The motherboard on my old Windows XP box quit while I was taking a break for lunch one day, and I decided to replace it with an updated Windows box. So I’ll keep on using a Snow Leopard laptop, OpenSolaris server, and Windows 7 as well.
Maybe I was asking for trouble, going with the 64-bit version of Windows 7 Professional, but with a quad core Intel box it seemed a shame to not do so. Most of the tools I use every day (like Firefox and Pidgin) are easy to reinstall and thus ignorable. But there are some that cost me a little more time to figure out. Admittedly, it’s a somewhat eclectic collection.
First off, mail. I use Pegasus Mail, have for many years, and it suits the way I work. Every time I’ve upgraded, it’s worked flawlessly. This time, it took a while before I figured out that I needed to not take the defaults in the install, but rather uncheck the “create user configuration” box, and then in the following configuration step select “single user only”. After that, copying across the mail and configuration file worked perfectly to set it up right.
The Palm desktop presents more of an issue. It turns out that you can’t use a USB connection to synchronize under the 64-bit version of Windows 7, so I’ll have to get a bluetooth adapter to synchronize my Treo 680. Or get a new phone. I’m still mulling the options on that one.
Printer: the HP Color Laserjet CP1510 drivers and software won’t install from the CD. This isn’t really an issue; the default Windows 7 driver works fine but doesn’t show you the toner status etc. Fortunately, the HP.com website has an updated “advanced” driver. Except for, it doesn’t do all the status stuff either, apparently. Oh well.
The scanner is an ancient one from Canon, the 3000F. The scanning application won’t install. There are no drivers or updated applications on the Canon web site for Windows 7. The toolbox application for scanning and copying shows up on c|net, at http://download.cnet.com/CanoScan-Toolbox/3000–2094_4-10972136.html (it may be a dead link by the time you read this), but without the drivers it isn’t much use. Hunting around on the web showed that this is a case for the Virtual XP mode. This consists of 2 downloads, the first of which is 500 MB. The current estimate on our currently floaky DSL link is almost 2 hours to go, so I think I’ll go and do some real work while waiting for it to trickle in, and continue this post when I’ve made some more progress.
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Q: “How do you run Windows on a dual-core machine?”
A: “One core runs the anti-virus software, the other core runs everything else.”
Seriously, Win64 has few or none of the compatibility advantages of Win32 and most if not all the problems of Windows.
[…] the previous set of Windows 7 adventures, I discovered that the box I bought doesn’t support hardware-assisted virtualisation, which […]
I’ll have to give the XP compatibility mode a try.