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Vann

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Posts posted by Vann

  1. So if I get infected by a virus because of an undiscovered vulnerability in, say, Winsock, Microsoft is not responsible and should just wait until the virus writers stop writing viruses?

    No serious OS takes this attitude, not even Windows.

  2. Mardsen, that's not what I wrote at all. Read it again. What I did say was that MS is responsible when third-party applications break the OS.

    If SP2 makes changes in the OS for the better then those changes should be made. I'm not sure why you're being so defensive.

  3. I'm not sure what you mean by "responsible for their own code," but MS is definitely responsible for issues in the OS whereby third-party applications can cause breakage. That is, unless we're to believe security is tantamount to hiding one's head in the sand.

    And, I'd like to point out, the bug referenced above has nothing to do with clueless users. However, if mocking end-users helps you rationalize whatever issues you might have when discussing this topic seriously then by all means go ahead.

  4. That was quite the apology for Microsoft, there, jroc. The fact of the matter is, there are problems with SP2 that should have been dealt with before final. Heck, Microsoft has already released a ;884020]hotfix for SP2 not a week after it was marked "final."

    To continue your fallacious car analogy, if a manufacturer released a car that required a tuneup only a week after purchase they wouldn't say say, "well, we didn't make you buy the car." They would recall the car.

  5. It's probably not that SP1 was already integrated, but that the OEM did something unorthodox to the CD. Oftentimes patches are applied or other changes made that make slipstreaming OEM CDs a difficult, if not impossible, experience.

    Did you slipstream SP1 onto the OEM CD? If so, there might be hope, but if the OEM pre-applied it I'm not sure what can be done. Other people might have more information.

  6. If your SP2 installation displays a version of Build 2600.xpsp_sp2_rtm.040803-2158 then it is the final build. You can see the actual build number by right-clicking on C:\Windows\System32\ntoskrnl.exe and then clicking on the "Version" tab. Here's a screenshot of what I'm talking about. The machine is running SP1 with some hotfixes.

    ntoskrnl.jpg

    So this machine is XP build 1151. On an SP2 machine this string would read "5.1.2600.2180"

  7. During the T-13 stage of unattended setup I want to install the Mozilla/Firefox Flash plugin. I have two questions about this.

    First, I downloaded the "corporate" flash/shockwave MSI files. They install silently very well, but don't include the Mozilla/Firefox/Netscape plugin. I know, for example, with Sun's JRE there's an option of "MOZILLA=1" that you can pass to the MSI. Is there anything similar to this for Flash?

    Second, since the above wasn't working very well, I tried to play around with the normal Flash Player installer. It turns out if you run the setup program with a /s switch it installs the plugin just fine, but at the end it opens up a browser window informing me that I just installed Flash. As much as I appreciate Macromedia's lovely advertisements and informative website, I'd like to stop this since I'm going to be running the setup program during the unattended setup. Is there any switch to prevent the browser window from opening at the end?

    An answer to either of these would solve my problem. Of course, I'd also be grateful if someone had another solution to installing Flash without any user interaction.

    Thanks.

  8. I have some problems with your post. First, what is the advantage of copying the ntuser.dat file as opposed to importing the registry settings during install? As I'm sure you know, during the T-13 stage of the installation where people should be importing their registry settings, the Default User's registry hive is mounted at HKEY_CURRENT_USER. So you are, in fact, modifying the Default User profile. What advantage does your method have? Instead of importing some registry settings you copy a file. I don't see how one is materially more difficult or cumbersome than the other. Your problem, as you said, was that your tweaks were unorganized, but that's your problem. Personally, I organize mine in an arbitrary number of separate files, put them in one directory in $OEM$, and have cmdlines.txt call a batch file which imports all the .reg files in the aforementioned directory. I just add or delete a registry file to that directory in $OEM$ and I'm done. Moreover, as you said, you still need HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE tweaks, which means even with your method you'll be retaining a repository of registry tweaks. This seems to be creating two spots for failure.

    Second, won't your ntuser.dat now contain machine specific information? There are plenty of things in the registry that are machine specific and vary even on fresh installs of XP. What if I want to install my CD on a Pentium II 400MHz machine, a Quad Xeon machine, and also in VMWare? Can you guarantee your ntuser.dat will work for all these situations? Because I can guarantee importing registry files at T-13 will.

    Third, how do you know the default settings in the Default profile won't change between hotfixes or service packs? Is the ntuser.dat created from a vanilla XP install the same as the one created with a slipstreamed SP1 or SP2? I don't know, but I wouldn't be surprised if MS changed it in the future. Across versions, of course, there's no reason for them to be the same, but there is reason to expect my registry tweaks to be similar between Windows 2003 and XP.

    These are the major -- in my mind -- that I thought of. If I sound unduly harsh, don't take it personally; I'm just trying to be critical. I guess my complaints can be summed up with the question: "Why is this better?"

  9. The best place to change it is in the winnt.sif file, because "changing themes" is not as simple as specifying a new theme files. In fact, if you look at the .theme file it is vaguely similar to a .reg file. Anyhow, add this to your winnt.sif file if you want the Windows Classic theme and the Classic Start Menu:

    [shell]
       DefaultStartPanelOff=Yes
       DefaultThemesOff=Yes

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