I previously posted a version of this on the OS forum, but didn't get any replies, so I thought I'd try my luck here. Pls take it easy on me--I'm an old hand at computing, but a n00b at gaming.
I imagine this has been asked before. I did search before I posted this, both the MS KB, and Googled it. MS KB no help at all (big surprise), and the Google results were all 1-2 years old.
Basically, how do you create a hardware profile when you want to game, on a system that has to do double-duty as a work machine? I know that Vista has eliminated the Hardware Profile utility that XP had, so what do you do?
The best anyone came up w/is going into Vista Services, and individually disabling Services for a logon profile. This is ridiculous, and I'm wondering if, in the intervening time, anyone has come up w/anything better. Losing the ability to create individual hardware profiles like in XP is absurd.
What I found people asking, is basically exactly what I want to do: keep my main profile for day-to-day work, and create a separate hardware profile just for all the spiffy new gaming hardware (Logitech gaming keyboard and mouse, Fang gamepad, SteelSeries headset, etc... yes, I went a little crazy w/the plastic).
The Logitech stuff usually gets along pretty well w/other hardware, but I have a MS Ergo keyboard, and MS keyboard/mouse software does not play well w/others. Also, that Fang gamepad has a major driver to use to customize the pad for different games, and I'll bet you a dollar it will hose things up if I use it on my main profile.
I've been doing this long enough to know that specialized drivers like the kind used in gaming gear stands a good chance of messing up my finely-honed system </slight sarcasm>, so I'm hoping I can get some advice here. I don't want to have to spend all that time disabling Services and unplugging hardware, just so I can plug in the gaming gear--by that time I'll be too ticked off to play.
So what are people doing about this? (Besides cursing MS, I mean.)
I imagine this has been asked before. I did search before I posted this, both the MS KB, and Googled it. MS KB no help at all (big surprise), and the Google results were all 1-2 years old.
Basically, how do you create a hardware profile when you want to game, on a system that has to do double-duty as a work machine? I know that Vista has eliminated the Hardware Profile utility that XP had, so what do you do?
The best anyone came up w/is going into Vista Services, and individually disabling Services for a logon profile. This is ridiculous, and I'm wondering if, in the intervening time, anyone has come up w/anything better. Losing the ability to create individual hardware profiles like in XP is absurd.
What I found people asking, is basically exactly what I want to do: keep my main profile for day-to-day work, and create a separate hardware profile just for all the spiffy new gaming hardware (Logitech gaming keyboard and mouse, Fang gamepad, SteelSeries headset, etc... yes, I went a little crazy w/the plastic).
The Logitech stuff usually gets along pretty well w/other hardware, but I have a MS Ergo keyboard, and MS keyboard/mouse software does not play well w/others. Also, that Fang gamepad has a major driver to use to customize the pad for different games, and I'll bet you a dollar it will hose things up if I use it on my main profile.
I've been doing this long enough to know that specialized drivers like the kind used in gaming gear stands a good chance of messing up my finely-honed system </slight sarcasm>, so I'm hoping I can get some advice here. I don't want to have to spend all that time disabling Services and unplugging hardware, just so I can plug in the gaming gear--by that time I'll be too ticked off to play.
So what are people doing about this? (Besides cursing MS, I mean.)