Dear friends:
Yesterday, after I finished to give a presentation to a group of
executives of the Company I work for, I ordered my Vista equipped
notebook to shutdown (Vista 32 bits, Business).
The process took 55 (fifty five) minutes to complete, and during that
period of time, only the "logging off" message (and the hourglass)
were displayed. The hard disk computer light was blinking all the
time, so I didn't wanted to power it down to avoid any data loss. No
other message was displayed, so I didn't have any idea of what Vista
was doing.
Do the brains of Redmond think that their users should spend almost an
hour after any presentation in order to make it more productive? Why
they don't make Vista to inform the user what is happening, and to
suggest what to do in order to accelerate the shutdown process?
Does somebody know how to handle this kind of problem?
Vista is very nice, but I am becoming bored of it, I think that
Microsoft's idea of building a mainframe operating system for normal
executive's notebooks doesn't works.
Thanks
Juan I. Cahis
Santiago de Chile (South America)
Note: Please forgive me for my bad English, I am trying to improve it!
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