Six Steps To Bakup A Copy of Windows Vista

Windows Vista includes additional functionality and features that Windows XP did not have. One major utility that was upgraded in Vista is the “Backup and Restore” center. There are six steps make it easy to set up and create backup copies of your entire computer and operating system.

First,turn on your computer and plug your external hard drive into your computer.
Second,Open Windows Vista “Backup and Restore” center. To do this, click “Start,” “All Programs,” “Maintenance” and “Backup and Restore Center.”
Third,Click the “Back up Computer” button on the right side of the screen. This opens the “Backup Wizard,” which walks you through the backup process step by step.
Fourth,Select the location of your Windows Vista backup copy by clicking the drop-down menu labeled “On a hard disk.” Click the “Next” button to proceed to the next step.
Five,Select the drive you want to make a copy of from the “Which disks do you want to include in the backup?” window. Choose the hard drive labeled “C” to make a copy of your entire computer. Click the “Next” button to proceed.
Six,Click the “Start Backup” button. Your entire system, including the Windows Vista operating system, will be backed up onto your external drive.

All Ddditions XPLife (2010)

All Ddditions XPLife (2010)

All Ddditions XPLife (2010) | 887.82 Kb

Supplement to the remarkable program XPLife to change Windows XP interface. Supplement applies to all versions of the Programs and XPLife.

List of topics:
Azure
Element
Horizon
SevenLife
SevenLite
Windy

OS: Windows XP
License: Cracked
Size: 887.82 Kb

Download:
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Windows XP PRO SP3 VistaVG Black + Blue Ultimate Style

Windows XP PRO SP3 VistaVG Black + Blue Ultimate Style | 698 MB

Windows XP PRO SP3 VistaVG Black + Blue Ultimate Style | 698 MB


Microsoft Windows XP PRO SP3 Corporate *
- NO CD-KEY needed….already slipstreamed. ***** V2C47 MK7JD 3R89F D2KXW VPK3J *****
- NO ACTIVATION needed…
- NO CRACK needed….
- NO PATCHES needed…

PASSES ALL WGA CHECKS – FULLY UPDATEABLE !!!!!
DO NOT TRY TO UPGRADE YOUR EXISTING OPERATING SYSTEM WITH IT !!!!
A CLEAN INSTALL IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO TAKE ADVANTADGE OF ALL FEATURES AND CONFIGURATIONS.
BURN BOOTABLE .ISO AT VERY SLOW SPEED … AND INSTALL FROM BOOT (not Desktop) !!!

Changes:
- Based on the Windows XP SP3 RTM (Build 5512)…The untouched ISO straight from MSDN
- Added New Extra Themes (VistaVG Blue & XP Live Blue)
- Added some custom Wallpapers
- Added visual c++ 2005 sp1
- Added visual c++ 2008
- Updated Sata/Raid drivers (MassStorage Driver Pack v.8.05)
- Updated DirectX 9.0c
- Updated Firefox to v.3.0 Final
- Updated CCleaner
- Removed Vista Backgrounds
- Remove Minimize and Maximize windows sound Reg entries (annoying for some ppl)
- Windows Movie Maker….Not Removed !!! …it’s there ;)

==========================
* DriverPack Chipset
* DriverPack MassStorage
* DriverPack LAN
* DriverPack WLAN
==========================

====================
Addons Integrated:
====================
- Vista RTM Boot screen
- VistaVG Ultimate Black Theme ( default )
- Vista Aero Cursors Black ( default )
- Vista Sounds ( default )
- Vista Sidebar
- Vista RTM Fonts
- Vista SceenSavers
- Vista User Accounts pictures
- Custom Welcome/Shut Down screen
- Custom Backgrounds
- ToolBar Styler
- Clear Type Tuning
- LClock
- Image Resizer
- DAMN NFO Viewer
- CCleaner 2.08.588
- Unlocker 1.8.5
- Microsoft Power Toys (Power calculator, SyncToy, TweakUI)
- Right Click Image Converter 2.2.0 ( pre-activated )
- IconPackager 3.2 ( pre-activated )

….YOU CAN CHANGE ICONS AND FOLDERS TO LQQK MORE LIKE VISTA WITH ICONPACKAGER AND THEMES PROVIDED !!!

- WinRAR 3.71 Registered with Vista themes
- Firefox 3 Final
- Internet Explorer 7
- WMP 11.0.5721.5145
- Calculator Plus
- visual c++ 2005 sp1
- visualc++ 2008
- Java Runtime Environment 6 Update 6
- .NET Framework 1.1 + 2.0 + 3.0 + 3.5
- DirectX 9.0c End-User Runtime June 2008
- KB905474 – Windows Genuine Advantage Notificationss ( WGA )

==================
What’s removed:
==================
- Games
- Internet Games
- Pinball
- Screensavers
- Display Adapters (old)
- IBM Thinkpad
- Printers
- Scanners
- Images and Backgrounds
- Music Samples
- Old CD Player and Sound Recorder
- Windows Sounds
- MSN Explorer
- Netmeeting
- Windows Messenger
- Windows Tour

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54 New 2009 Windows XP Theme Packs Download

54 New 2009 Windows XP Theme Packs

54 New 2009 Windows XP Theme Packs

These themes are for Windows XP with install.exe for each theme and will not work for Vista.
1 unpack rar
2 open the folder with the themes
3 choose the one you want to install
4 click install

Hotfile:

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Rapidshare:

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Windows XP SP3 Dutch – MSDN Untouched

Windows XP SP3 Dutch - MSDN Untouched

Ervaar meer met uw computer en internet dan u ooit had kunnen vermoeden. Windows XP Professional Edition zorgt ervoor dat u op een betrouwbare en gemakkelijke manier met uw pc kunt werken. Het programma kent een strakker, intuïtiever visueel uiterlijk en geavanceerde functies voor digitale media waardoor het werken met digitale fotografie of het afspelen van muziek eenvoudig en plezierig is. Tevens bevat Windows XP Professional functies om het werken binnen bedrijfsnetwerken veiliger te maken.

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O&O CleverCache 6 Pro and keygen

This application cleverly optimizes your system to boost cache and memory utilization, but only advanced users will fully comprehend this product. O&O CleverCache Professional Edition’s well-designed interface offers a full component of graphs and charts to please graphics fans. Most controls are novice-friendly click-on/click-off devices, but a few sliders simplify changing settings.

Start it and forget it is the theme as O&O CleverCache Professional Edition opens and quickly configures its optimal settings for your cache and memory utilization. As this is an art and not a science, the application makes it easy for advanced users to alter cache size, free memory recovery, and other settings.

How well it works depends on your system. The big advantage of this program over others is the simple method to create profiles. When you find the precise group of settings for your system, you can easily save them to a profile. Change your needs and quickly save another profile. It takes only a second to switch profiles when you switch your system’s role. We believe this application has the right mix of novice-friendly controls, and advanced user settings to make it flexible enough for the majority of users.

O&O CleverCache 6 Professional is a unique tool that optimizes the File Cache Management for Windows Vista, NT, 2000 and Windows XP. This results in an enormous increase in performance boosting a system’s performance at times to up to twice its original speed. All this is achieved without the need for additional hardware or any reduction in your system’s stability. You simply install O&O CleverCache 6 and youe ready to go no need to reboot. It automatically recognizes your configuration, and within five minutes you can unlock the hidden resources on your Windows system.

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Product: O&O CleverCache 6 Professional Edition

Name: seeor

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What is ctfmon.exe And Why Is It Running?

You are no doubt reading this article because you are frustrated with the ctfmon.exe process that just won’t stop opening no matter what you do. You remove it from the startup items and it just magically reappears. So what is it?

Ctfmon is the Microsoft process that controls Alternative User Input and the Office Language bar. It’s how you can control the computer via speech or a pen tablet, or using the onscreen keyboard inputs for asian languages.

If you are using any of the above, you should leave it enabled. For everybody else, we’ll get to the job of disabling this annoying service.

image

Depending on your system configuration, there are a number of different steps to disable it. I’ve tried to list all the methods below.

Step 1: Disabling in Microsoft Office 2003

We can remove the alternative text input from Microsoft Office 2003 by just removing that feature in the setup.

Note: I haven’t figured out where the equivalent setting is for Office 2007 (if there is one), but we can also disable it a different way below.

Go to Add/Remove programs, choose to Change your installation of Microsoft Office and make sure you check the box for “Choose advanced customization of applications” before you hit next.

image

Find “Alternative User Input” in the list and change the dropdown to “Not available” so it looks like this:

image

Step 2a: Disabling in Windows XP

There’s an additional step we can take to make sure it gets turned off in Windows XP, which really seems to be the best answer for XP users.

Open up Control Panel and choose Regional and Language Options.

image

Choose the Languages tab and then click on Details in the top section.

image

Now on the Advanced tab you can choose to “Turn off advanced text services”, which should immediately close ctfmon.

image

You’ll also want to take a look at the first Settings tab, and make sure that your “Installed Services” box looks similar to this one:

image

If you have more than one Installed service then ctfmon might come back… For instance on my system there was an input for my drawing tablet so I could use it as a text input… which I don’t care about, so I clicked Remove on it.

Step 2b: Disabling in Windows Vista

The setting above for completely disabling text services doesn’t seem to exist in Windows Vista as far as I can tell, but we can remove the additional input services using a similar method.

Open Control Panel, choose Regional and Language Options and then find “Change keyboards or other input methods”.

Virtual Memory in Windows XP

Introduction

This page attempts to be a stand-alone description for general users of the way Virtual Memory operates in Windows XP. Other pages on this site are written mainly for Windows 98/ME (see Windows 98 & Win ME Memory Management) and, while a lot is in common, there are significant differences in Windows XP.

What is Virtual Memory?

A program instruction on an Intel 386 or later CPU can address up to 4GB of memory, using its full 32 bits. This is normally far more than the RAM of the machine. (The 32nd exponent of 2 is exactly 4,294,967,296, or 4 GB. 32 binary digits allow the representation of 4,294,967,296 numbers — counting 0.) So the hardware provides for programs to operate in terms of as much as they wish of this full 4GB space as Virtual Memory, those parts of the program and data which are currently active being loaded into Physical Random Access Memory (RAM). The processor itself then translates (‘maps’) the virtual addresses from an instruction into the correct physical equivalents, doing this on the fly as the instruction is executed. The processor manages the mapping in terms of pages of 4 Kilobytes each – a size that has implications for managing virtual memory by the system.

What are Page Faults?

Only those parts of the program and data that are currently in active use need to be held in physical RAM. Other parts are then held in a swap file (as it’s called in Windows 95/98/ME: Win386.swp) or page file (in Windows NT versions including Windows 2000 and XP: pagefile.sys). When a program tries to access some address that is not currently in physical RAM, it generates an interrupt, called a Page Fault. This asks the system to retrieve the 4 KB page containing the address from the page file (or in the case of code possibly from the original program file). This — a valid page fault — normally happens quite invisibly. Sometimes, through program or hardware error, the page is not there either. The system then has an ‘Invalid Page Fault’ error. This will be a fatal error if detected in a program: if it is seen within the system itself (perhaps because a program sent it a bad request to do something), it may manifest itself as a ‘blue screen’ failure with a STOP code: consult the page on STOP Messages on this site.

If there is pressure on space in RAM, then parts of code and data that are not currently needed can be ‘paged out’ in order to make room — the page file can thus be seen as an overflow area to make the RAM behave as if it were larger than it is.

What is loaded in RAM?

Items in RAM can be divided into:

  • The Non-Paged area. Parts of the System which are so important that they may never be paged out – the area of RAM used for these is called in XP the ‘Non-Paged area’. Because this mainly contains core code of the system, which is not likely to contain serious faults, a Blue Screen referring to ‘Page Fault in Non-Paged area’ probably indicates a serious hardware problem with the RAM modules, or possibly damaged code resulting from a defective Hard disk. It is, though, possible that external utility software (e.g. Norton) may put modules there too, so if such faults arise when you have recently installed or updated something of this sort, try uninstalling it.
  • The Page Pool which can be used to hold:
    • Program code,
    • Data pages that have had actual data written to them, and
    • A basic amount of space for the file cache (known in Windows 9x systems as Vcache) of files that have recently been read from or written to hard disk.

Any remaining RAM will be used to make the file cache larger.

Why is there so little Free RAM?

Windows will always try to find some use for all of RAM — even a trivial one. If nothing else it will retain code of programs in RAM after they exit, in case they are needed again. Anything left over will be used to cache further files — just in case they are needed. But these uses will be dropped instantly should some other use come along. Thus there should rarely be any significant amount of RAM ‘free’. That term is a misnomer — it ought to be ‘RAM for which Windows can currently find no possible use’. The adage is: ‘Free RAM is wasted RAM’. Programs that purport to ‘manage’ or ‘free up’ RAM are pandering to a delusion that only such ‘Free’ RAM is available for fresh uses. That is not true, and these programs often result in reduced performance and may result in run-away growth of the page file.

Where is the page file?

The page file in XP is a hidden file called pagefile.sys. It is regenerated at each boot — there is no need to include it in a backup. To see it you need to have Folder Options | View set to ‘Show Hidden and System files’, and not to ‘Hide Protected mode System files’.

In earlier NT systems it was usual to have such a file on each hard drive partition, if there were more than one partition, with the idea of having the file as near as possible to the ‘action’ on the disk. In XP the optimisation implied by this has been found not to justify the overhead, and normally there is only a single page file in the first instance.

Where do I set the placing and size of the page file?

At Control Panel | System | Advanced, click Settings in the “Performance” Section. On the Advanced page of the result, the current total physical size of all page files that may be in existence is shown. Click Change to make settings for the Virtual memory operation. Here you can select any drive partition and set either ‘Custom’; ‘System Managed’ or ‘No page file’; then always click Set before going on to the next partition.

Should the file be left on Drive C:?

The slowest aspect of getting at a file on a hard disk is in head movement (‘seeking’). If you have only one physical drive then the file is best left where the heads are most likely to be, so where most activity is going on — on drive C:. If you have a second physical drive, it is in principle better to put the file there, because it is then less likely that the heads will have moved away from it. If, though, you have a modern large size of RAM, actual traffic on the file is likely to be low, even if programs are rolled out to it, inactive, so the point becomes an academic one. If you do put the file elsewhere, you should leave a small amount on C: — an initial size of 2MB with a Maximum of 50 is suitable — so it can be used in emergency. Without this, the system is inclined to ignore the settings and either have no page file at all (and complain) or make a very large one indeed on C:

In relocating the page file, it must be on a ‘basic’ drive. Windows XP appears not to be willing to accept page files on ‘dynamic’ drives.

NOTE: If you are debugging crashes and wish the error reporting to make a kernel or full dump, then you will need an initial size set on C: of either 200 MB (for a kernel dump) or the size of RAM (for a full memory dump). If you are not doing so, it is best to make the setting to no more than a ‘Small Dump’, at Control Panel | System | Advanced, click Settings in the ‘Startup and Recovery’ section, and select in the ‘Write Debug information to’ panel

Can the Virtual Memory be turned off on a really large machine?

Strictly speaking Virtual Memory is always in operation and cannot be “turned off.” What is meant by such wording is “set the system to use no page file space at all.”

Doing this would waste a lot of the RAM. The reason is that when programs ask for an allocation of Virtual memory space, they may ask for a great deal more than they ever actually bring into use — the total may easily run to hundreds of megabytes. These addresses have to be assigned to somewhere by the system. If there is a page file available, the system can assign them to it — if there is not, they have to be assigned to RAM, locking it out from any actual use.

How big should the page file be?

There is a great deal of myth surrounding this question. Two big fallacies are:

  • The file should be a fixed size so that it does not get fragmented, with minimum and maximum set the same
  • The file should be 2.5 times the size of RAM (or some other multiple)

Both are wrong in a modern, single-user system. A machine using Fast User switching is a special case, discussed below.)

Windows will expand a file that starts out too small and may shrink it again if it is larger than necessary, so it pays to set the initial size as large enough to handle the normal needs of your system to avoid constant changes of size. This will give all the benefits claimed for a ‘fixed’ page file. But no restriction should be placed on its further growth. As well as providing for contingencies, like unexpectedly opening a very large file, in XP this potential file space can be used as a place to assign those virtual memory pages that programs have asked for, but never brought into use. Until they get used — probably never — the file need not come into being. There is no downside in having potential space available.

For any given workload, the total need for virtual addresses will not depend on the size of RAM alone. It will be met by the sum of RAM and the page file. Therefore in a machine with small RAM, the extra amount represented by page file will need to be larger — not smaller — than that needed in a machine with big RAM. Unfortunately the default settings for system management of the file have not caught up with this: it will assign an initial amount that may be quite excessive for a large machine, while at the same leaving too little for contingencies on a small one.

How big a file will turn out to be needed depends very much on your work-load. Simple word processing and e-mail may need very little — large graphics and movie making may need a great deal. For a general workload, with only small dumps provided for (see note to ‘Should the file be left on Drive C:?’ above), it is suggested that a sensible start point for the initial size would be the greater of (a) 100 MB or (b) enough to bring RAM plus file to about 500 MB. EXAMPLE: Set the Initial page file size to 400 MB on a computer with 128 MB RAM; 250 on a 256 MB computer; or 100 MB for larger sizes.

But have a high Maximum size — 700 or 800 MB or even more if there is plenty of disk space. Having this high will do no harm. Then if you find the actual pagefile.sys gets larger (as seen in Explorer), adjust the initial size up accordingly. Such a need for more than a minimal initial page file is the best indicator of benefit from adding RAM: if an initial size set, for a trial, at 50MB never grows, then more RAM will do nothing for the machine’s performance.

Bill James MS MVP has a convenient tool, ‘WinXP-2K_Pagefile’, for monitoring the actual usage of the Page file, which can be downloaded here. A compiled Visual Basic version is available from Doug Knox’s site which may be more convenient for some users. The value seen for ‘Peak Usage’ over several days makes a good guide for setting the Initial size economically.

Note that these aspects of Windows XP have changed significantly from earlier Windows NT versions, and practices that have been common there may no longer be appropriate. Also, the ‘PF Usage’ (Page File in Use) measurement in Task Manager | Performance for ‘Page File in Use’ include those potential uses by pages that have not been taken up. It makes a good indicator of the adequacy of the ‘Maximum’ size setting, but not for the ‘Initial’ one, let alone for any need for more RAM.

Should the drive have a big cluster size?

While there are reports that in Windows 95 higher performance can be obtained by having the swap file on a drive with 32K clusters, in Windows XP the best performance is obtained with 4K ones — the normal size in NTFS and in FAT 32 partitions smaller than 8GB. This then matches the size of the page the processor uses in RAM to the size of the clusters, so that transfers may be made direct from file to RAM without any need for intermediate buffering

What about Fast User Switching then?

If you use Fast User Switching, there are special considerations. When a user is not active, there will need to be space available in the page file to ‘roll out’ his or her work: therefore, the page file will need to be larger. Only experiment in a real situation will establish how big, but a start point might be an initial size equal to half the size of RAM for each user logged in.

Problems with Virtual Memory

It may sometimes happen that the system give ‘out of memory’ messages on trying to load a program, or give a message about Virtual memory space being low. Possible causes of this are:

  • The setting for Maximum Size of the page file is too low, or there is not enough disk space free to expand it to that size.
  • The page file has become corrupt, possibly at a bad shutdown. In the Virtual Memory settings, set to “No page file,” then exit System Properties, shut down the machine, and reboot. Delete PAGEFILE.SYS (on each drive, if more than just C:), set the page file up again and reboot to bring it into use.
  • The page file has been put on a different drive without leaving a minimal amount on C:.
  • There is trouble with third party software. In particular, if the message happens at shutdown, suspect a problem with Symantec’s Norton Live update, for which there is a fix posted here. It is also reported that spurious messages can arise if NAV 2004 is installed. If the problem happens at boot and the machine has an Intel chipset, the message may be caused by an early version (before version 2.1) of Intel’s “Application Accelerator.” Uninstall this and then get an up-to-date version from Intel’s site.
  • Another problem involving Norton Antivirus was recently discovered by MS-MVP Ron Martell. However, it only applies to computers where the pagefile has been manually resized to larger than the default setting of 1.5 times RAM — a practice we discourage. On such machines, NAV 2004 and Norton Antivirus Corporate 9.0 can cause your computer to revert to the default settings on the next reboot, rather than retain your manually configured settings. (Though this is probably an improvement on memory management, it can be maddening if you don’t know why it is happening.) Symantec has published separate repair instructions for computers with NAV 2004 and NAV Corporate 9.0 installed. [Added by JAE 2/21/06.]
  • Possibly there is trouble with the drivers for IDE hard disks; in Device Manager, remove the IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers (main controller) and reboot for Plug and Play to start over.
  • With an NTFS file system, the permissions for the page file’s drive’s root directory must give “Full Control” to SYSTEM. If not, there is likely to be a message at boot that the system is “unable to create a page file.”