Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

10 seriously annoying default configurations

By | April 24, 2009, 2:16am PDT

Summary: Guest post: Into every life, a little stupidity must fall. And sometimes, you just have to vent about it. Rick Vanover shares a few of the default configurations he finds especially frustrating and idiotic…. What are yours? For more posts like this see TechRepublic’s 10 Things blog. We all have them: Stupid default configurations that we [...]

Guest post: Into every life, a little stupidity must fall. And sometimes, you just have to vent about it. Rick Vanover shares a few of the default configurations he finds especially frustrating and idiotic…. What are yours? For more posts like this see TechRepublic’s 10 Things blog.


We all have them: Stupid default configurations that we either have to change or live with. Some of them may seem pointless and irritating, although there’s usually some situation where they make sense. Regardless, when configurations are wrong for us, they get under our skin more often than they help us get on our way. Here are 10 of the default configurations that aggravate me the most.

Note: This article is also available as a PDF download.

1: Keyboard failure, press F1 to continue

I know it has been fixed for a long time, but all former Compaq server administrators will remember this one. How silly of a message that the server would sit there with its tongue hanging out waiting for us to acknowledge this error with the object of the error. Truth be told, this was my motivation for writing the top 10 irritating defaults.

2: Windows Server 2008 interactive installation name

For Windows administrators who perform an interactive installation (where you boot from the CD), the default computer name is less than intuitive. To be fair, it is a standard name associated with boot environments, but the interactive installation removed the ability to set a computer name. I think we’ll have to get used to names like WIN-IU7JC1B15RI. However, this can be configured with an installation answer file or Windows Deployment Services.

3: Microsoft Office Recently Used File List value of 4

There is nothing more irritating than using a new installation of Word, Excel, or PowerPoint (2003 or earlier) and seeing a deprived recent file list on the File menu. I change this right away by going to Tools | Options | General to access the option to increase the number of recently used files — but the maximum is 9. Office 2007 finally loosened up this restriction, and you can set those apps to list as many as 50 of your most recently used files. The option is a little harder to find, though: Click the Office button and select Advanced in the left pane. Then scroll down to the Display section and enter the setting you want for Show This Number Of Recent Documents.

4: Windows Server 2008 using IPv6 and IPv4

I’m glad it’s available for use in the product, but does anyone know anyone actually using IPv6? It surely is not a mainstream protocol in use. I believe it will be adopted sooner in other regions of the world, but I don’t think it should be enabled by default yet. One good tool to get started in managing Windows Server 2008’s network stack is the Netsh tool.

5: Folder does not exist. Do you want to create it?

This technically a safety step, but how frequently do we select no to this question? Further, this is usually not the last question of a Windows installation wizard, so there is an opportunity to go back in the installation and change the installation path. As a side note, it’s a good practice to keep all of your installed applications in a designated area. For example, installing all applications and components not part of the operating system to a drive other than the C drive can manage the system drive space better. By using a different drive letter to contain the third-party installed software, storage provisioning for the C: drive can be standardized easier.

6: Voice-prompt-only service phone numbers

This one never ceases to amaze me. My previous job required quite a bit of travel. During weather or flight interruptions, I would often call the airline directly from my mobile phone rather than wait in the line equal to three aircraft’s worth of passengers when I needed re-accommodation. The service numbers were usually voice-prompt driven, which makes no sense in an airport, as there are incredible amounts of background noise. I became an expert of saying “Yes” and “No” very loudly and gaining the awkward attention of my fellow passengers. Number entry dialing is often possible but hard to find if it is not mentioned.

7: The Windows beep device

This is annoying for many reasons. For one thing, it doesn’t adhere to Windows sound volume settings for default configurations. This is especially irritating for administrators like me, who connect to multiple systems through tools like Remote Desktop and have the beep transferred as well. But the beep can be disabled. Simply go into Device Manager, choose Show Hidden Devices from the View menu, go to the Non-Plug and Play Drivers section, double-click Beep, and choose Do Not Use This Device (Disable) from the Device Usage drop-down list in the Beep Properties dialog box. After the next boot, beep is no more!

8: The entire default Internet Explorer browser configuration on Windows Server

Is it just me, or is the default installation useless? Even adding sites to the trusted sites list and local policies for the trusted sites doesn’t allow proper behavior of some legitimate sites. Ironically, Windows Update will work with all of the installations required. I find myself installing an alternative browser, such as Opera, Firefox, or Safari. To be clear, I don’t install it on every server — simply on those where browsing functions are required and it makes sense to do so. As a side note, this is a good trick to getting crude Explorer functionality in Windows Server 2008 Core installations.

9: Windows Server 2008 default folder view

I sure love the folder view in Windows Server 2003, XP, and prior editions. But Vista and Windows Server 2008 have really messed with my mind. I’d like to get a show of hands: Who actually uses Documents, Pictures, and Music as favorite links? My favorite link is the folder and computer. Just let me see my file system. I know what I am doing, most of the time!

10: VMware vCenter Server’s certificate store

The default installation of VMware’s vCenter Server product is two years. For many people, there are quite a few surprises on day 730 of their server virtualization bliss. The good news is that you can correct this situation before it gets you. There are plenty of topics on the VMware Communities forums, as well as this whitepaper from VMware on the replacement process.

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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I'd kill for...
Dr. John 1st May 2009
I'd kill for a modern version of Norton File Manager. The Win95/98 version even had X-Tree Gold mode. *sigh*
off by default. and it seems the only way to turn it back on is through the about:config interface.
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More Firefox
john.lemme@... 24th Apr 2009
I love how on a Mac, Ffx's prefs are on the Firefox menu, on Windows they're under Tools, and on Linux they're in Edit. I realize that if you only use one system this is simply good design, but if you regularly use all three systems it's a PITA.

/Just to be clear, I think it's good that they did it. It just annoys *me*.
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Windows hides file extensions by default
john.lemme@... 24th Apr 2009
All by itself that's my top ten items. But when you add "don't show system and hidden files", "round sizes off to 100K", and "when I sort by extension, sort by file type instead", you end up with a file manager that's not very good for managing files.

I love trying to remember whether XLS files sort under "X" for xls, "E" for Excel", or "M" for Microsoft. Just sort by what I tell you to sort by, dammit.
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With those crippling options in place,
Rick S._z 27th Apr 2009
Windows Explorer begins to rival the misery of using GTK2's FileChooser. (Gnome, Firefox on Linux, etc.)

But gtkFileChooser() remains worse. grrrrr, I'm a linux user and HATE IT.
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in spite of the USERS.
Thanks for the tip on the annoying BEEP!
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RE: 10 seriously annoying default configurations
Hallowed are the Ori 24th Apr 2009
One of my gripes: That annoying damn balloon that repeatedly comes up to let me know I have unused icons on my desktop.

And this isn't really the same thing as what this article was about, but...

Copying / Moving. Why is it that when you are copying or moving a directory full of picture files, for example, and it cannot copy/move one of the files, the whole operation stops? Is it really so hard to keep going with the rest of the operation and give me a report at the end of the copy/move?

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every time.

Another, but related: Even when, as Larry mentions, you change the view settings to just view files in Vista, you STILL don't get a time stamp or file size for music files. Just that stupid star rating thing.
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Turn off desktop cleanup
Dr. John 27th Apr 2009
Right click on desktop, select properties, select Desktop, select Customize Desktop, uncheck the box. All done.

I commented on the file copy/move thing in another post, before reading yours. I feel your pain.
How about hiding the underlines on Menu items, just to make using keystroke shortcuts more difficult, or Vista's programmers' inexplicable decision to leave the title bar blank on Windows Explorer, or--worse--making the title bar font small, faint, and therefore unreadable. Each iteration of the operating system makes fonts, icons, and everything else more fuzzy in the quest for a snazzy interface.
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... and your data has been lost.

[Ok]

NO, it's NOT "OK", but that's the only option!
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Hey - did you all know that negative and zero values numbers cannot be plotted on a logarithmic scale? MS Excel reminds me of that about five times every day.

I don't know how common the use of log scales is in general, but in my industry (energy) it is very common, and it's also very common to have gaps in data.

Another annoying default in MS Excel 2003 was the default plot shading & border -- they didn't even match their own defined "automatic" selections that would come up when you edited them!
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copy/move file(s) errors in Windows
Dr. John 27th Apr 2009
And, let's not forget the incredibly annoying way Explorer deals with copy or move errors. You highlight a batch of files, drag n drop, copying or moving them. Explorer takes over and starts doing what you asked. However, if it can't copy a file for some reason, it tells you so, then QUITS! It doesn't skip that file and continue. It just quits! Now, you've got to try to figure out where it quit, etc.

The one tool I miss more than anything else ever created by Norton was the Norton File Manager. It was like X-Tree Gold, on steroids and made for Windows. If an error occurred, it gave you the oops, then continued.

*sigh* Gawd, how I miss that!
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So, you reveal...
RS9 28th Apr 2009
Your AGE!

X-tree Gold!! That goes way back to the late DOS years!!! None the less, I just experienced this delight trying to copy a 200Gb drive before a system restore... Yep!! Makes me really want to give MS more money for another DVD full of krap Ie:. W7, Vista, etc-etc.
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I'd kill for...
Dr. John 1st May 2009
I'd kill for a modern version of Norton File Manager. The Win95/98 version even had X-Tree Gold mode. *sigh*
0 Votes
+ -
On this thought, how about...
RS9 28th Apr 2009
The default video resolution on all video card installations being set at 400 x 800!!!!

How sweet this is! Does ANYONE know anybody ANYWHERE that uses this resolution? This is the "5 year old with a box of crayons" resolution! But the sweet spot?

Try moving the screen to show the "Apply" then subsequent "OK" tabs to save your higher resolution selection!

Yes, yes, I know about the "Low resolution" bubble that asks you to let Microsoft adjust it... If you don't click it IMMEDIATELY or click anywhere else, POOF! it's gone! I wonder if anyones EVER answered "NO" to this one... This one is MADDENING!

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