lol you're right! i wasn't really trying to head toward 3.11...i just wanted to make my idea clear - hehe....i couldn't remember if 98se had a login system or not
thanks bcastner, it says specifically a login script, rather than a process. does this make a difference? I'm somewhat confused as to how malware can get onto my fresh install.
but the PE idea is great!! i'm looking into it [:::wanders off to learn about bartPE and other things like it]
i currently have the administrator/daily user setup, and i never have to see the login screen because i have the auto logon feature setup in the registry. I'd like to re-word my question:
Is it possible to get rid of the whole user concept? like it was in win 3.11. i just want the xp os, and...
it is a fresh new install, i got sp2 this past week and slipstreamed it into my install. malware is not the issue, but thanks!
scheduled tasks is empty, i cleaned out my startup folder and startup configuration, disabled many services...i bet you guys are wondering why? i'm making my own...
my total startup time is 27-28 seconds. my goal is to have a extremely streamlined xp - i'm aiming for the lowest boot time. i know you guys are saying 16 is not excessive, and you're right, for normal purposes.
but i'm trying to do something different, and this login script is taking up 16 of...
is this whole individual user setup in xp so integrated that it cannot be extracted/ disabled?
i have one computer and i don't need a login or anything like that. i just need to turn it on and use it as soon as possible
thanks you tfg13...you put me on the path to discovery...thank you very much for the tip! I found under the Computer Configuration > Administrative templates > System > Logon a 'key' that once set, allows you to not process the runonce list, which is something else i needed. thanks again...
but...
I would like to know what the login script is and how I can modify/strip it down. I am trying to achieve a very low boot time with winxp, and when I used the microsoft bootvis tool [no longer provided by microsoft], it says that the login script takes 15.96 seconds.
That's a huge chunk of time...
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