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Entries in windows vista (2)

Sunday
27Jul2008

Make Windows 7 or Vista log in automatically

If you have a computer used for home theatre or gaming, or if you are not worried about people having access to your computer, then you may find the password logon is an unimportant feature.

One method to get rid of the logon is to create user profiles with no passwords. The problem: No access to many types of windows networking.

But there is another way to eliminate Vista’s login: Make it log on automatically…

  1. Click Start
  2. Enter netplwiz in the search field and press enter
  3. Click Continue at the User Account Control window.
  4. A user accounts window will open.
  5. Highlight your user account.
  6. Un-check “users must enter a username and password to use this computer”
  7. Click OK.
  8. Enter your password when required (or, if you’ve not created a password, leave it blank and click OK).
  9. Restart.

Now Windows 7 or Vista will log on automatically with your user account; you will have network access (and even admin priveledges if your account is set to administrator) but you’ll never need to enter a windows password.

Be Careful:  This opens a gaping hole your PC’s security - don’t do it if your computer (or the network it is connected to) contains information that needs to be secure. Anyone who has access to your computer will have full control over it and any networked resources.

Thursday
01May2008

Windows System Restore crashed and won't complete its job

Windows Vista System Restore is a handy tool and can save the day when disaster looms, but when System Restore fails what can you do? 

My story has a happy ending - perhaps yours has begun in a similar way…


  1. You run windows update and it offers an optional driver update (eg. for your crappy Belkin usb wireless adapter).
  2. You say ok.
  3. I all looks good, but when you restart it hangs at shutdown, with that little circle spinning on into eternity.
  4. You leave it alone for an hour, but it is never coming back. You hard reboot.
  5. The computer hangs on startup – won’t get past the black screen with the green scrolling widget.
  6. You try a few more times, and maybe sometimes you get a successful startup – or else you can only successfully boot to safe mode.
  7. You try uninstalling the update. No luck.
  8. You try running System Restore, but it simply doesn’t run.
  9. You try running System Restore in Safe Mode, but it simply doesn’t run.
  10. You run a monitor and watch the active services when you launch System Restore, and you discover that the service starts, and then disappears after two seconds.
  11. You look for logged errors relating to System Restore, and find nothing.
  12. You waste hours trying to locate a solution online. You find nothing for this specific problem, nor anything close enough to help. You curse.
  13. In desperation you boot to the Windows Vista installation CD. At the main page, instead of the central “Install” button you click “repair windows” at the bottom left. Then you choose System Restore, and select a restore point. The computer thinks and grinds for just a few minutes, then says it is done and you click ‘restart’.

    Voila! Everything is back to normal.


I think the moral of this story might be: If System Restore ever fails on you, and you don’t have a disk image to fall back on, go straight for the windows disk and spare yourself a heap of grief.