Recently I bought a laptop with Vista. Shortly after I was shown the
latest Apple OS at a friends place. Vista seems like the rough edges
have been taken off XP, but it looks like Apple OS ten years ago! I love
the way the Apple OS allows access to the Unix window and the Apple
boots so fast!!

I live and learn!

Chris.
  
Chief Information Officer
Hunter Urban Division of General Practice
Tel: 02 4925 2259
Mobile: 0413 945 564
Help Desk: 02 4929 1000
http://www.hudgp.org.au 



-----Original Message-----
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Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2007 2:58 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Gpcg_talk Digest, Vol 19, Issue 36

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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: [The Vista/Dell Experience] (Peter Machell)
   2. Re: [The Vista/Dell Experience] (ash)
   3. RE: [The Vista/Dell Experience] (Cedric Meyerowitz)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 13:00:13 +1000
From: Peter Machell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] [The Vista/Dell Experience]
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk <[email protected]>
Message-ID:
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

On 18/04/2007, at 9:22 AM, Andrew N. Shrosbree wrote:

First major mistake:

> I had a second requirement in that I wanted a very good machine for 
> cheap.

Second major mistake:

> No, I was not going to consider a Mac.

Seriously, if I so desired, I could spend all day every day fixing
issues caused by that wonderful combination of Dell, Microsoft and
Norton's. All of them should be avoided if stress free computing is your
goal.

Peter.
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Message: 2
Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 13:39:27 +1000
From: ash <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] [The Vista/Dell Experience]
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Peter Machell wrote:

> Seriously, if I so desired, I could spend all day every day fixing 
> issues caused by that wonderful combination of Dell, Microsoft and 
> Norton's. All of them should be avoided if stress free computing is 
> your goal.

someone's tag on a forum reads :

"if you play a windows cd backwards you can hear satanic voices- that's
nothing !
  if you play it forwards it installs windows....."

:-)  ash


------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 14:58:02 +1000
From: "Cedric Meyerowitz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: [GPCG_TALK] [The Vista/Dell Experience]
To: "'General Practice Computing Group Talk'" <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

I'm surprised that your good friend didn't know that Vista needs Office
2007.  Was well published .  And if he knew he should've told you.  
It is a bit difficult to open the new packaging of Vista, Office 2007,
but if you carefully follw the instructions, it works.
You wrote: Get a knowledgeable person who understands your needs to help
you.    Seems your knowlegable person ley you down
Your knowlegable friend should have advised you not to have a TV tuner
in your laptop.
 
Cedric
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Andrew N. Shrosbree
Sent: Wednesday, 18 April 2007 9:23 AM
To: GPCG Talk NEW
Subject: [GPCG_TALK] [The Vista/Dell Experience]



I have been hearing horror stories about software not being able to run
on Vista. This story appears to confirm my fears.
Tread carefully.

-------- Original Message --------



The Vista/Dell Experience 

I needed a new laptop. My choices were to scrounge around and try to
find something with Microsoft XP, or to bite the bullet and opt for
Vista. One of the problems with the former was that many graphics cards
that come with XP machines will perform only marginally at best with
Vista (or at least I am told). I am not a PC guru, but I have a trusted
friend who told me to stay away from at least a dozen options that I was
considering because of graphics card issues. I have learned from
experience that it is better to be safe than sorry.

I had a second requirement in that I wanted a very good machine for
cheap.
My third requirement was that it had to be better than my desktop model.
My desktop had an older processor, but it did have 2 gigabytes of
memory. The new laptop (with the addition of a new monitor) would
replace the desktop system.

Like it or not, Vista is here. My desktop was running Windows 2000
Professional, and although it was running fine, it would soon be
unsupported. I had performance issues, as well. I also needed the laptop
up and running with all my stuff on it by the end of April. No, I was
not going to consider a Mac. Here, then, were my requirements:

1.      I wanted a very good laptop for cheap. 

2.      It had to have a good processor with at least 2 gigabytes of
memory.


3.      It had to be up and running with all my stuff on it by the end
of
April. 

4.      It had to have a graphic card, memory, and processor capable of
running Vista reasonably well, although it did not have to have Vista
itself, per se. 

5.      In a weird-but-true situation, the deal had to please my friend
more
so than me. 


Although Vista was not a requirement (capability to run Vista in the
future was), all the non-Vista machines that I looked at had crappy
graphics cards that were ruled out by my friend. Changing a graphics
card is no big deal in a desktop model, but on a laptop, it is.

To get a machine for cheap, we were watching Dell for refurbished
models, as well as other places for the best deals. All in all, I had a
pretty tough set of requirements, and at least three weeks passed with
my friend nixing every choice that I presented him. Finally, a machine
came in that met his satisfaction. And if he was satisfied, then so was
I.

The Machine 

Dell Inspiron 6400/E1505 notebook
Intel Core 2 Duo processor T7200
4MB Cache/2.00GHz/667MHz FSB
2 GB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz (2 DIMMs)
TV tuner w/ remote control
15.4 in WSXGA+ notebook screen
Windows Vista Home Premium
6-cell primary battery
Intel Pro Wireless 3945
8X CD/DVD burner (DVD+/- RW) with double-layer write capability 120 GB
SATA hard drive (5400 RPM) 256MB ATI Mobility Radeon X1400 HyperMemory
graphics card Norton Internet Security 15-month subscription Image
restore software Free shipping

The price was $1,099. I am not a geek, but I assume that this was a very
good deal, given my set of requirements and also by looking at current
pricing of that configuration in a Dell catalog. I was also able to pick
up a refurbished Dell UltraSharp 2407WFP 24-inch widescreen flat-panel
LCD monitor for $539 (also with free shipping) that my friend said was
to die for. I wanted to get a 22-inc h monitor for way less, but my
friend, bless his heart, would have none of it.

Software Problems 

The problems started shortly after I received my stuff. All the hardware
was fine, but I started having huge problems when I loaded my existing
Office
2002 versions on the machine. I kept getting repeated messages that an
application was trying to access my Outlook mailbox. By repeated, I mean
something like 20 popup boxes, one right after another, all saying the
same thing. Canceling the messages did no good; I had to OK every damn
one of them. Then, after a 30-second pause or so, there would be another
blast of 20 messages to respond to. 

The specific message was: "A program is trying to access e-mail
addresses you have stored in Outlook." Check out this Outlook
experience: "I can deny or I can allow for 1, 2, 5, 10 minutes. If I
don't select 1 minute, I am not able to do anything with the form. Only
if I did select the check box 'Allow for 1 or 2 minutes,' then only I am
able to get the program to work." That person's experience was actually
better than mine. Regardless of what I did, I was not able to get
Outlook to work at all:

  <http://www.ezimages.net/upload/WHISKEY/20070417.JPG> 



Imagine that popping up every second for 20-30 seconds, after which you
get about 20-30 seconds to do something, followed by another blast of 20
or so prompts. Allowing access for 10 minutes does not help.

Dell Software Support -- Less Than Worthless 

I made the mistake of calling Dell for support. Dell told me that I did
not purchase coverage to help me with this problem. I replied that I
paid an extra $70 for one year's support with my purchase. Software
support responded this was a software issue and my policy was for
hardware only. I asked for escalation. The supervisor said I could have
signed up for one month of support for $50 at the time I bought the
machine, but it would now cost me $250 (and that it was a good deal).
Dell would not give me the first month for $50 anymore. I was too late.
What kind of policy is that, anyway?
I threatened to return the machine (I wasn't serious, as I needed
something), but all that got me was "one free try" for 15 minutes. The
software support team looked around for a while, and their conclusion
was that I had a virus. I told them that others had this problem, as
well (there are lots of references to this on Google), but they insisted
I had a virus.
I escalat ed one more time and was told once again that I had a virus. I
explained why it was extremely unlikely that I had a virus, but they
responded, "Take it or leave it for $250."

So here's the deal. I have a brand-new machine, running Vista, behind a
hardware firewall, with Norton security on the machine, and one of the
first things I did was update virus configurations (after I got my DSL
connections working -- which, by the way, was another time-consuming
problem in and of itself), but the best Dell could come up with was that
I had a virus, and Dell wanted $250 to fix it.

I told Dell where to go. Dell software support seriously sucks. But I
knew that headed in. I have had previous support issues with Dell. I
wasted a few more hours of my friend's time and mine scrambling around
on the Internet for a solution. I did find some free software that,
supposedly, would fix this problem. It locked up Outlook, and I had to
remove it.

Somewher e along the line in my attempts to fix the problems, Outlook
itself realized I had a problem and searched for a solution. The
solution was a set of fixes to Outlook. I put them on. Same problem,
another search. More fixes. This went through three iterations. After
the last fix was applied, the solution from Microsoft was one that I
should have been bright enough to figure out in the first place: I
needed to upgrade to Office and Outlook 2007.


One can actually spend days on crap like this, and I did, while slowly
loading other stuff from my old machine to my new machine, and getting a
small amount of other work done, as well. Note that Vista has a feature
to move data files between computers automatically, but it does not work
with Windows 2000. Sheesh. I am not even going to go into the details of
the time and effort it took to fix a corrupted Outlook file on my old
machine, which happened in the process of trying to export it to the new
machine. That alone took half a day to fix, and I still do not know how
it got corrupted.

Flying Saucers and Missing Shards 

There was no real choice. I decided to purchase the home version of
Office for 2007, and by Microsoft's clever design, Office Home does not
come with Outlook. I had to purchase a stand-alone version of Outlook.

Microsoft packages its stuff securely. I removed all the clear tape that
I could find on the Outlook box, but I still could not get the box open.
If you have not seen these boxes, they consist of very thick, bolted
plastic and a slider to open the top. I could not get the slider open. I
was not a happy camper, and at 3 a.m. on the third day of trying to get
the computer to run, I just decided to force the box open by prying it
apart.

This was a mistake. The box splintered into a dozen or so pieces, and I
cut my hand in the process. The CD went sailing across the room, and I
was dripping blood on the carpet. Although the CD was not damaged, the
product key was. It split into three pieces, of which I could find only
two. I spent two hou rs that night looking for a tiny plastic shard
containing two characters of the product key.to no avail.

I decided to load the disk, and of course, it would not load authorized
(without the key), but it would load unauthorized with a 25-use
limitation, after which the product would not run. I also opened, this
time successfully (with no cuts or bruises), the Office 2007 box and
loaded that software as well.

Lo and behold, the problem of repeated messages -- "A program is trying
to access e-mail addresses you have stored in Outlook" -- went away. I
suspected as much. Word and Outlook talk to each other. Vista just
cannot handle programs accessing the mailbox like they used to. So I
would have paid Dell $250 for nothing and would have trained them as
well (assuming, of course, that I would not still be searching for the
solution some two weeks later). On next to no sleep for three days of
messing around, I went to bed somewhat happy at 5 a.m.

A New Product Key 

The next day, I called Microsoft. I was actually impressed with its
automated voice menu system, as I quickly got to someone who could help
me with activation.

I told them I had a problem they had never heard of before. They assured
me they had heard everything. I explained the problem, and they stood
corrected. They had not yet heard of anyone cutting their hand opening a
box of software, with the CD sailing across the room, with the product
key splintering in pieces, one of which could not be found.

The contact generated a new key for me. I entered it, and it was
accepted on the first try. Hooray! I was happy. I spent the rest of the
day loading other software on the new laptop. I was pleased to see that
my own programs ran without a hitch. I also managed to get some real
work done for a change.
So was everything up and running on the fourth day? Not so fast.

I rebooted on the evening of the fourth day, as some software that I h
ad loaded required a reboot. I went into Outlook, and it would not run.
It seems Microsoft gave me the key for some sort of trial. I could not
send or forward messages, but only receive them. That problem only
happened after I rebooted. No problem, I thought, I'll just call
Microsoft again.

The next day, I called Microsoft's automated system, but this time, it
took me to a person in India who had no idea what I was saying.
Eventually, that person gave me another number to call. It was for
"Microsoft paid support on a per-incident basis." No thanks. I called
the first number back and talked to yet another person who redirected me
back to India, where once again I received no help.

Somewhere along the line, I escalated the problem and finally got to
someone who was (after several attempts) able to generate a product key
for me that actually worked. Ultimately, I had to uninstall Outlook, and
then reinstall it with the newly generated key.

Dell Hardware Support 

It was only after getting all my software up and running and stuff moved
off the old machine that I even bothered with the new monitor. That was
five full days later. The new monitor came up, but I could not get
anything to display on it. It's like it was sitting there turned on, but
unattached to my computer. Furthermore, Dell neglected to send me a
user's manual with the monitor.

I called Dell hardware support about the monitor. When it comes to
automated response systems, Dell's is as bad as it gets. After a very
lengthy delay in the automated system, with me repeatedly doing nothing
but swearing and pressing the operator key on my phone, I was actually
connected to a real live person.

This time, I was very lucky to get a person who not only cared, but who
also knew what he was doing. This is a very rare combination these days.
He walked me through configuring the monitor so that I could use both
the laptop monitor and the new flat-panel monitor. The graphics card
(for which I also have no manual) seems to work beautifully, at least
for my purposes.
I would like to say that Dell hardware support is great, but after the
software fiasco and the length of time it took to get to a live person,
I believe that I simply got a random "good draw" -- sort of like
catching double aces to start off a hand of Texas hold 'em.

But the guy who helped me configure the ATI graphics card was very good,
indeed, especially since this was actually a software problem.. I felt
blessed in light of recent experiences at both Dell and Microsoft that
this hardware person from Dell even agreed to help.

Hmmm. It now seems that one feels "blessed" to get any help. Is that
unusual?

Lessons Learned & Advice 

*       Do not even think about trying to get prior versions of Office
or
Outlook (at least 2002 versions) up and running on Vista. If you buy
Vista, plan on purchasing new versions of Office and Outlook 

*       Dell software support totally sucks. Plan on this problem never
being fixed 

*       Dell laptops are fine, but only if you know enough to make a
wise
selection or if you have a guru helping you. Actually, that statement is
not unique to Dell 

*       I really do like Dell's 24-inch flat-panel monitor 

*       Dell hardware support is, likely, far better than software
support.
Then again, I may have simply been very lucky with hardware support.
However, anything is better than Dell software support. In fact, if you
have a software issue with Dell, you may want to try hardware support
first and pray 

*       It may take you far longer than you think to get a new machine
up
and running 

*       Do not attempt to force open a hard plastic case containing
software
unless you want a cut hand, missing shards of product keys and an extra
day of grief 

*       Get a knowledgeable person who understands your needs to help
you. I
am very pleased with my new system now. Thanks, R.E.! 

*       The Vista experience took me 5 days. Armed with info from this
post,
however, your results could be much better. 

Addendum: I have been running Vista now for about a week with no
additional problems. I like it, especially the extra security. Many
things you do now require permission, which is fine with me. There will
be no more automatic uploads if you accidentally visit a rogue site.

Some will note that I have previously stated that OpenOffice would be
the end of Microsoft revenue streams. I think it will.eventually. And
because of problems like mine, businesses will be slow to migrate to
Vista.

Vista did not change the fact that Microsoft's upgrade model is under
stress. New computers may come with Vista, but the amount that Microsoft
can get for Office and the like will probably drop significantly over
time. I just can't see users in India and China paying for Office when
they can get something nearly equivalent for free.

It was my personal timeline to do something quickly that forced me into
one more Office upgrade cycle when I was still relatively happy with
Office 2002. I got six years of use out of Windows 2000 Professional and
close to five years out of Office and Outlook 2002. For many, myself
included, I expect or at least hope this will be my last major paid-for
hardware and software upgrade cycle for a long time.

Regards,

Mike Shedlock ~ "Mish"

-- 

  _____  

Andrew N. Shrosbree B.Sc,B.Ec
Technical Architect
ArgusConnect Pty Ltd
Web:http://www.argusconnect.com.au
Mobile: +61 (0)415 645 291
Email:andrew.s at argusconnect dot com
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> dot au
Mob: +61 (0)415 645 291


View my Skype profile  <skype:andrewshroz?userinfo> (andrewshroz) 

...or just call me <skype:andrewshroz?call>  

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