or: How I Learned to Stop Blaming Windows and Love the BSOD
August 2004 - Posts
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I know this is a slightly more esoteric topic, even for me, but I want to address cc:NUMA platforms, and how they matter to Windows and Windows applications. What is NUMA you ask? NUMA stands for Non-Uniform Memory Architecture. (The cc: stands for Cache Read More...
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I just got another first-hand experience in the difficulty of trying to affect computing through social engineering. Our fax forwarding people do their forwarding based on the cover letter. Whoever is listed on the From: line gets a TIFF of the fax forwarded Read More...
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Ok, my arm is warm now. Time to start tossing some theory bombs out there, and hope none get picked off. They said Italians couldn’t quarterback, but look at Vinny Testaverde! (Err…no, don’t.) The reason treating support processes like a manufacturing Read More...
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Ok, I know I said when I started this blog that I wouldn’t be going into the support aspects of my job much, but I lied. I can’t resist being an armchair quarterback, so I am going to warm up my arm today, and start tossing Hail Mary’s tomorrow. Just Read More...
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This is something that most people in the mainframe business have taken fom granted for decades now. To the PC world, it’s relatively new…and to the PC OS world, even newer. Starting with the Pentium and Pentium Pro, Intel introduced the Machine Read More...
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I know, another title that seems ridiculous. Why in the world would anyone want a button that intentionally bluescreens your system?! When you’re confronted with a hard hang though, (no mouse or keyboard) you’re in for a heck of a time trying Read More...
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A comment from the earlier memory management entry posed a good question. How does PAE factor into the new No Execute (NX) mechanism enabled by the Opteron, Athlon64, and new Prescott-based Xeon? In Windows XP SP2 and Server 2003 SP1, the two are inexorably Read More...
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You should get out of the PC kitchen. This is another silent system killer that most people don’t want to acknowledge. (Though I will admit it’s gotten easier the last 2-3 years, as Intel, AMD, nVidia, and ATI have cranked up the wattage to Read More...
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IMO, it's not what anyone else might think. SQL, Exchange, and Web Services get all the hype, but I think Terminal Services will get the most immediate benefit from the backwards-compatible nature of the x64 architecture. Let's look at some of the benefits Read More...
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That could probably help 90% of the developers at Microsoft, to be honest. Kernel mode debugging is sometimes equated to black magic for devs who spend most of their time in the highly friendly (and deterministic) world of user mode. An analogy I like Read More...
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On my way into work today, I realized that Seattle traffic is one of those human systems that visibly conform to the second law of thermodynamics… OK, that’s a gross oversimplification, but it’s still amazing to watch people intentionally Read More...
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Ok I want to get this one out of the way, since I end up answering these questions far too often…why there is no FAQ on this is beyond me. PSE, PAE, and AWE. People seem to understand that they all allow you to address more than 4GB of RAM on a Read More...
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I know that title must seem silly, but it’s the title of a mock KB article that floated around inside of product support here for a number of years. You’d be amazed by the number of blue screens we see where the culprit is bad or failing RAM. Read More...
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My name is Carmen Crincoli, and I am an Escalation Engineer in Microsoft's Product Support group. Even for those intimately familiar with the typical product support experience, my title might be unknown to you. Escalation engineers are typically the Read More...
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