I just installed Vista SP2. Then I merged SP2 and all other system packages into Vista permanently, freeing up lots of disk space. How does one do this?

  1. Click Start.
  2. In the search box, type cmd and press Enter. You’ll get a command window.
  3. Type compcln.exe
  4. You will be prompted as follows:


    This operation will make all service packs and other packages permanent on this computer. Upon completion you will not be able to remove any cleaned packages from this system.


    Would you like to continue? (Y/N):
  5. Answer “y” and Windows Component Clean will clean up all that crap.

That’s it. Now your system is a lot like a fresh Vista+SP2 build without all the leftover junk. Enjoy.

burnout
Burnout Paradise is a game I played a whole lot when it came out. It’s also a game that I haven’t sold off because of the amazing downloadable content that Criterion has supplied, all free.

Since most of my gaming happens on the Xbox 360, I have also racked up a bunch of achievements, as of right now 850/1050 gamerpoints worth. The achievements that I haven’t obtained out of the core 1000 are for anything related to Burning Routes. There is one burning route per model of car, and it involves just hauling it open-throttle style across the map from some point A to another point B, usually set far apart.

There are a few reasons that I haven’t done these. One is that I didn’t do any burning routes as I advanced my license, and now that’s pretty much all I have left. Completing a burning route, driving back to the garage, changing cars, driving to the starting point for that car’s burning route, then repeat for 80 or so cars. Since I’ve completed everything else in the game, I can’t really work it into gameplay, so it’s really tedious.

Another reason is a combination of two things. One, Burning Routes are hard, one crash and you’re liekly not going to do it. Two, there is no restart option.

Imagine that for a minute. You get in a car, do a long race across this gigantic map, and near the very end someone pulls out in an intersection and you crash. Now that you’ve blown it, you have to just sit for a moment until the game registers that you’re no longer interested, or go to the finish line and lose. And then you have to drive all the way back across the map to the starting point of the Burning route and start again. It’s torture.

Some people defend this game design decision by saying that it fits in with the open world philosophy and that anything else would be “jarring” or some other mealy-mouth fanboy crap. However, when an online race starts all players don’t have to go driving to the starting line, instead you’re suddenly warped to the starting line from wherever you are, and no one seems to complain about that.

Anyhow, I think it’s crap, and I’m not the only one.

Crashy Smashy image by JackBlade

Crashy Smashy image by JackBlade

Criterion is finally addressing this in one of two downloads available February 6th. One of the updates is the Party Pack, which is paid content and will add some kind of crazy festive party mode.

The other update, the free update, adds the forementioned restart. It also tweaks car handling and some of the game modes so they’re more balanced. For instance, the Stunt Run counter has been tweaked to start off slower and then speed up with each multiplier. Like all change, this will likely upset a large number of people and result in flamewars in many forums.

I might just dust off my copy and finish up those Burning Routes and get my Criterion license now that the game has been fixed.

Anyone is welcome to FR me on the Xbox 360, my gamertag is Minimalist360.

If you have a laptop which comes with a PS/2 touchpad (most) and you’re running XP or Vista, you may notice something like this with this month’s Windows software updates:

The entry in question is the “IdeaCom Technology Inc. – Input – IdeaCom HID Touch Screen (PS/2) MOUSE” update. Do NOT install it (unless you have one of those), as you will lose the ability to use your trackpad and/or PS/2 mouse. If you’ve lost said ability, here are the steps to fix.

  1. Figure out a way to navigate to \Windows\int\oemXX.inf (XX is different on different systems, mine is oem11.inf). Maybe plug in a USB mouse if you’re not good with the keyboard.
  2. The file should have a “Modified” date of December 11, 2008.
  3. If yea, delete that file.
  4. Open Device Manager, look for HID devices. Open it up, fine the IdeaCom device, and remove it.
  5. Reboot. Everything should be back to normal.

Driver rollback and system restore do NOT work. Nice job Microsoft, you started the new year with a giant Zune fiasco, and now this, which I imagine will affect a LOT of people that don’t think about whether they have a touchscreen or not.

I’m not sure why this is a completely under-the-radar release, but it improves Vista’s search in myriad ways.

http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=940157

I know I am late to the party with these, but I just discovered them.

Nifflas’ Games

There are a few great platformer-exploration games here.

Fun one, the option to turn off hibernation via the GUI has been eliminated. I have a laptop with 4GB RAM and a 64GB SSD, so space is at somewhat of a premium. I never use hibernate (sleep works great) so I figure let’s disable it. You have to do this from the command line. Open a command line with administrator privs, and type:

powercfg -H off

Your hibernation file will immediately be freed and all hibernate options will disappear from power plans. Pretty obvious should be the way to turn that back on:

powercfg -H on

Here’s how to open a command line with administrator privs:

  1. Click Start followed by All Programs and then Accessories
  2. Oon the Accessories menu Right Click on the Command Prompt
  3. From the drop down menu, Click on the Run Administrator option

virtual pc, free

and

free VMs with IE6 IE7 and IE8

Yours Truly,

Minimalist360

Dell sells this card and it’s supposed to have GPS in it. Only, it doesn’t seem to. The help in the Dell Mobile Broadband Card Utility tells you how to use the GPS option in the tools menu, and/or the GPS Status button in the card manager. So here’s the card manager:

dell1.jpg

I don’t see me no GPS Status button. I contacted Dell tech support a few times over the last few months, and they eventually refer me to Sprint, which is ludicrous since Sprint a> sucks, b> doesn’t have customer support to speak of c> doesn’t support this card. I tried once.

So lo and behold on my final chat session with tech support tonight, the one where I’m planning on getting mad and demanding 40% of my purchase price refunded for false advertising, the man in India types these magic words: “The Dell Mobile Broadband Card Utility (DMBCU) determines the presence of GPS software when the software is installed.” Aha. Aha!! Registry.

So I fire up the process monitor. I run the DMBCU and capture events. I search for GPS and I find on HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Novatel Wireless\NextGenCommon a key called GPSHWStatus:

procmon.JPG

…and it’s set to 0 or not there…

procmon_detail.JPG

I’m running Vista x64 – this key would be different on 32 bit windows machines, should be the same but without the Wow6432Node\ part. So, on to registry editor:

registry1.JPG

Indeed, it is there and set to 0. So ah sets it to 1:

registry2.JPG

And the next time I run the DMBCU, it installs a driver(!) for … the GPS!

devmanager.JPG

and would ya lookie here:

dell2.JPG

It seems to work. I’m inside and I haven’t checked it out yet, but when I hit that button it finds the GPS on COM6 and starts to search for satellites.

I did all this while the Dell tech support guy was connected to my machine remotely. He tried to pull down the Tools menu to look for the GPS entry, moused over all icons in my tray, and then told me I would have to contact Sprint. [sarcasm]I’m SO glad I allowed the remote connection.[/sarcasm] When I got angry about that, he spent 3 minutes looking up information and then mentioned the bit about the install. I did the rest and then near the end when I said “Did you see that? It installed a driver!” he says to me “Great. Glad we could fix your trouble.” Uh huh.

I hope this helps someone. I have seen many posts on the Dell Community forums about this with no solution.

I had to rebuild the OS on my laptop, so I started from scratch with Vista x64 Ultimate. All went well during the install, and updates were installed. No crashes, no problems.

When I started using the system, I noticed some differences from the other installs. I first noticed when adding the debugging symbols to Visual Studio. When I browse folder, this is what happens:

vs_issue1.JPG

The User profile folder, which is my case is supposed to be my username, “kk” ( and is on my desktop), instead is empty. When I click on it, I get the error “The folder cannot be used.” If you look at the image, there’s an extra space in there, it’s like the folder name being retrieved by the system is null.

Visual studio recovers from this and I can browse for the folder. Apple’s iTunes, however, fails. I keep my music on an external hard drive, but when I click on “browse…” to point my music folder there, I get the same error as above, but iTunes becomes unusable after I clear the dialog. Which sucks because iTunes also base64 encodes their preferences xml files rather than just writing them out as UTF-16 encoded, but I won’t pick on Apple too much since I am a shareholder. Oh wait, yes I will, what the hell kind of boneheaded decision was that?

In Internet Explorer, you can relocate your folder for cache. Here is what comes up on a properly working system:

proper_ie_dialog.JPG

And here is what happens on my system:
improper_ie_dialog.JPG

Note the lack of the User Profile folder in this dialog. So IE wins on the “smartness” of dealing with this issue, but it’s still an issue. On a system where this works properly, you can also browse “up” in certain dialogs to the top, which brings you to that User Profile, I get the same error in that case as well.

Some things I’ve done to try to fix this:

  • I tried searching through the Microsoft knowledge base, and I find many articles about “special folders” like Music and Pictures not having the correct icons, but nothing like this.
  • I spend about an hour with procmon watching what kind of registry access is made on the system to see if it’s some kind of problem there. That was so painful — when you open a browse dialog there’s a massive flurry of activity and nothing jumps out as a problem.
  • I’ve compared permissions, etc, on a working system with this system, identical.
  • I decided to create a new account on the machine, all new accounts being created have exactly the same problem.

It’s weird how crippling this is, it’s minor issue but it comes up a lot and it makes it hard to browse for files in general. If anyone has experienced this problem, please share your findings.

…without all the crap.

The main Nero Burning ROM program is perfect for what I use burning software for. I can make data CDs and DVDs, dual layer DVDs, and if I have VOBs I can create a Video-DVD. I can save a disk layout, and load it later and burn it. Burning works, supports some nice features like overburning and verification, and that’s about it.

The problem is, it’s IMPOSSIBLE to install just the Nero Burning ROM program. No matter what you do, it installs Nero Scout, which then immediately starts indexing files on your hard drive. It installs a variety of other crap, and you end up with 4-5 loaded processes. That’s if you JUST chooses Nero Burning ROM.

So, NERO is dead to me, in the same way that Real Media is dead to me. (Backgrounder, Real Media had a completely deceptive install program that turned on all kinds of features. It did so by showing you a scroll box with 4 items shown, all unchecked, and then if you scroll down you see 4 “Adware” type programs are checked.) On principal, I will NEVER install any Real product on any platform ever again.

So with all of Nero’s crap, and the fact that they are charging $50 upgrades every 18months or so for not a lot of new stuff, means that I’d like to send that the way of Real.

Does anyone use a CD/DVD burning program that does as I described above? If so, can you comment?

Thanks in advance.