OK, computer
Apr. 4th, 2013 02:02 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Recently at work, I got a new laptop. The "ooh, shiny new hardware" is slightly offset by the usual round of tweaking all the settings to make it behave how I want. Not to mention a few days worth of installing software and copying data off the old machine. Of late, instead of actually working, I've been repeatedly running the Cygwin installer every time I discover another package I forgot.
This is the first machine I've significantly used that runs Windows 7. So there were lots of new settings to find. Turning off Aero, turning off Snap... all those things which are trivial to solve once you've discovered what the particular "feature" that's winding you up is called. Plus all the fun of discovering that the updated driver for one of your peripherals has removed your favourite feature (I'm looking at you, Logitech).
I am trying not to turn things off for the sake of it. I have to use Outlook for work email, and did find myself busily re-arranging the layout to make it look like my previous Outlook, before realising that this one might well be a better use of space. Different doesn't necessarily mean worse, Venta.
Grrr, mutter, don't like change.
That and learning that half your software has to be explicitly run as administrator to make anything work.
I have finally won the mouse battle. I want my touchpad to have its left and right buttons reversed (ie right is click, left is context menu). I want my trackball to be the same. I want my USB mouse to have its buttons normal way round (no, I'm not just awkward for the hell of it - the USB mouse is for passing guests who freak out at my reversed buttons and, on occasion, confusedly push my trackball round the desk).
And I think I've run into my first real accessibilty issue. My new laptop has quite a high res screen, which means teeny tiny text. Particularly with my work set up, where I have a separate keyboard[*] and so on, the screen is quite a long way away and hard to read. Easy, boost the display size up to medium - which would be great if applications bothered to respect that setting. Skype is a particularly bad offender, there - sure you can manually tune the font for the chat windows, but can you change it for your contacts list? Nope. Firefox copes a lot worse than I expected, too - though whether that's FF's fault or individual sites' faults I'm not sure. Things interact in strange ways, too. Turn up the font size in FF's settings, and the BBC news site turns into a compressed horror. Leave the font as it is and zoom instead and it's fine. Bah. Doubtless I will learn.
Anyway, I think I'm more or less finished now, and might actually get some work done. Except...
I have yet to work out how to turn off the stupid miniature pop-up windows which appear whenever you go near the taskbar. I'm perfectly happy for others to have them if they want - I emphatically don't. They serve no purpose for me and - because of the way I lay out my desktop - frequently pop over the thing I'm trying to read. Any ideas? (Don't tell me to run gpedit, it doesn't work on Windows 7. I can increase the time delay on them, which is what I'll doubtless end up doing, but would really like to nuke them completely.)
[*] Just as well, really. The new laptop has (unusually) a full size number pad like a real keyboard. Which is great, but means the actual business bit is heavily offset to the left of the machine. Since I don't look at the keyboard when typing, I keep failing to notice this and typing things that ;ppl ;olr yjod.
This is the first machine I've significantly used that runs Windows 7. So there were lots of new settings to find. Turning off Aero, turning off Snap... all those things which are trivial to solve once you've discovered what the particular "feature" that's winding you up is called. Plus all the fun of discovering that the updated driver for one of your peripherals has removed your favourite feature (I'm looking at you, Logitech).
I am trying not to turn things off for the sake of it. I have to use Outlook for work email, and did find myself busily re-arranging the layout to make it look like my previous Outlook, before realising that this one might well be a better use of space. Different doesn't necessarily mean worse, Venta.
Grrr, mutter, don't like change.
That and learning that half your software has to be explicitly run as administrator to make anything work.
I have finally won the mouse battle. I want my touchpad to have its left and right buttons reversed (ie right is click, left is context menu). I want my trackball to be the same. I want my USB mouse to have its buttons normal way round (no, I'm not just awkward for the hell of it - the USB mouse is for passing guests who freak out at my reversed buttons and, on occasion, confusedly push my trackball round the desk).
And I think I've run into my first real accessibilty issue. My new laptop has quite a high res screen, which means teeny tiny text. Particularly with my work set up, where I have a separate keyboard[*] and so on, the screen is quite a long way away and hard to read. Easy, boost the display size up to medium - which would be great if applications bothered to respect that setting. Skype is a particularly bad offender, there - sure you can manually tune the font for the chat windows, but can you change it for your contacts list? Nope. Firefox copes a lot worse than I expected, too - though whether that's FF's fault or individual sites' faults I'm not sure. Things interact in strange ways, too. Turn up the font size in FF's settings, and the BBC news site turns into a compressed horror. Leave the font as it is and zoom instead and it's fine. Bah. Doubtless I will learn.
Anyway, I think I'm more or less finished now, and might actually get some work done. Except...
I have yet to work out how to turn off the stupid miniature pop-up windows which appear whenever you go near the taskbar. I'm perfectly happy for others to have them if they want - I emphatically don't. They serve no purpose for me and - because of the way I lay out my desktop - frequently pop over the thing I'm trying to read. Any ideas? (Don't tell me to run gpedit, it doesn't work on Windows 7. I can increase the time delay on them, which is what I'll doubtless end up doing, but would really like to nuke them completely.)
[*] Just as well, really. The new laptop has (unusually) a full size number pad like a real keyboard. Which is great, but means the actual business bit is heavily offset to the left of the machine. Since I don't look at the keyboard when typing, I keep failing to notice this and typing things that ;ppl ;olr yjod.