Reserved Seating at the Movies, Windows Update & Scheduled Tasks, oh joy

Posted in IT, Rant, TV / Movies, Windows Vista by Will on July 13, 2007.

Reserved Seating at Greater Union Cinemas, Glendale

Reserved seating is, in my mind, meant for places where there’s either a need for people to sit in specific seats. Or where most, or all of the capacity of the place is being occupied. Think planes, coaches, or sports stadiums.

So, when I went to the local Greater Union Cinemas, I was surprised when I was asked where I wanted to sit when buying my ticket. Given I was already running 15 minutes late to the film (10 of that due to the slow process of actually waiting in line for the 6 people infront to get served), I just said “Wherever”, not knowing that they were actually serious about this seating business.

I got into the theatre, trying to be as unobtrusive as possible, and sat at one of the first seats I could find. They wern’t great seats (off to the side) - but hey, Donkey, Shrek, and Fiona were already on screen. I did note that the cinema was 3/4 empty - and that there were plenty of seats infront, behind ,and beside me.

About another 10-ish minutes afterwards, I saw someone walk past me (given I was sitting in the second-from-the-end seat), and then walk back out.
A few moments later, theres a manager beside me “Sir, you’re sitting in someone elses seat”. I was a bit stunned/confused, given the large number of empty seats around me - and replied something like “Uhh, there’s an empty row infront and behind me”. But the Manager persisted “Sorry, but I’m going to have to ask you to move”. Given I was missing the movie, I couldn’t be bothered arguing over it and got up and moved the next row down.

Heck, if the mother and daughter who wanted to sit there had been disabled in any way, or I was sitting in specially assigned seats, or I was just in the way of them getting to the rest of the group they were with, I wouldn’t have had any issue moving. But, no, there wasn’t any reason I could see - it was just a pedantic manager and (presumably) mother.

Windows Vista’s Scheduled Tasks & Windows Update
I really like Windows Vista. There’s a whole bunch of small things that add up to make it a real pleasure to use.

There are two things, however that do drive me up the wall.

The recommended option in Windows Update is for it to download and install items for you automatically. It’s a good idea too, after all - having most users be in charge of which critical updates get installed isn’t usually the best way to keep a PC secured and up-to-date.

The thing that really annoys the crap out of me, is that it will automatically reboot your computer, regardless of what you had open or what it was doing. So, if you were, say, downloading a large file, or processing a report - your computer reboots, and unless the software is designed to resume from it’s last point - you’ll have lost all that effort. This is especially annoying if you’re trying to download/process some data in an after-hours/off-peak timeperiod. Because Windows doesn’t return you to the point at which it rebooted (technically infeasable without security issues) - the software can’t resume from it’s last point.

The only work around I’ve found is to disable Windows Update from installing updates automatically.

Scheduled Tasks
Another thing that’s kinda cool about Windows Vista (and possibly XP too, however I never experienced it) - is that Schedule Tasks can wake the computer from a sleep, hibernate or even shutdown mode - as long as the computer still has power.

The most visible example of this is Windows Media Centre. It will wake the computer automatically to record TV Shows, which is good - however it also wakes the computer to update the TV guide. At 3am. Some people happen to have cases which in certain circumstances can vibrate, seting up a resonance in the desk which amplifies the sound of the vibrating case. So, everyone in the house, at 3am, knows the computer is downloading TV guides. Resulting in the power cord getting yanked out.

A more, err, sociable setting would be to wake it during the day, if the guide hadn’t been updated in the last 4 days or so.

3 Comments

  1. Paul replied:

    I’ve never automagically been rebooted by Windows Updates.
    When WU wants to reboot, it pops up a little dialog, “WU wants to reboot”, with the ability to ‘reboot now’, or set a reminder for 10m/30m/1hr/4hrs.
    Laptop/Desktop/Chickz0rs computer all act this way?

    July 13th, 2007 at 12:12 pm. Permalink.

  2. Will replied:

    It happens to my desktop and laptop.
    I get that dialog if I’m logged in and at the PC when the dialog comes on.

    If I’ve got the desktop locked instead, and the PC is left on overnight - sometime around 3am it downloads the update, applies it, then reboots.

    July 13th, 2007 at 12:18 pm. Permalink.

  3. Dor Rotman replied:

    Regarding Windows Update - when that happend to me for the first time, I was completely annoyed. Had tons of apps open, and everything was lost..

    However, when I switched to manual updates mode, I encountered a new problem - Windows Update notifies me of every small update it wants to install, especially the almost daily updates of Windows Defender.

    So why not make an option in the middle? “Install updates automatically, besides those that need a computer restart or a restart of a running program”.

    August 2nd, 2007 at 6:42 am. Permalink.