



At Last! A working version of Vista and Paperport! I tried a LOT of combinations, patches, fixed and all of them failed. BUT, an expert in the software showed me how it could work, and it works really well. We used a Visioneer Strobe 220 and Paperport 11, (clean install, no upgrades or previous versions left on the machine).
There is a little bit of awkward clicking when you try to set the scan mode to something different but once you understand what it is asking you to click…it is fine. Setup and calibration went fine and poof, a working document manager and scanner that takes up very little space.
This was the longest part of my beta testing with Vista, by far! Glad to see the folks at Visioneer/Nuance producing beta and final Vista drivers, long over due and very appreciated!
Now I need to scan about 5 billion pages that have been sitting on my desk waiting for this solution….




Just when you thought you might go back to XP….a service pack emerges for Windows Vista. I’ve heard crazy tales that it will install XP as a cure for everything, funny but wrong. Actually Microsoft is very serious about improving the new OS and has gathered tons of bug data ever since the beta program began years back. So here comes the first service pack and let’s hope they fix the most common of issues first.
There will be a beta release of Vista SP1 with a select test group, then a larger group, then it should start emerging through Technet and MSDN channels. All in all the release should be available in the first quarter of 2008.
What will the Service Pack include?
According to a Microsoft whitepaper, the details of the release are as follows:
“The goal of Windows Vista SP1 is to address key feedback Microsoft has received from its customers without regressing application compatibility. Windows Vista SP1 will deliver improvements and enhancements to existing features that significantly impact customers, but it does not deliver substantial new operating system features. For example, the service pack improves the performance of the desktop shell, but does not include a new version of Windows® Media Center.
The updates in Windows Vista SP1 fall into three categories, which the following sections describe in detail:
Quality improvements have the broadest impact on all customers. It is the foundation of Windows Vista SP1 and is about improving the overall Windows Vista experience.
First, Windows Vista SP1 will include all previously released updates for Windows Vista. It also will include security, reliability, and performance improvements. These improvements target some of the issues Microsoft has identified as the most common causes of operating system crashes and hangs, giving customers a more reliable experience. These updates also improve performance in key scenarios-for example, when copying files or shutting down the computer.
The following sections describe many of the security, reliability, and performance improvements that will be in Windows Vista SP1.
Security improvements that will be in Windows Vista SP1 include:
Windows Vista SP1 will include improvements that target some of the most common causes of crashes and hangs, giving users a more consistent experience. Many of these improvements will specifically address issues identified from the Windows Error Reporting tool. The following list describes some of the reliability improvements that Windows Vista SP1 will include:
The following list describes some of the performance improvements that Windows Vista SP1 will include:
Many of the changes in Windows Vista SP1 will improve the deployment, management, and support experience for Windows Vista customers. The following list describes some of these enhancements:
In addition to these changes, Windows Vista SP1 will change the tools that customers use to manage Group Policy. Administrators requested features in Group Policy that simplify policy management. To do this, the service pack will uninstall the Group Policy Management Console (GPMC) and GPEdit.msc will edit local Group Policy by default. In the SP1 timeframe, administrators can download an out-of-band release that will give them the ability to add comments to Group Policy Objects (GPOs) or individual settings and search for specific settings.”
For entire article go here: Whitepaper


More Options ...

Categories
Tag Cloud
Blog RSS
Comments RSS

Void
Life « Default
Earth
Wind
Water
Fire
Light 