features you disabled in Windows 7 and why?


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Anyone who assumes someone is an idiot for disabling UAC is an idiot. :)

Some people shouldn't disable it but for some it can be quite annoying and if they know what they are doing then sure why not

I've yet to see a single person who disables UAC, who actually understands what the whole UAC package is and what UAC actually does outside of the warnings.

in fact the people who can disable it are the ones who don't know what it does, and just click ok when UAC asks if they really want to install the fake anti virus in their mail. Granted again, that's only a small subset of what UAC does but it's the most visible one.

None :) I have no need to - the operating system is perfect for me, as opposed to Windows Vista where I removed text labels from the taskbar and tried to make running program icons larger there - I was very surprised when they actually incorporated this into Windows 7 :D

+1

UAC doesn't annoy me. Everything that is built in seems essential for me (especially since they removed the features that Live! brings). And for everything else, it doesn't seem like removing them will give me a performance gain.

Has anyone seen a performance gain by disabling anything? I understand taskbar UI (if you like the old style) and UAC annoying people. But does anything actually give you more FPS in a game or make things "snappier?"

I've yet to see a single person who disables UAC, who actually understands what the whole UAC package is and what UAC actually does outside of the warnings.

in fact the people who can disable it are the ones who don't know what it does, and just click ok when UAC asks if they really want to install the fake anti virus in their mail. Granted again, that's only a small subset of what UAC does but it's the most visible one.

Exactly. People think that all UAC is there for is to annoy them with extra dialogs that ask are they sure they want to do this. But it also prevents other things (like a script running in another program) from executing code unattended. Forcing user interaction is a good thing. But if it is too annoying for you, then more power to you for removing it :D.

Linux and Mac have very similar "user access" features. All OS makers seem to think that it is a good thing.

I disabled Windows Event Logging (the service has nothing to do now - it actually is set to automatic but turns off as it has nothing to do) through Manage MMC. That kinda came as a surprise to me.

I also disabled Task Scheduler. Well, "I" didn't - I think one of the apps I used did. I am not going to turn it on.... because.

Anyone know what eHome is? It is located in ProgramData folder. I currently cleaning up my ProgramData directory - It is kinda frustrating to STILL have traces of Office 2007 trial, HP Software, and Norton Antivirus after removing it.... >:(

In other news, I just deleted 130 files from %windir% :D - I hate licence.rtf files.

Disabled all 30+ services that phone home to microsoft + disabled access to microsoft URLs.

The full list : http://news.softpedia.com/news/30-Windows-...ft-129592.shtml

Should buy some aluminum foil while you're at it. Must be nice to run a system that is as crippled as yours.

Anyone tried removing all the extra languages in system32 folder? For example, it-IT folder. Italian I presume?

If it hasn't changed from XP, it is safe to remove. Also I noticed another eHome directory in Windows directory. Interesting.

I disabled Windows Event Logging (the service has nothing to do now - it actually is set to automatic but turns off as it has nothing to do) through Manage MMC. That kinda came as a surprise to me.

I also disabled Task Scheduler. Well, "I" didn't - I think one of the apps I used did. I am not going to turn it on.... because.

Anyone know what eHome is? It is located in ProgramData folder. I currently cleaning up my ProgramData directory - It is kinda frustrating to STILL have traces of Office 2007 trial, HP Software, and Norton Antivirus after removing it.... >:(

In other news, I just deleted 130 files from %windir% :D - I hate licence.rtf files.

Udedenkz: task scheduler also does more than schedule tasks it also deals with the prefetch files and other things so i'm glad that you like a crippled system and continue to cripple it till it dies *Sarcasm*

388MB Backup Folder,

C:\Windows\winsxs\Backup

When is the backup folder used? Anyone know?

Udedenkz: task scheduler also does more than schedule tasks it also deals with the prefetch files and other things so i'm glad that you like a crippled system and continue to cripple it till it dies *Sarcasm*

Looking through all the events in the Task Scheduler, I did not find this.

Disabled all 30+ services that phone home to microsoft + disabled access to microsoft URLs.

The full list : http://news.softpedia.com/news/30-Windows-...ft-129592.shtml

Pretty much all those phone home if you tell it to, and asks every time.

and most of them are very useful like error reporting. most error that occur, though there hasn't been many since most apps and drivers are now fully compatible, will return proper fixes for the problem, and if it doesn't one usually pops up within 1-2 weeks after the engineers get a look at it.

Udedenkz, I don't wish to be rude, but you are getting to the point of self-parody. The fact you've even admitted to screwing up your PC many times should indicate that you are perhaps wasting a lot of time for little gain.

Windows Search -> Running SSD in Raid 0. Really don't see any use of Windows Search, my computer finds things instantly.

HomeGroup -> useless, not sure what MS was trying to do with it

Superbar -> Can't get used to it, prefer Vista Style

Superfetch -> Automatically disabled on SSD

Defragmentaiton - > Automatically disabled on SSD

System Restore -> Disabled, however i use Windows Backup which is great. It does backups every week, that's all i need.

Windows Reporting -> Disabled

Tablet PC Components - Disabled. Why is MS pushing this useless thing on every machine?

Games -> Removed.

Is there way to completely remove Game Explorer? That thing is absolutely useless.

I would like to see WEI gone as well. Not sure why do we need it.

Windows Search -> Running SSD in Raid 0. Really don't see any use of Windows Search, my computer finds things instantly.

HomeGroup -> useless, not sure what MS was trying to do with it

Superbar -> Can't get used to it, prefer Vista Style

Superfetch -> Automatically disabled on SSD

Defragmentaiton - > Automatically disabled on SSD

System Restore -> Disabled, however i use Windows Backup which is great. It does backups every week, that's all i need.

Windows Reporting -> Disabled

Tablet PC Components - Disabled. Why is MS pushing this useless thing on every machine?

Games -> Removed.

Is there way to completely remove Game Explorer? That thing is absolutely useless.

I would like to see WEI gone as well. Not sure why do we need it.

HomeGroup is about making home networks easier to create and manage.

Windows Reporting - i.e. letting MS know when you have issues? I guess it's a personal choice, but it's very useful for MS to get to know about problems, so they can fix them.

Tablet PC - it's possible that not all tablet-like PCs self identify as such, so the safer option is to show the components.

WEI - why on earth would you want to do that? It's a PC benchmark test. Getting rid of it would confer no benefit.

Interesting that an SSD speeds up searching that much, I'm slightly surprised.

Just to give my thoughts on UAC disabling, I wontjudge anyone for disabling it if they want to, however I think its good practice to leave it on.

Disabling it is the same as running your Linux box for everyday use as the root user, or yoru Mac (which they dont by default).

HomeGroup is about making home networks easier to create and manage.

Windows Reporting - i.e. letting MS know when you have issues? I guess it's a personal choice, but it's very useful for MS to get to know about problems, so they can fix them.

Tablet PC - it's possible that not all tablet-like PCs self identify as such, so the safer option is to show the components.

WEI - why on earth would you want to do that? It's a PC benchmark test. Getting rid of it would confer no benefit.

Interesting that an SSD speeds up searching that much, I'm slightly surprised.

It doesn't.

Also as for the system restore. yeah backups work great for... backups.

however, if the system should crash for some reason, I would rather spend 2 minutes doing a system restore than hours for a reinstall and backup restore. System restore doesn't even slow down the system like it did back in what, win 98... and with yoru supposedly fantastic SSD, it definitely wouldn't affect affect performance at all.

I don't get it. If the system has enough horsepower to run Windows 7, why disable anything (except perhaps the gadgets or other visual distractions that you don't care to see)? I'm not talking about tweaking things - that's fine - but why disable services, Windows components, etc? It certainly shouldn't impact performance to any noticeable extent.

I run 2xSSD in Raid 0 (Performance setup). Really no reason for Windows Search and Indexing. The reason why i removed System Restore is that i don't want Windows doing too much writes on it.

HomeGroup is about making home networks easier to create and manage.

Windows Reporting - i.e. letting MS know when you have issues? I guess it's a personal choice, but it's very useful for MS to get to know about problems, so they can fix them.

Tablet PC - it's possible that not all tablet-like PCs self identify as such, so the safer option is to show the components.

WEI - why on earth would you want to do that? It's a PC benchmark test. Getting rid of it would confer no benefit.

Interesting that an SSD speeds up searching that much, I'm slightly surprised.

There are other PC Benchmarks much better then WEI. WEI seems to be just another thing which makes OS cluttered. That thing should go away. Make it simple!

I run 2xSSD in Raid 0 (Performance setup). Really no reason for Windows Search and Indexing. The reason why i removed System Restore is that i don't want Windows doing too much writes on it.

System restore shoudln't really do more writes. it just makes sure to keep "marked" deleted files for as long as possible so they can be restored. So as far as I know it shouldn't really add much writes to the disk, outside of marking the files with a system restore date, on the files or in a table.

and there's still a need for search, since windows search also does inside files, and indexed search will be faster than any SSD for searching inside files.

System restore shoudln't really do more writes. it just makes sure to keep "marked" deleted files for as long as possible so they can be restored. So as far as I know it shouldn't really add much writes to the disk, outside of marking the files with a system restore date, on the files or in a table.

and there's still a need for search, since windows search also does inside files, and indexed search will be faster than any SSD for searching inside files.

Again i am not talking about single SSD. In my experience Windows Search didn't add any benefits. With or without search result comes up instantly as i click on key. I am sure Windows Search is good with regular HDD.

There are other PC Benchmarks much better then WEI. WEI seems to be just another thing which makes OS cluttered. That thing should go away. Make it simple!

WEI isn't a benchmarking tool. Well it is, but it's purpose is not to brag about your WEI score on neowin.

It's there because computer don't have a generic performance index, since different memory, disks, and cpu's even cpu producers(like the mhz myth) have different performance. you can't buy a game or software easily and just know it'll work on this and this computer.

WEI fixes this by actually creating a universal performance index. so when your mother buys you a game, she don't need archaic complicated lists of performance charts, she just needs the overall WEI, or the WEI of CPU/Memory/Disk

And then software can use the WEI to automatically tune their performance and graphical settings to your computer. like several apps already do, like the GPU accelerated WL gallery screensaver will do.

Disabling it is the same as running your Linux box for everyday use as the root user, or yoru Mac (which they dont by default).

It most definitely isn't.

With "over 10 years experience working in the IT industry on all scales from home computers to national corporate networks" you should know better.

It most definitely isn't.

With "over 10 years experience working in the IT industry on all scales from home computers to national corporate networks" you should know better.

Please explain...

There are other PC Benchmarks much better then WEI. WEI seems to be just another thing which makes OS cluttered. That thing should go away. Make it simple!

That really doesn't make any sense to me. It is a small part of a dialog box and has no effect on your performance what-so-ever by having it installed. Removing it doesn't free up more than a handful of MB of space. Seems like more of a hassle removing it from your install and us wasting time here discussing it than just leaving it alone. :laugh:

Udedenkz, I don't wish to be rude, but you are getting to the point of self-parody. The fact you've even admitted to screwing up your PC many times should indicate that you are perhaps wasting a lot of time for little gain.

I already posted in this thread why I actually can't mess something up. To summarize - disk image, registry backup, system restore.

You can help me by answering the question I posted above.

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    • Creative Sound Blaster AE-X PCIe review: your headphones will love it by Steven Parker If you have been reading Neowin for any length of time, you may remember that I reviewed the Sound Blaster Audigy FX Pro back in April. I found it to be an excellent budget sound card, even though it lacked support for formats such as DTS over the included SPDIF port. Anyway, Creative reached out to me again asking if I was interested in reviewing the Sound Blaster AE-X. It is a card mainly targeted at headphone wearers, which I'll get into a bit later. Before we get underway, here is a disclaimer: Creative Labs provided a free sample without any review pre-approval. Here are the full specs of it: Creative Sound Blaster AE-X Dimensions: 179 x 126 x 18 mm Weight: 263g / 9.28 oz Platform: PCI-e DAC: ESS ES9039Q2M Connectivity Options Side: Rear: 1 x HD Audio Front Panel Connector, 1 x ⅛“ Headphone port, 1 x RCA Line-out (Left) port, 1 x RCA Line-out (Right) port, 1 x Coaxial SPDIF-out port, 1 x ⅛“ Mic in/Line-in port, 1 x TOSLINK SPDIF-in port Surround: No DNR / SNR: THD+N: 0.0001% Dynamic Range 130 dB Recording Resolution: PCM up to 32-bit / 192kHz (Stereo) Direct Mode: Line Out (Stereo): PCM up to 32-bit  384 kHz Coaxial SPDIF Out: PCM up to 24-bit 192.0 kHz Headphone Amp: PCM up to 32-bit / 384kHz (Stereo) Native DSD: DSD64, DSD128, DSD256 Output Impedance: 1Ω, Supported Headphone Impedance: 8–600Ω, IEM: 0.5Vrms, Low: 1.5Vrms, Mid: 3Vrms, High: 6Vrms, Maximum output power: 350mW @ 32Ω (High), Maximum output voltage: 6Vrms (High) Front Panel Headphone Amp: PCM up to 32-bit / 192kHz (Stereo) Native DSD: DSD64, DSD128 Output Impedance: 10Ω, Supported Headphone Impedance: 32–300Ω, Maximum output power: 40mW @ 32Ω, Maximum output voltage: 1.9Vrms ASIO: ASIO 2.3 Total Harmonic Distortion: THD+N: 0.0006% Dynamic Range: 114 dB Scout Mode: Yes EMI shielding: No (but it passed all the FCC emission tests) Operating temperature: 0–45°C Input Power: 12V⎓0.5A Warranty: 1 Year (MSRP) Price: $179.99 / £169.99 The Sound Blaster AE-X was announced at the end of May, and it becomes clear that it is mainly for headphone wearers. I should also note that the card does not support DDL/DTS encoding technology, but it is said to support decoding through the coaxial SPDIF port. I was able to test this working with the classic Windows Sound properties, but I could not get a DTS (decode) signal through my Logitech Z906, it defaulted to 3D sound whenever I played DTS content through Plex or Emby. In addition, this card only supports two channels (stereo) over the speakers. The surround support is limited to the Headphone Amp, so before I get underway, what we have here is a card mostly intended for headphone use, especially with its SPDIF In (Toslink) port where you could connect another device like a console. So what about the highlights of this card? The AE-X is powered by the ESS SABRE DAC (ES9039Q2M), which is capable of a 130 dB dynamic range. In addition, it supports 32-bit/384 kHz playback for deeper detail and clarity. The headphone amplifier delivers up to 350 mW @ 32Ω, which admittedly far surpasses standard onboard audio, offering support for studio-grade headphones. DSD256 and ASIO 2.3 are also supported. What doesn't it have? No support for What-U-Hear, Super X-Fi, or the SmartComms Kit No EMI shielding, but it passed all the FCC emission tests (from the FAQ) I also want to make it clear that I am no audiophile. For me, it's purely subjective and it should just "work" out of the box. First impressions As I said in the introduction, I was a bit sad to see that the AE-X only supports stereo output, meaning it would not be on par with my ALC1220 over my speakers, as I mentioned it seems like this card is marketed toward headphone users. Since I am not an avid gamer that would rule me out as a potential customer, but I can still test its capabilities! The card arrived in a nice-looking box, as shown above. It's quite a bit larger than the Audify FX Pro that I reviewed back in April, and at first I thought the covering meant that it was EMI shielded, but it isn't as mentioned above in the highlights section. What's in the box: 1 x Sound Blaster AE-X PCIe card 1 x 3.5 mm CTIA TRRS to Dual TRS Headset Splitter Cable 1 x Quick Start Guide Aside from the Quick Start Guide, which someone at my age (I guess) needs a magnifying glass to read thanks to the tiny fonts, Creative Labs also has the manual online, which first requires you to prove that you're human in order to access it (so I can't direct link it). Anyway, the box is mostly made up of cardboard, and the only plastic in it is the anti-static bag for the card itself. Design Top Bottom The card itself looks pretty cool and actually wouldn't look out of place in an all-white build. There's only one connector, and for some reason it is awkwardly placed on the side (front-facing) that is for the front panel audio connector, which will let you use the headphones through the front PC audio jack. Since the front panel Headphone Amp has fewer capabilities than the rear headphone port, I decided not to use it. Rear of card PCI-e interface The rear of the card is completely open and is normally where you would find the front panel connector. The PCIe interface side is completely covered, which initially made me think it was EMI shielded. I/O panel Side (front-facing) with Front panel connector On the outer rear bracket side we have the TOSLINK SPDIF in, Coaxial SPDIF out, RCA line out (Right), RCA line out (Left), Headphone out, and Mic/Line in ports. On the front facing portion of the card itself is the F-panel connector. Usage Test System Our test system consists of the following: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D Gigabyte X870E AORUS MASTER (BIOS F12) Corsair RM1000x (2024) Thermal Grizzly Kyronaut (33x33x0,2mm) 2x 32GB Kingston Fury Beast RGB DDR5 6000MT/s CL36-38-38-80 T-Force Z540 2TB (PCIe Gen5) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 Founders Edition (NVIDIA) Creative Sound Blaster AE-X Windows 11 25H2 Pro I installed the card into the Gigabyte X870E AORUS MASTER which includes the RealTek ALC1220 onboard audio. For our subjective listening tests, I used the Coaxial SPDIF port to my Logitech Z906 speakers. For headphone tests I used the OneOdio Studio Max 2 Wireless DJ Headphones that I reviewed last month. After installing the audio driver, I installed Creative Nexus, which is a relatively new app designed for the latest Sound Blaster cards. Then I discovered the AE-X needed both a driver update from 1.00.15.0001 to 1.01.09.000 and a firmware update from 1.00.06.0000 to 1.00.06.0002, then I was set to go. 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When I reviewed the Audigy FX Pro, I went out and purchased a Logitech Z906 set second-hand for €100 specifically to use with the card, but in this instance all I could get on the AE-X was the 3D output of surround sound through Coaxial SPDIF and although it still sounded great, it isn't quite as good as DTS Interactive via my onboard Realtek ALC1220. Conclusion So what have I learned? The AE-X lacks multi-channel support for 5.1/7.1 setups and drops support for modern surround technologies like Dolby or DTS, functioning strictly as a stereo output device. So to really benefit, you will need Studio-grade headphones to "hear" the benefits of this card. With that being said, I can imagine it will appeal to gamers who are switching between console and PC. By utilizing the SPDIF in port, you could just plug your headphones into the AE-X (front or rear port) and then switch between PC and Console without having to move the headphones to a different port. As I said in the Sound Blaster Audigy review, the EQ in the Creative Nexus app offers safe presets, which allows a user to further tweak the lows, mids, and highs for a personal listening experience. Of course it all depends on the headphones you hook up to it. Speaking of headphones, I kind of wish I had higher-quality Studio-grade headphones to really test this card with; I'm not usually wearing headphones in my day to day duties. The only time I will wear them is if I want to listen to music very late at night and I don't want to disturb my neighbors, so my rating (verdict) is based on this fact. Someone with a PC/Console setup and wears headphone religiously to game, and consume media will benefit much more than I from the high-quality Headphone Amps that are included in the AE-X. Once again, I do feel like Creative could have gone the extra mile to support the S/PDIF port a bit more. Why include it if you're not supporting the main popular digital formats? 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    • Or... just use Bitwarden. Free, and has on-prem option as well. Works both on desktop and mobile, wherever you are. The age of local password files is over.
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