Tuesday, October 20, 2009

A Free Windows 7 Upgrade Could Cost You

Think upgrading your new Vista PC to Windows 7 will be a breeze? Think again.
Jared Newman

If you bought a Windows Vista-based PC in the last four months, and you're now eagerly awaiting the launch of Windows 7, consider restraining your excitement. While many major computer manufacturers have promised free upgrades from Windows Vista to Windows 7 for anyone who bought a PC after June 26, 2009, what you don't pay in hard cash could still cost you in headaches.
I'm not just talking about the upgrade process itself, which can be exhausting. Glancing through the upgrade information pages for participating manufacturers, several red flags went up. Here are some things to watch out for when it's time to claim your Windows 7 Upgrade Option:
1. Getting the Upgrade Could Take a While
When Microsoft offered free XP-to-Vista upgrades two years ago, getting the disc became a nightmare for some customers. We've now seen the first foul-up for Windows 7, with Toshiba telling customers that its upgrades won't go out until December, according to Bright Side of News. (Toshiba previously said the upgrade would ship within 60 days of October 22.)
For other manufacturers, you'll need a couple weeks of patience, or maybe more. To leave the actual ship date open-ended, Hewlett-Packard and Dell say that upgrades will begin shipping after October 22, though Lenovo says upgrades will ship one to two weeks from your request. Acer says "shipments will begin in increments. All orders will be handled on a first-in, first-out basis." So if you bought a computer last week, you could be at the end of a long line.
A word of advice: If you can, order the free upgrade now. Most manufacturers--Sony being the major exception-- are already allowing requests. Microsoft has a list of participating computer makers.
2. System Recovery Issues Abound
Say your HP computer experiences a hardware failure and needs repair under warranty. HP restores the computer to its factory settings, which means you'll be reunited with Windows Vista. No problem, as long as you've got a nice chunk of time to upgrade back to Windows 7.
Recovery issues aren't limited to HP. Softpedia reported that Windows 7 upgrades could kill the recovery applications that manufacturers include with their computers, though to be fair, people who purchase Windows Vista will deal with this as well.
3. You Need a DVD Drive to Install
This applies to anyone who upgrades to Windows 7, but as the optical drive becomes unnecessary for some users, I see trouble for recent computer buyers who skipped the DVD drive in their rigs. In particular, I'm thinking of Dell's Studio 14z and Acer's Timeline 3810T, which both ditched the optical drive for slimmer, lighter frames. Owners of those notebooks will have to buy an external DVD drive or borrow one from a friend to install the upgrade.
4. HP Hates Your Browser, Unless It's IE
Here's a minor nuisance for HP computer owners who've dropped Internet Explorer like a bag of dirt: IE is required to visit HP's Windows 7 upgrade order page. That's because the world's biggest computer manufacturer uses a Web program to validate your computer, and it only works in IE. If for some reason you don't have Microsoft's browser, you're told to contact Arvato, the third party that's handling HP's upgrades. Only one problem: the contact page isn't viewable in any other browsers, either.
5. Hope You Kept Your Receipt
Not all manufacturers are allowing upgrades without a proof of purchase. I'd say only a fool tosses his or her receipt for a computer, but, come to think of it, where is that receipt for the notebook I bought a few months ago? HP and Toshiba explicitly state that a proof of purchase, not just a serial code, is required.
6. Free, or "Free?"
When all is said and done, you might still have to open your wallet, due to shipping and handling charges and taxes. Lenovo charges $17.03 for U.S. customers, while Compaq, HP, Sony, and Toshiba charge some users, but not others, according to watchdog Edgar Dworsky of Consumerworld.org and Mouseprint.org. Acer, Asus, Del,l and Gateway don't charge U.S. customers for the upgrade, unless you believe that time is money.

Monday, October 5, 2009

What Is System Restore?

What does Windows System Restore do on your computer? Is it worth having System Restore on all the time, or is it wasting resources you could use?
System Restore runs quietly in the background doing nothing but monitoring your computer's programs, system settings stored in the Windows registry; what files are on your hard drive and which have changed in some way. So it doesn't consume much computer resources by running constantly. SO, you won't gain performance by turning off System Restore.
System Restore saves your computer's current state to a file called a Restore Point when one of the following events happens or is about to happen:
• When software is installed using the Windows Installer, Package Installer or other installers which are aware of System Restore.
• When Windows Update installs new updates to Windows.
• When the user installs a driver that is not digitally signed by Windows Hardware Quality Labs.
• Every 24 hours of computer use or every 24 hours of calendar time. Such a restore point is known as a system checkpoint. System Restore requires Task Scheduler to create system checkpoints. Also, system check points are only created if the system is idle for a certain amount of time.
• When the operating system starts after being off for more than 24 hours.
• When the user requests it.
In Windows Vista, copies created during File Backup and Complete PC Backup can also be used as restore points. Be aware that restore points can consume a healthy chunk of your hard drive
By default, Microsoft Windows slots up to 15 per cent of your hard drive's available space for the saving of restore points. When this space is filled with restore points, the oldest restore point is deleted on a "first in, first out" basis. If your hard drive is getting close to being full, Windows may also delete some older restore points to free up space. You can change the System Restore disk space amount as follows.
• Click Start, then Control Panel. (On XP, select "Classic View")
• Click System, then click System Protection (On XP, click System Restore).
• Select a drive and click the Configure/Settings button. A dialogue box appears that lets you
o Turn System Restore protection on or off for this drive.
o Set the percentage of disk space devoted to restore points
o Delete all stored restore points (Vista or Win7)
Remember, when using System Restore, programs installed since the last restore point was created will be lost.
System Restore can also be a way to get rid of malware but, it is not an effective measure. Frankie On Call can help with your virus and malware removal.