Save configurations?
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- johnsonlam
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- Joined: 2002 Feb 15, 04:07
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The registry edit was OK but not good and easy enough to work with.goggin wrote:I assume the orignal poster knows about exporting the HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\ZabaraKatranemia Plc key? This works very nicely! I've used it for years to quickly restore highly customized settings after a reformat or moving to a new computer...works just fine.
That's why many program need to handle the "saving configuration" by itself.
A user may good at operating the application but not with those regedit thing.
Hong Kong S.A.R. - International Joke Center
BTW, as a point of order, MS Office has included a tool for backing up all Office settings since Office XP...it's called the "Office (XP|2003) Save My Settings Wizard" under the Start > Microsoft Office > Microsoft Office Tools menu. It backs up all user settings including templates and all Outlook (not Outlook Express) settings/accounts/etc. (It doesn't back up your e-mail, just your settings and customizations). You can easily restore your customized Office setup after a meltdown or move to a new computer -- I've used this heavily and it's been a lifesaver for me.JRz wrote:Then again, I ask myself: do I have a 'backup' set of settings for other apps such as the Office suit, Outlook, Browser settings and so on...??
No, I don't because none of these apps offer such a feature. ...
While a heavy customizer like me really needs a settings backup feature in my customized applications, I already have that capability with xplorer2 by exporting the root xplorer registry key. I've used this settings backup method a lot and it's been a real lifesaver. I personally don't need anything more (and probably wouldn't use it if I had it), although I can appreciate that some may feel otherwise.
And just to beat this poor horse to death -- one of the new developments in WindowsXP that was heavily requested of Microsoft and they finally came through was a way to backup/restore settings easily -- hence the automatic Restore Point feature in WinXP -- and to be able to migrate Windows settings to a new machine -- which led to the "Files and Settings Transfer Wizard" -- a popular tool with corporate IT teams when upgrading a user's machine. (Where I work there are over 8,000 end users -- so this is a *big* deal.)
Even in Mozilla/FireFox (open source browser) development, one of the key features that stays a steady topic of discussion is the ability to backup/restore/migrate settings, customizations, and bookmarks.
So this is a feature that is slowly becoming mainstream.