Microsoft yesterday promised that a feature it's added to Windows 8 will put a  stop to endless reboots. 
Unlike earlier versions, Windows 8 will automatically call up a new menu with  repair and recovery options when the software sniffs out problems getting the  machine to boot or the OS to load properly.
In a post to the Building Windows 8 blog Tuesday, Chris Clark, a program  manager with the user Experience team, described new tools embedded in the  operating system designed to step in when a PC reboots more than twice because  of problems.
Although Clark couched the changes as necessary because of increasingly-fast  boot times -- meaning users are often unable to interrupt the process with  traditional key presses like F2 or F8 -- one side effect is that endless reboots  should be a thing of the past.
The problem has plagued Windows at times.
In 2008, an update to prep machines for the release of Vista Service Pack 1  (SP1) crippled PCs when it sent them into an endless cycle of rebooting.
The same trouble resurfaced in late 2009 as users tried to upgrade  to the then-new Windows 7 from Vista, and again in 2010 when a Microsoft  security update conflicted with rootkit-infected Windows XP PCs.
Windows 8, however, features what Clark called "automatic failover," which  loads a new boot options menu "when there is no way to successfully complete  Windows startup." From the boot menu, users can select the operating system's  repair or restoration tools to try to find and fix the underlying problem.
"This automatic failover behavior will take you directly to the boot options  menu whenever there is a problem that would otherwise keep your PC from loading  Windows," said Clark. "This even includes cases where it appears   that boot has succeeded, but in actuality the PC is unusable."
Windows 8 also takes other boot-related actions. An unsuccessful core boot  sequence triggers an automatic retry. If a second attempt fails, then the  machine automatically loads Windows Recovery Environment , the diagnostic  and recovery toolset that's been bundled since Vista.
Because the failover kicks in after Windows 8 detects two consecutive  reboots, theoretically the new OS should be immune to the endless rebooting that  has dogged XP, Vista and Windows 7
Along with addressing endless reboots, the new boot options in Windows 8 let  users initiate a restart that doesn't rely on a key press during the reboot  process, eliminating the need to interrupt the reboot at just the right  time.
As Clark explained, Windows 8 -- following in the footsteps of Windows 7 --  has such short boot times that it's essentially impossible to press a pause key  such as F2 or F8 before the process moves on.
Windows 8 boot times are something that Microsoft has already hawked. Last  September, when the company debuted the Developer Preview. According to the  company's test, Windows 8 boots between 30% and 70% faster than earlier  versions.bygreggkeizer

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment