New
#1
Does Sp1 fix window closing/opening lag/issue?
This is what i'm taking about YouTube - Windows 7 Aero Lag YouTube - Windows 7 RC1 RTM Aero Lag .If yes I will install the beta right away
This is what i'm taking about YouTube - Windows 7 Aero Lag YouTube - Windows 7 RC1 RTM Aero Lag .If yes I will install the beta right away
You need to install the RTM version rather than continuing to use the RC version... Im not even sure that the up coming SP will install on your version...
Sorry forgot to change my profile.I have The RTM installed
I've never seen an aero lag like that before opening or closing a window. That seems to indicate a driver problem or a very slow video card...i don't think the SP1 is going to resolve that issue.
I am running Win 7 ultimate 64bit and am not having that first prob. I do however see windows going up-down before opening.Suspect Aero w/ high performance settings.You could try to go into Control Panel-System-Advanced Settings will open new window= system properties,under Advanced tab first section= Performance-Visual Effects, turn off some of the fancy stuff like animate controls in windows and animate windows when opening,show shadows under windows. Check this and see if it picks up. If it does keep it this way if you prefer performance over appearance.Settings can always be set back to original.(i.e.=Let Windows choose whats best for my Computer) Hope this might help you. If not post back.
I have two 8800 GTS's in SLi ,4 GB ram and E8400 at 4000 mhz so this is not a performance problem. I'm using the latest nvidia driver and tried at least 15 different nvidia drivers from 182.xx till 197.xx . I used vista on the same computer and everything worked perfectly.It has to be a windows bug.I saw windows 7 on 5 different systems all with the same problem.
Has anyone installed SP1 and does not have windows 7?
That is odd. I have Windows 7 on 4 pc's (2 notebooks, 2 desktops) with cpu's ranging from a 2.5GHz Core2Duo, 2 T9800 C2D's in the notebooks, and a 2.67GHz Core2Quad in one of the desktops, with video hardware ranging from Intel mobo graphics to a NVIDIA 9800GT. Two Dell desktops, two Sony Vaio notebooks.
None of them exhibit this behavior.