{"id":183,"date":"2007-03-10T22:10:00","date_gmt":"2007-03-11T06:10:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.mccambridge.org\/blog\/2007\/03\/desktop-revitalization-episode-1-impressed\/"},"modified":"2022-09-11T00:40:44","modified_gmt":"2022-09-11T00:40:44","slug":"desktop-revitalization-episode-1-impressed","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.mccambridge.org\/blog\/2007\/03\/desktop-revitalization-episode-1-impressed\/","title":{"rendered":"Desktop Revitalization: Episode 1 "Impressed""},"content":{"rendered":"
Well, over the past month my frustration with my former desktop PC setup was building to a breaking point. I last installed Windows XP SP2 in approximately July 2006. Early on, I messed around with a bunch of drivers for reading Ext2 partitions and for getting my Netgear WG311v3 wifi PCI card working. Ultimately I found something that was “good enough,” but had a couple nasty bugs like: When you turn the PC on, it loads XP up to the point of displaying my wallpaper, and then freezes for about 30 seconds. If you pressed [Enter] on the keyboard, it immediately resumed loading and everything was happy. If you did not (for example, if you instead walked away), then Windows felt attention-deprived, and there was about a 50% chance the machine would hang completely requiring a hard reboot.<\/p>\n
Annoying, to say the least.<\/p>\n
So, after putting up with that for over a semester, my frustration finally built to the point that I spent the last week copying off all of my data, and last night wiped my drives clean. I also spent some time rolling a custom XP install CD using the amazing<\/em> nLite<\/a> utility, which allows you to slipstream hotfixes, PnP drivers, and text-mode drivers<\/em>, so no more “F6 to install a third-party driver” from floppy disk<\/strong> (who even has those? I mean, besides nerds like me?), and no more “Windows Update found 68 critical updates for your computer.” Very<\/em> nice.<\/p>\n So, I set up about 35 gigs for Windows XP, popped in the nLite disk, and went to bed. Oh, did I mention that it also fills in all those language\/localization settings, network options, display resolutions, default passwords, etc, automatically? When I woke up, my fresh, clean Windows XP desktop was sitting there waiting for me. No more “Oh, just one quick question” in the middle of a 30+ minute installation. Also nice.<\/p>\n The main event, though, was Vista. I haven’t run Vista on this machine since Beta 2 testing for a Microsoft Install Fest this past summer, which I ultimately abandoned in favor of XP due to lack of drivers. So today, I gave Vista another go, using the Ultimate edition. Installation went without a hitch:<\/p>\n