Archive for December, 2007

That’s it for this year, Happy Holidays Friday, December 21st, 2007

Christmas

Would you believe it, the last business day of the year is upon us.

To everyone who contributed to this site this year, my thanks.

I would also like to thank all my clients for their continued business.

My plans for next year are just “more of the same” but better.

I am having a quiet Christmas at home. My partner and I are expecting a baby sometime in the next 30 days. So we are taking it easy right now.

So I hope you have a Happy Christmas.

Colin

IE6 on XP Crashes after Windows Update MS07-069 Thursday, December 20th, 2007

internet-explorer-crash

One of the December 2007 security updates from Microsoft can cause IE6 to crash if you are running on Windows XP SP2.

**Update 21/12/2007: A Fix has been issued (<<Click)

From the source:-

After downloading the Internet Explorer Cumulative Security Update for December 2007, some customers using IE6 on Windows XP Service Pack 2 have experienced an unexpected crash or hang upon launching Internet Explorer.

This might occur while navigating to a website hosting considerable media content (for example: http://msn.com) resulting in Internet Explorer displaying a dialogue that states “Internet Explorer has experienced a problem and needs to close”. If you experience this issue, implement the applicable workaround provided in the following knowledge base article:

For your security, we strongly recommend that you deploy the Internet Explorer Cumulative Security Update for December 2007.

Terry McCoy
Program Manager
Internet Explorer Security

Link: post-install-issues-with-ms07-069-ie6-on-xpsp2.aspx

Registry Fix: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/946627

____________________

Dear Microsoft

A few things

1) If one of your updates causes problems, would it not be prudent to remove it, fix it and replace it.

2) Expecting end users to carry out a complex registry modification to fix a problem you created is beyond a joke.

3) I am confused about Terry’s Post. He says “We have known problems with MS07-069, but we recommend you install it”.

Social Comment: The blogs are wild today with how IE8 has passed the acid test

Link: Internet Explorer 8 and Acid2- A Milestone

IE8 has an installed base of zero, IE6 is still used by tens of millions. Go back to the well and fix the plumbing.

Your friend in Tech

Colin

How to Manage your Microsoft Outlook Data File PST Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

Outlook2003

Most people keep their Outlook e-mail in an Outlook Data File. This is a file with the extension of .pst

On all modern versions of Outlook this contains your entire Outlook structure including Inbox, Outbox, Sent Items, Calendar and Contacts.

Now if you do not have any data management strategies in place for your e-mail eventually you will run into problems. The .pst can become unstable when reaching 2gb in size. Particularly on older versions of Outlook

If you are not careful it can become a data recovery job to fix an oversized .pst file.

Below is the strategy I use to both Backup and Manage my Outlook .pst

I keep a separate .pst per year. so I have a 2005.pst, 2006.pst and 2007.pst etc. At the beginning of every year I create a new one with the name of the year as its title.

In a year I gets lots of e-mail but never 2gb worth, 2gb would be about 15-20 thousand e-mails. I get about 60% of that, so a 1.3gb file would be about right for me but dependant on what’s in my e-mail that year of course.

Backing up.

Here is how to locate your current .pst File

Go into Start > Settings > Control Panel > Mail

You should see something like this.

mail1

Click on Data Files

mail2

You may have more that one entry on your list, but the one with the comment “Mail Delivery Location” is the one your current e-mail is delivered to.

Highlight the line which has “Mail Delivery Location” against it and press Open Folder.

This will open up Windows Explorer and automatically highlight the current data file .pst

Click on View Details to easily find the size of this file. If its approaching 2gb in size then you need to start considering purging old items or putting in place a strategy like mine where you have a new .pst for every year.

So the the file you see highlighted is the file you want to make sure gets backed up.

How to create a new blank .pst

On the screen shot above you can see an Add button, on your version click add and it will ask you what type of Outlook file to choose. Choose the one most compatible with your current version of Outlook and a give it a name. Choose something meaningful you will remember.

Then in outlook you can change which .pst is the default mail delivery location by going into

Tools > Email Accounts > View or Change Existing Email Accounts >

mail3

Then selecting from the drop down (shown above) pick the personal folder to use. Unless you specifically name your Personal Folder you will see something like

Personal Folders
Personal Folders

In the scenario above it would be the 2nd one, the new one.

You then need to close outlook and reopen it and from then on all your e-mail will go to the new .pst

You would want to follow this procedure particularly if your current .pst has become unstable and wont receive any new e-mail.

If you have reached this post because you having outlook .pst problems here are some support links to help you.

Link: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/287497/

Link: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/272227

or

Link: http://www.slipstick.com/problems/scanpst.asp

If you have any Outlook Management Tips, please share then in the comments.

Hands on with the Toshiba Qosmio G40 series 17" HD-DVD Laptop Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

tosh

This is part of a series of posts I am going to create about the Toshiba Qosmio G40. Toshiba were kind enough to loan me one for review.

First things first the picture above is not an optical illusion the Toshiba Qosmio G40 is large, very large the screen is 17″. Now the screen maybe 17″ but the laptop lid measures a whopping 20.5″.

This laptop is stuffed with all the latest desirables:- HD-DVD (writer), a beautiful Hi-Definition 17″ 1080p screen. Intel Core2Duo 2.4Ghz, 400gb Hard Disk, 2 Gig of Ram, Harman Kardon speakers, HDMI out, Biometric security and a webcam  etc.

It shipped with: The Laptop, Power Cable, Windows Media Centre Remote, RCA Component Cables (to a 3.5m jack) and a HDMI cable. The installed operating system was Windows Vista Ultimate (32bit)

Out of the box the installed programs looked like this:

installed_apps

Windows Vista Ultimate took a good 20-25 minuets to install, rebooting several times during the process. Not a great user experience, but that’s not Toshiba’s fault.

Once reaching the Windows Desktop a total of 65 Processes were running in the background. Slightly more than I would like but typical for a consumer laptop.

The Windows Vista Experience Index out of the box is 4.5

WEI

Now something that is throwing me is the Device Manager reports two separate CPU’s

Normally I am used to seeing Core 2 Duo CPU’s listed identically, like below

mycpu

However on the Qosmio it lists a T7300 and a T7700.

cpu_mis 

Ill see if I can find out the story behind that.

My everyday laptop is a Dell XPS M1210 12″ Form Factor Laptop.

compare

I’m not seriously comparing the these two but it is important to gauge the sheer size of the Qosmio

I would say the size of the Toshiba is one of its strong points, the audio/visual experience for example is the best I have encountered from a laptop. This is to be expected from a device in this price range.

That’s all I have time for in today’s post. But tune in later for:-

Does it Game?

What is watching HD-DVD on the Qosmio G40 like?

Is 1080p on a 17″ screen that meaningful?

And More…

Offical Link: Qosmio G40 Series

Peer Review of the Dell XPS 420 Monday, December 17th, 2007

xps420

I love it when the other bloggers I read get the technology I am interested in.

Keith Combs, a Microsoft Infrastructure Architect has recently purchased a Dell XPS 420 to carry out various media encoding tasks etc.

He chose a quad core CPU and is going to be running Windows Vista Ultimate x64

He just created his first impressions post about the XPS 420.

The XPS 420 is proving to be quite popular, so lots of people are looking for reviews etc.

Keith’s Link: Dell XPS 420 First Impressions

Other Non Peer Reviews:

Cnet: http://reviews.cnet.com/desktops/dell-xps-420/4505-3118_7-32716531.html

Cnet UK: http://crave.cnet.co.uk/desktops/0,39029426,49294629,00.htm

ZD-Net: http://review.zdnet.com/desktops/dell-xps-420/4505-3118_16-32716531.html?tag=pdtl-list