effort to keep a clean PC.

Why should anyone take the original poster seriously? 3 posts in total - it sounds like little more than a hyperventilating fanboy seeking attention.

Leave the damn settings the way they are. They are like that for a reason - and shock bloody horror, Microsoft programmers are smarter than you. If you were of the same level of intelligence you too would be working at Microsoft.

I've never hacked with my Windows or Mac OS X installations and don't suffer even 1% of the possible problems I see others face. Maybe less diddling around and more using your computer for something productive.

Hi,

anyone has tried changing their Vista settings via the Ultimate Windows Vista Tweaker?

I found it on an article at ARSTechnica and have recommended it ever since:

http://www.winvistaclub.com/Ultimate_Windows_Tweaker.html

Instead of disabling UAC at all, what I do is disable it when I login as Admin and keep its defaults behavior when I log in as my day to day user.

The "quick boot" option is there as well, which leads to the question: "why would anyone want a slow boot?" :D

check it out, there's plenty of tweaks being added all the time.

Nplima, the man with the refurbished Compaq Presario.

  • 8 months later...
The master control panel is for 32bit systems only. It will cause endless explorer.exe crashes if it is used on a 64 bit machine. Especially if it's placed on the desktop.

Sorry for a somewhat epic revive folks.

I recently saw this same Master Control Panel posted on a forum I frequent although it said it was for Windows 7, So I quickly checked google to see if it was compatible, however I failed to notice that it said it wasn't compatible with 64 bit. So of course I tried it and ran into endless explorer.exe crashes, after googling, neds post was the only result I could find.

I was wondering if anyone knows how to resolve this problem?

Sorry for a somewhat epic revive folks.

I recently saw this same Master Control Panel posted on a forum I frequent although it said it was for Windows 7, So I quickly checked google to see if it was compatible, however I failed to notice that it said it wasn't compatible with 64 bit. So of course I tried it and ran into endless explorer.exe crashes, after googling, neds post was the only result I could find.

I was wondering if anyone knows how to resolve this problem?

%windir%\explorer.exe shell:::{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} as a shortcut works perfectly fine on 7 x64 for me. Maybe something else is wrong?

To say this nicely. Anyone who disables UAC is not very smart.

To be nice: Albeit I think if you need UAC to babysit you, you aren't very technologically inclined

I didnt need UAC to protect me in Windows 95/98/ME/2000 or XP what makes you think I need it now?

Yes I scan on a regular basis with anti spy/malware and antivirus and have yet to be infected..

Also Sandboxie is great

SPEEDUP BOOT

UAC DISABLED? SPEEDUP BOOT

If you choose to disable UAC then you might have noticed [ or not ] bit of slowdown in your boot time , this is because the UAC driver is still loaded during startup ,which is unnecessary and can be disable by doing this

Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\luafv] 
"Start"=dword:00000004

How do you do the above manually, this is what I see in RegEdit:

25z3qls.png

To put this nicely. Anyone who disables UAC is not very smart.

That's actually a pretty stupid assumption to make...

Many people who disable it are aware of what's going on at all times and are in fact smarter than the average joe.

UAC is there for to look after people to keep them from making mistakes.

I personally know what I'm doing and find it really annoying, so I disable it. I've never had a single thing go wrong.

So does this make me not very smart? I think not...

warwagon: i partialy agree with you on UAC but the part i disagree with is if the user is stupid to disable UAC, if someone chooses to Disable UAC then they must live with that,, err a choice. i would never call someone stupid if they Even Disabled There User account or anything as they have that choice to do but the person must realize that it may not be the right one.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Now 8GB of ram looks even worse in the Neo. I'm so happy I purchased 128GB of DDR 4 when I did.... paid $174. Upgraded my parents laptop to 32GB around the same time for $48. Luckily I have a TON of spare laptops. So i'm good on laptops for a while. I also have a lot of desktops too that I could use if i had to. Lets just hope nothing happens to my main 4 monitor couch workstation.
    • I will keep my current devices for several years... no planning in upgrading until these devices stop working. Too pricey.
    • Apple raises MacBook and iPad prices as memory costs surge by Karthik Mudaliar Apple has raised the U.S. prices of several MacBook and iPad models, including the MacBook Neo, which it launched for $599 less than four months ago. The company’s cheapest laptop now starts at $699, while some MacBook Pro configurations have increased by $300. The changes affect the MacBook Neo, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, iPad Air, and iPad Pro. Apple has not changed the hardware or storage included with these models, so customers are simply paying more for the same configurations. Here is how the new US pricing compares with the previous starting prices: Product Previous price New price Increase MacBook Neo $599 $699 $100 13-inch MacBook Air, 512GB $1,099 $1,299 $200 14-inch MacBook Pro, 1TB $1,699 $1,999 $300 16-inch MacBook Pro $2,699 $2,999 $300 11-inch iPad Air, 128GB $599 $749 $150 13-inch iPad Air, 128GB $799 $949 $150 11-inch iPad Pro, 256GB $999 $1,199 $200 13-inch iPad Pro, 256GB $1,299 $1,499 $200 The updated prices are already appearing on Apple’s U.S. online store. The MacBook Neo increase will probably attract the most attention. Apple introduced the laptop in March for $599, pitching it as a more affordable Mac for students and buyers considering Windows laptops or Chromebooks. It uses an A18 Pro processor and originally undercut Dell’s new $699 XPS 13 by $100. Following the increase, the two laptops now have the same starting price. The M5 MacBook Air has also lost the price Apple promoted when it launched in March. The 13-inch model arrived with 512GB of storage for $1,099, while Apple’s store now lists the MacBook Air range as starting at $1,299. The 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M5 chip and 1TB of storage has gone from $1,699 to $1,999. Apple has made similar changes to its iPads. The recently released M4 iPad Air, which launched at the same $599 starting price as its predecessor, now starts at $749 for the 11-inch version. The 13-inch version has risen from $799 to $949. The iPad Pro increases are larger in dollar terms. Apple’s 11-inch M5 iPad Pro now starts at $1,199, up from $999, while the 13-inch version has moved from $1,299 to $1,499. Both base models still include 256GB of storage. Apple blamed the increases on the rapidly rising cost of DRAM and NAND flash, which provide system memory and device storage. The company told Reuters that it had tried to shield customers from the increases but could no longer absorb them. “We have never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly,” Apple said. Tim Cook had already warned that price increases were coming. Cook said Apple’s existing component inventory had softened the immediate impact, but that higher memory costs would increasingly affect the company after the June quarter. Much of the pressure comes from the construction of AI data centers. Memory manufacturers are directing more production toward high-margin server products, leaving PC, tablet, and smartphone makers competing for the remaining supply. Apple has not said whether the new prices are temporary or whether further increases are planned. For now, the changes show that even Apple’s purchasing power has not been enough to keep the AI-driven memory shortage away from consumer devices.
    • Ventoy 1.1.16 is out.
    • This is a none story - these low volume Chinese models will always get new experimental features first because Apple and Samsung can't produce them in huge volume to meet demand.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      kinowa earned a badge
      First Post
    • Rookie
      krychek57 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
    • One Year In
      Philsl earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      462
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      135
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      77
    5. 5
      Xenon
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!