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| Guest | Data File Virtualization Question I am learning how some data files that Vista Business isn't sure of are "virtualized" so they can't do harm. My question is how does Vista determine which application's data files are questionable and which are not? Example. An email (Vista Windows Mail) had two attachments. One was a PDF file, the other a Word document. I don't know the version of the authoring software. I clicked the Attachments paperclip and opened the PDF file as I always have using Adobe Reader 8 (the latest). All is good. I clicked and tried to open the Word DOC file using Word 2000 (from Office 2000) and received a "file not found" and a long link into Internet Files. I went to the location in Internet Files and there was no Word DOC file... fair enough. So I went back to the email and Saved the doc file to my User folder. Now I navigate Explorer to my User folder and click the saved doc file.... file not found again. But if I open Word and then navigate Word to that file location, it opens. Someone please explain what is happening. Do I need to tell Word to behave differently? Are PDF files more acceptable to Vista than DOC files? I want to understand all of the security idiosyncarcies so I can adjust my computing habits accordingly. Thanks for your time. |
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| Guest | Re: Data File Virtualization Question There is something very curious, like a poltergeist, at work. Here's what I did as a test. Again, Word 2000. Opened Word, created a file and Saves As to the Desktop. Then closed Word and double clicked the Doc file I just created on the Desktop. Same error message about not finding the file. But Word does understand the DOC extension, it just can't find the file. Then right clicked the doc file and used the File-Open. Word started, same error. Then right clicked and did File Open With. Word was displayed in the next dialog box so I chose it. Word opened without error but there was no file displayed, not even a blank page. It was as if word had been started from scratch. Took the Test.doc file and renamed it to Test.txt. Clicked it and Notepad worked fine displaying jibberish as expected. Then right clickes Test.txt and chose Open With and then Word. File opened PERFECTLY. There has to be something about non-Vista friendly software that causes these virtualized files to be created whenever they are saved. I may try reinstalling Office 2000 and run the install as an admin hoping that may convince Vista that word is okay and doesn't need virtualization of its files. I have noticed the extra Compatability Folder in some Explorer screens and they contain these Excel 2000 or Word 2000 files. "John" <me@myhome.net> wrote in message news:%23apWHEAxHHA.600@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl... >I am learning how some data files that Vista Business isn't sure of are >"virtualized" so they can't do harm. > > My question is how does Vista determine which application's data files > are questionable and which are not? > > Example. An email (Vista Windows Mail) had two attachments. One was a PDF > file, the other a Word document. I don't know the version of the authoring > software. > > I clicked the Attachments paperclip and opened the PDF file as I always > have using Adobe Reader 8 (the latest). All is good. > > I clicked and tried to open the Word DOC file using Word 2000 (from Office > 2000) and received a "file not found" and a long link into Internet Files. > > I went to the location in Internet Files and there was no Word DOC file... > fair enough. So I went back to the email and Saved the doc file to my User > folder. > > Now I navigate Explorer to my User folder and click the saved doc file.... > file not found again. But if I open Word and then navigate Word to that > file location, it opens. > > Someone please explain what is happening. Do I need to tell Word to behave > differently? Are PDF files more acceptable to Vista than DOC files? I want > to understand all of the security idiosyncarcies so I can adjust my > computing habits accordingly. > > Thanks for your time. > |
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