Guest xpuser Posted June 26, 2006 Share Posted June 26, 2006 (edited) helloI have maintain the 'languages' and 'keyboards' I need under 'remove components' sectionwhat about the 'language groups' that appear in 'unattended setup'? do I need to choose any?I made an iso without choosing any 'langiage group' and I was able to type in both english and my languagewhats the meaning of choosing 'language group'?thanksPS1: whats the 'document templates' in 'remove components' ?PS2:somewhere in nlite it mentions 'controluserpasswords2' but I cant locate it, anyone remembers it? Edited June 27, 2006 by xpuser Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
T D Posted June 27, 2006 Share Posted June 27, 2006 You need to choose the language groups you are most likely to use, e.g. you are gonna view lots of english webpages so you select western european and united states and if you are chinese, you may choose east asian. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Camarade_Tux Posted June 27, 2006 Share Posted June 27, 2006 (edited) PS1: a clean context menuBy default, you have templates for Microsoft Word, Excel, sound recorder and maybe Paint. Edited June 27, 2006 by Camarade_Tux Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest xpuser Posted June 28, 2006 Share Posted June 28, 2006 (edited) isnt choosing my language under 'keyboard' and 'languages' enough?whats more in 'languages group' ?PS:this menu can be edited with tweakui, can I add 'create new file' later? Edited June 28, 2006 by xpuser Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Camarade_Tux Posted June 28, 2006 Share Posted June 28, 2006 PS:this menu can be edited with tweakui, can I add 'create new file' later?Of course. Mine is empty because I reinstalled two days ago. (and then, I came on the board and discovered nlite1.0 final ) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GrofLuigi Posted June 28, 2006 Share Posted June 28, 2006 PS1: a clean context menu...By default, you have templates for Microsoft Word, Excel, sound recorder and maybe Paint.If you want to remove some of these, search the registry for "shellnew" and delete the key. I would advise against removing items shown in Camarade_Tux's picture (.lnk, .txt, and directory - don't know what's the registry entry for this.)Additionally, if you want to keep it clean, delete unwanted entries in %userprofile%/ShellNew or %windir%/ShellNew (for Windows 9x).There's no reason for this annoying 'functionality' when every application has a "New" menu item. I haven't heard of a program that doesn't. The application is started anyway through the above entries.If you didn't know, this also adds few miliseconds to your startup time (and during normal operation also!) because every time you start a program, windows check its registry entries. The loss is unmeasurable, but it's about principle... GLAdditionally, if you want to keep it clean, delete unwanted entries in %userprofile%/ShellNew or %windir%/ShellNew (for Windows 9x).If you didn't know, this also adds few miliseconds to your startup time (and during normal operation also!) because every time you start a program, windows check its registry entries. The loss is unmeasurable, but it's about principle... Sorry for replying to myself, but I felt I should warn you: the first thing above causes problems with Microsoft office - that's a Windows Installer "managed install" and checks its files and registry entries on startup of its programs - you know, when you start an Office program and it popups a window for "repairing the installation" - but I'll post a fix for that some other time.Second - verified with RegMon.GL Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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