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Home>Give XP the performance tools of Vista

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 136 • 2008-01-10 • Circulation: over 400,000


Table of contents 
  • Top Story: Give XP the performance tools of Vista
  • Wacky Web Week: What, your cell phone doesn’t do laundry?
  • LangaList Plus: How you can easily schedule complex tasks
  • PC Tune-Up: Make Windows XP portable and take it with you
  • Patch Watch: Vista gears up for its first service pack

 
Top Story

Give XP the performance tools of Vista

Scott dunn By Scott Dunn

Windows Vista has an all-in-one window for monitoring the health of your system and tweaking its performance — but what if you use XP, not Vista?

With just a couple of downloads and a few drags and drops, you can add a Vista-like performance center to Windows XP.

Vista has a one-stop tune-up tool

Who doesn’t want a faster, healthier computer? Using diagnostic and maintenance tools can keep your system revved for maximum performance, but in many cases these tools are spread out all over your Start menu or hidden entirely.

Vista provides a partial solution by adding a Control Panel icon that’s chock full of system utilities. To access this icon in the Vista Control Panel, click the System and Maintenance category, and then launch the Performance Information and Tools icon. The resulting window provides links to a number of system-measurement and performance-tweaking utilities that provide one-stop tune-ups.

But what of XP? Fortunately, with just a little effort, you can create your own hive of performance tools in Windows XP — and even Windows 2000. Here’s what you do.

Assemble tool shortcuts in a new folder

Start by creating a folder that will hold your performance-tool shortcuts. If you want this folder to appear as a menu on the Start menu, right-click the Start button and choose Start, Open or Start, Open All Users. Navigate to the location you want for this folder, and then right-click a blank area and click New, Folder. Enter a name and press Enter.

In this folder, you’ll add shortcuts to tools that are the same as or equivalent to the utilities found in Vista’s Performance Information and Tools window. In some cases, doing this is a simple matter of using the right-mouse button to drag icons from the Start menu, drop them into your new folder window, and choosing Create Shortcuts Here.

In other cases, it’s easier to create a shortcut from scratch. To do this, right-click a blank spot in your new folder window, and then click New, Shortcut. Enter a command line like taskmgr.exe. Click Next, enter a name for your shortcut, and click Finish.

In a few cases, you’ll need to download some freeware equivalents to provide features that aren’t found in Windows XP or 2000. For example, the freeware program Fresh Diagnose is an approximation of Vista’s system health report. (Although the product is free, you do have to register it if you want to use the program for more than 11 days.)

Table 1 shows in the left-hand column the items that are found in Vista’s Performance Information and Tools control panel. This includes those that are only found under the advanced tools link, omitting one duplicate (visual effects). The right-hand column gives you links to the equivalents that will create your new performance center.

Table 1. Simulate the Performance Information and Tools feature of Vista by creating shortcuts in XP or 2000.

Vista feature
How to duplicate it in XP and 2000
Manage startup programs
Download, install, and add a shortcut to a free tool like Windows Defender, Autoruns, or Startup Control Panel
Adjust visual effects
XP only: create a shortcut with this command line:
control.exe sysdm.cpl,@0,3
Launch the shortcut and click Settings under Performance. (Does not work in Windows 2000.)
Adjust indexing options
Download, install, and add a shortcut to a free tool like Gooogle Desktop Search or Copernic Desktop Search
Adjust power settings
Right-drag the Power Options control panel icon to your new folder and choose Create Shortcut Here.
Disk Cleanup
Right-drag the Disk Cleanup icon to your folder from the following menu: Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools. Choose Copy Here.
Event log
Create a shortcut with this command line:
eventvwr.msc
Reliability and Performance Monitor
Create a shortcut with this command line:
perfmon.msc
Task Manager
Create a shortcut with this command line:
taskmgr.exe
System Information
Right-drag the System Information icon to your folder from the Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools menu. Choose Copy Here.
Disk Defragmenter
Right-drag the Disk Defragmenter icon to your folder from the following menu: Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools. Choose Copy Here.
System Health Report
Download, install, and add a shortcut to a free tool like Fresh Diagnose.


If you want to go Vista one better, you can of course add other shortcuts that you think will be useful. For example, if you like to tweak Windows services — for example, turning off unneeded services to save on memory — create a shortcut to services.msc. The Web site Black Viper has extensive info to guide advanced users in this process.

That’s all there is to it! Now anytime you need to look under Windows’ hood, just open your new folder (or your new item on your Start menu, if you created one) and select the tool you need. No more hunting all over your system for just the right tool.

Bonus Vista performance tip: Microsoft has released an update for Windows Vista that addresses a number of problems. Among other things, the update promises to improve performance, such as speeding up disk input/output by as much as 15%.

The patch will be distributed through Automatic Updates later this month. But if you want the benefits sooner, you can download the update now from Microsoft. Just see Knowledge Base article 943899.

Have a tip about Windows? Readers receive a gift certificate for a book, CD, or DVD of their choice for sending tips we print. Send us your tips via the Windows Secrets contact page.

Scott Dunn is associate editor of the Windows Secrets Newsletter. He has been a contributing editor of PC World since 1992 and currently writes for the magazine’s Here’s How section.

 
Wacky Web Week

What, your cell phone doesn’t do laundry?

Next generation cell phone  First there was the simple phone call. Then came text messaging. Then we gained the ability to send e-mail, take photos, download music, surf the Internet, and get turn-by-turn driving directions.

Now, this two-minute spoof gives us a look at the next generation of cell phones — and a true definition of the term multitasking! Play the video


 
LangaList Plus

How you can easily schedule complex tasks

Fred langa By Fred Langa

Once you know the trick, Task Scheduler can do just about anything but make the coffee.

The key is using a means of program control that dates back to the ancient days of DOS: command-line parameters.


Answering a reader’s plea for scheduling help

Reader David Rhind appeals for assistance in handling more difficult scheduling tasks that require a little human intervention along the way:

  • “Fred, in Part Six of your Housecall series, Schedule tasks without constant logons, you told us about using Task Scheduler [TS], but this remains a very gray area for many of us.

    I can see how to run a program using TS, but how about responding to input boxes once the program executes? For instance, when AdAware starts, you need to ‘Check for updates?’ or ‘Connect now.’ Then you have to click ‘Start.’

    If there is no user input, presumably the program just hangs, so how does TS manage to get past first base? Could you do an article on Task Manager using actual examples?”

Sure, David. Many programs can be made to run in a fully-automated way via Task Scheduler, but you should know up front that some cannot. The problem usually isn’t with Task Scheduler, but with the software itself.

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PC Tune-Up

Make Windows XP portable and take it with you

Mark edwards By Mark Edwards

Portable applications are very handy, because you can copy them onto a USB storage device and use them on whatever PC may be handy.

This week, I’ll tell you about a free tool that lets you to turn Windows XP into a portable operating system.


MojoPac puts Windows XP on a thumb drive

I recently came across an extremely cool tool that apparently has been around a while but, for whatever reason, I hadn’t become aware of it. The tool, MojoPac, makes Windows XP completely portable. This means you can run the operating system from a thumb drive or nearly any other USB storage device!

The way it works is fairly simple: You connect your storage device to a PC, download MojoPac onto the device, launch MojoPac, and walk through a simple configuration process. (Ideally, your device will behave like a fast, external hard drive — many iPods fit the bill. Also, the computer you use must be able to boot from whichever USB port you may employ.) You can then copy into MojoPac any applications you want to include on your portable XP desktop.

From that point on, when you connect your drive to a PC, MojoPac runs Windows XP as a standalone operating system that doesn’t affect the computer’s OS. Even better, you’ll be able to switch back and forth between the instance of XP that’s running via MojoPac and the copy of Windows that’s installed on the computer you’re physically using.

To get a close look at MojoPac in action, head over to the MojoPac Web site and view the demonstration videos. If you already know about MojoPac, perhaps what you dodn’t know is that RingCube Technologies (the Santa Clara-based company that created the tool) released on Oct. 2 a free version of MojoPac, called MojoPac Freedom. So go get a copy and try it out!

RealPlayer 11 is vulnerable to silent attack

On Jan. 1, the Russian security-research group Immunity Inc. told the world that RealPlayer 11 is vulnerable to a serious attack. The vulnerability could let a bad guy run code of his choice on your computer.

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Patch Watch

Vista gears up for its first service pack

Susan bradley By Susan Bradley

Microsoft’s Vista team is getting ready to release Service Pack 1, but a few “pre-SP1″ bumps were hit along the way this week that negatively affected Home Premium users.

Those problems have been swatted by now, but there are still several other issues that relate to Vista and XP updates.


935509
‘Pre-SP1′ BitLocker patch incorrectly installed

The Vista team released on Jan. 8 the first of the “pre-SP1″ patches that are being prepared in anticipation of Service Pack 1, which should be released within a few more weeks.

This month’s Patch Tuesday pre-SP1 update is intended to upgrade the version of BitLocker, Microsoft’s drive-encryption scheme in Vista Enterprise and Vista Ultimate, before SP1 comes out. Because BitLocker is only available in those two high-end SKUs, the Vista team blog stated on Jan. 7 that the pre-SP1 update was to be deployed only to those two versions of Vista.

For a few hours on Jan. 8, however, Vista Home Premium machines — which aren’t able to use Bitlocker — received via Automatic Updates patch 935509, which is described in Knowledge Base article 935509.

The Microsoft Update blog acknowledged on Jan. 9 that Home Premium customers were incorrectly getting the update. Microsoft staff indicated that the install wouldn’t harm the systems that inadvertently got it, but it was certainly confusing for many people to see a BitLocker download.

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The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, WinFind, Windows Gizmos, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of iNET Interactive. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.
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