Living with Vista – part I: power management

I’ve been running Vista in various locations at home & work for a few months now and I though it was time to write about my experiences.

Part of my day job recently has been looking at power saving, and putting machines to sleep (S3 standby) after a certain period of inactivity. In Windows XP this has been pretty unreliable mostly due to the ability of applications to veto the power broadcast message and hold up sleep.

Vista was supposed to change all this. Not only were drivers supposed to be more robust but applications only have a 2 second limit to respond to an impeding sleep request before Windows is yanked out beneath them. There is now also "hybrid sleep" (a mix of S3/S4) that is supposed to protect your data even if things do all go horribly wrong.

However, all is not well in the fantasy land of Vista sleep. At work I have a number of machines that work well (HP 7600, 7700 and tc4400). They go to sleep when they’re supposed to, they wake up when you ask them to and everything works once they’re back up and running.

At home I have one rather special homebuilt machine (I’ll be posting about it soon) and a HP tc4200 and neither are very happy with sleep. First, the tc4200: it’s a minor point but the wireless card refuses to work after S3 sleep. Only a reboot will fix it.

My homebuilt machine is a disaster zone when it comes to sleeping. It’s basically a Core 2 Duo built on a Gigabyte GA-965GM-S2 (which is really just an Intel chipset). No extra video cards, no peripherals… nothing fancy. When it sleeps, it spends about 10 minutes thrashing the hard disk (WDC WD2500KS SATAII) before restarting itself. Windows then refuses to start and only a quick trip into safe mode fixes it.

After several hours fiddling with power management settings, I now finally have it vaguely sleeping reliably. If you have problems with Vista sleep, try some (or all) of the following:

– Disable "allow USB devices to wake PC" (or similar wording) in the BIOS.

– In Vista device manager, go into the properties of your USB keyboard and mouse (don’t bother if you have PS2 ones) and in the power management tab uncheck the option to "Allow this device to wake the computer".

– Go into the "Power Options" control panel and create a new power profile. Once it’s setup click on "change plan settings" then "change advanced power settings". In here change the following:
1. Sleep > Allow Hybrid Sleep > OFF
2. USB settings > USB selective suspend settings > DISABLED

For me, at any rate, my machine now sleeps ok. When it resumes there are some niggles though: the NIC won’t pick up a DHCP lease (so now I have to set it to static), the numlock state isn’t remembered, it throws an error about an unrecognised USB device (when there isn’t once plugged in) and the fingerprint reader won’t unlock my session.

But hey, it sleeps :)

I still have some thoughts on the good and bad of living with Vista and I’ll post them up in the new few days – along with a surprise!

Squeaky Nano

Apparently some people have reported that their 2G iPod Nanos make a high pitched noise when they’re in use…

 I have to admit that I hadn’t really noticed, but if I put my ear to mine (8GB black) then I can just about hear it, and I have pretty sensitive ears to squealing noises!

I suspect it’s probably the inverter for the backlight as it stops making a noise when the screen lighting goes off.

Meh :)

Blog update

It’s been a right pain in the **** but I’ve got Movable Type 3.3 installed and with it a few new features like the "tag cloud". I just wish there was a way to assign MT tags using Microsoft Live Writer, then I’d never have to touch the web interface…

Nike+ disassembled

This is very sad , but what else can you do when your Nike+iPod running sensor goes flat and you can’t change the battery?

I had to take a Dremel to it to get it open…

Only after the event did I find a page with a technical writeup (if you’re into that sort of thing).

I am still pretty annoyed that you have to spend £20 a year on replacing the thing. How hard could it have been to build in a watertight battery compartment?

ORDB

It seems that ORDB is going away, so if you use it in your RBLs then you should remove it.

Looking at my stats it seems that ORDB hasn’t done very much so it’s not a great loss:

 

xbl.spamhaus.org 78.89%
list.dsbl.org 19.31%
sbl.spamhaus.org 1.21%
dnsbl.sorbs.net 0.57%
relays.ordb.org 0.03%

Crikey!

This is a machine I’ve been given to evaluate at work. Vista performance scores were originally set at the maximum of 5 (when the RTM was released) for the most powerful machine they could lay their hands on.

If you’re wondering, it’s a HP xw9400

Vista is here!

I’m literally instaling our copy of Vista Enterprise from the volume licensing site right now!

I feel like a child at christmas!

 

SA Win Vista Enterprise 32-bit English Disk Kit MVL DVD

Quick Info

File Size:
1975 MB

Estimated Download Time:
@56.6 – 115hr 5min 24sec ; @T1 – 5hr 45min 16sec

Date:
2006-11-09

Version:
Non-specific

Language:
English

CURAÇAO!!!!

Our honeymoon is booked, and we’re off to Curacao in the Dutch Antilles.

It’s a very, very long way away and we’re both looking forward to it immensely. I can’t wait!

Just in case you have no idea where it is: