Windows 7, Rain, & Stepford Snow

Windows 7 Upgrade

Yeah, I know.  I’ve always been a Mac guy.  Build quality of the Apple hardware far exceeds anything I’ve ever seen on the PC side.  The Mac operating systems have always made more sense and offered more and better control of the computing environment. 

Well, as you know if you’re one of the people  who read this blog, I’ve recently purchased a factory refurbished HP laptop.  It shipped with Windows Vista installed, which I really enjoyed.  Sort of a monster the functionality of which was fun to discover.  But, because I purchased before 31 January 2010, HP offered a free upgrade to Windows 7.  Because free is where it’s at, baby, I signed up.

In due time the envelope containing the two-DVD upgrade suite arrived.  Disc One is a proprietary HP upgrade helper sort of thing containing a user interface and progs that evaluate the hardware and C-out reports and advice.  And here’s the thing – the advice printing to screen is worth following.  First time around, I ignored the suggestion to abort the upgrade then find and uninstall the program that uses “keyboard filter” before running the upgrade stuff again.  After what seemed like a very long time, with the actual Windows 7 disc running its install, the entire system and upgrade hung completely on a chkdsk countdown at 1.

After using the Macintosh to get online and research the problem, I rolled back to Vista on the laptop, found and uninstalled the HP Quick Keys program, and a couple of days later successfully ran the upgrade to 7 without the slightest hitch.

I have never had any similar problems upgrading Macintosh computer operating systems.

Anyway, I do like Windows 7, but it’s not as funky-genie-like as Vista.  Just pretty stable and functional using far fewer system resources.

Rain

IMGP5684

What was it, a week ago, that we got all that rain.  Like Waterworld around here for a few days.  Got me thinking about the feasibility of installing a dry well out back and in front.

Snow

DSCN1961

Got a bunch of snow here at Stepford yesterday.  Our offices were all closed at noon – I got home before the atmosphere began to really resemble a shaken snow-globe.

Vituperation and Values

The vituperative response of a reader to one of my previous blog posts (an excerpt from the edited portion of that post follows) about the intent of my family to create our own holiday traditions that make sense to us and arise out of our own values has motivated me to specifically reflect upon those values.  The original post I redacted at the request of a close family member.

“Now that my wife and I are parents, we will begin establishing our Christmas traditions as a family; traditions that make sense to us and arise out of our own values.”

The Internet

I use Internet forums and this blog as places to write about what I think, as well as to write about my life’s events.  That is what Internet forums and blogs are for.  If the Venn diagram of my life overlaps with that of someone else, when I write about my life, I might also be writing about the events of someone else’s.  Because this blog cross-posts in other places, those who would not normally come here to read about the things I think and do may be exposed to ideas they find offensive.

Metrospy conservative values bumper sticker

Fatih, Family, Life, Country, and The Right to Bear Arms - some basic conservative American values

The Basics

Personally, I value truth for its own sake. I value the free exchange of ideas and do not expect even significant others to agree with mine.  I hope they will understand them, but agreement is not necessary for my own mental, emotional, and spiritual equanimity.

I value justice.  I will typically not tolerate, if there’s anything I can do about it, an injustice perpetrated upon myself or another person.  That means I won’t quietly accept a serving of excrement that I did not order.  Normally, I’ll return it, somehow or another, to the waitstaff, as opposed to hiding it under the table at my feet, or scraping it off the plate into a potted plant.  I won’t quietly sit by while another person is force-fed a similar helping.  And by the way, the serving-of-excrement thing is metaphor.

I value freedom to speak, write, publish, and broadcast my thoughts and ideas.  I value your freedom to disagree or to pay no attention.

I value thrift as the proper response to the possession of financial and other resources.  It just makes sense to be careful in circumstances of plenty, because circumstances may change.

I value charity as the proper response to the possession of plenty.  Because I have been helped many times by others, I am happy to be of service and to help others when I reasonably can.

I value the practice of my religion, and as a Christian, I think that Christian religious commemorations or, as we’ve come to call them, holidays, are essentially religious occasions.  While, to a degree, I enjoy some of the cultural traditions associated with Christian holidays, I consider them of secondary importance.

Other News

This blog post has been written in and is being published by a Windows Live program called Windows Live Writer.  I’m not sure it will work.  The Windows Live suite is something I downloaded and installed with a Windows Vista update.  I’ve heard terrible things about Windows Vista, but I find that I like it considerably better than Windows XP Professional.  That is, after installing Service Pack 2.

Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 is the system that came preinstalled on the HP DV6 factory refurbished laptop I purchased last week from HP’s online outlet store.  It’s not the super cool Macbook Pro I wanted (Apple Store factory refurb unit), but it has twice the RAM, a gigantic 12-cell battery, a much larger hard drive, built-in wireless, and will make a good sandbox for all those Windows programs I don’t want to run in a virtual machine on the Power Mac I normally use.  Oh yeah, did I mention I got it about half the cost of that Macbook Pro?

HP Pavilion DV6 Case

The downside

The downside is that it has a shiny case with ugly shiny silver circular designs that, at first glance, resemble nothing so much as little piles of fingernail clippings.  But it’s that thrift-thing, again.  Never buy new, never pay full retail, etc.; and looks don’t matter whereas function does.

I placed my order online the evening of Thursday 7 January, and received the laptop the following Saturday.  Turns out Saturday deliveries are included with standard shipping.  That’s great service.  Because I bought before 31 January, HP is shipping me a gratis copy of Windows 7, which I’ll probably install after monkeying around with Vista for awhile.  From the reviews I’ve read, 7 makes fewer superfluous hardware calls, runs faster, uses less battery power than Vista.

I’ll probably put some of the money I’ve saved toward an Apple Store factory refurb Imac sometime in the near future.