Dec
24
2009

Howto: Uninstall Windows Live Messenger

windows7The programmers at Microsoft must think that it’s really fun to torture their users.

If you even try to login to Windows Live service once (definitely including such original titles as Windows Live ID, Windows Live Messenger, but probably others too), they setup your computer to automatically prompt you to log back in the next time you reboot. Not only that but clicking on the Big Red X doesn’t make the program go away, it merely minimizes it (for your convenience they say) so that it’s at the ready for you the next time you want to use it. Not only that, but they don’t provide any obvious way to prevent it from prompting you for your password the next time it reboots. Not only that, but if you search for a way to uninstall said program, you won’t find anything called Windows Live Messenger or Windows Live ID. Their are other Windows Live components in the Installed Programs list, but nothing obviously related to these pieces of garbage.

Very nice Microsoft. Thanks. It’s no wonder people hate Microsoft so passionately!

If you really want to uninstall this garbage permanently, do the following:

  1. Open the Start Menu and click on Control Panel
  2. click on “Uninstall a Program”
  3. Scroll all the way to the bottom and find “Windows Live Essentials”
  4. Click Uninstall/Change
  5. Select the radio button beside “Uninstall” and then click “Continue”
  6. Tick the boxes beside for the Services you want to prevent from harrassing you. High on your list should be “Messenger”. Note that some of the Live services are actually useful and you may want to keep them.
  7. Click “Continue” and the annoyances will go away.

It should be a lot easier for users to identify the programs that they want to remove and/or to prevent from harassing them. Microsoft, fix this.

Nov
23
2009

Random USB Drive Disconnections in Windows

enclosureI have several old laptop hard drives that I use in cheap USB drive enclosures for backing up or sharing data. These things are great and then generally just work, even though you can buy them for as little as $3.82 from Amazon!

I recently plugged one of these drives into a new computer and, although the drive initially worked, it randomly disconnected after only a few minutes of use. I was only able to get it working again by unplugging it and plugging it back in. Once again it disconnected a few minutes later. This cycle continued as I tried to troubleshoot the problem by changing power settings, switching USB cables, switching USB ports, and testing the connection of the drive in the enclosure. Nothing I changed made a difference and the random disconnections continued every few minutes.

It finally occurred to me to try reinstalling the device driver for the HDD. So I uninstalled the driver and rebooted Windows. After starting back up Windows found the drive, installed the driver, and the problem went away.

I don’t know what caused the issue in the first place, but uninstalling and reinstalling the drivers worked perfectly. This is a good reminder that many USB device issues are driver related and can be resolved by reinstalling the drivers. Here’s how to do it:

  1. Open the Device Manager (click the Start Menu and type “Device Manager” in the search window)
  2. Navigate the Device Manager menu to the device in question. For me this was a “Disk Drive”
  3. Select your device, right click on it, and choose “Uninstall”
  4. Reboot and see what happens.

device_manager

Note that this issue and resolution is essentially the same for all recent versions of Windows, including XP, Vista, and Windows 7 (at least ).

Sep
15
2009

Automatically Login to Windows

windowsvistaI generally want my computers to automatically logon to my personal account when I turn them on (or when they restart in the middle of the night following an automatic Windows Vista update) so that I don’t have to waste any time logging in when I sit down to use the computer. This may not be the ideal thing for a computer shared by several users, but for a computer that has a single main user it is often very desirable.

I just got a new desktop computer and I’m in the process of setting it up with all my personal preferences.  This seems to take longer and longer as Windows gets more and more filled with bloat.  It seems to me that setting up automagic logons was a lot easier in Windows XP than it is in Vista, but I can’t actually remember how it was done there either. Maybe it was included as an option in the TweakUI Powertoy. Anyway I always have to hunt around to find the trick for Vista machines, so I thought I would write it down so that we can all find it easily the next time we need it.

Fortunately there are only a couple of easy steps:

  1. Click Start and type netplwiz in the search field (or in the Run… dialog if you are using the classic menus)
  2. Click Continue if one of those uber-annoying “User Account Control” windows appears
  3. Select the user account to which you want to automatically logon
  4. Clear the “Users must enter a username and password to use this computer” option box up above the User Accounts window
  5. Click OK
  6. When prompted, enter the password for the user account you selected in step 3

useraccounts

That’s it.  From now on whenever you start or restart the computer Windows Vista will automatically logon to your preferred account.  I assume that this method will also work for Windows 7, but I haven’t been able to test it yet.  I’ll get back to you sometime on or near October 22nd!!

UPDATE Oct 27, 2009 – This trick is definitely still applicable to Windows 7, and it works perfectly!

Aug
08
2009

Save Passwords for Mapped Drives in XP

windowsxpI find it very odd that I’m ranting about a Microsoft Windows XP issue. I rarely use XP anymore and when I do it generally just works. You don’t want to get me going about Vista (especially when it comes to “User Account Control”; I have a long post coming about that but I can’t finish it because I get too irritated every time I sit down to write it!), but I’m usually pretty happy with XP…

I have one XP machine remaining in my house. It’s a desktop machine that sits in the back corner of my basement and mostly acts as my file server. It wouldn’t be my first choice of machine for that purpose, but I’ve had it for years and it still works, so I leave it there. I’ve been using it as my iTunes server for a long time and so it was an obvious choice to use as the primary connection to my new Media Player as well (see my recent review of the Popcorn Hour PCH-A110).

pch-a110The Popcorn Hour is a network connected device with an internal hard drive that mounts as a network share. It was a piece of cake to get it connected to my home network, and I was transferring files onto it within a few minutes of opening the box. It was just that easy.

Until the XP machine needed a reboot after a Windows update. That’s when XP started to annoy me. It turns out that Windows XP Home is designed not to save passwords for mapped network drives. You can connect to a drive by giving it the password when you map it, but it doesn’t keep the password after a reboot…  Every other version of XP, NT, or Vista has this capability, but XP home does not.

I had to come up with a workaround to get the machine to “remember” the password.

1. create a new file in the startup folder with a .cmd extension. I called mine connect.pch.
2. open the file in a text editor (notepad is fine)
3. add the following line of code to the file:

NET USE U: \ComputerNameShareName password user:UserName

Where U: is the desired drive letter

This file is a Windows Command File which will execute every time windows boots up.  Essentially I have created a program that will remap my drive every time the computer reboots.  It’s kludgy and it’s ugly, but it’s simple and it works.

It should be easier than this.

Jul
03
2009

Fast User Switching not so fast in Vista

windowsvista I’m the type of guy that uses keyboard shortcuts all the time. It’s simply faster and more efficient, and it works for me. So back in the Windows XP days I got very used to using Win+L to change users (ie. to log into a different account) when working on a computer with multiple user accounts. This is a very common situation in common areas in offices or more likely around the home. This nifty little key combination automatically took the user from the current application or the desktop directly to the welcome screen where you could select the account you wanted to use.

Along came Windows Vista and they added an intermediate step to the process. Hitting Win+L now locks current user account rather than going to the welcome screen. The user is presented with the option to enter their password to access the recently active user account, or to hit the Switch Users button to bring up the welcome screen. Aside from adding a step (which is often time-consuming as Vista has to think about who-knows-what after each selection is made), this change is also pointless and is definitely not an improvement over going directly to the welcome screen. Chalk this one up to the massive list of “what-were-they-thinking” developments that arrived with Vista.

(If you hadn’t figured it out already, in Vista the term “Fast User Switching” really only means that more than one user can be logged in at the same time; however, only one user can actually be connected at any one time. Switching between those users is not necessarily very fast. This is not intuitive and what most users really want is a way to switch between users quickly, or even instantly!)

There a couple of options to getting around the Locked screen:

  1. The first option is free, and it comes courtesy of Quinn Lewis: Quinn pointed me to a hack using a utility that comes with Vista called TsDiscon.exe. Creating a shortcut to this utility and adding a custom keyboard shortcut will allow you to automatically jump to the welcome screen. Apparently this trick doesn’t work for everyone, but it worked perfectly for me. If you want to give it a try there is a tutorial on how to do it over at The Winhelponline Blog.
  2. The second option is to buy an app called DUST (Direct User Switching Task). This app gives you the option to cycle through the currently logged on users, or to disconnect your session, by hitting Win+S. The beauty of this app is that it takes you directly to any other user accounts that are already logged in, bypassing both the Locked screen AND the Welcome Screen. The only negative is that it is not free. At only $15 it’s not all that expensive, but the $15 only entitles you to use it on one computer. If you have several shared computers then you will need to purchase a license for each machine.

If anyone has any new or better (eg. free) ways to make this work, I’d love to hear about. Please leave a note in the comments. Let’s all hope that this process is streamlined in Windows 7…


TheBuckmaker.com Wordpress Themes | Kreditzinsen, Streaming Audio