There was a time when you used to log in to your Windows 7 machine, and it had enough time to bring Kepapa because it really thought about passing the screen you welcome. Well, this shows that the background of the Mao desktop, which burns my little ones, has been blamed.
Although many Windows 7 prefer Windows Vista Quirk Back in 2009, some users who compile their desktop background as a solid block were staring at themselves for 30 seconds – now we know what’s the reason. Microsoft’s former soldier Raymond Chen revealed in a recent blog post It was probably due to an easy programming error (through) PC World,
Chen has explained that after confirming your logon, starting a desktop is a quite complex process that rotates a piece of many elements by pieces. Chen writes, “The Logan system awaits all these pieces to report that they are ready, and when each one receives a clean signal, or when 30 seconds pass, the login system goes away from the welcome screen. Given this design, you can imagine a delay of 30 seconds.
In this example, the operating system is expecting that you will set up your desktop wallpaper with the Bitmap associated with the file you are associated with… but if you just set up your background as a block of color, Windows 7 is waiting for the answer that will never come. Therefore, you are waiting for a 30 -second Fail Safe to kick and load you at the desktop regardless of it.
Chen says that for similar reasons you may also have to wait for 30 seconds to log in if you have the ‘desktop image’ group policy, as Windows is checking 7 icons that you are clearly invisible. Chen explains that the group’s policies are particularly sensitive to such programming monitoring because they often increase late “Bold after writing the central code.”
Fortunately, it seems that the problem was resolved within months. Pick Features a support page This shows that the issue was resolved in November 2009 just five months after the start of Windows 7. So why was the machine I shared with my family so slow…? In fact, maybe not too hard about it.
Raymond Chen is highlighting many Microsoft mystery on his delogg, Old new thingIt also includes why some laptop hard drive discs could not easily handle Janet Jackson’s rhythm of the nation’s powerful bass line. Given that the current era Microsoft is now using AI to write about 30 % of its code now, we can see many more Information Dev Blog Post about ‘programming surveillance’ in the future.