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The "Not Quite Amiga but still computer related category" => Alternative Operating Systems => Topic started by: Miked on May 01, 2008, 08:39:48 AM
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Is anyone who is running Windows Vista having problems with taskeng.exe running on their systems? The program seems to be running twice and is really slowing down my system. I have googled and read "solutions", but they don't seem to work. I have tried to disable it via my firewall but it still runs.
At times it takes up as much as 70% of my computer's resources . Is anyone who is running Vista experiencing similar problems?
I'd appreciate any help... thanks.
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You might notice this is an Amiga site NOT a Windows Vista support site.
Please post Vista related question on the Vista support site, not here! Thank you and have a nice day!
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Darth,
I posted this in the alternate OSes forum. I run Winuae and I also have an Amiga 500 w/Bodega Bay, Derringer 030/40 and other goodies. I was hoping that others here could help me out. I've had an Amiga since 1987 and find the support here invaluable. If I am out of line, I apologize.
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You are not out of line by posting that in the right area like you did. Admitting that you have Vista is the first step on the road to recovery. ;-)
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@weirdami
Lol! Yes, if my Amiga 500 arrangement was a bit more powerful I wouldn't have the need for this windoze system. You know this Vista mess runs about 68 programs after boot up... it's such a shame.
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Have you considered upgrading to Windows XP? :-D
- Ali
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Have you upgraded to service pack 1?
It solved some of my speed related problems on this slow-ass OS
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InTheSand wrote:
Have you considered upgrading to Windows XP? :-D
- Ali
While Ali speaks in jest... This for me would be the only serious solution to the Vista problem. Or just wait for Windows7...
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Or switch to dual-boot XP and Ubuntu like I did :-D
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any requirement specs out there for w7? i can't find any.
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bloodline wrote:
InTheSand wrote:
Have you considered upgrading to Windows XP? :-D
- Ali
While Ali speaks in jest... This for me would be the only serious solution to the Vista problem. Or just wait for Windows7...
I completely agree on this. Not a chance you'd get me to leave XP and switch to Vista. Not at the moment anyhow. I know many people who have down-graded to XP after installing Vista.
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The problem is I bought this laptop with winblows Vista installed. I was Amiga only for a while and skipped the XP OS. I guess the question is would Microsoft let me downgrade to XP even though I do not own XP.
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Miked wrote:
The problem is I bought this laptop with winblows Vista installed. I was Amiga only for a while and skipped the XP OS. I guess the question is would Microsoft let me downgrade to XP even though I do not own XP.
Hmm, probably not. You'd have to buy XP I'm guessing, unless the people you bought the Laptop from are nice enough to let you swap. Or you could go buy an OEM version of XP until Vista comes up to scratch. Would only be about $120.
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What make of laptop is it, if its dell your in luck. Any version of XP sold with a dell will work on any dell computer in existance, no product key or activation needed
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who is the laptop maker and how long ago did you buy it? i had a dell and hated vista as it was so slow? i bought some more ram. still slow. i got in early and complained. dell offered me xp. they now offer it on some laptops. but the lappy was still slow with xp so i returned it.
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Are you sure that it's not the "Dual-Core" task enhancer like I have on my new MSI modo ? :rtfm:
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I'm typically not a Microsoft basher (in fact, Microsoft has made me a lot of money over the years...) but in this case, I agree that the best advice I've seen is to try to get yourself a copy of XP.
I typically support servers and networks, but I get asked about workstations quite a bit, so I decided it would be in my best interests to "upgrade" to Vista and get more experience so I could support my customers better. So when it came up time to refresh my own workstation, off to Vista it went. EGADS! I won't bore you folks with the 3+ pages of serious issues I discovered with this OS, but the short is that two months later (and a week or two after applying the official SP1 I downloaded from Microsoft.com myself) I finally threw in the towel and pulled out my XP CD and installed that.
Now, all that being said, here's what I've learned if you must stay at Vista...
First, as already stated, apply SP1 if you haven't already.
Second, Vista is VERY sensitive about drivers. I'd check your motherboard vendor for any updated chipset drivers. Letting Windows Update install your drivers is typically a bad idea for your stability and sanity. Update drivers AFTER applying SP1, because if you do it before, SP1 will randomly revert your drivers back to whatever version it feels like. Just one of the many "fun experiences" I "enjoyed" about my Vista adventure.
After that, I'd start looking into specific cases involving that file. I'm not sure what else you've tried, but after about 10 seconds of Google, I found the following MS Technet thread (http://forums.microsoft.com/TechNet/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=723232&SiteID=17).
HTH
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Something to understand about Vista that most people don't realize. Many things run as a "Service" in both Server 2008 and Vista. Things that run as a "service" are supposed to be "ON" all of the time.
In the past operating systems like XP and 2000 started services, but if something closed them, they don't restart themselves until you reset the computer. To be more "consistent" there was a change to the way these "services" are run. If they aren't running and are set to startup automatically (instead of manually) the OS assumes that correctly they should be restarted if they are flagged as automatic.
This will cause the CPU to waste time trying to restart these if they are marked "automatic start". This can cause the race conditions. In XP the default behavior is only try to restart services on a restart of the system. Windows requires some of these services to be "always on" and so they try to restart automatically.
This including the "pesky caching" service called WSEARCH, which you can see on the task manager under "SearchIndexer.exe". You can fix these issues easily by going into the services manager as set the individual service that keeps starting up as a "manual" start service under the individual properties of that service in the Services Control Panel.
The task manager can now tell you what process is connected to what service so you can track it down by process id and then going to the service task manager tab.
I find the searchIndexer.exe and the wsearch the primary reason my hard drive and CPU is getting eaten. Set thse to manual (they both will still fire up if needed).
I have a couple of HP machines and some vendors add their own services to the OS for Help and problem diagnosis. I find these poorly written too and problematic.
I don't believe this practice or restarting services if they close will be going away anytime soon even in other windows releases, so if you know this upfront you can easily fix that if you view it as a problem (which I don't). There were much more problems with services that quit unexpected and couldn't be restarted in the past under XP,2000 and other OSes. A poorly written "service" can be mistaken for problems in the OS and take down a system with the automatic services startup enabled... The system keeps trying to restart it with no luck taking up CPU time..
The problem about Drivers is they now have to be signed. Most come from 3rd parties and aren't written to specifications and some of them cause reliability issues..
The best thing in Vista is it's reliability monitor which graphs all this stuff and tells you whatss wrong so you can fix it.. It will also comeback automatically with fixes to crashing software if you submit the problem to Microsoft..
Most of the problem with the XP crowd that doesn't like Vista is really two issues.
Vista doesn't work like XP and people don't know how to diagnose problems and fix them and assume they have proper knowledge just because they think they knew how the old OS worked. A lot of tech support people think Vista and Server 2008 are just like the old XP and they should know everything already, even though there are significant changes in architecture and obviously behavior.
Killing services in vista doesn't help from the task manager doesn't help if they just start up again causing RACE conditions. Is this better, certainly it's lead to less tech calls when people have to restart these in the past. Things like autoconfig didn't work without a service running. It caused many tech support calls. Go into the service manager and set rogue stuff like that to manual start and it won't try to keep restarting these.
Services are like DAEMONs in other platforms. They are designed mostly to be on all of the time..
Most of the problem with Vista itself is not "problems" with Vista but problems with user and support staff knowledge of it versus XP.. Vista requires re-learning and some new learning. Most administrators of computers are too busy to learn about things like this or new security features which would cut down on their re-installs and cut down on their frustration and getting out the OLD XP disc..
I'd love to hear your issues it sounds like you lack some knowledge of how the new OS works because it's not business as usual.
If you had invoked the reliabillity monitor you probably could have tracked down this issue right away. I don't call it a problem, because this is some that should be happening. Services not running is a royal pain and some services are dependent on others to run and most people in the past haven't manually known how to restart them or couldn't because of dependencies.
Microsoft actually fixed this with Vista, something you are seeing as a problem that is completely minor and an experienced Vista user can usually stop in a couple of clicks..
You need to aquire more and new knowledge.. Or stay with XP.. Vista users who like Vista don't find these problems and most have learned about the changes and it's a non issue.
Get it together man you don't need XP. XP had the same 3rd party chipset problems when it came out 5 years ago, that's a minor issue that gets resolved pretty quickly because it impedes machine sales.. If the manufacturers loose sales because of it. Remember the VIA chipset problems with XP long ago?? People were hacking on XP because via didnt have it together right away.
Most people who bought Vista machines with new hardware doesn't have a problem. Who would have thought automatically restarting services would be a bad idea? It certainly cut down on many tech support calls over stalled unworking services that were dependent on another.. Auto restarting of these sounds like a great idea and most of the time in practice it is.. If you have poorly written services that are a memory hog, then it can be a bad day if you don't know what's going on or how to stop it.
Most of the people complaining are trying to "upgrade their machine" which doesn't meet Vista specs have a bad experience because Vista was not designed to upgrade your old 3-4 year old PC but work with and support a whole new generation of hardware with faster CPUs and a larger memory footprint. 3rd Party OEMs and Software houses are the worst for writing "services" because they don't track memory consumption and over all performance. Most of them feel you will only be installing their software anyway.. Right??
It's easy to blame Microsoft (lets face it a lot of people see a big target there). It's even easier to say "oh this doesnt work" and give up on something. Since the early Amiga days people have had issues with OSes it's nothing new.
I remember the days of early amiga where Amiga Fireworks mode might come up and machine crash if you had over 256K on your machine due to memory leaks. Come on people think about it we are much better off today even with Vista..
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Admitting that you have Vista is the first step on the road to recovery.
ROFL :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Certainly, checking over your services and never letting anything that isn't running be set to Automatic is basic administration. In fact, the Technet thread I linked to was saying, unless you need the Task Scheduler it can be turned off.
But, since two copies of it are running on his system, I'm assuming he needs it for something. Being a "scheduler" I'm assuming it probably is looking to the chipset APIs to find timing information. Updating the chipset drivers seems like a good idea, as they may be causing other problems you haven't seen, yet.
Also, Vista's reliability monitor would be a great feature, if it worked. Of course, it doesn't, though. It sees "WHQL Certification" as the most likely candidate for it's random spew of messages. Never mind the fact that the last WHQL driver is more than a year out of date, and designed for a product family that has less features than the device you own.
Vista's driver choosing algorithms kept insisting that the "best" version of my sound drivers were over 100 revisions out of date and did not support more than 2 channels. I'm sorry. I kind of LIKE surround sound. I only had this feature working correctly for the past 3 years in XP. This oversight might be more understandable if I had a rare audio chipset or something. But my workstation runs one of the world's most popular audio chips, the Realtek AC'97. Gah!
And don't even get me started on the moronic "reliability monitor". That thing started spewing advice after a system halt. The system halt was quite clearly my fault, and was caused by me trying to force an install of an XP game that didn't quite like UAC very much. Vista's reliability monitor concluded that my HP Photosmart printer driver caused the crash! How silly of me to blame the old game I launched moments earlier! It's clearly the driver for a printer (that was currently off) which is causing all the problems. (slaps forehead)
And again, I don't mean to make this into a diatribe, but I've got a lot more stories like these. There are a good number of other people who are quite versed on the current Microsoft Way that hate Vista just as much as I do.
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@Miked
If your version of Vista is either business or ultimate you can downgrade to XP. You have to call Microsoft to activate XP on your system and let them know you want to exercise your downgrade rights.
You will have to give them your code from Vista so have it handy.
The other option is to do what JJ said and find a windows XP CD(preferably with SP2) for a Dell computer and install it that way.