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PC problems: Upgrade or buy a new one? Suggestions from the Seattle Times

Patrick Marshall of The Seattle Times addresses whether it’s worth fixing a computer with issues, or if it’s a better idea to just get a new PC. Plus a few additional tips on maintaining your computer.

Patrick Marshall writes for The Seattle Times today has an article where he is asked his opinion on whether it’s worth fixing a computer with issues, or if it’s a better idea to just get a new PC. Marshall recommends what to do next when a computer slows down… and whether to upgrade or buy a new PC…

“You’ve raised two of the most frequently asked questions I get: Why is my computer slowing down? Should I upgrade or buy a new computer?

The most common causes of sudden slowdowns in performance are…

  1. insufficient memory for the applications you’re running,
  2. an overfull or fragmented hard drive,
  3. a misbehaving application or
  4. a virus or hacker.

“So how do you figure out which malady you’re suffering from? Windows provides a number of tools to help diagnose the problem. First, you’ll want to call up the Task Manager. [note: see How to use Windows Task Manager and Windows Task Manager on Wikipedia] Right-click in your system bar along the bottom of the screen and select Task Manager. Next, click on the Performance tab in the utility that pops up. You’ll get a display of how much memory is being used and how much your CPU is in use. If your memory usage is above 80 percent, you’ll want to explore what is eating up your memory. You can do this by clicking on the Processes tab. If you find that all the memory is being used by legitimate applications, you may want to consider adding memory.”

Good suggestions.

I’ll add, from the Microsoft Windows XP product page, see the section on 5 ways to speed up your computer

Follow these quick guidelines to maintain your computer and keep it running smoothly.

  1. Free up disk space
  2. Speed up access to data
  3. Detect and repair disk errors
  4. Protect your computer against spyware
  5. Learn all about ReadyBoost

One of the (usually!) easiest upgrades you can consider is increasing your computer’s memory, particularly if you determine that you don’t have enough system memory.  On the remaining Windows XP computer at home, we have 1GB of memory installed; on Windows Vista, we have configurations operating with 1GB, 2GB and 4GB.  And my main (older) Mac has 1GB of memory.  There are several tools to help you navigate the upgrade process, and I personally like the Crucial Memory System Scanner which “automatically analyzes your computer memory information and suggests an upgrade that’s guaranteed compatible.”

And defragmenting your hard drive may help your hard drive be more efficient at accessing and saving files.  To start Disk Defragmenter in Windows, click on the Start button, and navigate to the Programs folder and open the Accessories folder.  There, you’ll see the System Tools folder where you can select “Disk Defragmenter.”  In managing your hard drive, consider adding another drive or upgrading your drive to a larger model particularly if you have less than 10-15 percent free space on your main hard drive.

And of course, back up your files on your computer.

More info is also available on the Windows Help and How To site on Microsoft.com.

Tags: Microsoft, customer support, tips, customer service, Windows.

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Engadget notices Fujitsu’s new F-A50 all-in-one PC

Post this in the “ooh, I want one” category.

Of interest as I run off to a meeting (thanks, Bill, for the ping). Fujitsu’s F-A50 all-in-one escapes a terrible, terrible heritage from Engadget’s Paul Miller

Hey, it’s still not the most svelte of all-in-one PCs, but given its predecessors we’ll really take whatever we can get. The Fujitsu F-A50 rocks a 16:9 16-inch display running at 1366 x 768, with a base that allows for adjustable height and angles for the PC. Unfortunately, 16:9 is about as wild as things get around here, with Core 2 Duo T8100 processor, Intel GM965 integrated graphics and so forth. WiFi is built-in, which is always nice to see on a desktop PC, and there’s even a PC card slot for expansion. The whole shebang weighs in at 12 pounds, and goes on sale in Japan on May 17th for around $1,300. [Via Engadget Spanish]

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Windows XP SP3 Released to PC Manufacturers, System Builders

Yesterday we announced the release to manufacturers (RTM) of Service Pack 3 (SP3) for Windows XP, and as noted on Computerworld

“Windows XP has released to manufacturing,” said Chris Keroack, the service pack’s release manager, in a message posted to a TechNet support forum Monday at around 1 p.m. EDT. “Windows XP SP3 bits are now working their way through our manufacturing channels to be available to OEM and enterprise customers.”

If you are an IT systems administrator, developer, or if you’re no stranger to installing updates from the DLC, you will be able to update XP systems to SP3 next week when SP3 is released on the Download Center, or as an optional download on Windows Update. 

For consumers, you’ll start to see XP SP3 distributed via Automatic Update in early summer.

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Another look at the year 2038 problem

I was asked last week (again) for guidance I could give (being involved in time in one way or another, in addition to my day job) on how Microsoft products may be impacted by the 2038 issue


As I noted in January, the Year 2038 problem (as defined by the Wikipedia entry)



“The year 2038 problem (also known as “Unix Millennium bug”, “Y2K38,” “Y2K+38,” or “Y2.038K” by analogy to the Y2K problem) may cause some computer software to fail before or in the year 2038. The problem affects Unix-like operating systems, which represent system time as the number of seconds (ignoring leap seconds) since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970.[1] This representation also affects software written for most other operating systems because of the broad deployment of C. On most 32-bit systems, the time_t data type used to store this second count is a signed 32-bit integer. The latest time that can be represented in this format, following the POSIX standard, is 03:14:07 UTC on Tuesday, January 19, 2038. Times beyond this moment will “wrap around” and be represented internally as a negative number, and cause programs to fail, since they will see these times not as being in 2038 but rather in 1901. Erroneous calculations and decisions may therefore result.


Some people believed that the bulk of issues would surface on January 19, 2008, the date when new 30-year mortgages and bonds could be impacted.  In fact, much of the impact would have been seen years ago given that there are many financial instruments with a greater than 30 year life span: some mortgages and bonds extend out 40 years, and there are Japanese and English mortgages that can span close to a century.


From what I understand (thanks to the education from Geoff, Shay and several folks in DevDiv), information on how to mitigate the year 2038 bug was included in our Y2K response in the late 1990’s.  And Microsoft has provided guidance and statements on our various web sites, as impacts have generally been product specific for older products no longer in support (unless otherwise indicated in a supporting KB article).


In general…


  • currently supported core OS and mainstream support products operate as designed and with no known negative impact with regards to the 2038 unless otherwise noted.
  • SYSTEMTIME has no problems and can go until the year 30,827.
  • FILETIME, a 64-bit integer (two DWORDs representing LOW and HIGH values) since January 1, 1601 (Julian). It too can represent a 30,000 (or 60,000 unsigned) year interval.
  • Difficulties will be found were developers use C/C++ time_t, which will run out in 2038.

Programs that are compiled with VC8 or newer and do not define _USE_32BIT_TIME_T are immune to Year 2038 problems caused by time_t, assuming that they do not contain bugs themselves (casting a time_t to an int and back will truncate it). I’m told by the Developer division that…


For more references…



Hope this helps.

Tags: Microsoft, Vista, Windows, Time, 2038.


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Will the new crop of pro AVCHD-based camcorders ultimately help consumers?

One of the reasons I still like DV tape-based video cameras is that the DV codec is well supported in video editing programmes.  And as much as I considered to move to a hard drive based video camera, battery life as well as the AVCHD format kept me away: David sums this view up in his post on new Pro-AVCHD cameras at NAB… 

“What’s not to like [about AVCHD]? The editing workflow. Quite simply it sucks. First of all, to get video out of it, you have to ensure that it is plugged into its charger, then connect it to your computer and copy the files over.” 

Also, see George Ou’s post on zdnet over the loss of video detail in the AVCHD format…

HDV uses the older MPEG-2 format at 25 mbps… actual AVCHD implementation only uses 13 to 17 mbps MPEG4-AVC for compatibility with cheaper storage devices and it completely sunk when I read this excellent in-depth review from camcorderinfo.com.”

In the examples he cites from the Camcorderinfo review, you can see the quality loss in AVCHD vs. HDV: to be fair, the average consumer may not notice the lower video quality of AVC when watching video on the television.

But back to workflow.

Another difficulty with digital video (and particularly th enew AVC format) is editing. 

Yes, I know, many people never bother to edit their home video files, leaving the tapes to languish alone in a shoe box at the back of a storage closet or in your home office drawer.  And not everyone has the time to dedicate to capturing and editing videos – it is truly an art form, not to mention a time sink.  In a recent session, using MPEG-2 files from our old Panasonic handheld, pocket-sized SD camcorder (records on SD cards – I love it), I spent the better part of of two hours on a 20 minute video clip from our last vacation, including the time I waited for the transcode to WMV and burning to DVD.  For video tapes from our DV camcorder, add an hour for digitizing the tape.

And if you do have the time and inclination to edit and produce your latest blockbuster video, you’ll need a suitable editing software application.  For me, Windows Vista Movie Maker meets most of my needs, spending 10-15 percent of my time on Adobe Premiere Pro, with most of my content coming from MPEG-2 and DV files.  As Lori Grunin posted on the CNET gadget blog

“…you can’t simply play the files on a computer, much less send them to your friends, without down-converting to SD (which defeats the purpose of spending the extra $500 or so for an HD camcorder). After a few days of retracing the Web tracks I made last year, I decided to share the current state of AVCHD support with all you potential buyers.”

… and updated recently with…

“I was beginning to mellow, and even predicted that 2008 would be the year that AVCHD was finally ready for the mass market. Then I began my attempts to open 1,920×1080 videos shot with the Panasonic HDC-SD9. In short, every application I and our Labs’ tester tried–iMovie, Pinnacle Studio, Ulead Video Studio, Sony Vegas and Avid Liquid–at best could open but barely play some clips, and more often simply hung or crashed. Panasonic’s tech support wanted me to use HD Writer, the horrible home-grown application Panasonic ships with the camcorder. I finally got InterVideo WinDVD to consistently play clips, albeit not very smoothly.

“Updated 4/2/08: Per drj444‘s comments, I revisited VideoStudio and realized I hadn’t upgraded to 11.5. I did and tried again. The clips came in okay, but the software crashed soon after I’d imported them. Sigh.

AVC is not as widely supported in popular video editing applications as DV and MPEG-2 format.  With more and more cameras supporting the format, perhaps that will change.  See Lori’s post for more on Playback solutions and Editors that support AVCHD, but she notes that Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 still does not AVCHD editing. There are a few that do: see the AVCHD wiki listing on software titles

Overall, I think back to ten (yes, ten!) years ago when we launched the Pinnacle DV500 DV video editing solution… at that time with an SRP nearing $1,000.  This was a time when we saw the IEEE-1394 format catching on an DV ports just starting to emerge on PCs, and few software editing applications.  Native-DV editing wasn’t constrained to just on DV format, but several: consumer DV, DVCPRO, DVCAM, and even Sony’s Digital-8 (DV on the Hi8 tape format). 

But within a couple of years of launch, DV became widely accepted and proliferated, even though relatively small hard disk sizes prevented uncompressed capture of the DV file from tape.  That’s one of the main reasons I like the format: tapes were (and are) relatively inexpensive and held an incredible amount of data, up to 20GB on a single tape.  (on a related topic, see my post The “Great HD Shoot Out” review picks the Canon HV20 as top HD camcorder.)

It is amazing that two years after its introduction, the AVCHD format hasn’t seen the same level of support, which I think can be attributed somewhat to a lack of simple storage options, ones that we are just now beginning to see come on line (with more PC-based editing applications and playback support).  Considering that transferring AVCHD files from your HDD-based camcorder (via USB 2.0) is up to ten times faster than transferring DV-based footage connection (5 to 30 MB/s vs. HDV at normal video playback speeds of 3.5 MB/s).

And though it’s noted that “developers have pledged their support but it may still take some time for the implementation,” we’re seeing more integrated support for AVCHD as noted in the AVCHD wiki

“Windows XP Windows Movie Maker for example doesn’t even support HDV capture and Windows Vista only offers this capability on Premium or Ultimate editions. Windows Movie Maker in Vista while it supports HDV format still doesn’t permit selective recording and forces you to download the entire tape from the beginning. By contrast, AVCHD files simply need to be copied over using standard file copy/move operations making it far more user friendly.”

In support of the HD tape format, there is a long list of editing software applications that support HDV

In addition to the memory and PC horsepower requirements to capture, edit and publish AVCHD-based video content, consumers will face another challenge with AVCHD: the archival of the footage. 

With DV and MPEG-2, I find that it’s easier to import clips from the tape and SD card respectively on to our PC, and then archive working files to DVD-R or DVD+RW discs.  (I prefer DVD+RW if I anticipate coming back to a project: the format supports multiple writes and edits, allowing me to store the editing file session along with the video clips.)  Most often, I have multiple video sessions from different days on a single tape, and often the video clips that make up the sessions are less than the size of a DVD or two. 

If I run into a situation where I have multiple tapes for a video project (say, a family vacation) I find that the cost of an external hard drive allows for an inexpensive and immediately available archive: a quick scan of the Sunday paper ads finds external, portable hard drives for fifty cents a GB, and larger models such as the Western Digital My Book Studio External Hard Drive series (offering USB 2.0, IEEE 1394a/b and eSATA connections) on sale for under 35 cents per gigabyte.  A recent ad on NewEgg promoted the 320GB model for under US$110: that size will store a year’s worth of our family’s raw digital video, if not two.

AVCHD is gaining momentum, and I’ll wager that in a few years tape will ceed to SD and memory cards as capacity increases.  You’ll ultimately have to eventually put that AVCHD content somewhere, and recordable disc formats will certainly increase in size from the current mainstream 4.7GB DVDs.  So consider which format is right for you.  Go to the store, look at the camcorders, read the reviews and pick out which one is right for you.  Whichever of these two formats you choose, chances are that your video will be widely supported, and the video quality will be better than anything else you’ve experienced in recent years. 

Tags: video, DV, AVCHD, digital video.

 

New Pro-AVCHD Cameras (David Sayed’s Microsoft Blog)