hide unhide windows vista administrator account

To enable the hidden windows vista administrator account follow the steps.


Open a command prompt as Adminisrator this can be done by using the right click menu "Run as Administrator" (or use CTRL_SHIFT+Enter in the search box)
Type the following command
net user administrator /active:yes
Logout and see the Administrator account in the welcome screen.
To revert back or to disable the administrator account issue the following common in the same scenario

net user administrator /active:no

Windows Vista Quick Start Guide

Windows Vista Quick Start Guide

Minat Edit Video? Windows Movie maker

Windows Vista - Create Movies

Demo: Super-fast searching in Windows Vista

Watch this demo to learn how to find files quickly using the search tools in the Windows Vista Start menu, Control panel, and folders.

http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/Windows/en-US/Help/E9C85CF8-9AC3-4324-A3A2-8942E958D1071033.mspx

Install an Ancient Printer in Vista



Q: I have a well-loved NEC SuperScript 1450 printer that worked perfectly well under
Windows 2000 Professional. Recently, I built a modified "Bang for the Buck" box, with Vista Home Premium as the OS. When I tried to install my printer, I received a message that Vista had found driver software, but that the PCL6 driver was not compatible with a policy enabled on my computer that blocks NT 4.0 drivers. I've been all over my Vista settings in vain looking for the place to change that setting. Can you help me?—Craig McKay


A: Okay, since a policy is giving you trouble, let's just change the policy. Click Start and enter gpedit.msc to launch the Group Policy Object Editor. Under Computer Configuration, double-click Administrative Templates and select Printers. In the right-hand pane, find the policy named Disallow installation of printers using kernel-mode drivers and double-click it. Set its status to Disabled. By disabling the disallow policy, you enable the use of kernel-mode drivers—twisted! Click OK, close Group Policy Editor, and reboot. The downside of this setting is that a badly written kernel-mode driver can crash your system; that's what the policy was meant to prevent.
PC Magezine

UiTM Microsoft Future camp 2008


Tenaga Pengajar Mr, Harshad Rai (Vista deployment),En. Saiful (Microsoft Office 2007)
Urusetia En.Osman Mat Sam
Peserta
Afifuddin Fadil,Amdan Mamat,Aminurashid Hasan,Amir Hamzah Rosezalee,Asyadee Saleh,Azri Hashim,Basarolhisham Bahari,Fredly Masri,Mohammad Ashraf Abu Bakar,Mohd Azhar Abd Rahim,Mohd Rafhan Jaafar,Mohd Tumijan Rasikin,Muhamad Khairul Abdul Hadi,Muhammad Bukhairi Bin Mohd Noh,Nazrol Hisham Ghazali,Noor Muliyati Khalid,Nuraini Muhamad Ali,Roslan Mamat,Saenah Hasim,Samsiah Jusoh,Shahizan Said,Shuhairul Faridah Sarip,Siti Fatimah Hasan,Siti Marina Sulaiman,Umar Mohamad Zin,Wan Natrah Yunus,Mohd Azlan Ibrahim,Sabri Ahmad.


(KE RUANGAN FORUM)

Horribly Slow Browsing in Vista


What could be tripping up Web browsing in a seemigly Vista-capable PC?

by
Neil J. Rubenking

Q. I have a Windows Vista Home Premium machine with 2GB of memory. My Web browsing is unbelievably slow. When I click on most Web pages I watch the little circle on the tab go round and round as it sometimes takes more than a minute to load a page. At first I thought it was a problem with IE7, but I have the same problem with Firefox . I know it's not a problem with my connection because this happens at home with my cable modem and at work with a very fast connection. Also, if I use my Windows XP system, I don't have the problem. Is there a Vista setting that I messed up?—James Malone

A. You may have a problem with Vista's "Auto-Tuning," which is not compatible with certain routers and other network devices. If you like, you can run the Internet Connectivity Evaluation Tool found at
www.microsoft.com/windows/using/tools/igd. Note that you'll have to use Internet Explorer and install an ActiveX control. Pay special attention to the TCP High Performance test. But it may be easier just to turn off Auto-Tuning and see if that helps.

To check, do this: At the Start menu type command, but don't immediately launch the command prompt. Instead, right-click it and choose Run as Administrator. Type this command:

netsh interface tcp show global

If the line Receive Window Auto-Tuning Level does not say "disabled," enter this command:

netsh interface tcp set global autotuning=restricted

Better? If no change, repeat the above process but use the command

netsh interface tcp set global autotuning=disabled

If this didn't help, you might as well put things back to normal by repeating the above but finishing with the command

netsh interface tcp set global autotuning=normal

FROM PCMAG