Friday, September 08, 2006

Last night, I finally completed my install of Vista on my home machine. I sort of wish I had taken the clean install route instead of the upgrade path, because it took forever! One of my coworkers did the clean install and he was finished in half an hour - it took me two nights! Now, those two nights were really because I started it and went to sleep and was greeted with an "End task" dialog on a program that had hung the first morning. I let it continue through the next work day and was greeted with another dialog when I got back the next evening. I did successfully install it, though, and I like it quite a bit. My biggest complaint so far is that Windows One Care isn't currently supported in Vista yet. It's even a Microsoft product for crying out loud!

Anyway, this post is about UAC, though :)

On my PC, whenever the UAC dialog appears, my entire screen goes black and, when it comes back, the dialog is the only thing that isn't a darker color. When the screen goes black, it is almost as if my monitor has lost the signal from the computer, like when you're rebooting your machine. That is probably my biggest complaint with it right now, because the process isn't very responsive. (Is that a performance issue on my machine? I don't know, but I do have more memory on the way)

Here's what I'd like to see: the ability to have a true Administrator account that doesn't have to have the UAC dialog pop up for administrative-related tasks; HOWEVER, I do understand why Microsoft is hesitant to do this. My parents have been using Windows since version 3.1 and they've never had a dialog like this. *nix users have always (?) had the idea of a root user, so that is something they know, but my parents probably have no idea if they're admins or not. In fact, they only have one account set up and they never even see the welcome screen in Windows XP.

How does Microsoft get them to go from that to having one or more logon accounts and then an admin account that doesn't have annoying dialogs and actually expect them to use the one that HAS the dialogs? We might know not to use the admin account for security reasons, but do you really expect users to read the warning message? Users don't read messages now and I'm guessing they won't read them in a new version of Windows either. I'm sure it can be done, but it won't be easy.

Monday, September 11, 2006 12:45:50 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Hey David! Just read some of your posts on Vista. Vista is running pretty decent so far on my pc - even with the 4.1 performance rating! It appears your overall rating is your lowest rating of 5 categories. I guess my Athlon64 3200+ isn't as strong as it used to be! Oh well, just one more excuse for the wife so I can upgrade my pc, thanks Microsoft!
I have also run into the annoyance of the UAC dialog. I did notice that the dialog performance in RC1 does seem better than the UAC dialog in the August CTP, so maybe they are making performance changes. I agree, I don't like my monitor acting like its shutting off and on every time I get this dialog. I've also noticed I get the dialog even when I'm logged on as the admin, only it asks to verify by clicking the continue button. So it seems everyone is getting the dialog on my pc.
One, very odd, side note of clicking ok on the UAC dialog is that it changes how applications run. My wife made sure Sims 2 was installed shortly after Vista to ensure that “Sims 2 downtime” was at its lowest. When she finally got to use the pc, on her account, she launched the game by putting the cd in and clicking ok and the UAC window for the auto run. She played the game and saved her sims for the evening. The next day, she launched the game from her desktop and her sims were missing. After a few nice words about Vista, she decided to recreate her sims and play. The third time she launched sims, the first sims were back and the second ones were no longer around. I began looking around and depending how/where you launch the game determines the “Documents” (formerly My Documents?) that is used. Launching from the cd with UAC will cause the game to use the admins “Documents”, while double-clicking the Sims 2 icon on her desktop will launch the game using her “Documents”

Scott
Scott
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