The Windows Vista Experience: Week 2 starts
It is with some wryness we note that "Windows Defender" (Microsoft's anti-spyware thing) at the end of a scan doesn't say that it didn't find anything bad, it says that the machine is running normally.
I'd heard that Vista was supposed to boot faster than earlier Windowses. Maybe it does. Depending on how you measure. It's pretty quick to get to the login screen, and to let you log in (which I can do by fingerprint, in of the genuinely nifty features of this box). It does, however, take fourteen minutes before I can actually do anything. Like read mail, or start Firefox. That's not particularly fast, IMAO.
I'd heard that Vista was supposed to boot faster than earlier Windowses. Maybe it does. Depending on how you measure. It's pretty quick to get to the login screen, and to let you log in (which I can do by fingerprint, in of the genuinely nifty features of this box). It does, however, take fourteen minutes before I can actually do anything. Like read mail, or start Firefox. That's not particularly fast, IMAO.
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As for startup items, I got it fully installed and haven't added or removed anything. 12 little icons appear on the right side of the taskbar, and I don't know what even half of them are.
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The trick is to identify the ones you don't want started at boot time. Office and messengers are good bets to turn off, you can start them manually when you need them.
And yes, 2G of ram is what most geeks consider the minimum when it comes to Vista.