Windows Vista notes, part 2

Continuing my notes on Vista usage:

  1. User Access Control or UAC is really as annoying as Apple depicts it in the famous ad. I have switched it off after an hour of clicking “Allow” all the time. Not only it is annoying, it also prevents the programs that are not aware of it from copying certain files which UAC thinks it has to “protect”. I use a program called Far Manager to work with files and it was just complaining about not being able to copy certain files (not even sure what was so special about them, not the system files certainly). When I disabled UAC the copying started working without problems.
  2. Constant disk activity can drive you mad. In my case it was caused by one of the “features” which I think lots of Vista users will be turning off. It is a “shadowing” feature which you can enable for each hard drive separately. It basically saves the copies of all your data so that you can later go back to a previous version of any file, directory or even all hard drive.
    That’s great of course. In theory. In reality I have a 500 Gb hard drive which is half full already with data, movies, games and other big files. This data is constantly updated by me and Vista constantly copies everything. Not only the constant disk activity is annoying, but this eats the hard drive space too. When I disabled the feature I immediately got back 50 Gb of free space. I’ve decided that I’ll better use good old undelete from a 3rd party vendor to get the accidentally deleted files back.

Both of these “misfeatures” reminded me about one thing that I hate in programs like Putty. The developers do not let you save the password by design. They think that this is the best way to provide maximum security for the password. If the password is not saved anywhere in the program, then no one has any chance to hack the program and steal it. Right? Wrong!

The only thing that they achieve with this approach is that the users have to write their passwords elsewhere. On piece of paper, in the notepad, everywhere. Is this more secure then letting the user store the password in the program and then using some advanced technique to properly encrypt it? Nope, this only makes security a bigger problem. Of course, it becomes the users own problem, the software developers can not be held responsible if someone stills that paper with a password from the user’s desk. That’s so wrong in my opinion.

And the same happens with that 2 features in Vista. A person like me just turns them off because of their annoyance. Both features are great in theory and I definitely like to use them but not at the cost of such annoyance.

UAC is actually so wrong that I am quite sure Microsoft will be fixing it in the first Service Pack for Vista.

7 Responses to “Windows Vista notes, part 2”


  1. 1 Evil Agent

    lol I saw the UAC Apple ad now (the other ones I had already seen) - brilliant!

    Although I don’t like Macs (they’re great out-of-the-box products, but when you need more than that…. good ol’ PC beats them by far!), I must say that their campaign is absolutely brilliant!

    However, I kinda like UAC. Obviously, it’s gonna take a little while until software developers have their products Vista-ready (I think that signed products can do pretty much everything without express permission), it’s not that bad to know what’s happening in our system… Except for the time we’re upgrading and installing everything! :P It’s annoying in that stage (cancel or allow? cancel or allow? annoying! :P)

  2. 2 Frank

    Would you mind describing how to disable UAC and shadowing.

  3. 3 Lee Francis Wilhelmsen

    I turned off shadowing by right clicking on the Computer icon, open “properties”, choose the “System Protection” tab and uncheck the disk under “Automatic restore points”.

    I reclaimed at least 10 GB of my disk.

    Check out http://blogs.zdnet.com/Bott/?p=243 for details.

  4. 4 thanks

    Thanks; this constant disc access was starting to get me all warm and fuzzy - very annoying to say the least.

    For the record the User Annoyance Control feature was the first thing that went on my vista.

    Whomever at MS came up with these ideas (and a few others we don’t know about yet, I can see comming) can go flush it as far as I’m concerned.

    Other than these I’m pleased by the OS thus far and it’s quite pleasant to work with once you get the hang of things.

  5. 5 Herb

    Thanks for the write up. The disk noise was driving me crazy ! Now I can live with Vista again ! … and may turn off UAM to save my wrists !!!

  6. 6 Brad

    I used perfmon to look at disk activity and every second Vista is pulling the registry and looking at USB drives. I do have an integrated 15-in-1 card reader that may be the problem. Why would Vista poll the card reader every second - oh yeah, Windows programmers!

  1. 1 Vista disk activity again at The Chronicles of Stuffed Guys

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