Survey are you better off since installing Win2K Svc. Pack 3
Hey I'm trying to determine whether I was just lucky or if Win2K SP3 has improved the stability and compatibility of other users as well. What do you think of Sp3? Haven't installed it yet? Give it a try Thanks for you feedback, Christian Blackburn.
Hey I'm trying to determine whether I was just lucky or if Win2K SP3 has improved the stability and compatibility of other users as well. What do you think of Sp3?
Haven't installed it yet? Give it a try http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/downloads/servicepacks/sp3/sp3lang.asp
Thanks for you feedback,
Christian Blackburn
Haven't installed it yet? Give it a try http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/downloads/servicepacks/sp3/sp3lang.asp
Thanks for you feedback,
Christian Blackburn
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Except for the anoying windows update problem I have not had any problems.
had a BSOD problem on a friends machine with deamon tools
no workaround was found
had to uninstall the program
that is the only machine i have used it on
all my machines are running .NET
no workaround was found
had to uninstall the program
that is the only machine i have used it on
all my machines are running .NET
Quote:
(Service Packs I will do this for... but not beta Os' & what not, not even programs if the coder lists them as such!)
so i must be one of the more dangerous types unleashing the newest .NET builds on my network.
(Service Packs I will do this for... but not beta Os' & what not, not even programs if the coder lists them as such!)
so i must be one of the more dangerous types unleashing the newest .NET builds on my network.
Wow I guess those who used Windows Update had a really bad time. I think I tried SP1 off Windows Update on a system at work and it worked great, but that was then and this is now. After working at Microsoft and installing Windows 2000 beta builds off a 10 megabit network you learn to download all the files first, because you just never know when the network will burp. So in the future I'd recommend following the link I provided (at the top of this topic) and download the full 120 meg file and that way you know ahead of time that if the update program needs a file it'll be there ready and waiting.
I pretty much gave up on 2000 a year ago (good riddance to bad rubbish I say) so I haven't got any need to try this SP. I have the XP SP sitting on my hard drive but since I'm using .NET exclusively these days I have no real need to try that yet either.
No major problems on our deployments
However, at my home machine i started to get
"can not read from memory xxxxxxx etc error"
occasionaly. And windows update ain't very cooperative, like it refuses to work no matter what.
Also my Notebook is gone haywire and had to reinstall the OS.
My home desktop was a fresh install.
Apart from those it is fine never had any stability problems before or after.
However, at my home machine i started to get
"can not read from memory xxxxxxx etc error"
occasionaly. And windows update ain't very cooperative, like it refuses to work no matter what.
Also my Notebook is gone haywire and had to reinstall the OS.
My home desktop was a fresh install.
Apart from those it is fine never had any stability problems before or after.
I just install sp3 on my router
works great
works great
Quote:Yes, a pain, but I get to do things differently too, things I know & learned over time on the last installation that I knew I could have done better.)
I used to feel exactly the same way, but as I have gotten older I've realized that I don't enjoy installing Os's, applications, and drivers all day. The number one thing I loose on a re-install is time. I can think of so many things I'd rather be doing it scares me . So that's why I use Norton Ghost, but there's a ton of great backup titles. I also hate going through every program and digging my way through thousands of settings dialogues to get things just the way I want them. So I back it up. And yes if things get really screwed up (after worm virusses for example) then yes I re-install too.
Does anyone know of any freeware backup titles worth a damn? I have RawRead/RawWrite which is an internal microsoft tool (not to be mistaken with the freeware floppy tool). However rawread only supports Fat12,16, and 32 and doesn't support resizing. So if you have a backup and your HD dies and you try to restore it to a larger drive you're hosed . Lame no?
I used to feel exactly the same way, but as I have gotten older I've realized that I don't enjoy installing Os's, applications, and drivers all day. The number one thing I loose on a re-install is time. I can think of so many things I'd rather be doing it scares me . So that's why I use Norton Ghost, but there's a ton of great backup titles. I also hate going through every program and digging my way through thousands of settings dialogues to get things just the way I want them. So I back it up. And yes if things get really screwed up (after worm virusses for example) then yes I re-install too.
Does anyone know of any freeware backup titles worth a damn? I have RawRead/RawWrite which is an internal microsoft tool (not to be mistaken with the freeware floppy tool). However rawread only supports Fat12,16, and 32 and doesn't support resizing. So if you have a backup and your HD dies and you try to restore it to a larger drive you're hosed . Lame no?