Boot-It- Like it, or give it the Boot?
P Squared Home Page
   
P Squared Community Forum
Home       Members    Calendar    Who's On
Welcome Guest ( Login | Register )
        



Boot-It- Like it, or give it the Boot? Expand / Collapse
Author
Message
Posted Tuesday, January 23, 2007 4:40:24 PM
Supreme Being

Supreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme Being

Group: P Squared
Last Login: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 9:36:30 AM
Posts: 870, Visits: 803
Your chance to comment - what do you all think?

------------

Bill Bailey: "No win, no fee, no basis in reality. Just a room above a minicab office in Acton and a steady stream of greedy simpletons whose delusion is only matched by their clumsiness"

Post #2034
Posted Friday, February 23, 2007 8:37:28 AM


Forum Member

Forum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum Member

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: Thursday, October 23, 2008 8:30:33 PM
Posts: 44, Visits: 45
Hi,

Tried it the other day, and generally like it.  A few little bits of feedback though.  Some more pedantic than others :-)

I did a standard install, on a ( as far as I'm aware) standard W2k Sp4 box, which already has myriad v2.6 installed

1) The help file didn't work.  The chm was there, and if I clicked it directly, it loaded, but the link on the front of boot-it didn't seen to do anything.

2) On the setup actions screen, none of the +[edit]- buttons had tool tips.  Tut tut.

3) It'd be useful whilst it's performing a test, or waiting before it moves to the next test, if there was a countdown clock / progress bar showing how long is left and that the process is still alive.  As when you're watching it it seems like it's taking an awful long time (watching paint dry...)

4) Button colours.  Were they white buttons on a white background? Can they be made to be a bit more "buttony", or to follow what is set in windows ?

5) Update manager.  Perhaps I didn't spot it being mentioned in the literature,  but it would be nice to tell people you're installing more than what they signed up for. It surprised me, and I don't know if I can un-install it without affecting boot-it (I'm guessing yes, but then...)

Apart from those few niggles, a good product and a useful addition

Simon

HB Sheffield

Post #2060
Posted Friday, February 23, 2007 10:34:15 AM
Supreme Being

Supreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme BeingSupreme Being

Group: P Squared
Last Login: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 9:36:30 AM
Posts: 870, Visits: 803
Hi Simon,

Thanks for letting us know how you've found it

1) Hmm... not sure about this one, we've checked it out here and all seems to work.  Can you try pressing F1 and see if it works that way?

2) Done - thanks for letting us know

3) Not something that can be done easily unfortunately as each test is actually performed by a helper app, and some of aren't actually able to do anything while testing becuase they are so intensive whilst checking. We'll keep this one in the to do though as it would be nice to have. So you know, the tests are actually all performed concurrently, and only when they have all passed will the action occur.

4) The buttons are deliberately white - though I suspect the main reason your display seems a little strange is becuase the app is primarily designed for Windows XP users with modern flat buttons instead of the older chunky style buttons which get displayed when it's run under Windows 2000. I have to admit that we didn't even test it on Windows 2000 as it's no longer a supported operating system - for more info about supported OS's please have a look at http://support.psquared.net/softsupport.htm

5) It's actually part of the Installshield System that we use to install the application and doesn't do anything other than check for software updates. In itself it's harmless as we don't actually use it at present, so future installers may well have this removed.

Anything else you find please let us know.

As a heads-up, the next release of Boot-It also includes a section that allows you to set the computer to automatically logon rather than sit and wait for Ctrl-Alt-Delete. This can be done using Windows tweaks, and most of our new generation of products have it as well, but we thought it would be a good addition!

------------

Bill Bailey: "No win, no fee, no basis in reality. Just a room above a minicab office in Acton and a steady stream of greedy simpletons whose delusion is only matched by their clumsiness"

Post #2061
Posted Saturday, February 24, 2007 10:39:46 AM


Forum Member

Forum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum MemberForum Member

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: Thursday, October 23, 2008 8:30:33 PM
Posts: 44, Visits: 45
Item 3, Yeh, I realise that watching for shares to appear is intensive and you can't really quantify them.  I was possibly thinking more of a count down bar to when the backup options are activated, as you must have a backgound timer to run that bit.

Simon

Post #2063
Posted Saturday, February 24, 2007 6:39:06 PM
Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.

Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.Ex-Product Development Engineer of P Squared Ltd.

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 3:25:26 PM
Posts: 123, Visits: 147
I think you have a slight misconception about how it works. When the test sequence starts, all of the tests (primary and alternate configurations) start at the same time.

When all of the primary tests complete the primary action sequence is initiated.

When all of the alternate tests complete there are two possibilities:

1) The primary action sequence has started. In this case nothing more happens.

2) The primary action sequence has still waiting for the primary test sequence to complete. In this case a countdown is started (30 seconds by default). If when that countdown has finished the primary action sequence has not started then the alternate action sequence is started.

The alternation action sequence count down is displayed on the front end.
Post #2064
« Prev Topic | Next Topic »


Reading This Topic Expand / Collapse
Active Users: 0 (0 guests, 0 members, 0 anonymous members)
No members currently viewing this topic.
Forum Moderators: Andrew Burns, David Boulton, Peter Jarrett, Liam Burke

Permissions Expand / Collapse

All times are GMT, Time now is 12:19am

Powered By InstantForum.NET v4.1.4 © 2008
Execution: 0.047. 17 queries. Compression Disabled.

Site Map - Contact P Squared - Products - Support - Privacy Policy  - ©2008 Copyright P Squared Ltd