Even although Vista is now officially released, there are still a variety of critical bugs I've noted in Microsoft's new pretty OS.
The main one which affects me is the error code 43 bug which prevents AGP graphics cards from working properly on dual core machines. You could run dual core without the benefits of your graphics card, or you could turn off one core and have pretty graphics but slow programs. It took 3 months of investigation but I finally figured out that what was necessary was to update the AGP system device -- if you have SiS, or
Uli chipset (I have Uli) you are in luck. Otherwise if you are rocking with Nvidia's Nforce3, (or worse 2)...so very sorry.
Install the AGP Patch, reboot and your windows experience index should go from a 1 rating to something far more reasonable.
The second big bug comes on installation -- even when doing a clean install, Vista has a tendency to use drives OTHER than the boot/OS drive to store system files (such as ntldr). To avoid this you need to make sure that you are loading all your drivers from a USB key/CD and NOT from a separate hard drive in the system. Failure to do this will result in your system relying on two separate drives to get started. If anyone can tell me a shortcut to moving the system files over to the boot drive/partition I'd much appreciate it.
The third problem (and its something I'm still troubleshooting) is integration with firefox. If you set firefox as the main URL handler for Vista, many of the core OS referral functions breaks. For example typing an url in the Address links on the taskbar does not pull the page in firefox...rather the request goes nowhere. No solution for this other than using IE as the default browser for link handling.
Speaking of IE (and this is not strictly a vista problem), IE7 does not seem to work with Citrix. Anyone have any solutions for this?
Labels: Vista Bugs and Solutions