Don't know if this is interesting or not but...
I managed to kill my few-hour old Windows 7 install by resizing the (Windows 7) partition in Vista using Acronis. Acronis wouldn't do it from Windows 7 (and by that I mean during a reboot, it wouldn't perform the action). Running the same action from within Vista worked of course, but then Windows 7 wouldn't boot.
So I chucked in the Windows 7 disc again and it automatically found and repaired my Windows 7 install. But... and here's the interesting part... my boot menu now read "Windows 7 Ultimate (recovered) instead of the stock-standard "Windows 7". Interesting, I thought, and I selected the option. Following that, the boot screen switched to the Vista boot screen - scrolling green bar vs the glowing Windows logo. I actually thought I'd booted into Vista by mistake.
After that, Windows 7 eventually hit the desktop, but it was slower than my clean install... about as slow as Vista. My network also wasn't initialised when I got to it. In fact, if I didn't know better, I would have thought it was the exact same boot process/"optimisations" that I get from booting into Vista. After a few cold boots to make sure it wasn't anything odd, I deleted the partition and re-installed. Now I'm back to super-fast boots, and as soon as my desktop appears my networks are already initialised, and I can being using the PC.
I know it sounds odd, but if anyone feels like trying it, I recommend it. What do you think could have caused Windows 7 to revert to Vista's nasty performance levels?
I managed to kill my few-hour old Windows 7 install by resizing the (Windows 7) partition in Vista using Acronis. Acronis wouldn't do it from Windows 7 (and by that I mean during a reboot, it wouldn't perform the action). Running the same action from within Vista worked of course, but then Windows 7 wouldn't boot.
So I chucked in the Windows 7 disc again and it automatically found and repaired my Windows 7 install. But... and here's the interesting part... my boot menu now read "Windows 7 Ultimate (recovered) instead of the stock-standard "Windows 7". Interesting, I thought, and I selected the option. Following that, the boot screen switched to the Vista boot screen - scrolling green bar vs the glowing Windows logo. I actually thought I'd booted into Vista by mistake.
After that, Windows 7 eventually hit the desktop, but it was slower than my clean install... about as slow as Vista. My network also wasn't initialised when I got to it. In fact, if I didn't know better, I would have thought it was the exact same boot process/"optimisations" that I get from booting into Vista. After a few cold boots to make sure it wasn't anything odd, I deleted the partition and re-installed. Now I'm back to super-fast boots, and as soon as my desktop appears my networks are already initialised, and I can being using the PC.
I know it sounds odd, but if anyone feels like trying it, I recommend it. What do you think could have caused Windows 7 to revert to Vista's nasty performance levels?