Recommended Posts

Now show me what specific functionality most users will notice that Microsoft added that is already not available in Windows Update? The fact is there are none.

Easy. SP2 finally fixes the randomly resetting folder settings/window size issue. There several threads in Vista support discussing the bug.

Now show me what specific functionality most users will notice that Microsoft added that is already not available in Windows Update? The fact is there are none.

The answer lies in the question. Installing SP2 basically rolls in a few performance and reliability fixes not generally released, all the patches released since SP1, and some other small enhancements, plus meaning you have to download a lot less on WU. If you'd rather download 800 odd MB of updates every time you reinstall Windows, by all means keep to the SP0 version. For the rest of us, a new service pack release is welcome. Why so many people whine about them is beyond me, keeping an aggressive update and release schedule is a good thing.

Maybe you are suffering from the placebo effect that many experience when they install a service pack or maybe the SP reset some bad settings in the registry to better settings?

I have considered this possibility, but I'd be hard pressed to believe it. I actually have a fairly significant performance problem with SP1 on every box I own, which doesn't come up with SP2. (Not app performance, but lag/stalling on opening certain windows.)

Yes, it could obviously be related to applications/drivers I run or any number of other things, but it's a big enough thing for me to take note.

The answer lies in the question. Installing SP2 basically rolls in a few performance and reliability fixes not generally released, all the patches released since SP1, and some other small enhancements, plus meaning you have to download a lot less on WU. If you'd rather download 800 odd MB of updates every time you reinstall Windows, by all means keep to the SP0 version. For the rest of us, a new service pack release is welcome. Why so many people whine about them is beyond me, keeping an aggressive update and release schedule is a good thing.

You are absolutely correct if you are talking of a fresh install of SP1, but most people will be up dating a older install that should already be fully patched.

I have considered this possibility, but I'd be hard pressed to believe it. I actually have a fairly significant performance problem with SP1 on every box I own, which doesn't come up with SP2. (Not app performance, but lag/stalling on opening certain windows.)

Yes, it could obviously be related to applications/drivers I run or any number of other things, but it's a big enough thing for me to take note.

Are you talking about the bug that affects the control panel where Windows Explorer takes a couple of seconds to display all the icons? While annoying, that is still a minor bug fix most users will rarely notice since few people actually spend a lot of time in the control panel once Windows is configured. But yes in your case I could see how that would be a big deal since you probably use the control panel frequently.

If you search for conversations on Windows Server 2008 as a workstation, it is brought up that the kernels are exactly the same. Those were confirmed by our very own "Brandon Live".

SP2 confirms such a hypothesis with the same package being used for Vista and 2008.

Are you talking about the bug that affects the control panel where Windows Explorer takes a couple of seconds to display all the icons? While annoying, that is still a minor bug fix most users will rarely notice since few people actually spend a lot of time in the control panel once Windows is configured. But yes in your case I could see how that would be a big deal since you probably use the control panel frequently.

I've had it happen to more than just the CP. I rarely open the CP cause most things I need I just use the inbuilt search to get to. 'dev' to get to the device manager is much quicker than clicking through so many windows.

I've had it happen to more than just the CP. I rarely open the CP cause most things I need I just use the inbuilt search to get to. 'dev' to get to the device manager is much quicker than clicking through so many windows.

It affects more than the Control Panel, but that is where it is most apparent and why I used it as an example.

Most users stick with defaults. It may be glaring to us anal, "must have it our way types" but most people will hardly notice it.

I've had several non-tech people ask me about the bug so it's not just anal nerds who complained about that bug, although I will agree, it's a fairly minor one.

I've had several non-tech people ask me about the bug so it's not just anal nerds who complained about that bug, although I will agree, it's a fairly minor one.

I wasn't necessarily implying on this one that only nerds have noticed it. anal types (Not just nerds) in general will notice it, especially non techie Windows power users. (Yes those do exist in offices all over the country.)

@Intelman:

The answer is yes.

It affects more than the Control Panel, but that is where it is most apparent and why I used it as an example.

Either way, SP2 fixing all the glitchy crap is why I won't be bothering to move to 7 right away.

It might go on my notebook pretty soon after launch, but I'm undecided as to whether or not it'll do anything for me in general. Vista's been great except for the little glitches.

I'm looking forward to that damn bug which causes wireless connections to fail upon waking from sleep to finally be fixed. Why a fix for that hasn't been released on WU is beyond me :rolleyes:

Have you looked through Microsoft's knowledge base articles to see if a hotfix is available for your particular bug? Many hotfixes are only available in specific cases and linked to in these articles.

Vista was such a failure, it's dead even before the new windows came out.

*d'oh* and your comment is the failure of today :rolleyes:

May have been true with SP1 but it is in no way true of SP2. SP2 brings the Vista kernel up to the same as Server 2008s, so it's definately more than that.

Vista and Server 2008 share the same codebase starting with Vista Sp1.

You must be joking. That's one of the most glaring and annoying bugs in Vista.

but only for some people. Most people didn't realize that Vista uses different folder types for different folder content. This is not a bug. The only bug which occurs, is that sometime changes the view to music or pictures even if there are no files of this type in it. But this only happens 1 time in 3 months for me. So this is a minor issue.

I'm looking forward to that damn bug which causes wireless connections to fail upon waking from sleep to finally be fixed. Why a fix for that hasn't been released on WU is beyond me :rolleyes:

Request the update http://support.microsoft.com/kb/953270/en-US. On the page you can see a link, type in your email and request it.

Have you looked through Microsoft's knowledge base articles to see if a hotfix is available for your particular bug? Many hotfixes are only available in specific cases and linked to in these articles.

My what a forum troll you are. I guess you will not be installing SP2 since you "already have all updates".

Sp2 includes more updates than those freely released for download, new features and so on.

There is no reason to argue with EVERYONE. My experience with the SP2 betas, installed over a clean installed Vista SP1, is that it feels more slick and responsive.

Are you going to argue that this is also a placebo effect?

(i just selected your last post to quote and reply, has nothing to do with what you wrote)

My what a forum troll you are. I guess you will not be installing SP2 since you "already have all updates".

Sp2 includes more updates than those freely released for download, new features and so on.

There is no reason to argue with EVERYONE. My experience with the SP2 betas, installed over a clean installed Vista SP1, is that it feels more slick and responsive.

Are you going to argue that this is also a placebo effect?

(i just selected your last post to quote and reply, has nothing to do with what you wrote)

Welcome to my iggy list, jerk.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • BleachBit 6.0.1 Beta by Razvan Serea When your computer is getting full, BleachBit quickly frees disk space. When your information is only your business, BleachBit guards your privacy. With BleachBit you can free cache, delete cookies, clear Internet history, shred temporary files, delete logs, and discard junk you didn't know was there. Designed for Linux and Windows systems, it wipes clean thousands of applications including Firefox, Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome, Opera, Safari, and more. Beyond simply deleting files, BleachBit includes advanced features such as shredding files to prevent recovery, wiping free disk space to hide traces of files deleted by other applications, and vacuuming Firefox to make it faster. Better than free, BleachBit is open source. BleachBit has many useful features: Delete your private files so completely that "even God can't read them" according to South Carolina Representative Trey Gowdy. Simple operation: read the descriptions, check the boxes you want, click preview, and click delete. Multi-platform: Linux and Windows Free of charge and no money trail Free to share, learn, and modify (open source) No adware, spyware, malware, browser toolbars, or "value-added software" Translated to 64 languages besides American English Shred files to hide their contents and prevent data recovery Shred any file (such as a spreadsheet on your desktop) Overwrite free disk space to hide previously deleted files Portable app for Windows: run without installation Command line interface for scripting and automation CleanerML allows anyone to write a new cleaner using XML Automatically import and update winapp2.ini cleaner files (a separate download) giving Windows users access to 2500+ additional cleaners Frequent software updates with new features Going beyond standard deletion of files, BleachBit has several advanced cleaners: Clear the memory and swap on Linux Delete broken shortcuts on Linux Delete the Firefox URL history without deleting the whole file—with optional shredding Delete Linux localizations: delete languages you don't use. More powerful than localepurge and available on more Linux distributions. Clean APT for Debian, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Linux Mint Find widely-scattered junk such as Thumbs.db and .DS_Store files. Execute yum clean for CentOS, Fedora, and Red Hat to remove cached package data Delete Windows registry keys—often where MRU (most recently used) lists are stored Delete the OpenOffice.org recent documents list without deleting the whole Common.xcu file Overwrite free disk space to hide previously files Vacuum Firefox, Google Chrome, Liferea, Thunderbird, and Yum databases: shrink files without removing data to save space and improve speed Surgically remove private information from .ini and JSON configuration files and SQLite3 databases without deleting the whole file Overwrite data in SQLite3 before deleting it to prevent recovery (optional) BleachBit 6.0.1 Beta release notes: BleachBit 6.0.1 beta is now available for testing. This maintenance-focused release includes bug fixes, updated translations, and a range of safe enhancements. This release fixes a Windows security issue that could allow arbitrary file deletion during privileged cleaning (reported by Zeze with TeamT5). It also adds new cleaners (including a DNS cache cleaner, Claude Code, and Visual Studio Code forks), support for multiple Chrome and Edge profiles, new deep scan options for developer directories like node_modules and venv, and safer, faster file shredding. All Platforms Added cleaners for Claude Code, DNS cache, and many Visual Studio Code forks. Added support for multiple Chrome and Edge profiles. Chrome can now clean downloaded AI models. Deep Scan can optionally remove venv, __pycache__, node_modules, and .angular directories. Deep Scan is faster by skipping directories on the keep list. File shredding is safer, faster, and leaves fewer recoverable traces. Improved handling of cookies, symlinks, Unicode filenames, external processes, and configuration files. Improved Expert Mode warnings and long warning dialogs. Fixed crashes related to cleaner detection, invalid Unicode, and malformed cleaner data. Clipboard is now cleared automatically after shredding files via paste operations. Linux Added AppImage support. Added cleaners for Visual Studio Code, Codeium, Librewolf (.deb), Transmission (Flatpak), and Profanity. Improved Linux trash detection, including Snap-installed applications and mounted drives. Fixed Wayland root CLI issues and several Snap-related problems. Improved package dependencies, AppStream metadata, and desktop file handling. Fixed startup crashes when Python Requests is unavailable. Windows Fixed a security vulnerability that could allow arbitrary file deletion when cleaning with elevated privileges. Added %WindowsSystem% variable support. Improved clipboard clearing using native Windows APIs. Improved installer experience on unsupported Windows versions. Reduced installer size and improved application robustness. Fixed Unicode handling, filename anonymization, Git revision reporting, and splash screen stability. [full release notes] Download: BleachBit 6.0 | Portable | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) View: BleachBit Home page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • DriversCloud 12.1.6 by Razvan Serea With DriversCloud (formerly My-Config.com), you can explore your computer easily, safely and free. The application quickly scans your PC and identifies the hardware and software components. DriversCloud then establishes a list of the different drivers compatible with your OS and hardware. Download the drivers needed for the proper functioning of your computer. To detect your drivers, DriversCloud also displays a detailed summary of your hardware and software configuration, analyzes your BSOD, monitors in real-time your PC voltages and temperatures and lets you share your configuration online. Once the hardware components have been detected, you will be able to obtain with just a few clicks the latest drivers corresponding to the identified hardware. You can record your configuration on the site for free, and can get the corresponding URL to post the configuration to technical forums, e-mail and social networks. You can also download the detection result (the configuration) as a PDF file. To protect the user's privacy and data confidentiality, a 4-level confidentiality system was created that filters the XML marks and gives control to the user. The default level can be modified in the preferences. Using the maximum level will prevent the user from publishing his configuration and generating a corresponding PDF file. In non-connected mode, each XML configuration is stored on the server for one day (for practical reasons). However, you are given the opportunity to manually delete it. Created in 2004, and continually improved, My-Config.com has established itself on the web as a free service to PC users running Windows and Linux operating systems. The service is designed to work with the most common Internet browsers (Edge, Firefox, Chrome, Safari). Download: DriversCloud 64-bit | 20.0 MB (Freeware) Download: DriversCloud 32-bit | 18.9 MB Link: DriversCloud Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Contributor
      MarkHughes4096 went up a rank
      Contributor
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      516
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      193
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      96
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!