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Rob Keiser

Notes from the basement
July 03

jQuery Presentations

At the latest Philly.Net Hands On Lab we tried to create an example using the ListView and an RSS feed. The ListView example was taken from the demo that Joe Stagner did here. Unfortunatly his site was not working for the demo so we switched it to my blog.

If you want to see the final ASPX page you can get to it here.

Remember you can find more jQuery information at jQuery.com.

At the previous regular meeting of Philly.Net

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I also gave a short intro presentation about jQuery. If you would like to have the presentation you can download it from here.

I hope these presentations helped you get started. Let me know what else you’d like to know about jQuery by leaving a comment.

Thanks.

January 21

Dell Mini 9 and Windows 7 Revisited

Since the Beta of Windows 7 was released I figured I would try to upgrade my Dell from the PDC release to the Beta. Unfortunately there wasn’t enough disk space on my 16gb SSD to accommodate an update so I decided to simply blow away the existing build and start fresh.

Before I got started I checked for any BIOS updates. I had previously updated to A03 but I found that another update was available  - onward and upward to A04.  The BIOS update worked flawlessly and I was ready to begin.

I decided to boot from the external CD. Since there are no dedicated function keys on the Mini I had to hit the zero key. Of course, this is an exercise in timing since it is only available to hit for a limited time.

Once the install disk booted I blew away both the main partition and the 200mb partition that is created by windows 7.  I then created a single partition but and told the install to use it. Windows still wants that 200mb partition so it repartitioned the disk and began the install.

Expanding the files took the longest – about 20 minutes. The entire install took about 45 minutes.

I did get the wireless hotkey to work by downloading the battery Meter/Wireless Switch for the Mini 12 (for vista). This installed fine on the 9. Thanks to the myDellMini website for the information.

So far the beta is working well – it is responsive and shows no signs of being a beta.

December 07

Dell Studio 17 Vista Upgrade

I purchased a Dell Studio 17 and it came with Vista Home Premium 64 bit on it. This was the way it came from Dell, it does have 4Gb of memory so the 64 bit version is useful.

I wanted to upgrade this to Vista Ultimate. Normally I wipe a new machine and start fresh, but this computer had very little in the way of bloatware so I figured since all the drivers were loaded and working I might as well try the upgrade.

My first attempt was running smoothly until it got to the second to last part and gave me an error saying it could not configure one or more system components.

I thought it might be something special on the laptop, perhaps the fingerprint reader or bluetooth or maybe the WiFi. I decided to go to the Dell support website and upgrade the drivers. I upgrade the BIOS, the fingerprint reader, and the WiFi. As it turned out, upgrading the WiFi was not the right thing to do…

Still the upgrade of Vista would not work. So I tried removing Daemon tools ( a software DVD drive) – no luck.

I finally tried the web (I should have started there). I found some posts on the technet forum that seems to address the issues. So this is what the recommendation was:

Go into Control Panel/Programs/Programs and Features. click on the “Turn Windows Features on or off” link in the left panel.

  • Uncheck XPS view under ms .NET framework
  • Uncheck Remote Differential Compression
  • Uncheck Windows DFS replication Service

After doing this the upgrade worked. I’m not sure why Windows doesn’t know how to do this but I’m just glad it worked. I was only left with one problem. Remember that I upgrade the WiFi card, well Windows could no longer see it. I had to use the driver disk that came with the machine and reinstall the driver for the card.  After that all was good…

December 03

Dell Mini and Windows 7

I picked up a Dell Inspiron Mini 910 and decided to put Windows 7 on it. This has been done by other people with apparent success. The only difference was that I got the Mini with Ubuntu preinstalled (it’s cheaper that way).

I knew I might run into driver issues but figured if all else failed I would reinstall Ubuntu and be back to where I started. The Mini did come with a driver disk that appeared to have all the XP drivers loaded. They were in self extracting ZIP files.

After running the install for Window 7 I was left with very little in the way of network peripherals working. I tried to load the XP drivers that came on the CD. Extracting the software was not a problem, but they also tried to run a setup utility which did not recognize Windows 7 as a valid OS.

I grabbed an external USB drive and went to my workstation in the hopes of finding some drivers on the Dell site. There I found some new drivers and an update to the BIOS. I loaded all the drivers from the site onto the USB drive and headed  back to my Mini.

First I updated the BIOS since I would have done that anyway. Then I started to load the drivers from the site. After a few I found the wireless driver and it installed….at least part way. It did have some errors but I figured I’d just try to get connected…and it worked!

After getting online it found some newer drivers at the windows update site for the network so I installed them. After that all the network peripherals were found and I was up and running.

After I got everything working I loaded the blue badge application to turn on all the extras for the 6801 build.

So far Windows 7 is running without problems on the Mini although there are still a couple of devices that are unknown.

image

The Mini came with 1GB of memory and a 16GB SSD. After installing Windows I was left with a little less than 6GB of disk space.

I have since upgrade my memory to 2GB. This was not because the system was running slow, but because a 2GB chip was only $25 - tough to pass that up.  I am also looking into upgrading the SSD. Runcore has a 32, 64, and 128 model out which are supposed to increase performance. They also have mini USB ports on them for easy transfer of disk images. The 32GB model is going for around $120.

July 17

Taskeng.exe on a rampage

The other day I opened my laptop and woke it up form sleep to find that it was running a little sluggish. When I opened task manager I found that the taskeng.exe application had over 900 entries in the process list. I tried killing them but they continued to startup. Clearly something was amiss.

I'm running Vista so getting to the task scheduler is pretty easy, just hit the windows key and start typing task... Once I got into the task scheduler I still could not see anything wrong. Going into Task Scheduler Library showed only one task and it was not running.

I had to click on the view action item in the right pane and select Show Hidden Tasks and there it was. It was the RSS synchronization task that was the culprit. Apparently it kept failing when it was starting up (I could see this in the history tab). Now that I had found what the problem was, I was at a bit of a lose as to how to fix it.

Doing some searching revealed this post by Karl Foley. It was about vista 64 but it sounded like the same problem. Following his advice I was able to get everything back to normal.  I also learned about a new application - msfeedssync - I didn't realize this existed nor did I know that it was responsible for getting my RSS feeds in IE. I tried to find any help on this application but I came up empty.

BTW - I was able to easily kill all those runaway taskeng processes by using Powershell and the stop-process command.

 

Robert

Occupation
Location
Philadelphia Area Computer Society Windows SIG leader. Philly.Net helper
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