#194002 - 2009-05-25 04:57 AM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: NTDOC]
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Jack Lothian
MM club member
Registered: 1999-10-22
Posts: 1169
Loc: Ottawa,Ontario, Canada
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Doc,
Funny you should say that, I was recently talking with a friend about 3.1, Norton desktop & old versions of Excel & Word. In some ways, I think things have gone backwards since then. Some very non-teckie people where doing great things on PCs back then - even secretaries were producing word, wordperfect, excel & lotus macros. The great thing about those early versions is they continually empowered users & challenged them to do really surprising things.
Starting with NT, things changed. It became all about empowering admins & programmers, sometimes to the detriment of users. Today for most users, a computer has become a fancy typewriter & web browser. For a short period, it was much more than that. I find that PC networks are becoming more mainframe like all the time. All those mainframe encumbrances that frustrated us & we were overjoyed when they were eliminated are coming back. Being a long-term mainframe programmer, I kind of expected this because I knew these constraints were important but I hoped for something different.
Those old systems even ran faster on those ancient machines. Every version of Windows seems to demand an order of magnitude increase in hardware & yet still runs slower than the last version. You run like crazy but you keep moving backwards. For me, the truth is that other than web stuff, my core usage of Windows/Office has not really changed in maybe 15 years or more.
PS: I loved Norton Desktop, I am not sure but didn’t Win95 have a Norton Desktop version too. I seem to remember buying it.
PS2: Not everything has moved backwards. For maybe 25 years or more, I have been a big time SAS user & every time a new version comes out I can not wait for the upgrade because every upgrade so far has empowered me more than the previous version. I even find myself cannibalizing mainframe SAS code that I wrote 20 years ago for my current projects. Does anything MS has produced meet this standard? (Maybe KixTart meets this standard of continuing improving empowerment).
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Jack
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#194105 - 2009-06-03 07:10 PM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Allen]
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ashgray2
Just in Town
Registered: 2009-06-02
Posts: 3
Loc: US
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Is is OK to install a virtual machine software in my windows XP system, then I'll install the Windows 7 on this virtual machine. I would like to test this new operating system. I would like to see if it is capable/ and features.
_______________ Laptop Products, Sports deals
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ashgray2
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#194119 - 2009-06-04 04:39 AM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Allen]
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JNK
Fresh Scripter
Registered: 2006-04-11
Posts: 33
Loc: USA
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Back to my original question: When will Kix be able to tell the difference between a Vista box and a W7 box (the @ProductType macro).
By the by, I have been running W7 since the first beta --- seems to be pretty solid and I have only had a few speed bumps along the way. I am this close (| |) to whacking my production box (currently XP) and using W7 for production. I suppose that is to be expected from an R2 product from M$ though (Windows 7 is Vista R2, IMO, but I digress).
For those working in the Enterprise, M$ has spent quite a bit of time and effort tweaking the Deployment Tools ... WDS, WAIK, ImageX and related technologies are actually starting to look like mature products (*gasp* -- I can't believe I just said that) and the new DISM is so easy, even I (a Caveman) can use it. They do have a bit of work to do on their documentation (who doesn't), as getting a totally silent W7 install was a pain in the @$$. Setup and configuration of the server itself was a breeze, but those stupid XML answer files ---- EEAK! Thanks to Google and a bunch of folks who are doing the leg work for others, I am happy to report some good results. I am even considering abandoning Ghost as my deployment method and use M$ technologies instead (omg, there I go again!). I must really need to get some sleep!
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#195387 - 2009-08-11 10:48 PM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Allen]
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Radimus
Moderator
Registered: 2000-01-06
Posts: 5187
Loc: Tampa, FL
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I'm running the enterprise release now on a few laptops and it seems quite nice but some of the KIX related issues I have noted:
@productype = vista (known issue) logon scripts run elevated, but regular ones don't kix2exe support for kixforms doesn't work, have to install kixforms prior
all in all, I like Win7, but it is starting to point out the age of kix+forms... It seems like I am going to have to learn a real language now
What are people programming in now for logon scripts and admin tools? Powershell and VB?
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#195410 - 2009-08-14 04:32 AM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Gargoyle]
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Radimus
Moderator
Registered: 2000-01-06
Posts: 5187
Loc: Tampa, FL
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I'm looking at adminscripteditor since it seems very flexible in making all the forms for whatever language is thrown at it...
It will at least do the basics of vbs, ps and kix... and package to exe as a built in.
Hopefully it will at least take some of the pain out of learning PS
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#195427 - 2009-08-14 08:11 PM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Gargoyle]
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NTDOC
Administrator
Registered: 2000-07-28
Posts: 11624
Loc: CA
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Admin Script Editor is a nice little tool - I bought a copy last year. Not sure how well they're doing though as like KiXtart has slowed down, they too seem to have slowed down and I don't see Steve online all the time like I used to.
SAPIEN TECHNOLOGIES, INC. (Primal Script) has a lot of advanced tools, but I've not tested their product in probably at least 3 or 4 years.
Link for Pricing: Primal Scripting Primal Script 2009: $299.00 Primal Forms 2009: $89.00 PrimalScript 2009 Studio $539.00 PrimalScript 2009 Universal $1,000 PrimalScript 2009 Studio is a bundle of all of our current software applications. This includes:
* PrimalScript * PrimalScope * ChangeVue * PrimalXML * PrimalSQL * PrimalMerge * PrimalPackager (when released)
UltraEdit is also a great editor, but judging from what is shown on each Website it would seem that Primal has more to offer in the area of Forms and PowerShell stuff, but that's only based on reading their Website and not actually using their tools.
Community Tools
We're making these tools available for free to the scripting community. While many are designed specifically for VBScript or ASP, the ones implemented as COM components will work with any COM-compatible language, including JScript, KiXtart, VBScript, and so forth. Instructions for using each is included in a separate PDF file, linked below.
We're granting you a free, non-exclusive license to use these tools. However, these tools are not public domain. You should read our Community Tools Universal License Agreement, since by using these tools, you're agreeing to the terms of that License Agreement.
"Best effort" technical support for these tools is provided in SAPIEN's Support Forums. Note that you must have a free MySapien account to access the forums.
http://www.primaltools.com/downloads/communitytools/
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#195428 - 2009-08-14 09:43 PM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: NTDOC]
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Radimus
Moderator
Registered: 2000-01-06
Posts: 5187
Loc: Tampa, FL
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kix and kf seem to be drying up and going away, at least as far as general use goes. Although, there seem to be a stubborn group that refuses to get current, but...
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#195470 - 2009-08-20 09:11 AM
Re: Testing Windows 7 Beta
[Re: Allen]
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Arend_
MM club member
Registered: 2005-01-17
Posts: 1895
Loc: Hilversum, The Netherlands
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