"Malke" <notreally@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
news:uJWa%235QeHHA.4636@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
> ptravel@travelersvideo.com wrote:
>> On Apr 7, 1:33 am, ptra...@travelersvideo.com wrote:
>
>>> I tried it, but it doesn't help at all. Also, I don't see how it
>>> would account for the difference in running within a Virtual Machine
>>> on Vista versus Vista, as a Virtual Machine is using the Vista-
>>> configured NIC.
>>
>> Okay, this has been bugging me so I spent the last hour working
>> through it and found the problem.
>>
>> SpySweeper.
>>
>> If the "Common Ad Sites" shield is enabled, web browsing Java-heavy
>> websites in Vista will be painfully slow. Disable it and web browsing
>> becomes lightning fast. Note, too, that Webroot claims that
>> SpySweeper is "Vista ready." I like SpySweeper a lot, and it's
>> infinitely better than Windows Defender, but this is a pretty
>> significant bug.
>>
>> And another point: this isn't a Vista bug, but a third-party program.
>> Vista's working just fine.
>>
>
> Thanks for posting the answer. Other people have had difficulties with the
> latest version of SpySweeper and not just on Vista.
>
> One point I'd like to make about virtual machines, however - the virtual
> machine is *not* using your Vista-configured NIC. All virtual machines use
> emulated hardware that has nothing to do with the actual hardware in your
> machine. So it would be possible for a vm to have a problem with drivers
> for the emulated NIC. I think it is probable that you knew that and I have
> misunderstood your post but I wanted to make that clear just in case.
>
> Again, I'm glad you got that sorted. Thanks for taking the time to post
> your solution.
>
>
> Malke
I'm confused.
I thought the way Windows Virtual Machine worked was it set up an
environment for software that looked like hardware, i.e. it had registers in
the "right" places that hooked into the underlying OS, so that when another
OS was run within it, it appeared to that OS as if it was controlling the
hardware when, in fact, all it was doing was passing commands to the
underlying OS that, in turn, actually controlled the hardware. For
instance, if Vista was misconfigured and the network interface wasn't
working under Vista, it also wouldn't work in a Virtual Machine run under
Vista, even if the VM OS was correctly configured.
Is that wrong?
> --
> Elephant Boy Computers
> www.elephantboycomputers.com
> "Don't Panic!"
> MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User