If you have not followed this series from day one start here: DAY ONE 

8:20

Start my day with my usual tasks, yesterday putty started using my key for ssh, this morning it won’t. And Windows now takes two minutes before I can launch any programs…

I have decided that desktop widgets, plasmoids, gadgets (as windows refers to them) or even conky is useless as a means for getting information about your system, being notified of e-mails or keeping up to date with the latest rss feeds.

Your open programs keep covering them! Last night I minimised all my windows and stared blankly at the CPU monitoring gadget for a moment. “What’s that doing there?” Then I remembered that I added it to keep an eye on how much resources Windows 7 actually uses. That was about the same time that I also realised that I did not look at this gadget since the day I enabled it because it was constantly covered by whatever I had open and was working on.

Conky also has a short life with me when I am using gnome. I usually only start it now when I have specific need of the info I set it up to provide, and conky is also the main reason I have set my terminal to transparent so that I can see what is going on with my system while I am hacking away in terminal.

Controversial as it sounds, but the Vista sidebar was better suited to the job. It allowed you to keep your gadgets visible while working, and was well suited to the wider format of screens that we work on today.

It was a resource hog though, and I disliked it. Most users I know disable it because their computer runs faster without it, and they tend to begin ignoring it after a while.

Go figure…

10:28

I must say I have been enjoying my working on Win7 this morning. Once my housekeeping was done I really experienced little hassle. I was happy.

THen I started to work on a webpage with Dreamweaver.

The process involves taking text from a word document and inserting it in an HTML file paragraph by paragraph. Now Microsoft Office Word works fine in this regard, and so does Dreamweaver.

My frustration is with the lack of multiple desktops. I now know why each of our developers have two screens in twinview mode.

Right now I have to click on the taskbar Icon for word, select the text, click on the taskbar Icon for dreamweaver, paste the text, edit it until it is just right, click on the IE Icon on the taskbar, click on the preview of the particular tab where my localhost is displayed and click refresh.

I really miss having multiple desktops!

In gnome, the way I had is set up I would ctrl+alt+left to Word, copy, ctrl+alt+right to Dreamweaver, paste and edit, ctrl+alt+right to view my localhost etc, etc. It is much more intuitive. My need of using the mouse would be kept to a minimum and I would be working at a quicker pace.

I wonder why Micorosoft has not introduced multiple virtual desktops on Windows on the mainstream releases yet. Sure there is powertools for Windows, but I cannot find a version for Win7 or Vista.

If any of you know where I can get it please let me know…

Likes and Dislikes time!

Right. Time for another roundup of what I like and dislike.

Likes

  • Windows 7 seems really solid. Besides the lock ups I had in the first two days I haven’t had much to complain about.
  • I really like playing DVD’s on Windows 7. Windows Media Player is really streets ahead anything in Linux in this regards. At least the version that comes with Ultimate Edition.
  • Windows Media Centre is also quite nice.

Dislikes

  • Booting my laptop takes longer every time. It is up to two minutes now from where I log in to where I can actually start working. That is totally unacceptable.
  • IE 8 x64 does not have flash support.
  • The extra clicks and steps to do what I want. Want to run putty? ARE YOU SURE??? Okay then you can run it… also note what I said on day five with regards to the extra clicks…
  • Whenever I log in after a startup I have tons of popup applications that first need to be closed before I can get any work done.

All in all I can say there is a big improvement over Vista with Windows 7. What bothers me is that symptomatic problems that bugged users with previous versions of Windows have not been resolved - slow response on startup and first login, tons of programs that load popups and splash screens when you first log in.

I can definitely notice a performance degradation when I start running a lot of programs at the same time. Today I had IE, Word, Access, Dreamweaver and Skype open at the same time and it was noticeable how much the computer slowed down. Not as bad as with Vista by a long shot, but still enough to notice.

I fell asleep while watching a movie on the laptop with the kids so no update. Read on for Day 7

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7 Responses to “Going Closed Source Day 6”
  1. [...] Closed Source Day 4 - And a Virus! Going Closed Source Day 6 » Oct 05 [...]

  2. > Your open programs keep covering them!

    I wholeheartedly agree, and the same thing applies to desktop icons, too. Which is why I quickly disable both: right-click on the desktop -> View -> Show desktop icons/gadgets.

    On the other hand, you can make gadgets display on top of everything else by right-clicking them…

    > Right now I have to click on the taskbar Icon for word, select the text, click on the taskbar Icon for dreamweaver, paste the text, edit it until it is just right, click on the IE Icon on the taskbar, click on the preview of the particular tab where my localhost is displayed and click refresh.

    Use Alt+Tab. Or at least Ctrl+click on IE icon to activate the last active IE tab and not go through the extra step of picking the right tab each time.

    > The extra clicks and steps to do what I want. Want to run putty? ARE YOU SURE??? Okay then you can run it… also note what I said on day five with regards to the extra clicks…

    It sounds like you’ve downloaded the plain PuTTY binary directly (i.e. putty.exe) rather than the installer. When you do that, IE (and Firefox) will set a metadata bit on the executable that marks it as coming from the network, and thus “unsafe” - which means that Windows will then ask you if you REALLY want to run it each time you try. This is mostly just a security feature to prevent people blindly downloading .exe files and running them with a single click. OS X has a very similar feature, from what I heard.

    Changing this is trivial - next time you run the .exe and it asks you if you really want to run it, note that there’s a checkbox in that dialog, “Always ask before opening this file” - uncheck it and it will reset the metadata flag, and stop bothering you.

  3. Also, for fast switching between applications in 7 specifically, do not forget about Win+1, Win+2… etc.

  4. Hi int19h

    For some reason your comments keep getting cued for moderation. Not sure why.

    Thanks for the tips.

    Re: Putty. I downloaded the complete package. I also told Windows not to bug me every time I run this program and since then it hasn’t asked me for confirmation again.

    Win7 has a very pretty switcher when you press Win+tab. I guess it is just a matter of me being used to working a certain way.

  5. The Day 7 link is broken…

  6. Hi Gert. Thanks for the note about the link. I was away for the weekend without teh intarwebs access and for some reason my cellphone refused to update the link properly. Even when I fudged it in html…

    Got home now and fixed it.

  7. Linda Walsh says:

    I assume you’ve found your multiple desktop tools by now? 1) you can still load the XP multi desktop freebie and it works on win7-64bit. It has some quirks but benefits over *true* separate desktops.

    For a true separate desktop tools try the one in the freebie sysinternals suite available from sysinternals.com (will redirect to an MS website that is now the home of them).

    It has *true* multiple desktops — the progs in each can’t float to other desktops like in the XP multi-DT tool. A program started in one isn’t likely to interfere with one started in another.

    There’s also 3-D CUBE for multiple desktops that runs around $19 (not free software, so maybe for your closed-source spirit it would be better.)
    See http://www.thinkinbytes.com/en/home/index.php for options.

    ….interesting reading your troubles….if I spent all my time blogging about all the problems I have in windows, I’d never get the problems solved… (and they just keep on coming!).

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