Vista Annoyances
NOTE: This is not the same as the Vista general Thread which is a review for those wondering if to use Vista, this Thread caters for those who already use Vista and have become annoyed with certain difficulties that were not present in XP.
Since using Vista I have found a lot of simple things are difficult to do that were relatively routine in XP, so I will attempt to make a list of solutions here. Feel free to contribute your 'fixes' here as well.
Ensure you state which version of Vista you are using since there are many.
Here is a start:
QUOTE |
"Windows needs your permission to continue." Oh really? So going into the Control Panel and double clicking an icon wasn't enough of a confirmation? For those who are not sure what I am talking about, chances are great that you've never touched Vista before. When the time comes that you need to change some form of configuration, you will get a prompt asking you if it's ok to continue. It's highly annoying but in all fairness, this nag -can- be disabled on a per user basis. |
Here is another annoyance - remember how in XP you could have an animated icon in the system tray to show activity from the net and network, well this does not exist in Vista! What is more is the icon they do provide does have an option to animate it by right clicking on it and choosing the animation option BUT it is an icon for everything (local and internet network) plus it shows not bit rate! I have not found a solution for this yet.
'Kill switch' dropped from Vista
Microsoft withdraws an anti-piracy tool which disables Vista when invoked, following customer complaints.
Ref. https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7126902.stm
Ok sorry for the late reply but for those who are annoyed by that User Account Control pop up there is a way to disable it. I must say here that I do not recommend disabling UAC but I know most people are annoyed by it so here goes. Oh and I am not taking credit for this, this is someone else's 'find'. Hope this is helpful.
Turn Off UAC Completely: To turn off UAC completely, which disables all prompting, the Secure Desktop Mode, and all UAC-associated security benefits, go to Control Panel>User Accounts and click the 'Turn User Account Control on or off' link. On the next screen, untick the 'Use User Account Control (UAC) to help protect your computer' box and click OK. Reboot and UAC will no longer be active. This is not recommended at all but is the quickest and easiest way to disable UAC prompts and associated behavior, returning you to the same level of security in XP.