Gnomie Jerry Smith writes:

I upgraded to Windows Vista about eight months ago and have been somewhat pleased. I found that the overall UI has been changed very much — specifically the start bar. It took me a while to get used to, but the transition ran somewhat smoothly. Around Thanksgiving I found that the computer was starting to run slightly slower and decided to check out the RAM on my HP Pavilion a1250n and found that Vista Aero had taken away 300 MB of my RAM! I was more than slightly annoyed at this and found that the only way to fix the problem was to disable Aero (even though I didn’t want to because I thought it made the UI much nicer). So I decided to ask for another GB of RAM for Christmas and that did the trick. My computer has been running fine since the upgrade. Here my top five tips that I have for new Vista customers.

  • Disable the sidebar. It’s nice if you want your computer to slow down so much that it takes forever to start up. I found that there was really no use for it and that it had really pointless gadgets. I mean… come on! A clock? There’s already one in the bottom left corner.
  • Upgrade to at least 2 GB of RAM. If you can’t afford it or you don’t want to, then disable Aero and set the display theme to Vista Basic. It will speed up your computer so much.
  • Customize the size of the desktop icon text. To do this, right click on the desktop and go to personalize. Click the adjust font size (DPI) at the left. Click custom and drag the ruler to change the size. This makes reading the icon text easier.
  • Group the icons. This way you can put the most used icons in the middle of the screen or anywhere else you want them. I have my desktop organized into three sections. Two across the top and one down the right side. The first group is hard drive links, and my recycle bin, and anti-spyware/firewall. The second group is basically all my most used programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, yadda, yadda, yadda. My third group is links to file folders that contain documents. There is a link for My Documents, Pictures, and Music, and also my Web site, Projects, and School Work.
  • Disable pointless start up programs. Do this by either going into the startup folder in the all programs folder or run “msconfig.” This opens the System Configuration Utility. Go to the startup tab and disable anything that isn’t absolutely necessary. Especially do this after installing HP software on your computer — it typically comes with a lot of bloatware.

Have fun with you new OS. Explore, poke around, and have fun with it. If you really mess anything up just roll back the computer using System Restore. Have fun!