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Microsoft Is Downloading Windows 10 Without Asking

New submitter christhedj writes with a story at The Inquirer, according to which: Microsoft, having learned nothing from Apple and the U2 album, have started downloading Windows 10 as part of Patch Tuesday for Windows 7 and 8 users. For people on a 32GB flash drive tablet, that's a big chunk of space taken up with something that they didn't ask for. Microsoft admits to doing this, but users are not happy. Way to look needy, Microsoft.

867 comments

  1. That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was still on the fence about whether to stick to Windows 7 or upgrade to Windows 10. This just made my decision for me. Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years depending on how well they've got games running on Linux( since that is the only thing keeping me on Windows anyway).

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    1. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

    2. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years

      woah, calm down there. Why are you in such a hurry?

    3. Re:That was easy by mlw4428 · · Score: 1, Informative

      I'll tell you upfront, very very few major game developers are considering Linux yet. They won't until the crowd is there and proves that people are willing to pay money for games. The probably is that your average Linux gamer is a cheapskate or a GNUStallinist who feels that everything should be 100% free and open source. The second issue is that Linux is really a fragmented market to the point where even basic testing and support on the exact same hardware can be difficult. Valve is working on making "consoles" that are setup in a standard way, but the vast majority of PC gamers don't want a console in any form. Is it possible, sure, but it's not likely.

    4. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Dual boot, use windows as a toy - only for games, linux for everything else...
      As a bonus, your windows install will get less clogged up with cruft and the games will run better.

    5. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

      Probably not. Like I said, I'm really only still on Windows because of games, and with me essentially "growing up" (married, work 8-4 M-F and 1 weekend a month, planning to have kids next year) chances are in a few years I will hardly be playing games anymore anyway. At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    6. Re:That was easy by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 2

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

      That's going to be Windows OS A 10.3 Leaping Panther.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    7. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Valve is working on making "consoles" that are setup in a standard way, but the vast majority of PC gamers don't want a console in any form. Is it possible, sure, but it's not likely.

      Since most of my games are through Steam anyway, I am hoping that increased adoption of a Valve console would lead to something of a PC version. I have a work provided laptop for work, so my desktop is for pure entertainment anyway. And the newest game I've bought is ESO anyway. Hell, I only just bought Skyrim for PC earlier this year. All of my purchases at this point are Humble Bundles or Steam sales, most of which are usually a few years old. So I don't need to be able to play AAA titles on release day.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    8. Re:That was easy by jandrese · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You might be surprised at how healthy gaming is becoming on Linux. The Linux Steam client is helping a lot. I've been playing through Torchlight II and Bioshock Infinite (my backlog is kind of long at this point) on Linux and they just work. No mess no fuss just launch them from Steam and play. In my Steam catalog maybe half of the games are playable on the Linux side, and admittedly the Linux list is heavily weighted towards indie titles, but Steambox has been convincing some of the big name publishers to put in the relatively minimal amount of effort necessary for Linux support.

      A lot of it comes down to the engines too. If you build on Unity then Linux support is a no brainer. If you build on Unreal then you probably won't have Linux support, but even that is changing as engine developers are adding Linux build options now.

      That said, some big name titles are not getting native Linux versions in the foreseeable future. If you want to play GTAV you need a Windows machine, or really a console because the PC port was so halfassed to begin with. Generally if the Windows version of a game is barely functional they won't have a Linux version either. An exception is apparently Arkham Knight, which had a terribad PC port but somehow is still going to make it to Linux this fall apparently.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    9. Re:That was easy by mlts · · Score: 1, Troll

      I'll be on Windows Server 2016 before Windows 10. For someone who knows what they are doing, W2016 is a lot better, just because it ships with all but basic functionality off/uninstalled. Wi-Fi, Cortana, and a UI? All available via features, but not there by default.

    10. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Windows 8.1 helpfully overwrites the boot loader when it's not the MS boot loader. Does Windows 10 still do this?

    11. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      I've actually thought about doing this already, just not sure how well it would run on my system, how to set it up, or even what distribution to use (and ask 5 random slashdotters what the best Linux distribution is and you will get about 17 different answers).

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    12. Re:That was easy by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Correct. I dual boot Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, Bowler, Beret, and Gentoo. I'm planning on adding Slackware for when I just don't feel like doing work.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    13. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      You might be surprised at how healthy gaming is becoming on Linux. The Linux Steam client is helping a lot. I've been playing through Torchlight II and Bioshock Infinite (my backlog is kind of long at this point) on Linux and they just work. No mess no fuss just launch them from Steam and play. In my Steam catalog maybe half of the games are playable on the Linux side, and admittedly the Linux list is heavily weighted towards indie titles, but Steambox has been convincing some of the big name publishers to put in the relatively minimal amount of effort necessary for Linux support.

      Part of my concern is my existing Steam library and whether or not I would need to repurchase a majority of the titles I already own. I suppose I could Google it or delve into Steam's support/FAQ, but that would take effort on my part and this is still Slashdot.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    14. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "The probably is that your average Linux gamer is a cheapskate or a GNUStallinist who feels that everything should be 100% free and open source."

      Do you mean a GNU/Stallmanist?

    15. Re:That was easy by jandrese · · Score: 5, Informative

      You buy games, not versions of games on Steam. So if there is a Linux or Mac install of a game you bought on Windows, it automatically appears in your list on the other platforms. Surprisingly, Steam's cloud saves generally work cross platform as well, so you can start a game on Windows and then finish it on Linux, or play a round on the Mac and then go back to your Linux box.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    16. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Am currently running a dual boot Win10 and Linux system. No problems so far. Even have my Dropbox folder shared between the two.

    17. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows Server 2016 IS Windows 10. So you'll be on 2016 and 10 at the same time.

    18. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      and another shill. you'll be out of a job in a few years, you'll see.

      The fact is that Microsoft is terrified. They know that their time is up and this is the last desperate grab to try to stay relevant.

    19. Re: That was easy by mattcoz · · Score: 3, Funny

      You're sticking with Windows 7 because Windows 7 is downloading something without you asking?

    20. Re: That was easy by guruevi · · Score: 3, Informative

      Depends on which Unreal engine. Older games on older engines could run on Linux even without official support, usually simply copying and renaming the binary.

      If the Unreal engine were compiled for Linux, replacing the launchers would be relatively simple.

      It eventually comes down to choice of rendering language. If you stuck to Directx for some reason, you'll be stuck with Windows (or Wine). The growing iOS, Android, Mac and Linux markets can't be reached. If you chose OpenGL, porting is simple.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    21. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not DSL? Anything more is just a waste.

      Hahaha, I'm just kidding. I rarely use Linux anymore because everything I need is on both Windows and Mac and I don't have to do anything stupid to get it set up properly.

    22. Re:That was easy by zwede · · Score: 1

      Part of my concern is my existing Steam library and whether or not I would need to repurchase a majority of the titles I already own.

      I'm very impressed with how Valve/Steam handles this situation. When you buy a game on Steam you buy it for all platforms. I used to run Windows and had some Steam games. Then I switched to Linux and any games I had that had a Linux port were available to play. No effort required, they were simply there in the Linux Steam client. A few months later another couple of games I had from the Windows days released Linux ports and they just appeared as available/purchased in my Steam client on their own.

    23. Re:That was easy by CastrTroy · · Score: 2

      Let's look at it this way. The Windows Phone market share is larger than the Linux Desktop market share, and the games/apps for phones are considerably less complex than those of their desktop counterparts, for the most part. You still don't see app/game developers latching on to Windows Phone. It will take quite a few more people moving over to Linux for it to really gain any traction.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    24. Re:That was easy by Penguinisto · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAaaaa!

      (...typed on my MacBook Pro at work while waiting for a build to complete. My MacBook Pro at home says you're full of it too, as well as my Linux home machinery...)

      In all honesty, transitioning away form Windows was once a long, drawn-out process. I kept a Windows box around for years because of gaming, and CG applications (3DS Max specifically) that only worked on Windows. However, bit-by-bit, I was able to move my CG tools and gaming habits over to either Linux or OSX (or in the case of CG, I found better that worked on OSX, so I re-worked how I did things to adapt) - with each change, the Windows box became less and less used. It went from a dedicated Windows box, to a dual-boot rig, and eventually, I dumped the Windows partition entirely.

      Fast forward to today, where the one and only Windows machine in my possession is an Windows 7 VM sitting on my MacBook. I might start it up once every 8 months or so to fire up an old CG application or tool, but usually I only do it to convert a really old/archived CG file into something I can use in OSX.

      In my wife's case, the transition was almost instant: Two years ago, she took one look at Windows 8, and went with a new iPad instead. Eventually she discovered that sometimes she needed a laptop, but I have one loaded with Linux Mint for her that she uses just fine, and has actually come to prefer using it over Windows.

      TL;DR - sometimes it's drop-easy to convert (especially for ordinary users who don't do much with a computer), sometimes it takes time (for us crazy people who do a lot of stuff on one.)

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    25. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'll worry about that when my Windows 8.1 support ends in 2023. By that time, I'm betting that SteamOS will have wooed over enough developers that I'll never need to use Windows again.

    26. Re:That was easy by flacco · · Score: 0, Troll

      Or you could stop being a fucking pussy and refuse to accept this kind of disregard and abuse from your OS vendor once and for all, now, today.

      Many games are already available for Linux and more will follow when Steam Machines arrive in November.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    27. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

    28. Re:That was easy by shaitand · · Score: 2

      "Windows OS A 10.3 Leaping Panther"

      Leaping Panther is definitely an Apple thing. More likely it will be something like "Data Defender" which streams all your data directly over unencrypted broadcast radio, installs itself and accepts it's own EULA as a "feature."

      I mean... if they are going to jump naming convention why not go with the congressional approach?

    29. Re:That was easy by HyperQuantum · · Score: 2

      That's going to be Windows OS A 10.3 Leaping Panther.

      You mean more like Windows OS A 10.3 Screaming Monkey...

      "Update me! Update me!"

      --
      I am not really here right now.
    30. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had a Linux VM around, installing the steam client and looking at your game library there might be the easiest way to check which games are installable on Linux. Steam will make it obvious so you don't need to actually install any games or try to play them.

      Or, going to the steam store, pick the Linux/SteamOS option to filter the store listings, then type in a game name in the search box. This is easy to check a few, but using the steam client will be easier to check against a large library.

    31. Re:That was easy by umafuckit · · Score: 1

      Start migrating to Linux now and dual boot into Windows for games.

    32. Re: That was easy by jd2112 · · Score: 2

      No, Ballmer isn't at Microsoft anymore.

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    33. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That does happen on some laptops, not on others. Not that much worse than the situation on Windows, really.

    34. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somewhat expensive way of avoiding W10 - you are correctly licensing all your cores of course?

    35. Re:That was easy by Chatsubo · · Score: 1

      On my linux machine I run the native steam client AND the windows steam client via wine (+PlayOnLinux). You'd be surprised how well Wine works these days.

      To re-iterate others: You don't need to re-purchase your games to get Linux ports, you already have the game on steam regardless of platform. If you are in doubt, run linux steam from a live-cd and see for yourself.

      --
      > no, yes, maybe (tagging beta)
    36. Re:That was easy by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Insightful

      this entire thread sounds like a repost from 1998. not much has changed on this topic in 15-20 years

      personally, i think google *may* find some way to kill off windows in 5-10 years

      i'm not talking about chromebooks, i'm talking about how android has destroyed windows in the phone market. google is leveraging and will continue to leverage phone dependence to make desktops and tablets something you want the same interaction with, content sharing with, seamless switching, etc.

      i'm not saying exactly what that compelling need is, but obviously microsoft can't leverage the desktop to compel people to put windows on their phone. so google *might* be able to do the opposite with some must-have need or want

      ps: i'm purposefully ignoring apple. i never owned an apple product in my life. too pricey. we're talking about the masses here, not the middle class of rich countries and the upper middle class of everywhere else. apple is just a luxury brand walled garden, an outlier

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    37. Re:That was easy by LVSlushdat · · Score: 4, Informative

      When you have an SSD that boots Linux in less than 20 seconds, who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly.. I run Kubuntu 14.04 on a Dell Precision M4400 and haven't EVER hibernated it, as a cold boot is fast enough to not give a shit if hibernation works or doesn't work...

      --
      THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
    38. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. I have 5 old junk laptops each running mint and never have a suspend/resume problem.

    39. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That usually the fault of the laptop's manufacturer not following the standard.

    40. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blatantly false. RTFM please before being an ass-hat.

    41. Re:That was easy by Wraithlyn · · Score: 1

      If you want to play GTAV you need a Windows machine, or really a console because the PC port was so halfassed to begin with.

      The hell are you talking about? The PC version of GTAV is fantastic. BETTER than the console versions (I have played extensively on both). Higher res/framerate, mouse/keyboard support, video editor, moddable, and no bugs whatsoever that I encountered (or read about in any reviews). It's pretty much a gold standard for how to do a PC port.

      The port of GTA4 was the disaster... and they evidently learned their lesson.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    42. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, my three Linux laptops all suspend and resume properly. Face it, you bought a dud laptop...

    43. Re:That was easy by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      Given the way things are going with wine and for openGL, we could be there already if it wasn't for generally abysmal support for linux drivers. I think Valve pointing out "hey, halflife runs equally well on linux when you freakin support it!" is about the only chance we have of having reasonably up to date linux gaming support in the future.

    44. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, unless you happen to have one of 99.9% of laptops of course.

    45. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You buy games, not versions of games on Steam. So if there is a Linux or Mac install of a game you bought on Windows, it automatically appears in your list on the other platforms. Surprisingly, Steam's cloud saves generally work cross platform as well, so you can start a game on Windows and then finish it on Linux, or play a round on the Mac and then go back to your Linux box.

      Most of the time with some minor exceptions with older games the steam cloud saves do work across different platforms.

      But there's something even nicer: You can actually transfer backed up games from platform to another if the target platform is supported. Steam client will repair the installation and download all platform specific files after restoring the backup. Downside is that some games seem to store platform specific data inside large files which makes the repair operation slower.

    46. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks to systemD, my boot times are so fast now that I don't have to worry about suspend and resume. *Hides*

    47. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At least I fucking hate restarting applications and getting them to the point I want.

    48. Re: That was easy by malignant_minded · · Score: 1

      I have Mint 17 and have intermittent hibernate issues on my T500 with SSD but I agree with the other poster it boots so fast that I don't really care that it fails where as Windows boot times are a crap shoot. You should save your work before hibernating because it is a gamble on any OS just some odds are worse than others.

    49. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Planning to have kids" = "Planning to have Windows for the kids' games"

    50. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No matter who lies at fault the problem still stands.

    51. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tl;dr: your post layout sucks

      PROTIP: Put the too long, didn't read version at the top, otherwise people will have already read all of it to get to the too long, didn't read version.

    52. Re:That was easy by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Actually, I recall hearing that on Humble Bundles at least, Linux users are considerably more generous than their Windows-using peers. The problem is just that they're still a small fraction of the gaming market, and yes, there is a serious fragmentation issue.

      Valve's "console" might change that if it ever actually launches, we'll have to see. If nothing else it offers a long-missing de-facto "standard" for a Linux gaming platform, reducing fragmentation. I think you're wrong about its consolness being an issue, because it's not actually a console - it's just a console-style UI slapped on top of an otherwise fully-functional desktop Linux PC, installed on whatever hardware you want. Along with a set of recommendations for "console form factor" hardware. i.e. compact, quiet, and nice to look at. There's not even anything keeping you from installing Windows alongside SteamOS and dual-booting into a perfectly normal PC. The only real difference between a Steam "console" and a normal PC is that it's hooked up to your TV, and as someone who has been using a 40" TV as their primary monitor for a long time I can say it (mostly) works great. And as 4K screens start entering the low-to-midrange market that should eliminate the last major problem of low pixel density.

      As for ideology, most of the Linux users I know switched because they were sick of putting up with Window's B.S. (malware, instability, etc), rather than for ideological reasons. Even most of my more hard-core Free Software friends are more concerned with their *infrastructure* being free - OS, office suite, development, etc - i.e. everything they NEED to do their job/have their computer be useful. They pretty much all recognize that AAA games can't realistically be Free, and are perfectly content buying commercial games, just like they buy commercial movies and music. It's entertainment, totally unimportant on an individual instance basis.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    53. Re:That was easy by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      I appreciate your optimism, but trust me: having kids is stressful, and I found that having games as a (less frequent, but still occasional) escape was even more important.

      --
      -Styopa
    54. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when does Linux suspend & resume not work? I've been using it for years on my laptop...

      Am I using an outdated kernel?

    55. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't had that particular problem in several years. Not that I suspend often nowadays, what with SSD and UEFI giving me about five seconds from power button to login prompt, but on the rare occasion I want everything left in situ while moving between buildings, suspension works flawlessly.

    56. Re:That was easy by phayes · · Score: 0

      It's no worse that Windows+Dell/HP/Lenovo's inability to reliably resume correctly from suspend docked/undocked without regular blue screens.

      I moved to OSX, the only OS that I've seen that correctly accounts for thunderbolt devices connecting/deconnecting without reboots.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    57. Re:That was easy by stooo · · Score: 1

      No, no, no.
      Kids play on Linux now.

      --
      aaaaaaa
    58. Re:That was easy by rnturn · · Score: 2

      ``Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.''

      Both "Sleep" and "Hibernate" options work like a charm once I upgraded from openSUSE 12.2 to 13.2. Granted, it was hit or (mostly) miss prior to the upgrade but it hasn't failed once since I took the time to update the OS. I have nothing to tie my personal computer use to Windows. Left that atrocity of an OS behind ten years ago.

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    59. Re:That was easy by Idarubicin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When you have an SSD that boots Linux in less than 20 seconds, who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly.

      Presumably people working on multiple documents and/or in multiple applications who don't want to have to restart those applications, reopen their files, and rearrange their windows every time they go from home to office. (Or office to train. Or living room to desk. Or whatever.)

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    60. Re:That was easy by greenfruitsalad · · Score: 0

      for those cases, use suspend. my applications rarely work after a hibernation but survive suspend (mostly) without any harm. in my case, it's the fact that i have /home on NFS that does it.

    61. Re:That was easy by mitzampt · · Score: 1

      YMMV, hibernate/suspend is indeed buggy but it will not stay that way ;). And think of various Linux failures as opportunities: the community makes it so that you don't get several Gb of unattended updates unless you ask for it. Any distro that violates that is readily swappable with one that doesn't.

      --
      uhm...
    62. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a married geek, I can confirm that I don't have the time to use computers anymore at home. For regular browsing, reading, playing games, or studying, I use my iPad (or the Google Docs website at work since I can edit my own files without installing a client).

      And when I want to play with my wife, I have a Raspberry Pi with RetroPie or an old GameCube with cheap used games.

      I only use my computer once a week for BT or to manage my budget with YNAB.

    63. Re:That was easy by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      There is also Apple that resumes just fine. I refuse to buy their mobile products but I'm fine with using the computers.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    64. Re:That was easy by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      yeah, 'saving state' is such an old and outdated concept. I mean, why would we want to checkpoint the status of lots of open files, open browser windows, edits that are not ready to be commited or saved but you don't want to close the file, either. even the cursor position is important to be saved; its all part of 'state'.

      but go ahead an argue that saving your status is worthless. in fact, maybe you like to just be forced to logoff and reboot every few hours? hmmm? sound good to you?

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    65. Re:That was easy by mnooning · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You will be much better off waiting a year till the Windows 10 bugs are worked out.

      I upgraded to Windows 10 five days ago on one of my Dell GX960 Core 2 Duo machines. Windows 10 will *NOT* drive the HP LP2475w monitor that was working fine with Windows 7 at the recommended native resolution. The lowered resolution it will drive it at is distorted. I had to replace the machine with a different Windows 7 machine. I do not have any monitors smaller than 24 inch, and I do not have any Windows 7 disks, so I sat the trial GX960 on a shelf for now.

    66. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just upgrade. It's the future, no sense of fighting it. Best thing to do is use it and demand changes from within.

    67. Re:That was easy by greenfruitsalad · · Score: 2

      on my previous thinkpad (t61), in windows, hibernate only worked for the first couple of months. at some point after an update it failed completely (suspend worked 75% of time). my favourite windows feature was automagically switching from suspend to hibernate inside my backpack and failing. I'd sometimes come home open a bag and find my computer screaming for cold air. good times.

      fortunately, i only kept windows on it for sentimental porpoises (and other sea mammals). In Ubuntu/Debian, I never had the problem. But then again, i almost never used hibernate, only suspend.

    68. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What about the time spent relaunching all programs, windows, etc back to where before? Sometimes you want to turn it off without interrupting your workspace.

    69. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rule has always been to install the more ham-fisted OS first, then the one that handles the bootloader more intelligently and/or is easier to alter to add OS entries (on the off-chance it doesn't find them automatically). This is still the best rule, and in this case, Win8 is the ham-fisted one. Win8 only overwrites the bootloader if it's installed after the other OSes, in my experience (I've been running dual boot Antergos and Win8 for some time now). This is the case for EFI, at least. I can't speak to legacy BIOS.

    70. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      What about the time spent relaunching all programs, windows, etc back to where before?

      I'm guessing LVSlushdat might recommend not using the applications you currently use and instead using competing applications that support automatic saving of "all programs, windows, etc back to where before" on logout and restoration of same on login.

    71. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      No, you're using a make and model of laptop on which suspend and resume happen to work in Linux. There exist other models on which they do not work.

    72. Re:That was easy by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I was still on the fence about whether to stick to Windows 7 or upgrade to Windows 10. This just made my decision for me. Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years depending on how well they've got games running on Linux( since that is the only thing keeping me on Windows anyway).

      You may find that in a few years, games mean less to you. I found that as I got further from college, had kids, etc. I just had less time for games. So they became less of a deciding factor for OS choice.

    73. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Which distribution of Linux are you talking about? And which specific laptop?

      We've been on Ubuntu (switched to Xubuntu because of Unity) since the beta of Breezy. In that time, we've had more than one laptop and suspend/resume always worked on them. Actually, we're all Linux at home, with 3 Synology boxes, 2 desktops, and 3 laptops.

    74. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You might... but the number of people who will do that is a small, small fraction of those who will accept the free upgrade...

      Give Linux a try now, if you haven't already... it sounds nice, but it comes with a lot of little limitations that have to be worked around or lived with...

      There is reason the marketshare is what it is...

    75. Re:That was easy by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Informative

      Just a data point, but my Ubuntu laptop suspends and resumes just fine. But my Windows laptop doesn't and frequently has to be rebooted when that happens.

      IIRC my Powerbook used to have similar issues, I think it's just a hard problem for operating designers - who start with operating systems that don't support the feature - to retrofit onto existing systems. I'm kinda surprised Ubuntu does it without problems, but it does.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    76. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      this entire thread sounds like a repost from 1998. not much has changed on this topic in 15-20 years

      But, but... the "Year of the Linux Desktop" is just around corner, isn't it?

      Er... you're right of course, the marketshare of Linux on the desktop hasn't moved much in 20 years, nor will it.

      A few people move to it, a few people move away from it, nothing much changes.

    77. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL. If I had a cent for every loser who claimed he would "switch to Linux" and then came back to Windows with his tail between his legs, I'd be rich. Linux is about to disappear in a couple of years anyway: there are less and less developments, because the people who were developing it are getting too old to care, or have grown up to the point they actually have to earn a living. At this point in history, Linux is just a scare card to play in order to get some good deals from MS or Apple, but it won't last long. A couple of years and it will be over. Computers have changed, get on with the times.

    78. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't had a suspend/resume issue with Linux in years. Last was USB3 driver support, and that was fixed in quick order.

    79. Re:That was easy by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Probably worth noting that Windows 10 seems to have apps "disappear" and need restarting on an hourly basis, and that's with light load. "Mail" seems to be the worst.

      Also - automatic reboots. If there's one thing worse than having to shut down your power-compromised laptop, and then restart it when you're ready to use it again, it's having the device reboot all by itself and lose much of what you've done in the process.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    80. Re:That was easy by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2

      Hey, it's a luxury brand walled garden but it's also not Microsoft. I'm using it and I'm quite happy with it as a rule. Spent a lot of largely trouble-free years on Apple stuff.

      My brother's a rightwing corporate programmer and he has recently bailed on Microsoft and is trying much harder than ever before to get into Linux. He's been MS guy for decades. it's interesting to see (encouraging, even). I can't imagine he'll react sympathetically to this news that MS is basically force-updating Windows 10 to people.

    81. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      TL;DR - sometimes it's drop-easy to convert (especially for ordinary users who don't do much with a computer), sometimes it takes time (for us crazy people who do a lot of stuff on one.)

      And most of the time it is more or less impossible...

      OS X and Linux on the desktop are trying to solve problems that people don't have...

      That they are "not Windows" is not enough reason to switch to them...

    82. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm if you work in the computer profession and aren't "middle class" you are doing something completely wrong.

      Interns don't count.

    83. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, maybe not. I'm 35, and I still devote a lot of my free time to computer gaming (less than in my early 20s, true, but it's still significant).

    84. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read just fine to me.

    85. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      As for ideology, most of the Linux users I know switched because they were sick of putting up with Window's B.S. (malware, instability, etc)

      If your friends are having problems with malware or instability, then the problem is the person sitting behind the keyboard, not Windows...

      I honestly can't recall the last time Windows crashed on me, it is solid as a rock.

      Malware? Well, I don't get that. Besides running security software, I also practice safe browsing habits, I don't click on everything on my screen, I have ad-block installed, etc.

      Keep in mind that if Linux had 90%+ marketshare, it would also have a ton of viruses and malware as well. It doesn't today largely because it isn't being targeted.

    86. Re:That was easy by Kjella · · Score: 1

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAaaaa!

      And sometimes it's just an empty threat. Three reasons I can't switch, I got plenty more. Or rather, I did use Linux as my primary desktop like 2007-2010, it worked more or less but I always needed a gaming box so consolidating some hardware I decided to just run Windows 7. I hoped that by now it'd reach more of the mainstream but no, from July 2008 to August 2015 it's gone from 0.84% to 1.5% desktop market share. Steam got less than 1% Linux users. Those who think they see a shift in the market towards Linux are deluding themselves. Most people who run Windows today will run Windows 5 years from now and with Win7 running out of support most people will upgrade then, if not now.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    87. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Seems to work fine with OpenSUSE + Lenovo T420.

    88. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You might be surprised at how healthy gaming is becoming on Linux.

      No, I'm aware there are a number of games that support Linux to one extent or another...

      The problem is... What games are Linux ONLY?

      I can think of a long list of Windows only games, but what games do I need to install Linux to run?

      The answer is, none... (or at least none that 99% of the people would really care about, there might be one somewhere).

      Slashdot is not reflective of the general marketplace, people here love to talk about Linux, but the reality is that it is a very small market with a very small userbase.

      Valve has business reasons for trying to support it, they are trying to hold back Windows and the Windows store, which is now their competition. (or might be in the future, I don't see many AAA games in the Windows store right now).

      Keep in mind that if Linux ever became a thing due to Value, then it would lose a lot of what you currently like it for, since it can't remain 52 different versions and still be consumer friendly.

    89. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly

      Me. I have a lot of applications open. I want them all open at the same place I left off. I don't want to have to reopen a dozen apps and files and re-find my place in each of them. With hibernation, I can open up the laptop and start back right where I left off.

    90. Re:That was easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Then don't get a shitty model. Any business-class laptop will work fine.

    91. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm waiting the year so that hopefully Microsoft will stop trying to forcefully push Spyware 10 because it will no longer be "free".

    92. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You suspend and resume your games? I always just save and exit, but TBF I'm kinda old.

    93. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree. I run Fedora 19 x86_64 on an ASUS Ultrabook, and
      only 1 version of the kernel (3.11.10-200.fc19.x86_64) actually
      works. And it's an odd-ball version, too! Don't listen to the
      asshats that say "well it reboots super fast, so who cares!" -
      it's the re-setting up of all of your applications that takes the time.

      It's truely a hit-or-miss with _any_ linux on any platform, and
      it seems to be getting worse. :(

    94. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " If you build on Unreal then you probably won't have Linux support, but even that is changing as engine developers are adding Linux build options now. "

      Unreal has had Linux support since day one with the original Unreal/Unreal Tournament.

    95. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All it will take is for Steam machines to gain some traction.

    96. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Yep, they delayed the release of GTA V on the PC until they got it right...

      I own it, I've played it... rock solid...

    97. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Linux suspends and resumes fine nowadays on pretty much any laptop.

    98. Re:That was easy by kwoff · · Score: 0

      There are ways other than hibernating the OS to save state:

      • Firefox: Edit -> Preferences -> General, When Firefox starts: Show my windows and tabs from last time
      • Emacs desktop save mode
      • Edits not ready to commit (or save, huh?), you have various things like git stash or branches, or screen if you're working on a remote workstation.
    99. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I'm not as picky as you are.
      I'm OK with the "regular" suspend/resume and I don't recall that not working in the last couple of years...

      But if you insist on "correct" suspend/shutdown, it might be different I guess. What's the big difference anyways?

    100. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know you can revert the install, right?

      Just go into the control panel and find the revert / restore function.

    101. Re:That was easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      How is their time up? I'm sure plenty of people here will agree that I'm a giant Linux proponent and MS-hater, but this stuff isn't new, it's just more blatant, but no matter what MS does to piss people off, it has almost no effect on their marketshare for PC OSes. The amount of abuse their customers will accept is simply astonishing. I wish it was legal for them to force even more onerous conditions on their customers as long as they willingly agree to it (by continuing to purchase and use Windows), because it'd be funny to see what they could get away with.

      Face it, people are going to bitch and complain about these forced updates, the new telemetry/spying, and they'll still continue to use Windows despite all that. MS could put a clause in the EULA, backed up a Supreme court ruling, that all users have to agree to having their kids sent to indoctrination camps and they'd line up for this, rationalizing to themselves how this is better than switching to another OS because some random application doesn't work there or because their $30 POS inkjet printer doesn't work with it. The EULA for corporate customers could require all profits be paid to MS and CEO pay dropped to $50k and corporations would happily agree to this rather than switch to something else. There's simply no limit to what MS can get away with because no one will leave them; anyone who refuses their terms has already left, and probably did so long ago.

    102. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Virtualization helps somewhat with this. Suspend the VM, run systemctl suspend, and even if the Linux bare metal OS decides not to resume and requires a reboot, the VM still will resume exactly where it left off.

    103. Re:That was easy by Al+Al+Cool+J · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      YMMV, but I recently switched my Windows netbook to Linux and I can't believe how lightning fast it suspends/awakes now. I spent several days just showing it off to friends and co-workers. Suspend - awake - suspend - awake. It's like magic compared to how it used to be under Windows. This is a machine that under the light edition of Win7 had become so slow, I couldn't even use it to browse Twitter from a fresh reboot. Now it's finally a fully functional computer and not just a toy.

    104. Re:That was easy by digitalPhant0m · · Score: 1

      It's a chicken vs egg issue with Linux. I know plenty of people that tell me: "when my favorite software (or game) is ported to Linux, then I'll switch".
      The problem is that vendors are saying "when the user base is there, then I'll port the software".
      Stalemate.

      The probably is that your average Linux gamer is a cheapskate or a GNUStallinist who feels that everything should be 100% free and open source.

      Absolutely untrue. The average Linux gamer/user is on Linux because they don't like Windows, not because they are cheap. Everyone I know that runs Linux as their primary desktop spends quite a few bucks every month on games via Steam (I do too).
      Cheapskates are are on every OS, that's why pirating is so prevalent.

      The second issue is that Linux is really a fragmented market

      Very true. I think Ubuntu has done the best for everyday desktop use, and Steam works beautifully on it. This is probably the best best right now.

    105. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know that you can revert the OS right?

      Windows 10 automatically backs up your previous install.

      That said, you should download drivers from the manufacturer. I normally wouldn't suggest this on Slashdot, but you seem to be out of it...

    106. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buy a laptop with supported hardware. My Linux laptop is a System 76 model for that reason, suspend works perfectly. All open source drivers.

    107. Re:That was easy by EvilSS · · Score: 0

      Not true. I have 5 old junk laptops each running mint and never have a suspend/resume problem.

      So Linux only works properly on old hardware, don't expect it to work on anything recent. Thanks for setting us all straight!

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    108. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Test driving a Win10 Pro install. ..

      All of those functions you mention are off by default.

      Not sure what you're talking about lol

    109. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      You might... but the number of people who will do that is a small, small fraction of those who will accept the free upgrade...

      Give Linux a try now, if you haven't already... it sounds nice, but it comes with a lot of little limitations that have to be worked around or lived with...

      There is reason the marketshare is what it is...

      All I would need it for is web browsing, maybe watching some Amazon instant video, and games. I can live with running a Windows 7 VM for some games if needed. Not really worried about productivity software, can always (hopefully) fire up my old laptop I still have lying around somewhere.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    110. Re:That was easy by chipschap · · Score: 4, Informative

      I know this has been a problem with Linux on some laptops. I've experienced it, too. But I've been able to get it working on three different laptops (the number of laptops I've owned in my lifetime) with some effort. Yes, you may say, it should "just work" --- and that's right.

      (Does it "just work" on Windows? I honestly don't know, I haven't tried.)

      But it is not a fatal failing and can be made to work. Linux offers more than one method of hibernation, and actually, the biggest problem for me has been difficulty recovering the wireless networking after hibernation. But I've been able to work around that, too.

    111. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Sleep and resume just work perfectly on my ASUS laptop woth Arch Linux. Your comment sounds so 10 years ago. I close the screen and it just automatically sleeps. Just like OS X or Windows.

    112. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the fact that Android, a Linux-based OS, is currently the most used OS in the world. Oh and it got to number one in a much shorter time than it took Windows.

      Nice try at trolling though.

    113. Re:That was easy by theburp · · Score: 1

      Healthy? Hardly. According to Steam, Linux accounts for less then 1% of user now, and that keeps sliding down month after month as the hype over Steam on Linux dies off.

    114. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 2

      It's not just that (this happens to me too though). If you read my comments, you'll see I had a very had time installing Linux Mint on my HP laptop. It would have been impossible for most users.

      However, last week I booted into Linux Mint 16 again, and tried to run updates, and guess what? THEY ALL FAILED, with error '404' no less. Now, as a developer I know what that means, and I googled and found that basically the ubuntu servers had moved the files for updates because they're too old. Really? Linux Mint 16, and it's dependencies are too old? What the fuck. How does anyone think this is okay?

      In the end I had to 'upgrade' to 17, which means you should wipe everything and re-install (this is also totally unacceptable). Instead I followed a guide to update which involved using sed -i on the command line (again, what the fuck?) and then doing apt-get upgrade and update. This mostly worked, except that Cinnamon no longer worked until I uninstalled and re-installed fglrx.

      Now, really think about what I just wrote. A new Linux distribution gave me that much shit to install, then update, then upgrade. Does anyone honestly believe it's ready for the 'general' user?

      I'm not talking about the fact that it has bugs / errors either, I'm talking about how it handles them. It never once gave me any indication on how to fix things, or try to fix them itself. It always came down to me googling and using technical tools to fix things. Does nobody else think this is unacceptable?

    115. Re:That was easy by Immerman · · Score: 1

      >If your friends are having problems with malware or instability, then the problem is the person sitting behind the keyboard, not Windows...
      In many cases I agree. However transitioning them to Linux fixes the problem anyway. Some of that comes down to there being less malware to begin with, some comes down to it being more difficult for them to fiddle with things that should be left alone if you don't know what you're doing.

      As for the status of malware if Linux had 90% market share, you might be right, but I suspect it would still be less of an issue than for Windows. We won't know for sure unless/until that day comes - for now we can only draw inferences from the fact that Linux is strongly dominant in the internet/infrastructure/server market, a market that makes for a very lucrative target, but largely doesn't have to deal with incompetent users willfully bypassing their OS's security to install "cool" cursors.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    116. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not been an issue with Fedora 21 on my HP laptop or on an old MSI Wind Netbook, or with Fedora 22 on several different models of HP and Dell laptops owned by various members of my family. What distro are you using on what brand/model of laptop? I did have one where due to someone changing power settings within Gnome, it did what was configured and not what was expected.

    117. Re:That was easy by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Yeah because models work universally because of magic secret stuff and aren't at all essentially commodity hardware in a more specific package. Suspend / Resume support is an absolute crapshoot completely independent of price and quality, and the percentage of laptops sold with actually Linux support as claimed by the vendor is in the single digits.

    118. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) I've got laptops where *Windows* fails to suspend and resume correctly.

      2) Suspend support is pretty much perfect on ThinkPads and Latitudes. And if you're using a laptop that's not a ThinkPad or a Dell Latitude, turn in your geek card now.

    119. Re:That was easy by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      My Lenovo Thinkpad running xubuntu doesn't suspend right. I just set it to hibernate instead - that works fine. Just takes a little longer to wake.

    120. Re:That was easy by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Cool, thanks. Thinking about setting up a dual boot to see if I would even like/could handle switching to Linux (and also to see exactly what of my steam games are on Linux too). Any advice on an easy to set up distro for someone just starting out on Linux? Assume no CS experience beyond building my own PC and installing/setting it up (because that's all the experience I really have).

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    121. Re:That was easy by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "Since most of my games are through Steam anyway, I am hoping that increased adoption of a Valve console would lead to something of a PC version."

      So download SteamOS and walk away from Windows for good.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    122. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you've been living in a cave for the past ten years.

      I'll give you a hint: Google it

    123. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's look at it this way. The Windows Phone market share is larger than the Linux Desktop market share

      could you share your source? I was searching way to count "Linux desktops" and there isn't any. In my area most of the linux desktops at work or at home came with windows 8 preinstalled.
      so those machines are counted as "windows market share". some even run windows in VM. way easier to solve problems with backup/recovery ....

    124. Re:That was easy by b0bby · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I have Mint 17 running on an older Vaio. I have suspend issues but it hasn't bothered me enough to actually look into if it's possible to correct it or not.

    125. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why shill against freedom? Linux supporters almost always beat the average per person paid. Fragmentation FUD is FUD when they only have to develop for one platform and many others will take care of the rest for their respective platforms. Many more game companies are now supporting Linux and I think this upward trend will hold.

      Why not do good in the world instead?

    126. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The probably is that your average Linux gamer is a cheapskate or a GNUStallinist who feels that everything should be 100% free and open source.

      Wow, biased much? Go look at the breakdowns on Humble Bundle sales (ones which offer games available on the 3 platforms simultaneously), and you'll see that linux users are always willing to pay more. I suspect that more or less, that trend would continue across the gaming market if you could aggregate such information.

      Also, what the fuck is "The probably[...]"?

    127. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, what? Citation needed. Oh, somebody who doesn't work in video game production stating an opinion like a fact. Why on earth would I be surprised to find that here, on the internet, of all places. Every AAA house has been looking at linux for a while now, and tons of the smaller developers already support linux. Have you not even seen the linux steam section? Or realized that SteamOS is nothing but Linux?

    128. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to play GTAV you need a Windows machine, or really a console because the PC port was so halfassed to begin with.

      Another fucking idiot who doesn't know what he's talking about. Welcome to Slashdot, I guess.

    129. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In general, the Windows server versions always make better desktop systems than the Windows desktop systems, but it costs more.

    130. Re:That was easy by flacco · · Score: 1

      > Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Am I the only one who doesn't have this issue, then? Lenovo T440s.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    131. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      What distro are you using on what brand/model of laptop?

      I do not own the laptop in question yet. I am doing research in advance of purchasing a 10 inch laptop. When I searched for Linux support on the ASUS Transformer Book, I got "not working" on Debian, Ubuntu, and Arch.

    132. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I care. Things should work properly.

    133. Re:That was easy by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is kind of the default choice for someone in your situation. It also happens to be the distro that Valve uses for their Steam integration work, so is probably a good choice for you.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    134. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lenovo crap overheats. Latitudes are solid machines though.

    135. Re:That was easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Now, really think about what I just wrote. A new Linux distribution gave me that much shit to install, then update, then upgrade. Does anyone honestly believe it's ready for the 'general' user?

      I don't think any OS is ready for the general user. Have you tried using Windows 8(.1) lately? That sure as hell isn't ready for the general user. Its UI is a complete mess, you have to switch between two totally different paradigms and looks-and-feels just to go configure something in the control panel, and even then you'll find there's not one but two control panels, the Metro one with almost nothing in it and then the regular one which is hidden away and has to be found with a search.

      If I stuck Windows 8.1 on my wife's computer, I can only imagine the ranting she'd spew out when she finds out she can't figure out how to do anything. Right now, she's using Linux Mint KDE and the only time I need to provide her any tech support is when the cat sits on the keyboard (usually this just requires typing F11 or F12 to get out of the mode in Firefox the cat managed to get into with its butt). And after this happening several times now, she probably already knows how to do this herself as she hasn't called me to fix anything on her computer in quite a while now, cat-butt-related or otherwise.

      Granted, I do tend to keep her computer somewhat up-to-date (she's running Mint 17 now, not 17.1 or 17.2). I did have to upgrade it because of the repos not working in 16 any more. I didn't bother doing a back-door upgrade, I just reinstalled. It's not a big deal; I always put /home on a separate partition on any computer I set up, so switching distros is easy. I don't know why every distro doesn't make this default in their install program.

    136. Re:That was easy by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Bah, that's what I get for going from memory instead of double checking. I was off by a version.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    137. Re:That was easy by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Who ever uses suspend in the age of SSDs?

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    138. Re:That was easy by zwede · · Score: 1

      After having tried many distros, my go-to for easy-to-install, everything-just-works is Mint.

    139. Re:That was easy by BadDreamer · · Score: 1

      That's a very general statement, and the general answer is "you are incorrect".

      I have three laptops here. All run Linux Mint, with various desktop managers. All of them suspend and resume correctly, without me doing any kind of adjustment to make it work.

      I have another laptop, an old Centrino, which sometimes hangs on resume. Since it's only used for occasional surfing, I simply shut it down, and the browser remembers where it was when restarted.

      By contrast, I have had more suspend/resume problems with my Macbook Pro. Not many, but more.

    140. Re:That was easy by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Why wait? Switch to Linux now and run Windows games under KVM with 99.6% of native performance. While gaining a marketable skill at the same time (vm management).

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    141. Re:That was easy by DocHoncho · · Score: 1

      I upgraded to Windows 10 from 7, and it left Grub untouched. Of course, it still says "Boot Windows 7," but that's not very important.

      I would imagine, however, that doing a full install might mess with the existing boot loader configuration. There are probably other variables at work as well, such as which drive has the MBR, which drive is being used for Windows, etc.

      --
      Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
    142. Re:That was easy by BadDreamer · · Score: 1

      If you want so called AAA titles, like one of the endless military fps clones, sure. But a surprisingly large number of indie games are developed on platform neutral toolkits, and come out for Windows, OSX and Linux (and often iOS and Android as well).

      And of the larger games, WoW has always worked well on Wine, Valve's Portal and Half Life series runs on Linux, and a few surprises showed up recently in the form of a native ArmA III and War Thunder clients. The only games I sometimes play which do not run in Linux now are Asetto Corsa and DCS World.

    143. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only have a lonely desktop for Windows games and to run linux VMs. The rest of my devices are linux or android and these are my daily drivers that play most of my games, do all of my critical stuff and where I do all of my browsing. Can't say I've had much of an issue. I personally am waiting on Win10 to make sure drivers and custom themes have a chance to be fully baked. I can always block Cortana and telemetry with my linux based firewall.

    144. Re:That was easy by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Who the hell modded that troll up? Latest data point for me was yesterday, a drive by install off the standard Ubuntu usb key onto a big name ultrabook of recent vintage came up perfectly with suspend, 3D hardware, and wifi all working perfectly. Five minutes later Windows was gone for good (just click "install Ubuntu") and good riddance.

      Hardly worth remarking on the success cases these days, the failures are more interesting. If you have one (which you don't because you're just a random asshole troll reading from a script) then report it and watch that issue vanish too. See, it's fun.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    145. Re:That was easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That's like saying it's perfectly safe to have sex with a bunch of skanky women as long as you use multiple forms of protection, get tested regularly for STDs, etc. Or, you can just move to this tropical island where all the women are beautiful and diseases don't exist. Hmmm, which would I choose...

      Why should a casual user need to invest that much time and effort into avoiding these problems, when they can just use an OS that doesn't have them? On top of that, the UI in Windows (8+) is completely unusable and they all spy on you too. What kind of moron would willingly use an OS that sends all their keystrokes to MS?

    146. Re:That was easy by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Not that much worse than the situation on Windows, really.

      You probably don't have any data on Windows installed by the user on random hardware. I expect that you will find that Windows is way worse than Linux now. For most people, that pain is suffered by the OEM so it's hidden.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    147. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or on Windows...or on any spinning disk laptop. I did corporate IT, don't try to BS me that Windows is any better. SSDs make a lot of those problems go away on any OS.

    148. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      I actually have Windows 8.1 on this same laptop which dual boots Linux Mint 17 (now). There are definitely issues with it, such as the charms being totally undiscoverable, the start menu being full-screen, etc. But it still retains all the things Windows is good at, such as being able to apply updates on 5+ year old OSes, being able to upgrade by simply pressing a button, drivers auto-installing when you plug something in, and problems trying to correct themselves (in addition to the ability to report).

      I think re-installing an OS is a big deal, not because it's "hard" in the sense that you can't get the installer, moves the files around, etc., but because it's a pain in the ass, ESPECIALLY when I just did it a year ago. Many people still run Windows 7, and that's 6 years old! Everytime you update you have to re-install everything, re-configure whatever lost its settings, etc etc. It's unnecessary, and it should be required just because your OS is a year old and all the updates return 404...

    149. Re:That was easy by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      You might be surprised at how healthy gaming is becoming on Linux

      1.5% of PC users use Linux. Healthy from the standpoint that the games available work but not a convincing when you look at the numbers. The real question is, what percentage of that 1.5% will actually game? In the current state I would assume less than on PC.

      My understanding is that converting a game from one OS to another in a framework such as Unity is simple but the big publishers don't use theses frameworks. So how much work goes into making it happen? I honestly don't know. There's also the issue of support to users. What are the additional complications of having to support an OS with so many flavors and colors?

      but Steambox has been convincing some of the big name publishers to put in the relatively minimal amount of effort necessary for Linux support.

      What is defined as minimal efforts? If Linux already has DirectX (though that was suppose to have happened by now), then maybe but if not how are games converted over without the supporting library?

    150. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God I am not looking forward to convincing my wife that we are no longer with Windows. But it must and will be done.

    151. Re: That was easy by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hibernate and suspend are so unreliable on my Win7 laptop that I just stopped using them.

      I used to be a network manager, so I know how to fix most things. But I just got tired of messing with it and have up.

    152. Re:That was easy by CanEHdian · · Score: 1

      ...you WILL be on Windows 10, within a few years.

      Say can you do me a favour and type the following in shell?

      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:microsft/win
      sudo apt-get update
      sudo apt-get install gwx

      Thanks mate!

      --
      When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
    153. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      All I would need it for is web browsing, maybe watching some Amazon instant video, and games. I can live with running a Windows 7 VM for some games if needed. Not really worried about productivity software, can always (hopefully) fire up my old laptop I still have lying around somewhere.

      Then by all means, give it a try, nothing is stopping you...

      Just keep in mind that if you're angry with Microsoft over Windows 10, that doesn't make Linux a good solution. It just means you're angry with MS.

    154. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My anecdote disagrees with yours. Ideapad Y480 running Debian. Resumes faster than I can open my screen. It's incredible.

    155. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would bother me I guess.... if I owned a laptop.

    156. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      On top of that, the UI in Windows (8+) is completely unusable

      Ahh, no it isn't... I've had Windows 8.1 on multiple machines for some time now, it works just fine. Boots right to the desktop, don't even see the start screen.

      Most of those machines are on Windows 10 now, very nice overall.

      they all spy on you too

      I don't think the word "spy" means what you think it does... They collect usage information to improve the quality of their product. Knowing that XYZ program is run on 42 million PCs means that they need to add it to their testing suite for new releases. Knowing that ABC program is only run on 300,000 machines means they don't.

      Knowing how their customers use their OS improves the future quality of the OS. This is a "Good Thing".

    157. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't speak for laptops, but I've been suspending to disk (a.k.a. hibernate), for a long time. Works perfectly every time. ...And there, I just hibernated and then restored. The only time it takes a long time is when my machine is dirty (about 2-3 times per year), when I have to vacuum it out because the power supply fan is thermostatically controlled and it doesn't stop all the fans till its either cool in the case or 2 minutes have gone by. If its that hot in the case, pull out the vacuum, clean, and then its down to about 5 seconds.

    158. Re:That was easy by Forever+Wondering · · Score: 1

      You might be interested in dual boot.

      When I did this a few years back for a new system I got, it had Vista. I then installed Linux over it. The Linux distro installed grub and found the Vista install and it became a choice in the grub boot menu. Later, I installed an upgrade version of Win7. It didn't touch grub or Linux, so now I've got a full dual boot system. I boot Linux by default, and override at the grub prompt for Win7 for games [or turbotax :-)].

      --
      Like a good neighbor, fsck is there ...
    159. Re: That was easy by UnsignedInt32 · · Score: 1

      From my experience, it worked on most of hardware I've used before with Windows. The biggest problem I experienced is that it took forever to hibernate and resume, to the extent simply shutting down was much quicker.

    160. Re:That was easy by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Why should a casual user need to invest that much time and effort into avoiding these problems, when they can just use an OS that doesn't have them?

      First, there isn't exactly a lot of time and effort involved in Windows these days. Don't browse to unsafe sites, don't click on everything that pops up, and leave Windows updates running.

      Second, Linux is not plug and play for the average consumer, far from it. You have a biased view, simply by being on SlashDot in the first place, however... you can give a Windows 10 USB stick to my mother and she could install it on a bare metal computer. You put it in a USB slot, turn the computer on, it installs. When it finishes, all the drivers are installed, she logs into her MS account, it asks "do you want to set this up like your old machine?", she says yes, it then looks just like her old machine, complete with Windows apps and Start menu.

      It doesn't get any bloody easier than that.

    161. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL good luck there buddy!

    162. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Does nobody else think this is unacceptable?

      I do. That's why I use OS X. All the fun of UNIX with none of the hassles of Linux, and none of the spying of Windows (and what little non-anonymous "spying" there is (Spotlight Suggestions and iTunes Library Details-Sharing), is easly turned off via GUI switches).

    163. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy there Shilly McShillster. No need to get your panties in a bunch.

    164. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      I don't think any OS is ready for the general user.

      Funny; in your long-winded rant, you didn't once mention OS X.

    165. Re:That was easy by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      "Many games" are on several platforms, but not necessarily the games everyone wants. Sure, tons and tons of games on smart phones, but all of them utter crap. Steam Machine is a dream, it will have a small subset of Steam games but it will be a long time before it has enough higher quality games that people will pay attention. Most PC games in the last ten years are tied heavily DirectX, and they just don't work as well when running under WINE.

    166. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps after a year the automatically downloaded W10 becomes a pirate copy and MS will send the RIAA to sue everyone who has not paid for it..

    167. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      And if you're using a laptop that's not a ThinkPad or a Dell Latitude, turn in your geek card now.

      Is that why you see so many MacBooks at "Geek" events?

    168. Re:That was easy by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      The second issue is that Linux is really a fragmented market ....

      (I'm no proponent but,) Did you see what systemd wants to achieve?

    169. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have been on Linux for 10 years with no ill effects at all.

    170. Re: That was easy by mSparks43 · · Score: 0

      Yea. I've been caught out twice by leaving my laptop on (win10) and having it restart without my permission and loose work. Linux way better than windows. But windows works well enough on the laptops to not really justify going through the hassle of intalling nix.

    171. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe he will, but i wont xD

      I have been running Linux on all my machines since 2007
      of my 6 computers only 1 has Windblows installed (dual-boot) and only for a small handful of games maybe (%10) that don't run well under Linux
      other then that i generally get better performance with most games under Linux
      mostly attributed to better usage of resources by the OS

      there is some assembly required, but is no harder to work with then Windblows

    172. Re:That was easy by eth1 · · Score: 1

      I'll tell you upfront, very very few major game developers are considering Linux yet. They won't until the crowd is there and proves that people are willing to pay money for games.

      IMO, very very few "major" game developers are putting out anything worth buying anymore, anyway. All of the AAA titles seem to be watered down for the lowest common denominator, and riddled with bugs that never get fixed. I spend way to much time gaming, and have been exclusively playing indie titles or games from smaller studios for the last 2-3 years now, and still have a "waiting list" because there's just so much good stuff out there if you care to look. Not all of them support Linux, but enough do.

    173. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't treat every news you hear out there like a threat - sometimes it might be your friend.

      Simply put what MS is doing - is in case you wanted to Install windows - WITH YOUR PERMISSION - it pre-emptively downloads the ISO when the network is not being hogged so that you don't wait long during the insall process - in case you did say YES to installing windows.

      I dont want to install it, and have actively been removing the updates that harrass me into installing it. I don't want it downloaded on my metered connection, I dont want it downloaded when I am trying to watch netflix, and frankly I dont care if its the last computer on the network I dont want it downloaded.

      This is just to avoid network hogging issues when everyone is trying to download windows at the same time.
      Also Windows 10 introduced a new concept of P2P downloads to avoid network issues again .... now don't tell me you are afraid of every P2P software out there as well and will jump to Linux at the first whiff of P2P mention... :-)

      I certainly dont the hell want it uploading to other computers either, my upload speed is very limited.

      So MS is not installing anything (not one BIT) without your permission - its just keeping a download copy (that too, not the whole ISO) so that in case you wanted to install - you would have it ready to go.

      I DONT WANT IT TOOL

      Is that SO BAD now ?

      Umm YES It is absolutely stupid.

    174. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have run Ubuntu on many different laptops over the years, i buy a new one every year and have never failed to get the hibernate/sleep functions to work

      you might want to check on the forums, see if you can get some help because AFAIK hibernate/suspend should work just fine if setup correctly

    175. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They collect usage information to improve the quality of their product.

      Damn, you are naive as fuck.

    176. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This decision has not only cost some users much valuable disk space, but in the case of one of my clients, $400 or more in internet bills. Some users are connected to the internet by 4G cell USB modems. One of my clients on such devices doesn't use the computer or internet much except to check email etc. When ever they turned on the Windows 7 PC, Microsoft Windows 10 attempted to download. Every time they shut off the PC and started it, this process would start over causing their bandwidth on their cell modem to not only hit the cap, but exceed it by 300%. Microsoft should be responsible for these overage charges! I've since turned off automatic updates on all my client PC's and instructed them to update what they need until they want to install Windows 10 upgrade.

    177. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea those who knows boot times are a crap shoot for me too. I never know if it'll be 2 or 3 seconds cold boot to fully useable desktop.

    178. Re:That was easy by Overand · · Score: 1

      I'd be more into this gripe if my Windows 7 laptop didn't bluescreen 1 out of every 3 or so times it tries to resume from hibernation.

    179. Re:That was easy by Overand · · Score: 1

      My Win 7 laptop suspends and resumes great. It hibernates great too... 2 out of 3 times. Those other times it bluescreens when it tries to resume. Soooo... yeah, kinda hard for me to get behind this gripe.

    180. Re:That was easy by Kavonte · · Score: 1

      So Linux only works properly on old hardware, don't expect it to work on anything recent. Thanks for setting us all straight!

      No, that's not it at all. The age of the laptops is irrelevant and simply a consequence of the fact that anyone who has a lot of laptops they can install Linux on likely has those laptops because they are too old to otherwise be useful.

      The actual reason this person has had success with suspend and hibernate is just a simple matter of statistics. There is a 50% chance that suspend and hibernate will work on any given laptop. So for five laptops, we can calculate that the chance of success on all of those laptops is just 1 in 32. Thus, anyone who sees suspend and hibernate work on five laptops is likely to assume that the success rate must be much higher than 50% for it to have worked five times in a row.

      However, on Slashdot, one might expect to find many more than than 32 people who have installed Linux on five laptops. Thus, to find one person who has never had any issues after installing Linux on five laptops is absolutely to be expected. Indeed, if we assume that there are hundreds of people on Slashdot who have installed Linux on five laptops, then if we don't hear from more of them who have had no issues with suspend and resume then we must assume that the success rate is actually less than 50%.

    181. Re:That was easy by cyberchondriac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Weelll, you say that now. I stopped playing games for years, and thought I was done with them. Then my son grew older, and discovered Skyrim. So then, I discovered Skyrim. The next thing I know I'm replacing the graphics card and the power supply to support it in my computer. Since then I've bought Doom3 and Rage, older era stuff my card can support (I bought the latest GPU my mobo could support). I'm trying to quit again, it's too much unproductive (but fun!) time spent.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    182. Re:That was easy by yodleboy · · Score: 1

      did you update your graphics drivers? I don't know what NVidia build came with Windows 10, but I couldn't get one of my screens to come up until I downloaded and installed latest directly from NVidia.

    183. Re:That was easy by yodleboy · · Score: 1

      "The amount of abuse their customers will accept is simply astonishing"

      I'd just like to point out that MS is rarely the innovator these days in egregious privacy invasions, telemetry and so on. What they have done is to see how little protest the supposed 'good guys' like Google and Apple receive for doing the exact same thing and decided to play along. Don't hate on them for learning the lesson too well. If anything, at least with MS, you WILL find out about it sooner rather than later, whether through the efforts of MS haters or MS's own release and patch notes. Not sure I trust Google and Apple to be less secretive.

    184. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Shrug] I've seen that failure happen on ostensibly vendor-supported "Works with Windows" laptops all the time, and seen many Linux laptop setups that work fine. Heck, I had to manually disable a *keyboard's* wake-on-sleep option to get a Windows desktop machine to sleep properly.

    185. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cores or CPUs? I do know W2012 and W2012R2 license by actual CPU, and it doesn't matter if you have a dual core i5 or a 18 core Xeon.

      It is not too bad for desktops, if you buy the OEM version. I don't change PCs often after I build them, so the $800 or so tends to be not that big a deal overall.

    186. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Suspend works on my Asus laptop.

      On a lighter note, how long has you Daddy worked for Microsoft little boy?

    187. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why blame the wrong party?

    188. Re:That was easy by Forever+Wondering · · Score: 1

      The first step is to find the disk space for the Linux distro. If your current system has multiple partitions you can repurpose one if you can move the files off it (e.g. move D:\games to C:\games). You'll probably need to burn a bootable CD with a partition editor. It will grow/shrink partitions [adjusting the filesystems as well]. gparted is one.

      Linux works best with a small /boot partition [say 2GB]. It needs a root partition [to future proof, I recommend 60GB]. A swap partition that is [minimum] 2x the size of physical ram. And a /home partition [make this "all the rest"]. You can get this by shrinking an existing big Win partition that is [say] 10% full. You then create the four partitions from the free space you just created. Or, you could also just add a new SATA disk and put all of the Linux partitions there.

      The one caveat: Be careful with disks that are >2TB as the /boot partition must be in the lower part of the disk due to limitations with the partition table entries in an MBR (BIOS) boot block. I'm assuming you have a BIOS based system (vs. UEFI) and that your boot block is an MBR. All UEFI systems use [mostly] GPT partitions that don't have that restriction. Some BIOS also support GPT, but converting an MBR to a GPT requires a tool.

      When installing grub [the linux boot loader], it replaces the boot loader in the MBR block with grub's. This is fine, because on a pure Win7 system, the boot loader in the MBR just looked for the the "active" partition, read the first block from that partition and transferred control to it. This "second" boot block on the Win7 C: drive will then read the first N blocks from that partition [the "real" win7 boot loader] and transfer control to it.

      The first partition of any MBR disk starts at block 1024. That means that blocks 1-1023 are unused. The grub installer places grub's "second stage" boot there. Grub's MBR boot will read block 1 and transfer control. The block 1 boot will read in 2-1023 and transfer control to it (the "real" grub loader). It is this "real" third stage grub loader that will give you the boot menu, etc. When you select "Win 7", it will read the first block of the Win7 partition and transfer control to it. Win7 won't know the difference from this point on.

      Further, note that even if you add a second Linux only disk, the MBR block will be the one with the lowest SATA slot number (e.g. 0). So, if your Linux only disk is slot 1, the MBR changes will still be on slot 0. grub should handle this just fine, but If you're squeamish, you could swap the cables so the Linux add-on disk is slot 0, but now the Win7 C: partition is on the slot 1 drive and I honestly don't know if the Win7 boot loader is smart enough to handle this.

      Before you proceed, you must create a full win7 backup. I use MS's backup tool. Use the tool to create a "system recovery disk" [a CD]. Tell the tool to "create a system image" during backup and be sure to configure it to backup all your partitions. Note: You must use an external [USB] disk as the backup media. Do not use an internal SATA drive for this [unless you disconnect it after the backup]. I had a disk wipeout, and I was able to restore everything. So, if you make a mistake, you're covered.

      As to distros, I use Fedora, but I've been doing this for a while. I configured a system for a friend who was non-technical and chose Ubuntu. I added an extra root partition and put Fedora on the second. Ubuntu had some issues and eventually even my non-tech friend decided on Fedora. Mint or Arch are also good choices. YMMV, so others can probably give you better advice on choice of distro.

      The CD based installers for most distros are smart enough to look at all partition tables on all disks and not mess with any Win* partitions they find and will add the Win* bootable ones as grub [boot loader] menu entries [at the bottom].

      --
      Like a good neighbor, fsck is there ...
    189. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I stopped Windows Update on Win 7 a week ago.

      Guess i smelled it correctly this time.

    190. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is because Mint 16 was based on Ubuntu 13.10 which not beeing a LTS had a very short support window.

      Add to that that you found shoddy advice since all you really had to do was opening /etc/apt/sources.list in a text editor and change a few URLs.

      Granted that all this should be better documented (it is for Ubuntu but I don't know how the situation is for Mint).

    191. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't like Windows/MS, but you use Steam? Fuck you!

    192. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that's the beauty of Linux - if you shut it down with open apps, it will reopen them upon your next login. Oh, and BTW, it does suspend and resume correctly on MY laptop.

    193. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no, no - it's the Apple users who are fags. The Linux guys are geeky neckbeards.

      Sounds like someone needs a trolling recert.

    194. Re:That was easy by Technician · · Score: 1

      I can tell when an unexpected reboot happened in Windows. On a dual boot machine, it boots into the other OS by default.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    195. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is Ubuntu with a skin...

    196. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haven't had this issue, but I only buy cheap netbooks and build my own desktops.

      Sometimes audio doesn't work after going to standby, maybe 1 out of 10 times. My servers don't standby and they don't do audio either.

    197. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ugh, hum.... Suspend and resume just fine here pal....
      Typing this from an HP Compaq Business Notebook circa 2008, running present day, Gentoo stable. What linux shity dist are you using that suspend, resume, doesn't work?

    198. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't have a cow, FUDdy McFreetard

    199. Re:That was easy by leonbev · · Score: 1

      It's funny that you mention that issue, as Windows 10 doesn't restore from sleep mode on my laptop after I upgraded it from Windows 7. Apparently it has been an issue for a lot of users.

    200. Re:That was easy by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Nvidia graphics? Seen that one a lot at the shop, for some reason the Nvidia driver doesn't initialize the memory on resume and shits itself. i bet if you gave us the logs we could find what the problem is, its usually a VERY simple fix but you have to know which third party driver is shitting itself.

      FWIW you might want to look into one of the AMD APU lappys, been selling those at the shop and none of them seem to have any issues with suspend nor hibernate, its one of the reasons I won't let go of my 2011 netbook (the others being size and battery life, makes it great for service calls) because the AMD APUs just don't give me the troubles the Nvidia ones do.

      Once I finish moving I'll probably put on Win 10 on the netbook (promised another sites users I'd run those "STFU Win 10" anti-spy programs and then do a network analysis) and we'll see if it still holds true but on Win 7 at least? AMD APUs make for pretty solid laptops that suspend and hibernate pretty easy.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    201. Re:That was easy by hairyfeet · · Score: 0

      That is because to be a fag you have to have sex with someone else and for Linux users this is not an issue.../rimshot/

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    202. Re:That was easy by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Probably worth noting that Windows 10 seems to have apps "disappear" and need restarting on an hourly basis, and that's with light load. "Mail" seems to be the worst.

      It's not a Win10 thing, it's a "buggy app is crashing a lot" thing.

    203. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had suspend and resume working on a WinXP desktop computer once. After a windows update it stopped working. Never got it working on a laptop on any Windows release.

      In the last 10 years, I've had three new laptops. On two of them, suspended and resume didn't work when the distro was installed. Six months to a year later, I decide to try it again, and am surprised to find a software update sometime in the last year fixed the issues. I figured someone would solve the issue eventually, but not that fast given how many machines I've had on windows that never did work.

      On my most recent laptop, suspend and resume worked perfectly from day one. It left me speechless.

    204. Re:That was easy by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This is certainly true. However, I will point out that what many people do with their phones is a little different than what they do with their PCs. I don't keep any financial documents or stuff like that on my phone, for instance. This is especially true for a business or government computer.

    205. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Running latest version of Mint. Playing all my favourite games, from fallout 2 up to elderscrolls online. There are always issues with any system, but the amount of support and the tons of references available online make it easy to use and learn.

    206. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doubt games will ever get to linux, but for most other things linux works fine. Personally I have a laptop and a desktop running linux (jumped ship first time I first experienced vista) and my wife and I share a laptop running windows whatever (8.1 for now, might change to 10 at some point if I can be arsed finding out if the silly tiles crap has been suitably exorcised) for spousal-acceptance reasons, including games (she's more a gamer than I am).

    207. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 10 doesn't do that for me, only annoyance is suspending and resuming causes my display port monitor to reduce in resolution. I had to hack the registry to set it to 4k and still windows loses the corner snapping and snaps windows to the full left/right over each other. Still I'm confident my next OS is also Linux as I've had enough of this privacy invasion too.

    208. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      going from pussy or faggot to mangina by getting married is not the solution either. The solution is divorce and running the system of your choice.

    209. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      43 years old work 8-6, 3 kids, still playing games. Damn you, Windows

    210. Re: That was easy by Yosho · · Score: 1

      The solution to this is really simple: build a gaming PC that has nothing but windows and your games on it. Have a second PC running Linux that you use for everything else.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    211. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and another empty threat. you'll be on windows 10 in a few years, you'll see.

      You tell him, Comment Fascist!

    212. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      Find an ASUS Transformer Book, put on "the standard Ubuntu usb key", and see if you can get suspend to work.

    213. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      People who want to come back to where they were with documents open for editing rather than a blank desktop, and people who want to load web pages in tabs and read them while offline riding the bus to or from work.

    214. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      At that point there is nothing left tying me to Windows.

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Other than Microsoft's telemetry reading everything on your computer, other than them forcing updates on you that break things.

      I mean seriously, if you are trying to make a reliability of operations argument, don't even use Microsoft as a positive comparison.

      I have 10 pro. Despite telling Microsoft to wait on updates, it just barrels right in and updates anyhow. And a whole lot of folks in my arena - emergency comms - are finding that updates break their machines. And only after a couple months it's the same old Microsoft. So it's now like you have to buy the Enterprise version to make certain your computer is protected from them. And I don't even trust that.

      And its a real pity, because 10 works very nicely for the most part. But the telemetry and lack of respect for your user settings - even on W10 Pro are real killers. One of these days, they are going to bitch up a huge number of computers.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    215. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      yeah, 'saving state' is such an old and outdated concept. I mean, why would we want to checkpoint the status of lots of open files, open browser windows, edits that are not ready to be commited or saved but you don't want to close the file, either. even the cursor position is important to be saved; its all part of 'state'.

      but go ahead an argue that saving your status is worthless. in fact, maybe you like to just be forced to logoff and reboot every few hours? hmmm? sound good to you?

      You seriously work that way?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    216. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Just a data point, but my Ubuntu laptop suspends and resumes just fine. But my Windows laptop doesn't and frequently has to be rebooted when that happens.

      Yeah same here. I've had many more laptops that won't wake from suspend or hibernate on Windows than on Linux. Worst problem I have now is Docky won't resume. A docky problem, not Linux.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    217. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      YMMV, but I recently switched my Windows netbook to Linux and I can't believe how lightning fast it suspends/awakes now.

      The suspend issue is really old news by now. I haven't had it in years. But some folks are still really pissed off about FDR yet.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    218. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      If you said the same about Windows, 12 guys would pop out of nowhere as if paid to appear and say:

      - It's the laptop!
      - It's the driver!
      - It's the HD!
      - It's the lid!
      - Bad installation!
      - Bad update!
      - Just reboot and try again!
      - Just reboot in safe mode!
      - Wrong configuration!
      - Easily solved by editing the registry and setting HKEY/MS/LOCALMACHINE/USER/APPDATA/HIBERNATE to "PLISNO";
      - It's a beta!
      - It's a defective processor batch.

      It would never be Windows' fault.

      BTW, just left my Linux desktop and went to test "suspend and resume" on my laptop upstairs (the one my kid and wide use).

      It suspended. And resumed. Everything ok, no problems at all.

      And then what next? Linux is ugly? Some people beg to differ...

      Why not cut the chase: Linux is bad because it doesn't give Microsoft any money (not that they didn't try...). On that, I'll agree with you. The only issue we might still have is that I find that GREAT!

    219. Re:That was easy by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Considering how unreliable ACPI and friends are, regardless of OS, you should be saving regularly.

    220. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      What the fuck. How does anyone think this is okay?

      In the end I had to 'upgrade' to 17, which means you should wipe everything and re-install (this is also totally unacceptable).

      Wow you set that one up and beat the shit out of it nicely.

      TEll me exactly why you had to wipe your computer to install Linux 17 on it?

      Instead I followed a guide to update which involved using sed -i on the command line (again, what the fuck?) and then doing apt-get upgrade and update.

      I'm beginning to get a pretty good idea why some folks have so much trouble.

      This mostly worked, except that Cinnamon no longer worked until I uninstalled and re-installed fglrx.

      Now, really think about what I just wrote.

      I have. You read like that guy who purposefully failed a Tesla, then complained about it. Nobody should have to do any of the stuff you write about to update their linux machine.

      A new Linux distribution gave me that much shit to install, then update, then upgrade. Does anyone honestly believe it's ready for the 'general' user?

      Yeah. My wife, who is the least technical, least patient, computer user I've worked with, managed to update without a hitch. She certainly didn't do it the way you attempted to do it

      I'm not talking about the fact that it has bugs / errors either, I'm talking about how it handles them. It never once gave me any indication on how to fix things, or try to fix them itself. It always came down to me googling and using technical tools to fix things. Does nobody else think this is unacceptable?

      I think maybe you just shouldn't use linux at all, or ever again. I'm not certain of why you had the issues you did, perhaps trying to force a windows outlook on Unixy systems, but your update process was bizzare to say the least. It's probably no comfort, but your experience isn't anything I've ever found or had to do in working with Linux.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    221. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      No, you're using a make and model of laptop on which suspend and resume happen to work in Linux. There exist other models on which they do not work.

      And just to make certain. Every laptop that has ever been produced works perfectly on windows suspend/resume.

      Right?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    222. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Yeah because models work universally because of magic secret stuff and aren't at all essentially commodity hardware in a more specific package. Suspend / Resume support is an absolute crapshoot completely independent of price and quality, and the percentage of laptops sold with actually Linux support as claimed by the vendor is in the single digits.

      I've worked with a lot of Dell laptops over the years which once they suspend, they won't wake up. You have to reboot them.

      But I guess its only a fatal issue when it's a linux laptop?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    223. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those in a corporate environment, its ideal to have users restart their machines force-ably. Otherwise you end up with machines pending reboot for months. Even Linux needs a reboot now and then. My environment is rebooting linux servers at least once a week. I'd hate to see it on a desktop. *Shudders*

    224. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was still on the fence about whether to stick to Windows 7 or upgrade to Windows 10. This just made my decision for me. Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years depending on how well they've got games running on Linux( since that is the only thing keeping me on Windows anyway).

      You either do it, or you stay in a perpetual state of 'In a few years, I'll do it'.

      Windows 10 pushed me to 'I'll do it'. I've tried it numerous times in the past, but I guess I didn't want it bad enough. Things are mostly solid these days on a distro like Mint + KDE. And if you're an advanced user that finds the things that don't work quite right because of your crazy setup? It's worth the very small amount of time to tweak a few things to get it the way you want to mean that you're free of the direction that Microsoft is heading.

    225. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For me it doesn't support my video card, so I got a black screen of death upon upgrade.

    226. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you're playing with or against your son then it isn't unproductive time.

    227. Re:That was easy by mykro76 · · Score: 1

      Linux already has far more games than PS4 (460) and XBone (290) combined. There's 1450 titles on Steam alone, plus exclusives on other stores and then there's a mountain of open-source games, more than a few of which are commercial quality. I've been gaming on Linux for years but its really taking off at the moment. So you could always check it out now :)

    228. Re:That was easy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Try OS X? Shutdowns are essentially irrelevant for application states. The only exception I've run into is an interactive session with an interpreted language. But event that isn't universal if you're willing to let click buttons (annoying) to let it save it's state.

    229. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You won't have the time to relearn linux.

    230. Re:That was easy by unixisc · · Score: 1

      I was still on the fence about whether to stick to Windows 7 or upgrade to Windows 10. This just made my decision for me. Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years depending on how well they've got games running on Linux( since that is the only thing keeping me on Windows anyway).

      The submitter's post makes me wonder whether Microsoft can pull it off even on the most barebones of tablets. For instance, I recently took my Winbook w/ a 32GB flash drive to the Microsoft store for them to upgrade it - couldn't cleanly do it myself. Had I bought a Winbook w/ 16GB flash drive, it would only have run Windows 8 - there's no way Microsoft could have upgraded it to 10

    231. Re:That was easy by unixisc · · Score: 1

      I was still on the fence about whether to stick to Windows 7 or upgrade to Windows 10. This just made my decision for me. Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years depending on how well they've got games running on Linux( since that is the only thing keeping me on Windows anyway).

      On the games thing, the next PC I buy, I'll fire it up w/ SteamOS, and then run Civ V on it.

    232. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the word "spy" means what you think it does... They collect usage information to improve the quality of their product. Knowing that XYZ program is run on 42 million PCs means that they need to add it to their testing suite for new releases. Knowing that ABC program is only run on 300,000 machines means they don't.

      Then let the end user opt out. If it's such a good thing and totally not a side channel that inadvertently leaks data that helps adversaries with spear-phishing campaigns, nobody in the software industry would opt out, would they?

    233. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I don't use free software. Try again, shill.

    234. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would he? He wasn't talking about toys.

    235. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just now fired up a Linux Mint live CD, installed Steam through the software manager, and browsed my pre-existing Steam game collection. Guess how shocked I was to find out that 65% of my game collection is supported by Steam on Linux -- and all my recent purchases are supported.

      My weekend plans just changed: I'm purchasing a new HD, installing Mint, and vow to never touch another Windows system again. I've been using Linux on my work laptop for the past 6 years, and have suffered with Windows for the family PC just for the games.

      Thank you Valve/Steam!

      Fuck You Microsoft, you are dead to me.

    236. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you shouldn't be so tied up with using ASUS. They aren't the company that they once were and most of their products are terrible now.

    237. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd go further and say if it brings fun and happiness into your life, then it's not unproductive. Mental well being is a good thing.

    238. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I put CentOS-6 on a very cheap ASUS netbook I purchased years ago (gave it to my father-in-law), and suspend/resume, WiFi, etc all worked flawlessly on the first boot.

      Little sucker is blazingly fast with Linux. Much faster than better-specd hardware running Windows.

    239. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The story for this for me has been simple. If I buy hardware that's designed for Linux (e.g. Dell XPS-13) then everything works fine in Linux. If I buy hardware that's designed for Windows then I find one or more devices which have difficulties. I have heard that System 76 isn't bad.

      Basically demand hardware that doesn't have the Windows sticker. If you need it for work, buy it with a guarantee that Linux will work. If you want to play around with configuration then build your own system choosing components that work the way you want them to.

    240. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft also doesn't let you know what the contents of the encrypted packets Windows 10 sends are. Why would they conceal this information from the very user of the PC sending it out if it were just harmless "telemetry".

      Also, I am not a Microsoft beta tester. If they want "telemetry" from my computer, they can pay me for it.

    241. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't get any bloody easier than that.

      Ahh, this explains a lot. You're a Brit. You're already so used to having your every action watched that the spyware in Windows 10 seems minor to you.

    242. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I downgraded to Windows 10 from 7

      FTFY

    243. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like the housewife whose husband beats her, yet you never leave.

      No, the best thing to do is to drop Windows like the steaming sack of shit that it is.

    244. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slight Correction, you buy licenses on steam... Sadly that's the reality

    245. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Suspend has worked perfectly on every laptop I've ever owned (All T-series thinkpads)

    246. Re:That was easy by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Err no it doesn't. Windows 10 in my experience since release to market is no less stable than previous windows. It certainly doesn't make apps disappear and last time I rebooted was the last windows update about a week ago.

      Speaking of windows does NOT randomly reboot. Windows reboots to install updates on a schedule you define. Defined there schedule and don't leave open files during that period. It's not that difficult.

    247. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, clicking a couple of icons really takes such a long time...

      What about the power waste by having your computer in sleep mode instead of off?

    248. Re:That was easy by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Three reasons I [winehq.org] can't [winehq.org] switch [winehq.org], I got plenty more

      There are handicapped/disabled people in the world. Some can't see, some can't speak, some can't run, some can't learn easily, some can't switch away from MS windows. That is fine.

      But I haven't seen most such people threaten to see, speak, run, learn easily or switch away from MS windows. So if a reasonable person is threatening, chances are that he is not disabled from carrying out his threats.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    249. Re:That was easy by Cley+Faye · · Score: 1

      That's the situation that is changing, fast. Along with a lot of indie titles, some (granted, not most) recent AAA titles also have Linux support. I'd give Arkham Knight as an example, but seeing how the windows release has gone I'd rather cite Borderlands, Witcher3 and Valve games, along with X-Com.

      For someone that can "only" play a few hours a week, Windows is already not a requirement anymore.

    250. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you have an SSD that boots Linux in less than 20 seconds, who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly.

      Where do you buy an SSD that slow? Linux booted in 15 seconds back before I upgraded to 7200 RPM (in the meantime, I'm running so many services - web server, DNS server and so on, that it probably takes a little longer now - though I haven't timed it).

    251. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll accept your point about GTA V.

      Both Company of Heroes 2 and Don't Starve are listed as supporting Linux natively, Wine is just so last decade.

      http://store.steampowered.com/app/231430/
      http://store.steampowered.com/app/219740/

    252. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are apparently a few exceptions to this (notably Call of Duty which is sold separately for Windows and Mac).

      Most games should transfer, though, as long as they have a Linux version.

      If you want to be sure, look for the "Steam Play" logo.

    253. Re: That was easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      That's even worse - imagine a forced reboot in a presentation where you are alotted 15 minutes and the reboot takes 20.

      Sorry, come back next month.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    254. Re: That was easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Lenovo or Dell aren't geek computers.

      True geeks assemble their computers from parts.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    255. Re: That was easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      More specific on Android devices.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    256. Re: That was easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      I can't update to any later Nvidia driver because they have stopped supporting my graphics card.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    257. Re:That was easy by righteousness · · Score: 1

      I've never had automatic reboots since upgrading from Windows 7 to Windows 10. Although I don't deny that they probably do happen, it seems Microsoft has managed to reduce occurrence of automatic reboot in Windows 10 compared to earlier versions of Windows. I wonder what's different between your computer and mine that you seems to get so many automatic reboots.

      --
      Don't fornicate. Seriously, just don't do it.
    258. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop buying HP laptops bitch

    259. Re:That was easy by sabbede · · Score: 1

      The quality of MS's behavior in this instance aside, there's really no good reason not to go to 10. It's free and far superior.

    260. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May want to check you hard drive and make sure its not the cause of the disappearing apps plus I have wins 10 and I've never had sudden reboots which also maybe a hard drive problem.
      Lol. Who actually uses the mail app except my grandparents. There are tons of other apps from Microsoft Outlook app to Thunderbird, which I currently use.

    261. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if you buy hardware compatible with Linux that would not be an issue. Linux has many problems, but this particular problem is a hard one to solve without help from the manufactures that only produces drivers for Windows.

      More often than not, you find yourself hating manufactures when you actually look how they implement some of their stuff.

    262. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently you haven't paid much attention either...
      Borderlands 2 uses the Unreal engine and they released it on Linux.

    263. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > But, but... the "Year of the Linux Desktop" is just around corner, isn't it?

      This is also from 15-20 years ago.

      Linux conquered the desktop some 15 years ago -- technically that is. Regarding marketing share, it is not a tech problem. Some people will complain about Microsoft all the time and still install Windows, sometimes even without wanting it.

      Actually, Linux is on the next stage: mobile... and it's doing quite well (see Android). Of course, lots of people will claim Android is not Linux, because that amounts to a recognition that M$ lost in another arena (besides supercomputers, servers, embedded devices etc.).

      But this is not that relevant, since M$ itself doesn't care about the desktop anymore. Hence the problems W10 has been showing -- they actually care about mobile, because there is where the future lays. Without it, they have no future. They know that but cannot seem to be able to defeat Android+Apple.

      Desktop? It's a dwindling source of money for them. My take is that one can expect less and less support for desktop Windows as time passes... the present privacy crisis is just one more sign of that.

    264. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whatever, Windows 10 freaking rox. Have fun with your 1993 desktop-looking goals.

    265. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can boot the machine you upgraded into safe mode, then there is an option to restore the "old OS". Had to do that on my Dell because the display was hosed after update to Windows 10. You have to Google the key sequence to get to Window 10 Safe mode, it isn't pressing F8 at Boot, it is something like holding SHIFT and something else while clicking shutdown... something weird....

    266. Re:That was easy by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      I would agree, but I never said we were playing together.. unfortunately, I'm playing solo 97% of the time. He didn't really get into Skyrim that much, he stopped just before killing the first dragon; he's more into Minecraft and Garry's Mod, which is great, but not my cup of tea. We've played some Quake and a little Portal MP though, and I agree, that's not a waste of time at all. I bought him L4D as well, but he lost interest in about 45 minutes. Most of my gaming is single player campaigns.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    267. Re:That was easy by Toshito · · Score: 1

      20 seconds compared to instantly on my Lenovo Windows 7 laptop (without any resuming problem for the last 3 years, and still using a good old spinning drive) I'd call that an eternity.

      I never use hibernate, I just close the lid and toss my laptop in the bag. When I need it, I open the lid and I'm instantly resuming what I was doing. The battery is good for a day or two at sleep, who needs hibernate?

      Waiting 20 seconds for a reboot and having to reopen everything every damn time would be very annoying.

      --
      Try it! Library of Babel
    268. Re:That was easy by nashv · · Score: 1

      As a recent migrant from Linux BACK to Windows, I have found that Windows 10 is actually a lot more productive.

      My experience with Debian based distributions is that there are very few things that Linux does better than Windows when it comes to the graphical user interface. I did realise that when it came to dropping to the command line , Linux does everything better than Windows.

      Combine that with the fact if you include games, and the tons of peripherals that come with proprietary drivers (including graphics cards, laptop bioses and motherboards), Windows does on the aggregate MORE than Linux does, it just made sense to go back to Windows. Most OSS that Linux has is also available for Windows. I cannot see any incentive to move away from Windows.

      --
      Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
    269. Re:That was easy by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Is that SO BAD now ?

      Several gigabytes of unwanted network traffic? Yes.

      If I want to install Windows 10 I'll fucking download it. Until then, get your shitty fucking software off my network and off my storage.

    270. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was in that position with win2000. I made the switch 100% when they stopped support for win2k. I simply started dual booting, using programs in windows with the same equivalent in linux (firefox, open office, gimp, etc.). It is not something you do overnight, but it can be painless. Nowadays I still have my old win2k on a virtual VM by VirtualBox, not even dual booting.
      If I ever felt like installing Win10, it will be on a VM, not on my main machine.

    271. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Why would he? He wasn't talking about toys.

      So you consider OS X, which is a fully POSIX-Compliant, Certified UNIX (something NO Linux will EVER be) OS a "Toy"?

      Wow. You Slashtards ARE ridiculous.

    272. Re: That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Lenovo or Dell aren't geek computers.

      True geeks assemble their computers from parts.

      So, a Macintosh isn't a "Geek" computer; but a Hackintosh is?

      Oh, and how's that "Assemble a laptop from parts" Project coming?

      Go back to 1990, fucktard. I've built many a white-box computer myself; and so I know that the level of "Geekiness" it takes is just above someone who can plug a network cable into a router.

      Call me when you can DESIGN a motherboard; not when you can mailorder some stuff that someone else recommended in an article, plug in all the clearly-marked, impossible-to-plug-into-the-wrong-socket cables and twist some Phillips screws. Wow! I R A Geek!

      Please! There is Ikea furniture that's harder to put together than a typical tower computer. And you think THAT makes you a GEEK?!?

      Whatever.

    273. Re:That was easy by Azarman · · Score: 1

      Some information for yee below most of the damage has already been done. Also SteamOS is going to save us gamers. I already moved my gaming box to Ubuntu, Windows boxes are now considered insecure because I cannot update, and EoL

      Remove the following updates (if installed already) Disable windows updates as these are marked as important

      KB971033 Description of the update for Windows Activation Technologies
      KB2952664 Compatibility update for upgrading Windows 7
      KB2990214 Update that enables you to upgrade from Windows 7 to a later version of Windows
      KB3021917 Update for Windows Customer Experience Improvement Program
      KB3022345 Update for customer experience and diagnostic telemetry
      KB3035583 Update installs Get Windows 10 app in Windows 8.1 and Windows 7 SP1
      KB3044374 Update that enables you to upgrade from Windows 8.1 to a later version of Windows
      KB3068708 Update for customer experience and diagnostic telemetry
      KB3075249 Update that adds telemetry points to consent.exe in Windows 8.1 and Windows 7
      KB3080149 (update for CEIP and telemetry)

      Run cmd as administrator
      sc stop Diagtrack
      sc delete Diagtrack

      - Task Scheduler Library

      Everything under "Application Experience"
      Everything under "Autochk"
      Everything under "Customer Experience Improvement Program"
      Under "Disk Diagnostic" only the "Microsoft-Windows-DiskDiagnosticDataCollector"
      Under "Maintenance" "WinSAT"
      Media Center" and click the "status" column, then select all non-disabled entries and disable them.

      *services.msc: "Remote Registry" to "Disabled" instead of "Manual".

    274. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All that is good in OS X was lifted from open source software. Apple didn't do anything but slap a crappy Fisher-Price interface on top.

    275. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a little kid who only knows how to "build" a computer post plug and play. You have no idea how to put together a PC that requires hardware configuration, let alone a kit computer.

    276. Re:That was easy by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Given this article, he may be on Windows 10 next Wednesday.....

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    277. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      All that is good in OS X was lifted from open source software. Apple didn't do anything but slap a crappy Fisher-Price interface on top.

      And EVERYTHING in Linux was RIPPED-OFF (reverse-engineered) from UNIX. Now what?

      I think you owe a LOT of UNIX Devs (who's work DIRECTLY lives on in OS X) a big, fat apology!

      And BTW, by definition, you can't "lift" ANYTHING from OPEN SOURCE software, unless you violate the terms of the licensing. And I'm SURE that Apple hasn't done that, or there would be FOSSHeads aplenty citing example after example of same in EVERY Apple-Oriented Slashdot article.

      And finally, I'd MUCH rather have that "Fisher-Price" UI than what MS is foisting, or the "well, maybe the next revision will be better" F/OSS Linux interfaces. Any of them.

    278. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sure does. Hope his lunix code is better than his web design. 404s fucking everywhere.

    279. Re: That was easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Reality: I built my first computer from actual ICs on a wire-wrapped board in the 80's.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    280. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lolwut? I've been using Linux for years on multiple desktops and laptops. So since Linux doesn't suspend and resume properly on a laptop (I'll take your word for it), that means I should go back to Windows? I think not.

    281. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tepples is autistic. That's why he always has such peculiar requirements that nobody else would ever want and why he seemingly has no job, no money and still lives with his family of ten+ people in a small house playing split screen games on a shitty console. It's also why he is constantly contradicting himself, moving goalposts and making tenuous excuses.

    282. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, my workstation at work runs Win7 on an SSD. I don't have time to blink, that it has booted.

    283. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you take into account all computer systems in the world, Linux is BY FAR the most used. Windows doesn't even come close.

    284. Re:That was easy by Splintercat · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu gives you an option to do an in-place upgrade through their upgrade gui, and it's worked just fine for me the several times I've used it.

      Under Linux Mint it's been a bit trickier, but not really that bad. I wish they handled the in-place upgrade stuff a bit better, but on the flip side the rest of the OS works really well for me and has many of the tweaks I'd normally apply to Ubuntu already done. With Mint 17 you actually can upgrade in-place to the point releases which seem to be tracking some upstream changes.

      While I find the short support times annoying, I find it acceptable that a short term release becomes unsupported quickly. The LTS releases from Ubuntu get security patches for 5 years, and you don't have to pay them any money for the service.

      Also whining about having to use the command line is like whining about having to drive stick instead of automatic. Automatic is pretty easy, but once you learn it, driving stick is not much more difficult and many people actually enjoy driving that way.

    285. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Suspend works well, it's hibernate that can crap all over your installation when it forces a power cycle because you can't boot into lnux any more.

    286. Re: That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      Reality: I built my first computer from actual ICs on a wire-wrapped board in the 80's.

      I'm not talking about something with the power of an Apple 1; and neither were you. But now you want to move the "Geek" goalposts, ok.

      I have been a paid embedded designer for nearly 40 years, since around 1978. If you count every microcontroller and microprocessor-based project I have designed and built from scratch, it would number in the many dozens, and would stretch back to 1978 or '79.

      Now what?

    287. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure what world you live in. I have a lenovo T420. It runs Ubuntu like a champ. I've had it since April and I can't think of one freeze, lockup, suspend, hibernation or much of any other error. The only thing that it isn't doing well is playing comercial DVD movies. Though since I don't care it doesn't matter. It runs Netflix, and Google play movies perfectly. Any DVD movies I do own I make into digitals and run them from the perfectly functional card reader.

      Get the picture?

      Even most games I care about (which is admittedly very few) run on it.

      I use Office 365 sometimes, Google docs most of the rest of the time. Occasionally I use Libre Office, and sometimes WPS office.

      Anyone who thinks Linux isn't an option for most people hasn't tried it and given it a fair shake. I've installed it for people in a few cases over the last few years and not one of them has turned back to windows. In fact they all use it and quite like it. One wished he had started using it sooner.

      Having said that, if you don't like.....whatever..... it matters not. Enjoy your Mac, Windows, or whatever your using. As long as there are options and choices I'll be happy. When we see a monopoly like Microsoft had a few years ago is when we get into trouble.

    288. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >(Does it "just work" on Windows? I honestly don't know, I haven't tried.)

      Actually, it doesn't. I get random BSOD's on resume, the new Windows 10 one with the frowny face that looks like this: :(

      I've troubleshooted the issue for weeks, reinstalled drivers, and done everything I can find online to fix it.

      My network card also takes close to five minutes to start, after either a cold boot, or a wakeup that actually worked.

      Windows 10 has quite a few bugs. I know it's Microsoft, but Windows 8 never gave me these kinds of problems. A lot of things that caused problems in Windows 7, "just worked" in Windows 8.

    289. Re: That was easy by i.kazmi · · Score: 1

      Hi, any chance one of those laptops was a HP envy with an insyde firmware? I've already tried swsusp, uswsusp and tuxonice along with trying various quirks modes and changes to various config files to no avail. The system always reports that it hibernated successfully but randomly throws a kernel oops on resume. It happens often enough that hibernation is unusable. I have kubuntu 15.04 with the 4.0.4 kernel. Any help/pointers will be appreciated

    290. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switch user and close the lid? That's what I do. No problem.

      This is a learned behavior. I shut down or sleep only when it goes with me.

    291. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget to turn off the mouse!

    292. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Commercial quality open source games? I'm sorry, but I gotta call bullshit on that.

    293. Re:That was easy by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Healthy as in popular titles are available on Linux and work without complaint. You don't have to find some obscure file on an FTP site somewhere, copy specific files off of the Windows DVD and then mess with weird X settings to get games working anymore. You just open up Steam and click "play".

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    294. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      Not sure if you're stupid or retarded. Let me break it down for you:

      • - I installed Linux Mint 16 1 year ago, I had troubles installing it. Let's move past that though.
      • - A few days ago, about 1 year after installation, all updates stopped working with an error 404. Does this not seem wrong to you? Do I really have to continue past this? No professional software should ever give 404 errors to a user, and it shouldn't even happen to begin with.
      • - As such, I need to make the updates work. Things I could do include: opening a sources file with a text editor, upgrading the OS, replacing the OS
      • - I opted to 'upgrade' the OS, because I don't want to have to re-install everything. Is that not unreasonable?

      Unlike most people on here, it seems, I have shit to do that doesn't involve having to deal with my OS every year. Thankfully with windows, I install it, and 6 years later it's STILL WORKING (I have not formatted my win7 desktop box in 6 years) and successfully getting updates, and when I buy a fancy new keyboard, "just works" with that too. Still don't get it?

    295. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      A good analogy, which is funny because my car is manual. Linux Mint offers no way to upgrade in the UI, at all. Showing 404 errors to a user is not acceptable either.

      It's not that I *can't* do it, obviously I did. But could my mother? The same person who's been using Windows 7, and Windows 8 successfully for years? She's never had to open a command line, a text editor to edit dist source files, and never had a problem outside of "where can I download this program."

      I'm simply trying to convey to those who love Linux why it's not being adopted among the non-tech community, but all I get back is "you're stupid", or "it works fine for me you're an idiot", or "that's how it is." I just find it amazing that everyone is okay with Linux' lack of intuitiveness *outside of the tools*, and lack of UI standardization.

    296. Re:That was easy by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Recent games though. The state of the game industry means that new AAA games are usually utter crap anyway.
      Just like Hollywood, there's a huge emphasis on graphics and voice acting rather than substance, a hard deadline which means ship it before it's ready, and too many sequels. These are games desgned to be played once, played for a week, then move on and dump your money into the next thing you hope will be good.

    297. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Works fine on Acer Apire 9410 using Linux Mint 17.2

      Anything else?

    298. Re:That was easy by dddux · · Score: 1

      Exactly. People should know that creating a separate /home partition is pretty essential if you want to retain your documents and program settings between OS upgrades, and upgrading every two years or so is highly recommendable anyway. I did it 3 times already on my Thinkpad, from Debian Squeeze, to Debian Wheezy, and recently to Debian Jessie. It left all my program settings and all the documents on the /home partition intact. So never install everything on one partition in Linux if you're planning to upgrade or change the OS later. You should at least have a separate /swap, /home, and the main OS partition.

      --
      "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
    299. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL! Neither Linux nor BSD are reverse engineered from UNIX, they are UNIX-like.

      This is why you use a Mac. You don't understand technology. Literacy doesn't seem to be your strong point either since you don't even understand the definitions of the word "lift".

    300. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steam?

    301. Re: That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you count every microcontroller and microprocessor-based project I have designed and built from scratch, it would number in the many dozens

      I love how vague you leave that with no proof. I'll interpret that to mean you slapped together a few simple breadboard timers and/or clocks. You know, the kind of stuff that many children have done.

      As WC Fields once said "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit."

    302. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol... don't know if this is meant to be funny or not. Do you have Windows 10? I love the random blue-screens when I dock and undock my Surface. Have run Linux on some of my machines since 1999 - NEVER had any suspend issues. For the guy above - the games suck though :-)

    303. Re:That was easy by Gob+Gob · · Score: 1

      Other than Linux failing to suspend and resume correctly on a laptop.

      Only happens to me on Windows on my dual boot laptop. I wonder if that makes this comment +4 Insightful too...

    304. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      So I'll ask about another make of PC in the same form factor class (10" detachables). Reports show that an Acer Aspire Switch is no better.

    305. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      The new laptops that I have considered this year (ASUS Transformer Book, Acer Aspire Switch) in the size range that I am considering (10") suspend correctly in Windows but have reports of epic failure in Ubuntu.

    306. Re:That was easy by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Then I would suggest you stop using windows because I have found it will never do it reliably. It is such a hit and miss thing, it becomes a real pain to use because a miss requires a reboot and even worse can be data destructive in it's failure, so really not a good idea. All it takes is one bad recovery from suspend and you can end up with real big problems.

      Of course, pretty neat job M$ PR=B$ units, shifting the discussion from M$ stealing customers bandwidth and running up quota limits and creating over charges for customers with caps on their internet to a discussion about Firefox and suspend. NO it is not appropriate for M$ to arbitrarily steal from customers in order to promote a product that people do not want, M$ Anal Probes 10.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    307. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Not sure if you're stupid or retarded. Let me break it down for you:

      Well, since yuou've descided to go with the insults, let me break it down for you.

      If you are having a metric ton of trouble, and others are not......

      You have the issue, not me, and not all all the others who don't have your issue.

      You aren't doing it correctly, that much is clear from your posts.

      You are using an obsolete version of Mint, and if you installed it a year ago, it was obsolete when you installed it. Are you likewise pissed off about no more updates for XP, or no direct seamless upgrade fom XP to Windows 10?

      Because that is exactly your complaint.

      Use a long term supported package, here's a list of them in mintland - http://www.linuxmint.com/oldre... along with the obsolete versions, of which yours is one.

      There might be a clue in all this for you, although I fear you won't take it.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    308. Re:That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      LOL! Neither Linux nor BSD are reverse engineered from UNIX, they are UNIX-like.

      This is why you use a Mac. You don't understand technology. Literacy doesn't seem to be your strong point either since you don't even understand the definitions of the word "lift".

      St. Linus says he was trying to emulate UNIX, or rather, minix. The definition of reverse-engineering is, in essence, to create something that emulates the operation of a prior thing, but without using the actual design documentation (I.e., source code in the case of software). Otherwise, it is simply plagiarism, or, in the case of copyrighted works, copyright infringement. Frankly, I don't know the copyright status of all the UNIX bits that are emulated in Linux; but at the very least, it Linux the very definition of "reverse engineering". Here's a pretty dispassionate discussion on the topic of Linux' heritage. It calls Linux a "UNIX Clone". In my book, that means it must've evolved primarily from either Frank plagiarism, or at the very least, reverse-engineering. Spin all you like; but that's the short and long of it.

      As far as "not understanding technology" just because I enjoy using Macs, it seems that I have to "defend myself" against this Slashtard meme on a semi-weekly basis; to the point where I have simply saved-off my by now "canned" response, to wit:

      I'm really getting tired of this /. meme. Perhaps I just need to publish my resume as part of my User Profile...

      Not to sound big-headed; but the short story is that I am an Embedded designer with almost 40 years of paid hardware and software development experience on a wide variety of microcontroller platforms, from 6502 to ARM9 Cortex (and many others in between), mostly in Assembly and C. Although I have done quite a wide range of applications, my forte and first love lies in real-time process control. So, to say that I have done more than my fair share of fiddle farting around would be an extreme understatement. Oh, and BTW, some of that Development, including software development, CAD for schematic capture and PCB development, some LabView stuff (BTW, LabView was for years a Mac-Only system), and other stuff was done on Macs.

      But, because the Embedded market has in recent years devolved into little else besides chasing contract work (which doesn't work well when you have a house and family to drag all over the country), I currently am employed doing Windows Application Development for a small local company. This also means that I do a fair bit of Windows Server admin stuff on pretty much a daily basis. Oh, and BTW, I am also a Certified SQL Server admin.

      So with all due respect, you don't know anything about my credentials. Now you do.

      Care to retract your fallacious and misinformed generalization regarding Mac Users?

      Oh, and does this also mean that the plethora of people who show up at hacker conferences sporting Mac laptops also "Don't understand technology?" Or are you going to claim that they don't count, just because they dual-boot a Linux Distro on their MacBooks?

      Oh, and as far as the definition of "lift" in this context? Essentially, it is a synonym for "steal". To take without permission. Much like Linux was "Lifted" from UNIX.

      As I said before, Apple "lifted" NOTHING from Linux, nor from any Open Source project. In fact, they have CONTRIBUTED quite a bit back to the F/OSS "Community". Would you like to see a list?

    309. Re: That was easy by macs4all · · Score: 1

      If you count every microcontroller and microprocessor-based project I have designed and built from scratch, it would number in the many dozens

      I love how vague you leave that with no proof. I'll interpret that to mean you slapped together a few simple breadboard timers and/or clocks. You know, the kind of stuff that many children have done.

      As WC Fields once said "If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit."

      I am just getting tired of having to "defend" against this bullshit; to the point that I saved off my by now "canned" reply, to wit:

      I'm really getting tired of this /. meme. Perhaps I just need to publish my resume (which, unabridged, runs about 7 pages) as part of my User Profile...

      Not to sound big-headed; but the short story is that I am an Embedded designer with almost 40 years of paid hardware and software development experience on a wide variety of microcontroller platforms, from 6502 to ARM9 Cortex (and many others in between), mostly in Assembly and C. Although I have done quite a wide range of applications, my forte and first love lies in real-time process control. So, to say that I have done more than my fair share of fiddle farting around would be an extreme understatement. Oh, and BTW, some of that Development, including software development, CAD for schematic capture and PCB development, some LabView stuff (BTW, LabView was for years a Mac-Only system), and other stuff was done on Macs.

      But, because the Embedded market has in recent years devolved into little else besides chasing short-term contract work (which doesn't work well when you have a house, and family to drag all over the country), I currently am employed doing Windows Application Development for a small local company. This also means that I do a fair bit of Windows Server admin stuff on pretty much a daily basis. Oh, and BTW, I am also a Certified SQL Server admin.

      So with all due respect, you don't know anything about my credentials. Now you do.

    310. Re:That was easy by kmoser · · Score: 1

      I've almost never had Windows resume correctly on any machine. It always screws something up, requiring a reboot. Either the sound no longer works, or it doesn't recognize some other peripheral, or something like that.

    311. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      So when I installed Mint 16, by going to their page and getting it, I did it wrong? Good one. I don't really care, windows won, and now nobody because its all mobile. Linux has its uses, but not on a regular person's desktop.

    312. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      So when I installed Mint 16, by going to their page and getting it, I did it wrong? Good one. I don't really care, windows won, and now nobody because its all mobile. Linux has its uses, but not on a regular person's desktop.

      Download an obsolete version then bitch about it. Then bitch about not getting updates for an obsolete product.

      Hey, no problem fellow. Your level of competence in computing is simply awesome. Yahoo comment boards might be a good place to work with your peers.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    313. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That link shows that it works. Did you read the whole thread?

    314. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's based on Debian and uses a completely different, specially made for Mint desktop environment.

    315. Re:That was easy by discowriter · · Score: 1

      No, he'll be on Linux. This kind of crap is going too far and Microsoft comes across as a huge hypocrite after criticizing Google. Linux actually has plenty of games on it and the developers themselves will get sick of this garbage and be even more open to Linux and getting it more support ~ the kind of support Apple and Microsoft refuse to give it because it goes against profitability for them. Like totally open standards that don't trap anyone. Programs and formats that work across platforms with zero obligation ~ are platform agnostic. Microsoft has pushed too hard, and although this might not be the last thing they get away with, it is noticed by all the informed people who actually make informed decisions about computers. To everyone else, it might as well be more malware, and those are the kind of dots Microsoft is connecting here. They're the disease-infested and doing this they're indulging the role even further. I don't think it will take a few years. The hardware is already there for great computers but Microsoft has done decidedly little to improve technology or computing lately. Linux is a step up and will improve dramatically should they become popular. Because while hardware manufacturers can write open source drivers, Microsoft's existence wholly depends on being able to sell software ~ not their hardware. Microsoft is skeezy that way, and their neediness is coming out the worst now that there are so many better options. Instead of increasing interest, they've made all their competitors look more trustworthy. Microsoft is showing its true colours for everyone in the world to see. Linux is just waiting there, slowly but surely improving. And when average, uninitiated people get used to it, nothing Microsoft does can ever turn them back. Ever. Microsoft doesn't know how to make truly great software so much as better-looking and easier software, specifically because people are used to it and have already invested so much of their habits, experience, and education into it.

    316. Re:That was easy by tepples · · Score: 1

      The instructions on the last page link to this gist that states that you still need to compile your own GRUB to boot, compile your own kernel to get the keyboard working, and buy and connect a supported USB NIC in order to install Git and the driver for the built-in WLAN adapter.

    317. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could jump now to Linux, especially if you had been purchasing from Steam with an eye towards titles that are cross-platform. A lot of the newer games are being built on top of cross-platform game engines, which means they'll run on Linux/Win/OSX.

      I've jumped ship this week to Linux Mint, with Steam for Linux installed. About half my games are cross-platform. Some of the rest will run in WINE. Some I'll be able to run inside a Win7 VM. For the remainder, well, maybe I keep Win7 installed in a dual-boot configuration.

    318. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can revert back to your previous windows, but only within 30 days... I'd suggest you do that asap on that gx960. it's under settings->recovery.

      if you have win10 upgrade activated, you've got a win10 license locked to the system and you can do a clean install later on without issue. (make the dvd or usb drive before you revert so you don't have to upgrade again then clean install).

      microsoft conveniently deletes the uninstall data after 30 days. they must believe that anyone that sticks with the pile of shit that is windows 10 for that long won't want to go back.

      You will be much better off waiting a year till the Windows 10 bugs are worked out.

      they will never get the issues fixed in windows 10. if you have a working windows 7 or 8.1 system, KEEP IT THERE. you've got until 2020 for windows 7 and 2023 for windows 8/8.1. most systems in use today with the previous but still supported versions will be replaced before their windows goes end-of-life.

      if you're unsure.. make a good hd images of everything, system/recovery/diag/uefi partitions.. all of them... make recovery disks, back up data... upgrade to 10 now.. let it activate.. then restore back to that hd image. that way you've got the 10 license activated for the system but you don't need to use it unless and until the current windows gets obsoleted by microsoft.

      if you buy a new system, get 7 or 8.1 on it and do the above... the ones we've been buying are 8.1 pro (install media provided) with preinstalled downgrade to 7 pro (can make recovery media for that too).

    319. Re:That was easy by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --I got tired of Linux Mint's seeming inability to do a proper upgrade as well, and switched to XUbuntu 14.04-LTS after the last go-round of not being able to do an apt-get upgrade anymore on Mint. Much happier now, you might want to give it a try. :-)

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    320. Re:That was easy by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      Personally, I plan to make my Win7 install locked down from the internet with a small whitelist of sites it can access. Like steampowered.com, skyrim nexus, and basically only sites required for my games to work. Notice how no Microsoft sites were not mentioned.

    321. Re:That was easy by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

      Yes but you are looking at it from the point of view of the user. I'm suggesting the publishers need to be motivated to do this and a fraction of the 1.5% of PC users may not be enough UNLESS we see something like the steambox pickup.

    322. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      Linux Mint 16 was obsolete early last year? It was released on November 13, 2013 (http://www.tecmint.com/linux-mint-16-installation-guide/). I have no idea what your point is. I installed it last year, then this year (1 year later) updates didn't work. I don't know any other OS which no longer supports updates after 1 year, let alone shows a '404' when this (if it ever) occurred. Do you still not get it? I don't know how else I can explain this to you. It's like talking to a 5 year old child who thinks he knows everything, except I assume (hope) you're older than that.

    323. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Linux Mint 16 was obsolete early last year? It was released on November 13, 2013 (http://www.tecmint.com/linux-mint-16-installation-guide/). I have no idea what your point is. I installed it last year, then this year (1 year later) updates didn't work. I don't know any other OS which no longer supports updates after 1 year, let alone shows a '404' when this (if it ever) occurred. Do you still not get it? I don't know how else I can explain this to you. It's like talking to a 5 year old child who thinks he knows everything, except I assume (hope) you're older than that.

      It's really kind of pathetic, but you just do not take telling, and you are so damn dense that a person that takes the time to educate you, gets nothing but abuse.

      Thes are the supported versions of Linux Mint:

      http://www.linuxmint.com/downl...

      That would be 2, 13, 17, 17.1, and 17.2

      Not that Linux Mint 16 is not on that web page

      Now go here:

      http://www.linuxmint.com/oldre...

      Linux Mint 16, code name Petra, package base Ubuntu Saucy, has been officially obsolete since July 2014. Says so right on the Linux Mint website. Go tell them it is still supported.

      Anyhow If you can't rake any telling, far be it from me to educate you. I hope you are just a troll. TTFN

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    324. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is sad considering you can boot on windows 10 in less than 10 second without hibernate

    325. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      games are only unproductive when you play alone, if you play them with your wife/kids it is so much better than watching TV

    326. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My daily driver is a 15 inch Retina MacBook Pro - this is what I use in the office and what I use when I am mobile. I have a Windows 8.1 home desktop (it's a Core i7 Nehalem) - the upgrade to Windows 8.1 was by accident - I accidentally started the installation when that upgrade popup seized control of my keyboard input and I couldn't figure out how to back out of it. I have been using the Mac more and more at home to the point where Windows usage is about 15% of my screen time. There is one application that I need to run on Windows: QuoteTracker or Medved Trader (the latter is the new version of the former but it's still in Beta). I'll keep a Windows 7 or 8.1 or XP system around to run that - or if I have time to set it up, run it on Linux or Mac OS X under Wine. I do most of my development work on Linux so no stranger to the OS. Mac sales continue to grow, even while PC sales are contracting so I imagine that lots of people are moving away from Microsoft.

    327. Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just jump to mac, it has a ton of games now

    328. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      Take a telling? Is that English? If they don't support it, why was it the link I was brought to from their own home page a year ago? You can use the wayback machine to see it. I stand by everything I've said, and I've noticed you continue to dodge the fact that showing a end-user 404 errors when trying to update is wrong. Why didn't it just tell me exactly what you said?

    329. Re:That was easy by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Take a telling? Is that English?

      Its a colloquialism.

      Long version is I'm "telling" you something that either through stubbornness, or inability to grasp what I'm telling you, you simply refuse to accept it.

      If they don't support it, why was it the link I was brought to from their own home page a year ago?

      You can still download Linux Mint1.0 beta.You can download every version of Linux Mint. The Linux world is not Windows - pretty much any version of any flavor of Linux is still available, including Mint 16. And Mint 16 isn't a Long Term Support (LTS) release now. http://www.linuxmint.com/oldre... shows us that the oldest LTS version is Mint 13, supportted until April 2017 - Next up is the Mint 17 and 17.x series, supported until April 2019

      There is also an LTS version names "Betsy", but that's oriented toward experienced and "adventurous" users. I'm no certain I'd recommend it to anyone personally except for experimenters.

      You can use the wayback machine to see it. I stand by everything I've said, and I've noticed you continue to dodge the fact that showing a end-user 404 errors when trying to update is wrong. Why didn't it just tell me exactly what you said?

      I don't even care why you got 404 errors. It's not dodging your question, its pointless. its just another symptom that there were no longer updates available for Mint 16. And that's just how it works.

      If I were to analyze what happened to you, I'd say you downloaded a package that was nearly obsolete at the time you downloaded it. That's no crime. If you aren't familiar with the Linux ecosystem, it can happen.

      But your reaction is all wrong. Instead of allowing that you might have made a mistake, you've decided to indict the whole ecosystem rather than say "Oops!

      All I'm saying is that your complaints are all due to being pissed about downloading an obsolete - or nearly obsolete - system, and expecting it to be supported after it is obsolete. Myself and a whole lot of other people don't have that problem. Why? Because we are using supported versions. And when 17 goes obsolete in 2019, we'll just move on to another supported version - what we won't do is complain about no updates any longer for 17.

      Because your problem is only a problem for you, and your expectation of support for an obsolete package, and insisting that you were somehow misled.

      But to accept any of that, you would have to take some telling.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    330. Re:That was easy by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      My reaction is that I went to the page and clicked 'download', posted several times about all the issues I had, and finally was told the reason (thank you, you are right). And, instead of getting a message that this happened, I get an awful message. Furthermore, 'upgrading' isn't really possible the way I would want it to be (like it is on OSX and Windows).

      Lastly, I've never, ever gotten a version of Windows or OSX that expired within a year and gave cryptic messages when trying to update, and also been unable to directly upgrade it.

      All of these issues combined, in addition to the community often being sarcastic towards me, has indeed made me very angry about "Linux" as a whole.

    331. Re:That was easy by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      Hibernating used to work on my i3 laptop with Linux Mint 17.1 KDE edition but stopped doing after an update. Didn't notice right away, I usually just use sleep.

    332. Re:That was easy by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      Sleep works correctly... close the lid and your laptop's state will be saved till the battery runs out 10 hours later.

    333. Re:That was easy by BootNinja · · Score: 1

      how is this any worse than "Something happened"? lack of useful error messages has historically been a hallmark of windows.

  2. Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Haven't they already backported all their spyware to 7 and 8 and forced it down users' throats as "critical security updates?"

    1. Re:Why do they need to? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Someone had a list of KBs to uninstall to get rid of the spyware.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't need to. They want to. So they did it. Why? At this point, who gives a damn?

      In Roman times, Cato the Elder would end his speeches with 'Carthago delenda est' (Carthage must be destroyed), even speeches without any relation to the issue of Carthage or the Roman wars with that city.

      I think it's time that posts be ended with the phrase 'Microsoft delenda est'.

      Just an idea.

      Microsoft delenda est.

    3. Re: Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 of the 4 KBs are not be displayed :P so it is impossible to uninstall them...

    4. Re: Why do they need to? by monkeyzoo · · Score: 4, Informative

      2 of the 4 KBs are not be displayed :P so it is impossible to uninstall them...

      Can anyone provide more info on this?
      Is it true? The list of KBs I know to avoid are:

      KB3022345 - Created a new Windows service called the Diagnostics Tracking service. (RETRACTED)
      KB3068708 - Update to 3022345.
      KB3075249 - Enhanced the User Account Control (UAC) feature to enable it to collect more information from the elevation prompts.
      KB3080149 - Update to 3022345/3068708.

      But it's true I tried to uninstall them and only saw 2 to uninstall and hide. I thought however that it was because some were updates/replacements of previous ones.

    5. Re: Why do they need to? by monkeyzoo · · Score: 2

      Correction: It seems I did manage to uninstall and hide 3 of the above, except KB3022345, which was "retracted," so maybe that's why?

    6. Re: Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Cetero censeo Carthaginem delendam esse

      ftfy

    7. Re:Why do they need to? by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

      Pretty much. They've also more or less completely rebuilt Windows Update on Win7 and Vista machines. The new version of Windows Update is doing all kinds of new activities, some of which includes nasty telemetry stuff, all of which involves a huge amount of hard drive churn every time you boot up. If you have an SSD, it should get through this in a couple of minutes. Users with mechanical drives have been reporting up to 40 minutes of constant disk churn in some cases (and reports of BSODs for some users during this process as well).

    8. Re: Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 of the 4 KBs are not be displayed :P so it is impossible to uninstall them...

      Can anyone provide more info on this?
      Is it true? The list of KBs I know to avoid are:

      KB3022345 - Created a new Windows service called the Diagnostics Tracking service. (RETRACTED)
      KB3068708 - Update to 3022345.
      KB3075249 - Enhanced the User Account Control (UAC) feature to enable it to collect more information from the elevation prompts.
      KB3080149 - Update to 3022345/3068708.

      But it's true I tried to uninstall them and only saw 2 to uninstall and hide. I thought however that it was because some were updates/replacements of previous ones.

      You forgot KB3083324.

    9. Re:Why do they need to? by Badooleoo · · Score: 1

      Just run a batch file

      https://github.com/WindowsLies...

    10. Re:Why do they need to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is funny, how MS is able to backport all the customer annoyances to older Windows versions, but leave the benefits (DirectX) to newer ones because of technical obstacles. Do they really think that pissing off a existing customer is a best way to get more money out of them?

    11. Re: Why do they need to? by Trax3001BBS · · Score: 1

      2 of the 4 KBs are not be displayed :P so it is impossible to uninstall them...

      Can anyone provide more info on this?
      Is it true? The list of KBs I know to avoid are:

      KB3022345 - Created a new Windows service called the Diagnostics Tracking service. (RETRACTED)
      KB3068708 - Update to 3022345.
      KB3075249 - Enhanced the User Account Control (UAC) feature to enable it to collect more information from the elevation prompts.
      KB3080149 - Update to 3022345/3068708.

      But it's true I tried to uninstall them and only saw 2 to uninstall and hide. I thought however that it was because some were updates/replacements of previous ones.

      KB3035583 this came out Apr 4th 2015 and when I blocked updates, it's a persistent update as you can't hide it. Can be found at Windows/System32/GWX, the information it gathered can't as it left 24 hours after it's install, unless you have a decent HOSTS file as I did.

  3. Arrogance? by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is way beyond arrogance, this is tantamount to installing malware on my computer. So now I have to go through all my windows machines checking and uninstalling "patches" for... ever?

    1. Re:Arrogance? by red+crab · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's just tantamount to installing an upgraded version of malware that is already running on your system. Not that bad.

    2. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So now I have to go through all my windows machines checking and uninstalling "patches" for... ever?

      Turn off windows update service and don't care? You can do that in 7 in less actions than it takes to get first time to BIOS on a laptop with pre-installed 8.1 nowadays.

    3. Re:Arrogance? by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good luck figuring out which ones are safe to install.

      Microsoft has promoted them to the point where they show as "Important" and claim to be for the stability of the OS. Unless you literally check every patch on the web to figure out if it isn't related to Windows 10 it's almost impossible.

      They're going to shove this turd up people's asses no matter what it takes.

      Apparently this is how Microsoft envisions the future ... sending a big "fuck you" to their customers and telling them they don't have a choice in how Microsoft runs things, and are re-defining who actually owns the machine.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    4. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Can you tell me how much the Microsoft astroturf team is paying per post these days?

    5. Re:Arrogance? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What about the people with full hard drives? I don't want to get warning messages about HD space, just because MS DLd a big OS on my old and rather full HD without my permission.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    6. Re:Arrogance? by LVSlushdat · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you're already using 7 or 8/8.1, you're getting the same "telemetry" crap shoved down your throat, unless you take the time to research and remove those "updates" doing this bullshit, and THEN you have to trust MS to NOT put them back despite your removal/hiding them.. "Trust" and "Microsoft" are two words that have NO business together.. And if you think *this* is "way beyond arrogance" wait till you actually RUN Windows 10.. To defang/castrate it from all of the spyware "features", you have to visit regedit, gpedit.msc, to disable/remove this sewage.. Even after alledgedly disabling some of the worst of the lot, namely Cortana, you *still* have a Cortana process running, that cannot be killed... I'm a retired Windows support tech/network admin who retired in 2010, and moved all of my home systems to Linux in 2011. I've installed/tested Windows 10 on a spare "burner" machine simply to be familiar with it when friends/neighbors ask me about it or want me to help them with it, when it inevitably pukes its guts.. I used/supported Windows from Windows 3.11 (1991) to XP/Windows 7 (2010) and I'm DONE with any Microsoft product and thats my advice to anyone who asks.. Those who continue to use Windows are now members of the largest botnet in history. sending ALL of your business to Microsoft... I might as well go ahead and say it "FUCK YOU MICROSOFT!"

      --
      THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
    7. Re:Arrogance? by LVSlushdat · · Score: 1

      Really.. There is sure a LOT of Astroturf around these parts.... MS always did have a lot of shills...

      --
      THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
    8. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's worse than that. Microsoft has also decided that they're going to stop posting details about patches. Check out the patch notes for Windows 10 updates (like KB3081452) and all you'll get, and I'm quoting verbatim for that update, is:

      August 27, 2015, compatibility update for upgrading to Windows 10

      Summary
      This update makes improvements to ease the upgrade experience to Windows 10.

      What does that mean? Not a clue. But that's the entirety of the upgrade notes. Everything else is instructions on installing the patch. What does it fix? Does it add new "telemetrics?" Does it fix any bugs? Microsoft won't say!

      Windows 10 is without a doubt the worst version of Windows since Windows ME. If you thought Windows 8 was bad, just wait until you try Windows 10! Explorer locks up constantly, breaking the Start menu and the desktop. The Nvidia drivers are the most unstable thing ever, and have only recently been fixed to the point where they just get restarted constantly rather than hard-locking the OS constantly. The Start menu search is now broken and finds a random subset of the installed programs. Cortana search will "find" documents on your computer ... but then not provide any way to open them. Windows 10 "tablet" mode provides no method of opening the software keyboard while "desktop" mode does.

      Windows 10 is just completely, hilariously broken, to the point that Windows 8 seems amazing by comparison.

    9. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And that unwanted forced Win10 download sucks up how much of my bandwidth cap?

    10. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      You joke, but people actually found out about this because Windows Defender quarrantined the download as malware. :D

    11. Re:Arrogance? by ericloewe · · Score: 2

      Funny how nobody complains if a tablet, phone or console demands an OS update to continue functioning (unless significant features are removed), but if it's Windows, it's "malware"...

      You want to complain about the automatic download? Fine, that is stupid. I was also surprised by the aggressiveness with which Windows 10 was pushed - I ended up accidentally upgrading sooner than I wanted when I thought I was just "reserving" the update.

    12. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...shove this turd up people's asses...

      I'm not one to judge what people do in the bathroom, but I think you might have this backwards.

    13. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your hdd has 10 GB of free space, you're doing something wrong.

      I have more than ten times that free on my phone for fuck's sake

      of all the reasons why this is an annoyance, you went for "it takes space on my hdd" ?

    14. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes an update that spies on you, throws ads at you and blocks your ability to control the system. That is the very definition of malware.

      In fact, Windows 10 is such malware that even the makers of Spybot have classified it as such and have released software to defeat all of that crap.

    15. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Android devices don't download newer version of Android unless I specifically tell it to. They also don't download nagware that annoys you to update. They are also purely consumption devices, which means they aren't nearly as important to keep locked down and stable as my PC.

      Also, because someone else does something unethical isn't an excuse.

    16. Re:Arrogance? by gstoddart · · Score: 0

      Check out the patch notes for Windows 10 updates (like KB3081452 [microsoft.com]) and all you'll get, and I'm quoting verbatim for that update, is:

      Just as annoying .. the page doesn't work without Javascript, needs me to allow onestore.ms to load content and run scripts, let gfx.ms run scripts ... in other words, they've got a terribly written website which seems to expect I'm going to trust an entire fucking TLD, and which will eventually probably need a Microsoft sign-in to see anything.
      Windows 10 is just completely, hilariously broken, to the point that Windows 8 seems amazing by comparison.

      Windows 8.1 on a desktop with Classic Shell installed so it looks like Windows always did, and with all the apps, their store, the Metro interface and all of the other crap disabled ... and it's a fine OS.

      But all of the garbage Microsoft is putting in to copy things everyone else has done ... complete garbage.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    17. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I complained when the Xboc 360 switched from the blade UI to the crappy live tiles with adds. I know many others complained as well. Phones OS upgrades at least with android actually provide new and useful features, and Tablets? if its running Android or iOS its the same as a phone OS upgrade. if its a windows tablet, e.g. Surface, well your getting upgraded if you like it or not to windows 10.

      Microsoft needs to go back to making usable software, before they end up down the drain they are circling.

    18. Re:Arrogance? by sconeu · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nope. I ALWAYS disable that customer experience crap, and I got offered two of the three telemetry updates last time I ran Windows Update.

      Fortunately, I knew enough to not accept them, and to mark them as "hidden".

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    19. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Please, go easy on Microsoft! I am a stockholder...!

    20. Re:Arrogance? by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      of all the reasons why this is an annoyance, you went for "it takes space on my hdd" ?

      Um, my Windows box has a 120GB SSD for the boot drive. I do not want Windows 10 on that machine. I sure as hell do not want it wasting 10% of the space on that SSD.

      Nor, for that matter, do I want it hogging the network sucking down a 10GB file in the first place.

      This just proves that Microsoft has gone batshit crazy.

    21. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. I have always had CEIP disabled and still had to purge several spyware updates.

      You don't have a fucking clue what you are talking about, kid.

    22. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No worries, if your experience is like mine you won't get any warnings! I am pretty sure this is why my computer crapped out yesterday. I had about 2.5GB storage remaining and stuff started going all shitty yesterday morning. System crashed and wouldn't boot up. sfc failed, startup repair failed, everything went to crap. chkdsk is fine, all my data copied to a backup fine and the computer is running without any problem from a live thumb drive -- wifi and everything. I am reinstalling because no repair tools could recover the system and I need some advanced excel macro crap for work, but I can't wait to drop windows completely.

    23. Re:Arrogance? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There's nothing crazy about it. MS can abuse its users however it wants, and they'll keep coming back for more. Just look at all the posts above ridiculing the idea of moving to Linux.

      MS could push a required update which grabs users' private photos and posts them on a public website for the world to see and people wouldn't stop using Windows. They could openly push an update which grabs users' login credentials and any financial information it can find and then sell this info, publicly, to Russian hackers and people would continue to use Windows. Nothing will convince people to abandon Windows, nothing.

    24. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Less than that porn flick you watched last night. Skip a day and rub it out tomorrow and you'll be even again.

    25. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point; MS tries really hard to hide the content of each update nowadays. On XP one would see a short description of a update with one click. On W8.x the first two clicks will just get into generic template page claiming that "the patch fixes a issue with windows." And only after few clicks more there is something more information what kind of spyware or DRM it contains this time. But MS will get what it orders, a customer can be screwed only a few times until it becomes former customer.

    26. Re: Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like at least one group within Microsoft is doing the right thing.

    27. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My HP Stream 7 toy tablet has less than 10GB of free SSD. If MS pushes a stealth W10 update package for it and renders the machine unusable, it will be returned to shop just to piss back to the MS. The management at big companies really should try to think what the world looks outside of their jet set mansions.

    28. Re:Arrogance? by tom229 · · Score: 1

      Windows 10 is already spyware. Nothing is free.

      --
      If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
    29. Re:Arrogance? by tom229 · · Score: 1

      Also this.

      --
      If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
    30. Re:Arrogance? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      All the updates seem to have the same titles too. "Important update to Windows 64-bit systems" or "Important driver update to Windows 64-bit systems", or stuff like that (I can't check actual titles at work without having internet explorer). This is how the stealth update for the Windows 10 advertisement/malware showed up on everyone's computer, which required that you learn the actual update number so that you could disable it.

    31. Re:Arrogance? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Well, Windows 8 wasn't that bad for me, and 8.1 was better. The big flaws were the stupid metro interface and removal of a usable start menu; the smaller flaws are just dumb microsoft things you find in every release. As far as desktop goes though, it's crashed much less then Windows 7 for me, takes up less memory, has some improved apps, and doesn't have that windows 7 glossy look.

    32. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My phone warns me about downloading updates that are only a few MB in size. WIndows downloads an entire new OS to my disk, "just in case".

      Hell on my rooted S4 I avoided updates for over a year. It would ask me in the morning, and I would hit no. Ask me the next day, and no. It did no downloading behind my back.

    33. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite likely this will backfire to MS soon. Windows was losing the game to viruses until XP came out and easy OS updates would block security holes pretty fast. But since the MS started pushing malware and spyware into people's machines via windows updates, more and more people will actively try to block the updates. And quite soon the non-Microsoft-malware will start emerging in large scale again.

    34. Re:Arrogance? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I've never had a phone demand an update to continue functioning. They ask to update, and I get the opportunity to say yes or no, and even if I say no they continue to work.

    35. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My policy is now to stop updating Windows 7 with anything other than "Security Updates".

      The added advantage of this is I find the winsxs folder stays at a sane size.

    36. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that on Win7/8 for the time being you can uninstall the hide these telemetry updates. Whereas on Win10, even if you disable all of the privacy invasion features, it still phones home completely disregarding your choices.

    37. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PS: In case it wasn't clear, I turn off all automatic updating and downloading. I then check the updates every month and only install those labelled as "Security Updates". Everything else can be completely ignored.

    38. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... telling them they don't have a choice in how Microsoft runs things, and are re-defining who actually owns the machine.

      You mean, just like Apple? :)

    39. Re:Arrogance? by Bathroom+Humor · · Score: 1

      I have Windows 10. I like it (aside from the privacy violations and horrible lack of settings).
      How do i disable and remove the worst of this cruft? I have turned off the Windows Update service (I can turn it on manually if I want to check). Is there a website that can describe the process for me?

    40. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Good luck figuring out which ones are safe to install.

      Microsoft has promoted them to the point where they show as "Important" and claim to be for the stability of the OS. Unless you literally check every patch on the web to figure out if it isn't related to Windows 10 it's almost impossible.

      They're going to shove this turd up people's asses no matter what it takes.

      Apparently this is how Microsoft envisions the future ... sending a big "fuck you" to their customers and telling them they don't have a choice in how Microsoft runs things, and are re-defining who actually owns the machine.

      100% Exactly correct.

      http://www.technobuffalo.com/2013/08/22/nsa-windows-8-exploit/
      http://www.technobuffalo.com/2013/07/11/microsoft-gave-the-nsa-direct-backdoor-access-to-outlook-skype/
      http://winsupersite.com/windows-10/how-stop-windows-10-upgrade-downloading-your-system
      http://www.extremetech.com/computing/195592-with-windows-10-microsoft-could-move-to-a-subscription-based-model
      http://www.extremetech.com/computing/205320-microsoft-windows-10-will-be-the-last-version-of-windows
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GU5uv28a3I
      http://techrights.org/2015/07/31/vista-10-anticompetitive/
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwRYyWn7BEo
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gghj03J_ri0
      http://localghost.org/posts/a-traffic-analysis-of-windows-10
      http://www.ghacks.net/2015/08/28/microsoft-intensifies-data-collection-on-windows-7-and-8-systems/

      THIS.
      https://gitlab.com/windowslies/blockwindows

      Use the hosts file. If you want to update anything (you probably never will want to again) just rename it to hosts_disable while you check each and every KB update Microsoft wants to push on you. Anything you don't absolutely know you need... hide it and forget about it forever. When you're done rename hosts_disable back to hosts ... enjoy your life. The internet is safer than Microsoft's OS now.

      Basically imho turn off your automatic updates.. but they probably already installed their keystroke logging garbage 2 days ago on "patch Tuesday". Anybody whose been too busy or just aren't savvy enough to what's going on in the world... You just got robbed. You've been had. You're the new global botnet. You were treated like the Microsoft sheep you are.

      Check all KB's before installing, you probably won't need any updates in the future if you are on 7/8/8.1 if you only use Windows for trusted sites and games. You shouldn't use Windows for anything but games at this point, and even that's a risk.

      Linux. distrowatch.com
      Use Oracle Virtual Box virtual machines, or multi-boot it. Simple, fast, free, fun, and more secure even by default. You can lock Linux down including read-only encrypted boot media.

      If you never noticed before there is "Secure Boot" in your UEFI. It is a Microsoft lie. You will need to disable it and enable "Legacy Boot" instead. Microsoft tried to block installing other operating systems, esp. Linux, while claiming it was to prevent malicious code from infecting your firmware or boot sectors. Nah. They lied. There is nothing secure about "Secure Boot". To install Linux on a newer machine you will have probably have to simply disable that dickmove setting in BIOS/UEFI. If you are going to use Linux in virtual machines look for youtube videos. It is easy. Basically just disable hyper-v and enable vt-x extensions and you're good to go. Read the Virtual Box install how-to's or watch the videos, including Guest Additions section.

    41. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing Nvidia owns the drivers and not Microsoft, becuase that would make your point almost valid. I've been running 10 now since day 1, and I've not ever seen explorer crash. Are you sure your hardware is ok?

    42. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has been proven that those updates are SOLELY for people who enabled Customer Experience Improvement Program, which is opt-in, and thus means they had asked Microsoft to collect their data in the first place.

      After you uninstall KB3021917 [microsoft.com], KB3035583 [microsoft.com] and KB3022345 [microsoft.com], you also need to disable two tasks in Task Scheduler. There are two tasks under TaskScheduler > Task Scheduler Library > Microsoft > Windows > Application Experience, "Microsoft Compatibility Appraiser" and "ProgramDataUpdater", that will continue to contact telemetry servers even if telemetry is disabled. These tasks run and phone home even if CEIP is opted-out of. Reproduce (on Win7 Pro) by:

      1) Opt out of CEIP.
      2) Remove patches 3021917, 3035583, and 3022345.
      3) Set up your IDS to block/report rundll32.exe overnight, and observe logs.
      4) Wait a day or two. You will see (failed, if you've blocked rundll32.exe from talking to the interwebs) DNS lookups to settings.data.microsoft.com and telecommand.telemetry.microsoft.com in both the IDS and in the Event Log.

      The two scheduled tasks will continue phone home even if the above mentioned patches are uninstalled. You must manually disable the tasks "Microsoft Compatibility Appraiser" and "ProgramDataUpdater" in order to stop the phoning-home behavior.

      BULLSHIT. This misbehavior has been documented since July, if not earlier.

    43. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget to disable everything in TaskScheduler > Task Scheduler Library > Microsoft > Windows > Customer Experience Improvement Program. I found that shit running even though I have never had CEIP enabled.

    44. Re:Arrogance? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      So the every other version still holds:
      NT 3.1 - Toy version so it don't really count.
      NT 3.51 - Meh, but not many suffered from it.
      NT 4 -OK
      2000 - Meh. (not really bad, but not really good either)
      XP - OK
      Vista - Bad like a bitch on PMS.
      7 - OK
      8 - Bad like a bad LSD trip.
      8.1 - OK
      10 - Bad because it rapes your integrity.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    45. Re:Arrogance? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      "Proven"???

      I have never admitted any permission to such a feature.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    46. Re:Arrogance? by Arterion · · Score: 1

      Actually, upgrading to Windows 10 should free up disk space. A full install of Windows 10 takes up less disk space than Windows 8.1. It also eliminates the need for a recovery partition.

      http://arstechnica.com/informa...

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    47. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this even legally allowed? Why is the EU/US not stopping this absolute abuse of power?

      MS could have become something fantastic after Balmer left. All this data havesting is just ruining peoples trust in their products.. What is next SQL Server data being sent to MS? Active Directory information being sent to MS?

      This is totally invasive and needs to be stopped - they are abusing their monopoly again.

    48. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite, son.

      Windows 1.x - crap
      Windows 2.x - crap
      Windows 3.x - crap
      Windows NT 3.x - crap
      Windows 9x/Me - crap
      Windows NT 4.x - good
      Windows 2000 - good
      Windows XP - crap
      Windows Server 2003 - crap
      Windows Vista/7 - good
      Windows Server 2008/2011 - good
      Windows 8.x - good
      Windows Server 2012 - good
      Windows 10 - the worst OS ever made

    49. Re:Arrogance? by hucker75 · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't you want the latest windows? I have no problem with this at all.

    50. Re:Arrogance? by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      They may not demand it explicitly, but yearly API changes that are not backported to older versions have nearly the same effect.

    51. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We playin hide and seek now.

      http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=8000075&cid=50511399

    52. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is way beyond arrogance, this is tantamount to installing malware on my computer. So now I have to go through all my windows machines checking and uninstalling "patches" for... ever?

      Yep. They fucked you. It is a huge waste of time and not something you can ignore. Being that I pay attention... I don't have this problem. Nearly every time I've posted links on how to block the download, how to revert back, and how to prevent the snooping... it's been modded -1 on Slashdot.

      Here, have this comment.
      http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=8000075&cid=50511399

      And this one.
      http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=7995871&cid=50507007

      See the nice -1's on both? If you have mod points see if they stick.

      What you said...

      this is tantamount to installing malware on my computer

      is essentially what Richard Stallman said here. https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/malware-microsoft.html

    53. Re:Arrogance? by martinfb · · Score: 1

      Agreed! Think about it: the 800-pound gorilla that is Microsoft is doing the same social engineering that hackers do. Mind you, the intent is not necessarily malicious, yet it IS intended to keep you HOOKED to the Microsoft model, with obvious plans to ultimately guarantee them your dollars, at least down the short road. Mind you, still, Microsoft is a business, and that means they should make money. How much and when SHOULD be a bit predictable by the consumer. It sucks being strapped into purchases that tax one's budget. And THAT is what the unethical part seems to be!

      --


      Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
    54. Re:Arrogance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      strange, thats very similar way how I got to Linux :)
      only seen from developer point of view who could not stand wasting 50%+ time on circumventing undocumented win32 API bugs

  4. You *will* upgrade! by GeekWithAKnife · · Score: 2, Funny


    These are not the upgrades you were looking for.

    Nothing to see here.

    Move along.

    --
    A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
  5. Waiting for it to update without prompting by mark-t · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If this is running as part of regular Windows Update, I'm curious to know whether or not this is going to just start installing the update to windows 10 without asking the user at some point.

    That will be *VERY* interesting....

    1. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by denis-The-menace · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They've installed stealth updates before.
      They are arrogant enough.
      Why not?

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    2. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or maybe Microsoft is going to prompt to update, but they want the update to be instantaneous. They hope that users will click "yes" by mistake, and if the update is prefetched there's no opportunity for users to click "cancel" on the progress bar.

    3. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Barsteward · · Score: 2

      Every time there was an update, the Window 10 update was also automatically ticked. I've been unticking before the installs take place but now i cannot remove the tick so i log off and close the lid so it doesn't update. I wonder when they'll stop me doing that.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    4. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by houghi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why not? Because they will be punished. Oh, wait. They won't. Fined? Nope. Loosing more customers than they gain? Nope.

      In fact what would be the reason from their point of view for NOT doing it compared to doing it. They gain more by doing it and so they do it. Simple.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    5. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you go into the old desktop styled Control Panel -> Windows Update, you can choose to uncheck and hide the Windows 10 upgrade. If *shouldn't* show up again after that.

    6. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by bobbied · · Score: 1

      You can turn off the Windows 10 update icon that shows up in the task bar by uninstalling the update that installed the program and then disabling the update so it won't get re-installed. Hopefully that will keep the button clicking mistakes down...

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
    7. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by SkunkPussy · · Score: 1

      I've never been offered windows 10, curiously (or maybe fortunately).

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    8. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by kevmeister · · Score: 1

      If this is running as part of regular Windows Update, I'm curious to know whether or not this is going to just start installing the update to windows 10 without asking the user at some point.

      I made the mistake of allowing the installation of new Defender signatures yesterday and what should appear but "Windows 10 downloading"! Looks like updating anything will trigger the download. I was VERY annoyed.

      --
      Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer, Retired
    9. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by geek111 · · Score: 1

      If they're going to do that, they could have Windows Update just download and install Debian Jessie for me... Save me the trouble of wiping Windows 10 at least.

    10. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by mark-t · · Score: 1

      My point being that if downloading it is being done without the user asking for it, then why not the full install?

    11. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Shamelessly riding the coattails of the first score 5 post in this thread to say: Fuck you sideways with a rusty chainsaw, Microsoft. Now they're forcing Win10 on everyone? Fuck you, fuck you, FUCK YOU. I'm one of the still-on-XP guys, was considering 7 at some point.. now, when the box finally dies and I have to build a new one? It's definitely some flavor of Linux. Also, it's official now: Computers are no longer Any Fun At All. Authoritarian, totalitarian bastard corporations like Microsoft have ruined it for good. Who knew that at some point in my life I'd be pining for Z80 processors and CP/M 2.2 and hardware I build from bare PCBs on up with my own two hands and a soldering iron (hell, I designed a fair portion of some of the first computers I had).

      Bastards.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    12. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three words. Class Action Lawsuit.

    13. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Well, they aren't doing that.... *YET*.... For the moment, it seems that they are just downloading it. This is certainly very serious all by itself, impacting users with limited bandwidth or disk storage, but even that is nowhere near as bad as the notion that this may be making it ready to do a full install of Windows 10 without prompting the user beyond "updates are available, install and restart?"

    14. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by kheldan · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the average end-user is going to have the default settings for Automatic Updates, which I believe is to download and install all 'recommended' updates, am I right?

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    15. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It won't.

      I mutilated that stupid GWX thing badly. It's so damaged that it won't successfully reinstall itself. (And, yes, it tries.)

      Last night, I had to use IE for a bill-pay website that started flaking out on Firefox, and suddenly, there's a whole desktop overlay pushing Windows 10. Not just IE's window, but the whole desktop... all because I started a Microsoft app.

      They can convert my Win7 Pro license when they pry it from my cold, dead hands. I'll have it in a VM under a Linux host, behind a pfSense box blackholing everything related to MS's telemetry soon. They've pushed me too far. I only wish there was better community support for C# development on Linux. I'd be there aw-day-erry-day if that were the case.

    16. Re: Waiting for it to update without prompting by kevmeister · · Score: 1
      They won't because they REALLY, REALLY need you to accept the EULA.

      Lawyers trump marketing every time.

      --
      Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer, Retired
    17. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Are you running Enterprise edition? It doesn't get the offers to upgrade. Not from 8.0 to 8.1, and not from 7 or 8.1 to 10.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    18. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Exactly. What's the downside of abusing their customers? None. No one's going to actually abandon Windows because of this, they'll just whine about it and continue using Windows with spyware updates applied, and scoff when someone suggests they switch to another OS.

      Personally, I don't think they're going nearly far enough. They should sell users' personal data to the highest bidder, and publish private data (photos, etc.) on public servers so people can laugh at private photos (make sure everything is tagged so you can look up photos by someone's name and address). What would anyone do about it? They're not going to stop using Windows, that much is clear.

    19. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft does lose customers. They went from about 95% to less than 90% already - more importantly though the Win32 platform is losing ground so that the bleeding will accelerate.

      Remember when Internet Explorer had over 90% marketshare? The same can happen to Windows.

    20. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has figured out that they can do whatever they want with impunity. Governments either are afraid and drop cases (US) or their judgements are ignored long enough that they are moot (EU).

      The only thing that is working right now is the decline in Windows users; too many outside of corporations are just not interested anymore, they'd rather use a phone. Microsoft realizes that their monopoly is finally being broken up from the grass roots and is scared, which is why they are pushing this 10 so hard because it's supposed to tie the phone and desktop and console together.

    21. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      A lot of companies have similar strategies. The require you to have the credit card on file even if you're using a free part of their service; which means the "convenience" of one click purchases will be accidental often enough.

    22. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      It had better not, or anyone on Time Warner / Cox that is using a CableCARD will no longer be able to use their TV service, as they killed Windows Media Center, and there is *no* other PVR software I'm aware of that can get around these cable systems abuse of the CopyOnce flag.

      Fucking sons of bitches.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    23. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not? Because they will be punished. Oh, wait. They won't. Fined? Nope. Loosing more customers than they gain? Nope.

      In fact what would be the reason from their point of view for NOT doing it compared to doing it. They gain more by doing it and so they do it. Simple.

      Yes. They did the calculus on this a long time ago. Look at the 2001 ruling in US. v. Microsoft, and you will see not a slap on the wrist, but a feather on the arm, and since it did not rouse them from their slumber, it had no effect. Microsoft learned from that case that they would never face fines of any kind for bad behavior. It emboldened them to pursue a closer tangent to the laws, getting ever closer to "crossing the line" but not quite, and carefully crossing the line where they can get away with it. They have made an art of "gaming the market" since the day they were formed, and "gaming the law" is part of their day-to-day operations. Microsoft's desktop space no longer has the consumer market --they have gone to tablets and phones that are beyond M$'s control, leaving tech. savvy corporations, who know enough to not trust them. The other guys are giving the OS away for free. A 'pushed upgrade' is their way of competing.

    24. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by SkunkPussy · · Score: 1

      home premium!

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    25. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      thanks. checked it again today and it now allows me to untick the box

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    26. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      They've lost a lot more customers than that. Many people I know who used to use Windows desktops or laptops at home now use iPads or Android tablets instead. Other than the company's ancient burner Dells for business trips, I now see more Mac laptops than Windows among the people I know and work with.

      The only market Microsoft still own is the business desktop, and their recent behaviour is only going to accelerate the move away from Windows there, too.

    27. Re:Waiting for it to update without prompting by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Sooner or later they will do the same thing there.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    28. Re: Waiting for it to update without prompting by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      That depends on what the original EULA did say.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  6. On other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    On other news, linux distributions started downloading systemd to users that did not want it.

    1. Re:On other news... by mark-t · · Score: 0

      Citation, please.... or bullshit.

    2. Re:On other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just checked my C: drive. There's a 5 Gb folder C:\$Windows.~BT sitting there that wasn't there before.

      I've never requested to update to Windows 10, and never set that option on the Windows automatic update.

      Wow.

    3. Re:On other news... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      And that's relevant to the issue I was challenging how, exactly?

    4. Re:On other news... by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      WHOOOOOOOOSH!

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    5. Re:On other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, cite me. I don't use Windows either since about 2002 I think.

    6. Re:On other news... by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Do you even understand the point of citation? I'm guessing not, because what you're saying makes absolutely no sense otherwise.

      Why should I cite someone who has not established credibility for their claims in the first place?

    7. Re:On other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      C'mon, you have to admit it was funny.

    8. Re:On other news... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Well, yes. In some cases. If the user did not prevent it. And then these users could pretty easily de-install that crapware again. And while systemd is an abomination, it is still FOSS and can be analyzed for what it does, quite unlike the MS-supplied malware.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  7. Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you are running Windows in 2015 then be prepared for the OS to own you!

  8. Do the users have the license for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do the users have the license for this? What if they voluntarily cede the license? Is the Windows operating system compelling people to unlawfully download copyrighted software?

    1. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Win 7 and Win 8 users automatically get a copy of Win 10 for free. So you're only pirating Win 10 if you're already pirating Win 7 or Win 8.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    2. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Microsoft offer a 1 year grace period for upgrades to Windows 10 even for pirated versions?

    3. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by SkunkPussy · · Score: 3, Informative

      As I understand it you get a free licence locked to 1 machine. But the windows 7 licence I bought is for any machine (but I can only install/run one copy). So that would be a retrograde step.

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    4. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      You can download it and install it but it is not activated. It is still considered pirated.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    5. Re: Do the users have the license for this? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      The term Microsoft uses is that the free Windows 10 update 'consumes' the older Windows 7/8 license when the upgrade is made.

    6. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also worried about this. I have also read that "upgrading" to 10 will invalidate the original retail licence, but it's not clear how I should get may money back.

    7. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's incorrect. The license states that you retain any transfer rights you had from the version you upgraded from.

    8. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by Megane · · Score: 1

      Do you actually trust Microsoft to get that right?

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    9. Re:Do the users have the license for this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a laptop which came with Win8.1 preinstalled. I made the backup disks, downloaded the Win10 ISO and upgraded the PC. So now my key is known for Win10. Then I wiped the disk and installed FreeBSD and VirtualBox, created a new virtual machine and installed Win10 in there with the same key. That is clearly very different [virtual] hardware to the actual laptop, but the install was no problem. Oh, and the virtual network is set to 'cable not connected' so poor old Win10 cannot see anything. Runs just fine and MS doesn't even know that install exists.

      Why? So I can run a Win10 only program if need be. Likely? No, FreeBSD suits my purposes just fine, and I have an XP virtual machine as well.

  9. Data Plan Blew Up by coop247 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My in-laws live in middle of nowhere Pennsylvania and had tried HughesNet for a few years but didn't like it. I told them to get one of the little wireless routers from Verizon, and they easily keep under their 2Gb limit.

    Last month she's calling me wondering how in the world she could have gone over her limit, and how they are going to charge her $30 and this and that. After some investigation, turns out it was Win10 downloading.

    Yeah, thats some shit right there.

    --
    //TODO: Insert catchy phrase
    1. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Same thing happened to me. I don't game or stream and am just a poor college dude, so I just tether my laptop to my phone for internet. I blew over my cap because of this. If I had known about it or had the option to delay, I would have gone to a wifi hotspot for the update. Microsoft really must have their head so far up their collective asses to not consider there might be any reason to give users a choice on if and when they download Windows 10. It just goes to show how Microsoft is out of touch with how people are actually using computers... "gee I have high speed internet at home so everyone else must have it too!".

    2. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by halivar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In this particular case, the villain is the greedy asshole ISP with the arbitrary data cap.

    3. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by coop247 · · Score: 2

      Shows with their Xbox idiocy too. They wanted "always on" this generation and are already talking digital only games for the next one. Not everyone has a 1GB fiber pipe you idiots.

      --
      //TODO: Insert catchy phrase
    4. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by tomhath · · Score: 1

      You want unlimited? Pay for unlimited. It's the customer's choice.

    5. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by willworkforbeer · · Score: 2

      ...Verizon, and they easily keep under their 2Gb limit. ... [now] have gone over her limit, and how they are going to charge her $30 and this and that. After some investigation, turns out it was Win10 downloading.

      And now M Night Shyamalan has optioned the movie version of Windows 10: The Bandwidth Rapist.

      --
      Pretending this is my office full of bitter coworkers..
    6. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by halivar · · Score: 1

      No, it's not. It's determined by whether available local ISP's offer unlimited plans, and whether that "unlimited" really means "unlimited" (which it usually does not).

    7. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by LVSlushdat · · Score: 1

      No, sparky.. they are only ONE of the villians in this story.. MS is the most egregious villian of this story.. To force a nearly 4GB download down EVERYones throat is so far beyond arrogance it isn't funny... Despite the fact that lawyers are the only ones who profit from class action lawsuits, I strongly suspect there needs to be one in this case.. Everyday I'm more glad that I quit using Windows in 2011, although I'm still gonna get asked to support it by my neighbors/friends who just can't get their lips off the Microsoft tit...

      --
      THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
    8. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by amorsen · · Score: 1

      You do know that HughesNet is a satellite ISP, right? There is no viable business case for unlimited satellite internet at anything more than 9600bps or so. You are sharing a much-less-than-gigabit connection between tens of thousands of users to get the average price down enough to make it affordable. A typical user who transfers 100GB a month will ruin it for everyone.

      I have seen quite a few impressive graphs where business DSL lines were filled to capacity for hours after the Windows 10 release. This is great news for most ISPs -- sure it means an extra cost of bandwidth short term, but it is going to put switching to fiber (or draconian QoS, more $$$) into the minds of many managers.

      Satellite ISPs are going to lose out. They make a bit of money short term because of the bandwidth charges, but they will shed customers because most customers hate unexpected bills.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    9. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, in this particular case the villian is the asshole corporation (Microsoft) pushing data down the pipe that you didn't ask for.

      It's like ordering something from Amazon or NewEgg, only to have it delivered with a crapload of extra stuff you didn't want and a "postage due" invoice. You're saying that's the post office's fault?

    10. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. You're just blinded by hate. You seem like a Linux user. They live in a perpetual state of jealousy and contempt.

    11. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by tepples · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A lot of these ISPs don't offer unlimited, and these users had no advance notice that unlimited would be preferable with their present usage pattern.

    12. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 1

      No, in this particular case, the villains are both. Greedy asshole ISP with arbitrary data cap and stupid asshole software company with braindead decisions.

    13. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're absolutely bound to exceed a 2GB data cap sooner or later even without the Windows 10 update, that's a crazy thing to suggest to someone as their primary internet connection. Between a few OS updates, a few various other app updates, a few email attachments, a few pages with flash video ads every day, sooner or later you're guaranteed to exceed 2GB in a month. That's only like 70MB per day on average!

    14. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even those of us with a 1 Gb/s fiber pipe don't want it. I have better uses for that bandwidth.

    15. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I pay for a cell data plan with several users, and I like to look over the bills, so I know more or less how much certain people use it. A 2GB plan would be insufficient for me, but not for the other people on the plan. (A 4GB plan would be good enough for me, provided nobody decided to ram a multi-gigabyte update through it.)

      Not everybody has your usage patterns.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    16. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by nnull · · Score: 1

      One of my buddies business had a problem with this with his measly 1.5mbit line (Yes, that's all you can get, telepacific is terrible with a high cost). He had 50 computers downloading Windows 10 without anyone's consent. It was hogging up all the bandwidth and he was unable to even use his email. When I took a look at it, you could do nothing to prevent it other than blocking it in the firewall. Windows was showing nothing (Not even showing in Windows update that it was downloading something) and turning off BITS did absolutely nothing to stop it (It would magically force it back on). I had to put a firewall rule to block this update.

      Microsoft Windows is behaving more like malware than an update.

    17. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good boy! The check's in the mail.

      -Satya

    18. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by t0y · · Score: 1

      If the connection is metered you should've configured it that way. For wifi, windows assumes it's not metered but you can change it. http://windows.microsoft.com/e...

    19. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      They don't need it to work well for every possible customer. They just need it to be the most profitable strategy overall. Your real problem here, I think, is that their interests are not aligned with yours.

    20. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You probably don't want the telemetry updates either, so it's your own fault. How do you expect Microsoft to know how you're using your computer if you don't let them snoop around?

    21. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They wanted "always on" this generation and are already talking digital only games for the next one.

      Does that mean I won't be able to play analogue games on it then?

      (Disclaimer; legitimate joke at expense of pet peeve aside, I'm in agreement with the "f**k Microsoft up the ass with something exceptionally unpleasant" sentiment generally expressed here).

    22. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by praedictus · · Score: 1

      My data plan for the 4G home wifi hub (no cable available in this part of the bairro) has blown its cap for the last months, and I have been blaming family members for downloading YouTube videos on their cell phones. Turns out my work laptop has been downloading the Win 10 update without telling me in the background, I see the hidden folder has roughly 5.6 gB of files, so I would be blowing the cap for the next 2-3 months if this continues. (Only 2 gigs cap then it goes down to old-time dialup speeds). NOT cool.

      --
      Watashi wa chikyubutsurigakusha desu.
    23. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      How are they out of touch? Why shouldn't they do this? Why should they give a rat's ass about your data cap charges? What are you going to do, switch to another OS? No, of course you won't, you'll just bitch about it on the internet and continue to use Windows and pay for Windows when you buy new PCs.

    24. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      MS is the most egregious villian of this story.. To force a nearly 4GB download down EVERYones throat is so far beyond arrogance it isn't funny...

      No, it IS funny, because no matter how much abuse they suffer these Windows users just won't give it up. It's funny to see how far MS can push it. People are whining about this stuff left and right, but are they actually voting with their feet? Hell no, they're sticking with Windows. So why should MS care about their complaints?

      although I'm still gonna get asked to support it by my neighbors/friends who just can't get their lips off the Microsoft tit...

      Why are you enabling them? Any time someone asks me for help with Windows I tell them I don't use it and don't know much about it.

    25. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your reply is really arrogant. If someone is certain that a connection they're paying for is only going to be used for light use, getting tricked into having multi-gigabytes of Windows 10 shoved down your throat doesn't make it their fault. The idiocy lies 100% with the braindead Microsoft programmers that implemented this.

    26. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      It's all the mentality at corporations these days; assume all the customers are hipsters, they've all got fat pipe ISPs, they're instagramming all day long, and they love putting everything in the cloud, so they'll never notice a 10gb download. Or they'll put a data cap on they phone customers and then preconfigure their phones to automatically update every application and do backups and replication to the cloud, and charge all of that against the data cap. In reality though, most people in the US have bandwidth issues.

    27. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Most consoles are there for the kids really. There are a few serious gamers in the console crowd, but the bread and butter market are those who want something cheaper/simpler than a computer. They're often in houses that don't even have reliable internet, the console is a one time buy and then the games are rented or borrowed or gifts from the grandparents. Even in the middle class houses I can see the big arguments about why is the internet down again and then they find out junior is downloading 20gb for the latest game that will only be played for a week before it's old news.

    28. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      If only Microsoft would tell people about this feature. Or maybe include some instructional guides with Windows installations like they used to do. The average user does not know any of this stuff. If you don't know it exists how do you know to go look for it? Windows 8 had a radically different usage than earlier Windows and it did not include any help at all about how to navigate around it (took me twenty minutes to figure out how to shut it down); they did add a few tips in the first update though.

    29. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      You can easily keep within 2GB data cap. Just stick to email. If you do some web browsing you *must* use adblock and noscript, and don't go to image heavy sites.
      Remember we still have a sizeable percentage of America still using dialup.

    30. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      That's a big flaw I see in Windows, OSX, Linux, and some smart phones. You basically can't tell what's using up your resources. Windows can be bad there because so much falls under a couple of executables doing most of the disk writes or net usage, so it's a common question online to find out if "services" or "host" is a virus or not. Android has a nice feature to show which processes are using the most data, though I did have a problem for awhile when so much was coming from Android itself.

      OS makers, including Linux distributions, want to turn the operating systems into black boxes and don't like customers asking too many questions about what's going on. That's fundmentally at odds with data caps or low bandwidth internet.

    31. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about your internet, but I pay for a RATE not an AMOUNT. When Comcast changes that (in October?) then I'll have a (bigger) complaint. I pay for a RATE; if they want to put caps on it without my consent, that is breach of contract in my mind. I realize I'll have to take my business elsewhere as no lawyer is going to fight for me pro bono publico. Hopefully, CenturyLink will have Prism in my area soon so I can drop Comcast completely.

    32. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If the ISP advertised the cap in advance, I don't see how they're at fault in any way.

    33. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only Windows didn't do things that it was never instructed to do.

    34. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Never make such an assumption that people will understand the need to "configure it that way". It's outright rude, especially when you have to consider that there are many older people using computers and that don't know anything about what they can click OK on or not.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    35. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by tepples · · Score: 1

      I don't know about your internet, but I pay for a RATE not an AMOUNT. When Comcast changes that (in October?) then I'll have a (bigger) complaint. I pay for a RATE; if they want to put caps on it without my consent, that is breach of contract in my mind.

      Comcast doesn't use "contracts". In fact, it has been running TV ads in response to bundles offered by the newly merged AT&T and DirecTV, and these ads slam AT&T for locking the user into a 2-year contract. But what the ads don't say is that this gives Comcast the flexibility to get all its subscribers onto a new set of terms within 30 days.

      I realize I'll have to take my business elsewhere as no lawyer is going to fight for me pro bono publico. Hopefully, CenturyLink will have Prism in my area soon so I can drop Comcast completely.

      And if not, you're stuck with sat or cell, which offer an even smaller AMOUNT.

    36. Re:Data Plan Blew Up by vandamme · · Score: 1

      Linux Mint is a less than 1 GB download. Just sayin'.

  10. Metered connections ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What about when you are on a metered connection (such as mobile broadband) ?

    This could cost you a fortune. Any chance Microsoft could be held liable for their customers communication costs ?

    1. Re:Metered connections ? by thewolfkin · · Score: 2

      What about when you are on a metered connection (such as mobile broadband) ?

      This could cost you a fortune. Any chance Microsoft could be held liable for their customers communication costs ?

      Yep, that happened. Let's see if coop247 tries to take them to court.

      --
      Just another second banana
    2. Re:Metered connections ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS could be held liable in Small Claims Court. A few million of those cases would be interesting. Of course I don't get WIndows10 on my Windows7 laptop, ever. It isn't supported by the hardware. Yet the little icon will remain there forever.... Waiting!

    3. Re:Metered connections ? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Of course, Microsoft will just respond with "You should have used the 'Metered Connection' feature built into the OS, which prevents large background network usage and lets you control what gets downloaded automatically" and move to dismiss.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    4. Re:Metered connections ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the choice to select Metered Connection presented to the user during the upgrade process from previous versions of Windows?

    5. Re:Metered connections ? by sabbede · · Score: 1

      And they'd be right to do so.

    6. Re:Metered connections ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That feature isn't available in Windows 7, and this download is occurring in Windows 7 too, right? As a new feature I didn't even know about it being available in Windows 8 until this slashdot thread, I imagine that applies to a lot of people.

    7. Re:Metered connections ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I am paying 50 cents for Gigabyte when within the allowance (meteor.ie) anything above is met with a hefty markup of 4000% and clock in at 20 Euros / Gig. Since I use about 100+ Gigs/month (shared with the family) I have been caught twice in a major way (by forgetting to swap the correct SIM card in time) to the tune of several hundred Euros. You can easily go over 150 - 250 Euros within a single day. The ISP usually says there is nothing they can do as you cannot transfer the bandwidth between the (capped) accounts.

      Thanks Meteor.ie! Way to go Micro$oft.

  11. Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

    When I go over my cap this month because of MS' arrogance, Who should I send it to?

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    1. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      I smell a class action suit.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    2. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 1

      Send it to Microsoft's Public Relations Manager. First tie it to a brick, and aim real high for his office window.

      By the way, address it to the manager personally. He's a grumpy old guy named Mr. Wilson.

      --
      If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    3. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Those are your socks.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    4. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by gstoddart · · Score: 2

      Oooh ... a class action lawsuit ... know what you'll get? A fucking voucher for a copy of Windows 10.

      Besides, the EULA probably says you have to agree to arbitration. It probably also says you can't do that either.

      Ain't it grand?

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    5. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but his next door neighbor's kid, Dennis, is always there to "help" him.

    6. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Minwee · · Score: 1

      No, that's just the guys downstairs smoking up. The end effect is about the same, so it's an easy mistake to make.

    7. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      And they'll ask you how many times you sued Internet ad companies.

      Many folks who do not use ad blocking software use more than 5GB every month in just downloading ads.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    8. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ISP for having caps that are so small. C'Mon ISP!

    9. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Nukenbar · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. You agreed to it somewhere in the 500 Terms of Service boxes you clicked yes to installing windows in the first place.

    10. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "Besides, the EULA probably says you have to agree to arbitration"

      I didn't read nor sign an EULA to this forced upgrade. Guess what that means?

      Null and fucking void.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    11. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      You're using a metered connection without using the "Metered Connection" feature built into Windows (which blocks large background downloads)? Pay the overage for your own foolishness.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    12. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It works better as a company. We have about 15 computers running on the fastest available connection we can get: 4Mbit.
      I can bill Microsoft for all the extra time and money, and until they pay in full (with interest), I can't buy anything from them. This basically gives me a blank check to look for alternatives.

    13. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a stupid analogy.

      People can put ads up on their web sites if they want and I can choose to visit or not. On the other hand, my computer is mine and should not be doing anything that I did not specifically tell it to do, such as download garbage like Windows 10.

    14. Re:Where should I send MS my ISP overage bill? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a EULA has any legal weight at all, it's because you agreed to it. Since Windows 10 is being downloaded without their consent, the EULA does not apply.

  12. Analyse this paragraph, please by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 2

    Read these two paragraphs from near the end of the article.

    Whether you believe it's to avoid fragmentation or to spy on you depends on how much pot you smoked in college,
    but it now appears to have gone from 'over keen' to 'needy' and you have to wonder why and whether it's going to
    blow up in the company's face.

    It should be enough of a clue that over 10 percent of Windows machines are still on XP and Vista,
    while there's over 40 percent more of the market on 7 than on 8, to be able to tell that people don't like to assume.

    What does the second paragraph actually say?

    Even if we take out the middle, it's strange.

    It should be enough of a clue to be able to tell that people don't like to assume.

    Please help me become enlightened.

    Respectually,

    The New Guy.

    --
    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
    1. Re:Analyse this paragraph, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what it is trying to convey is that Microsoft does not know its user base are all.

    2. Re:Analyse this paragraph, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pointing out that XP and Vista still have a 10% market share, despite the former being nearly 15 years old. It's also pointing out that Win7's market share is a full 40 points higher than Win8...over half their customers never moved past 7, so it's more than a little arrogant to assume that people will be falling over themselves to switch over to 10, let alone take kindly to having it done with such subterfuge.

      In the coming years, there's going to be a huge skirmish over whether convenience or ownership is the more important trait...and it's gonna get ugly.

    3. Re:Analyse this paragraph, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you're the only new guy around here, so you should put that into the body of each and every one of your posts, because the user ID field is not enough to identify you. Also, you're special.

      The New Guy.

    4. Re:Analyse this paragraph, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      think it's the gap between the puff of reefer!

  13. Windows 10...why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because fuck you that's why.

    Why do I need a new beta-browser? BFUTW
    Why do I need oodles of telemetry on the apps I use and the keys I press? BFUTW
    Why do I need to supply adjacent windows machines with windows updates? BFUTW
    Why do I need to send adjacent wireless clients my fucking wifi-password? BFUTW
    Why do I need to read every single involuntary patch you push to make sure it ain't more even more spyware/adware KBs? BFUTW

  14. Fed up of Microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Time to take the "last measure" against them.

    1. Re:Fed up of Microsoft? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      I don't think that they get that at all, for all that we know they have a daily lemonparty at Microsoft.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  15. Abandon those anachronistic founding father ideas! by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2

    "Well, we're just gonna install all the spyware Windows 10 has onto your 7 or 8 systems, anyway, which the NSA can invade our computers for without a warrant, so no rational reason is stopping you from upgrading to 10 now!"

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  16. Windows update forcing me to 10 by areusche · · Score: 2

    I spent the last few days battling with Windows Update which was forcing me to Windows 10. I have no desire to install the updated OS. Courtesy of the folks at Sevenforums I found that uninstalling these updates KB3075851, KB2952664, KB3021917, KB3035583, KB3068708 and deleting the $Windows.~BT (and / or) $Windows.~WS was able to remove the forced update. Windows update refused to search for any other updates requiring me to run the Windows 10 updater.

    Rant mode: fuck these forced updates, cryptic KB updates that don't really tell what they're doing, CHANGING KB numbers after I block the other bad updates, and any OS that hasn't been out for over a year. I am NOT your lab monkey.

    1. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by monkeyzoo · · Score: 1

      Any idea which of yesterday's patches is to blame for the new download? I had previously blocked:
      KB3022345
      KB3068708
      KB3075249
      KB3080149

      But I still got the new download yesterday!!

      I agree! TOTALLY pissed off about these bullshit secretive "security update" messages that are just unwanted bloatware, perhaps even spyware.

    2. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Kardos · · Score: 0

      Why do you keep taking the abuse? Stockholm syndrome?

      It's free to switch to a less user hostile software system

    3. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think at this point MS has finally made it where the risks of running Windows Update and getting files and features I don't want have outweighed the supposed benefits of keeping my system secure through Windows Update. No more updates, and Windows 7 is the last MS-OS I allow in the house.

    4. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Gaygirlie · · Score: 1

      Maybe areusche is a gamer? Linux is still a bad choice for gamers, there's no getting over that.

    5. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      just disable windows update entirely, take a good clean backup of your system, use linux for real browsing and put windows beyhind a trusted hardware (box) firewall, not letting it get out (whitelist only, level access).

      I disabled win updates almost a year ago, back when the ftdi driver was broken (on purpose) by the colluding MS and ftdi corps. after that, I fully disabled the MS update service, purged all unsafe updates and went thru the services list to turn anything that even looks odd, off.

      windows update is now a roulette wheel. I hate that and won't tolerate it. if I have to restore from a backup, at least that's not a big problem and I know I won't get any more 'surprises' from MS.

      windows is unsafe to be on a public network. not even sure its good to have on a captive private lan, either. but certainly, leaving windows on a public net connection is just asking for abuse.

      funny- its now MS that abuses its own userbase. the hackers are now less of a worry to many of us.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    6. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1

      You realize this is becoming harder to do, than keeping a Linux system working? And I'm a Mac guy with no special reason to advocate for Linux.

      It just seems like the funky details of resisting Windows 10 are starting to look more like bleepy gearhead console incantations just like if you had a non-working Linux system and had to hunt down the messy details of what parts to adjust.

      Except that in your case it's enemy action, not entropy.

    7. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I am NOT your lab monkey.

      No, you're their bitch. There's a difference.

    8. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are doing it wrong. Linux *is* the game.

    9. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Jim3535 · · Score: 1

      Why do you think they made updates unavoidable in Windows 10?

      It was also highly suspicious when they just started listing KB numbers instead of giving any info about what each update is. It seems an obvious move to make it much more difficult to tell what you are actually installing; presumably so they can sneak stuff through that people would normally question.

    10. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this not clear?

      https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/3035583
      Update installs Get Windows 10 app in Windows 8.1 and Windows 7 SP1
      This update installs the Get Windows 10 app, which helps users understand their Windows 10 upgrade options and device readiness. For more information about Windows 10, see Windows 10.

    11. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by n3r0.m4dski11z · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the list. I had two of the updates, however i am not seeing any hidden or $ folders on my hard drive at all. where specifically are they located? the root of c:\? Perhaps when i initially uninstalled the nag windows update i protected myself?

      --
      -
    12. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by devslash0 · · Score: 1

      I only had to remove one update - the original KB3035583. But there is more that needs to be done by the user. The major goal is to remove it from the Task Scheduler and to delete all that already sits on your hard drive. Unfortunately all those WSX-related tasks are owned by the system and require a good deal of work in PowerShell to get removed.

    13. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by monkeyzoo · · Score: 1

      I long ago uninstalled and hid KB3035583 also to hide that annoying toolbar icon, but I still got the new Windows 10 download yesterday. :/

      FUCK YOU MICROSOFT!!! Apparently, I need to put serious planning now into migrating to another platform before Win7 EOL's.

    14. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by cas2000 · · Score: 1

      Linux isn't a *bad* choice for gamers these days. Windows is still better for games - not because they work better but because there are more games available - but Linux isn't bad.

      There are many games available natively for linux, e.g. from gog or steam or the humble bundles. Many more will run perfectly well in wine - *most* windows games do. *some* games won't run at all on linux, either natively or with wine.

      I'm a linux user who spent many years running windows game in wine, then built myself a Win7 box out of spare parts about 5 years ago (after upgrading my main linux box) just to play the windows games i'd bought on steam that wouldn't run in wine - i bought an ATEN kvm switch so i can share the keyboard, mouse, and monitor. I do most of my gaming on that windows box now, but am thinking of turning it into a steam box.

      I use that win7 box for *nothing* but gaming, I rarely even open a web browser on it, just run the steam client and games. I don't even buy the steam games on it (i buy them in a web browser on my linux machine) because there's no way i'll ever trust a windows machine with my credit card or paypal account or any of my financial details.

      I have no interest at all in upgrading to win10 or letting microsoft spy on me....microsoft's repeated attempts to force that shit on me is just making the idea of converting that box to a steam machine far more attractive: Linux + Steam + Wine will suffice for 95+% of my gaming "needs" - and i've bought hundreds of steam games over the years (some of which i haven't even got around to playing yet) so i can just ignore the remaining 5%.

      ps: why don't i just install the steam client on my main linux machine and play games there? i have done so, but i don't play games on it often because game devs are morons who will happily write code that crashes the machine - i don't give a damn if my win7 game console crashes and has to be rebooted, but i really don't want to have to reboot my linux box and lose months worth of "context" in opened windows and running apps.

    15. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      funny- its now MS that abuses its own userbase. the hackers are now less of a worry to many of us.

      Even more interesting is if the hackers are able to pick up the "telemetry" data transferred from your computer and make use of it.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    16. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      At work, I know we have a windows update server that all our other servers look it for updates. The windows update server downloads everything, but then you can set a policy that says only push the security updates. Don't update anything else.

      I assume a home computer can be pointed to a windows update server on the home network as well?

    17. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by devslash0 · · Score: 1

      Well, if you want me to, I can have a look at your system using TeamViewer or any other remote assistance tool and try to do what I did in my system (change ownership and access rights to selected folders and files, remove it from Task Scheduler, delete all WSX files and disable KB3035583 permanently in your Windows Update panel). It's always easier to try than to migrate, isn't it?

    18. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      Might as well click the "Check for Updates but let me choose whether to download and install them" option, it's cheaper than trying to run your own update server where you're having to do exactly the same thing of going through the KB's and making sure Microsoft isn't trying to slip some spyware into it (A couple of noted spyware KB's were loaded in as a security update). If you've got a home network of several windows boxes and you want to manage the updates that are installed on all of them, that's when you want to use a local Windows Update server to be able to control what updates get pushed to several systems at once. Still have to review each update, but you only have to do it once as opposed to going to each individual computer and clicking off each update you want. The click once to configure all is what makes the Local Windows Update server attractive in the enterprise, but generally more expense than the average home user wants to deal with.

    19. Re:Windows update forcing me to 10 by monkeyzoo · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the offer to help, man.
      But I meant to migrate off Windows for the future once I can't run a Windows 7 PC under security maintenance anymore. That looks to be the last version of Windows I can tolerate running due to the disastrous nature of Windows 8 and the intrusive nature of Windows 10.

      As for this PC, I've deleted the folder again and blocked several updates and all seems good enough for now.

  17. We'll be here to help by raymorris · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > Looks like I'll probably make the jump to Linux in a few years

    Those of us who have been Microsoft-free for decades will be here to help whenever you're ready. Only if you're a Windows expert, they'll be a little bit of a learning a learning curve. For example, if you edit the registry manually on a regular basis, there's no registry on Linux. If you DON'T delve into the internals of the OS, you may hardly notice the difference, other than that you don't have to worry about software license keys anymore.

    My main tip to make transitioning simple:
    Don't ask "how do I run [brand name of software] on Linux?"
    Instead I ask, "How do I [accomplish task] on Linux?"
    As an example, it's much easier to do basic and moderate photo editing in Gimp than it is to buy Photoshop and get it running on Linux.

    1. Re:We'll be here to help by gstoddart · · Score: 2

      Yeah? And my existing iTunes library? My tax software? The software to keep my GPS up to date? The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?

      I've used Linux off and on since Slackware 0.99 in 1993 ... and there still remain gaps in some places where you find it's not possible to ditch Windows because there's still pieces you need.

      There just always seems to be a couple of things you still need, and for which the open source alternatives are either non-existent or absolutely terrible. At a certain point, building something which almost works from a kit ceases to be enjoyable.

      And it's those places which put me back to having a Windows machine as my main machine.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:We'll be here to help by flacco · · Score: 1

      I listen to music, use software to do my taxes, and design floorplans without Windows or Mac.

      We have different definitions of "to need".

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    3. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >And my existing iTunes library?
      Um. DRM free music plays fine on linux.

      >My tax software?
      GNU cash. Or, you know, just use the web apps all the tax prep companies sell access to.

      >The software to keep my GPS up to date?
      What, Your phone doesn't OTA update itself? Or are you stuck in 2005 and have a dedicated piece of hardware to use for directions? I can't comprehend why people still buy Germans and the like when they are inferior to cell phones in pretty much every way. Especially since Google Maps updates for free instead of a yearly fee.

      >The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?
      HomeSweetHome3D

      Like GP said: stop asking how to run $software and start asking how to accomplish a given task.

    4. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For infrequently used software like that (eg tax software), I have an old laptop that only gets pulled out at tax season (or whatever). For everything else there's Linux.

      Heck, a year or so ago I built myself a new high-end desktop (8 cores, 32 GB RAM, etc) intending to run VMs on it. First set it up with just Win7 to run some newer programs, then reconfigured it with more hard disk and put Linux on it first. I never have got around to reinstalling Windows, and that was over a year ago. Still pull out the old laptop (how old? it has a built in floppy drive, runs WinXP) for taxes. If the tax software stops supporting WinXP, I'll probably go back to Mac for that, or finally get around to setting up a Win7 VM on the big Linux box.

    5. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 2

      And my existing iTunes library?

      Because iTunes Store dropped FairPlay digital restrictions management for music in 2009, your existing iTunes music library works in any AAC player for X11/Linux.

      My tax software?

      Individual tax returns can be prepared on HRBlock.com, and you have to re-buy the software annually anyway to account for annual changes to the tax code, so you can just buy the one that works best in Wine.

      The software to keep my GPS up to date?

      A GPS application for a phone can be updated within the phone, and a standalone GPS ought to be able to be updated by copying a file to it through USB mass storage or MTP.

    6. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      Instead I ask, "How do I [accomplish task] on Linux?"

      I can phrase my questions in this form:

      How do I find a new 10.1 inch detachable laptop that correctly supports unmaximized windows, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and suspend in X11/Linux? I've read horror stories of suspend not working on the ASUS Transformer Book. I tried Ask Ubuntu, but it turns out Ask Ubuntu doesn't want "how do I go about finding compatible hardware" questions. I tried Android, but unmaximized windows eluded me there; no one wants a full-screen calculator.

      How do I print USPS and UPS postage labels for packages on Linux? The AppDB entry for Endicia DAZzle, the postage software we currently use on Windows, is for a version six years out of date.

      How do I develop and test applications for non-Linux operating systems on Linux? I have several users who are unwilling to install Linux on the bare hardware just for one app or to install VirtualBox and Linux just for one app.

    7. Re:We'll be here to help by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      A GPS application for a phone can be updated within the phone, and a standalone GPS ought to be able to be updated by copying a file to it through USB mass storage or MTP.

      My, aren't you optimistic...

      It's an unbelievable headache to get your average GPS unit updated with Windows (I'm familiar with TomTom), much less any other alternatives you might suggest.

    8. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah? And my existing iTunes library? My tax software? The software to keep my GPS up to date? The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?

      I've used Linux off and on since Slackware 0.99 in 1993 ... and there still remain gaps in some places where you find it's not possible to ditch Windows because there's still pieces you need.

      There just always seems to be a couple of things you still need, and for which the open source alternatives are either non-existent or absolutely terrible. At a certain point, building something which almost works from a kit ceases to be enjoyable.

      And it's those places which put me back to having a Windows machine as my main machine.

      if all the music you own is on iTunes and nowhere else, you may want to rethink your dependence on Apple. Your taxes shouldn't be dependent on a single bit of software as this would cause a huge problem if the company which develops this software goes under, leaving your tax information unobtainable.
      If your GPS requires a Windows software update, use your phone for GPS (if you're using a phone that gets OTA updates, you'll never have to worry about that again).
      The home design software you use can be replaced with other software which runs on Linux.

      I've used Linux exclusively since 2008. Nothing I need has been unavailable to me.

    9. Re: We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I buy Germans because they make for better Nazis.

    10. Re:We'll be here to help by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      What, Your phone doesn't OTA update itself? Or are you stuck in 2005 and have a dedicated piece of hardware to use for directions? I can't comprehend why people still buy Germans and the like when they are inferior to cell phones in pretty much every way. Especially since Google Maps updates for free instead of a yearly fee.

      I'm not really arguing against your point, but Google Maps is utterly useless if there's not a constant data connection because the Map is updated on the fly instead of stored on the device. If you're out of your service area and reach the edge of your cached map before service is re-established, you could very well wind up lost without a functional GPS. It's for this reason that a lot of less knowledgeable users will still buy a dedicated GPS unit.

      If you have enough storage on your cell phone, however, I'd highly recommend installing a good GPS app, like NavFree USA, as you can download the maps to the device and they are always ready to use along with receiving periodic updates. These dedicated GPS apps will never require a data connection during use and will use the location information from the GPS sensor whether you have a data signal or not.

    11. Re:We'll be here to help by Calydor · · Score: 1

      I thought the correct way of asking was, "Lol, Linux sucks, it can't do like Windows can!"

      Then you get a massive flamefest explaining at least ten ways of accomplishing that task.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    12. Re:We'll be here to help by Calydor · · Score: 2

      Sigh.

      Slashdot, that wasn't HTML code.

      Was supposed to say "it can't do [task] like Windows can!"

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    13. Re:We'll be here to help by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      a standalone GPS ought to be able to be updated by copying a file to it through USB mass storage or MTP.

      They ought to, but basically none of them work that way. You've got to use the manufacturer's update tool because DRM.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Don't ask "how do I run [brand name of software] on Linux?"
      Instead I ask, "How do I [accomplish task] on Linux?"

      "How do I do my accounting on Linux so that I can send my file to my CPA, who uses Quickbooks, so he can have his bookkeeper do edits and changes, and send it back to me and have me open/import it into my file?"

      "How do I open Word 2013 files (DOCX) on Linux, make changes and edits, and have them open on a Windows machine in Word 2013 and show up exactly the same as they do on the Linux machine?"

      "How do I stream my Amazon Prime music on Linux without a web browser open?"

      As an example, it's much easier to do basic and moderate photo editing in Gimp than it is to buy Photoshop and get it running on Linux.

      Not if you're already a Photoshop user it isn't... I've tried Gimp, it has major limitations compared to Photoshop. If you do such work on a serious basis, there is really no substitute for Photoshop, which is why for all the moaning and groaning of their move to the cloud and sub based services, more or less everyone went along.

    15. Re:We'll be here to help by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking about maybe setting up a dual boot to see if Linux is something I even want to get into. All I would really need for it would be to run Firefox and Steam. Any advice on how to go about doing it or what distro to use? Looking for something straightforward, easy to use, and doesn't require someone to be a power user or have a background in CS to set up. I figure it's better to ask someone who uses it rather than just Googling and picking one with the most interesting name.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    16. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use Windows in a virtual machine for those, and/or Wine - many applications work perfectly fine in Wine.

    17. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Because iTunes Store dropped FairPlay digital restrictions management for music in 2009, your existing iTunes music library works in any AAC player for X11/Linux.

      Yes, because THAT is the solution... So take your music, import it into another player, set it up... then what happens when you buy more music on iTunes, do it again?

      When you buy music on your iPhone, the idea is that it automatically shows up on your computer too. That really doesn't work for your solution.

      Individual tax returns can be prepared on HRBlock.com, and you have to re-buy the software annually anyway to account for annual changes to the tax code, so you can just buy the one that works best in Wine.

      Some of us prefer to locally install our software. Some of us need a more complex solution than a web site.

      Having to change our ways so we can change our OS... to end up, what, doing the same thing a different way, is not an improvement...

      A GPS application for a phone can be updated within the phone, and a standalone GPS ought to be able to be updated by copying a file to it through USB mass storage or MTP.

      You have a very narrow worldview if you think it is a GPS application for a phone.

      Try a Garmin... they do still have uses you know...

    18. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then use an offline GPS maps program like Sygic. I have the entirety of North America and Europe stored on my phone.

    19. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You are, of course, correct...

      Some of the Linux users here sound like religious zealots... ANYTHING BUT WINDOWS is their entire game plan, and they'll accept any amount of headaches and workarounds to avoid using Windows.

      "Just change your software to something else" is such a stupid response, but it shows the mindset of the Linux faithful.

      You buy a computer to run your software, you don't buy software to run a computer.

      The OS is not the important part, it is the programs you want to run. You run the OS that your programs need, not hunt down the programs that will support your OS.

      The Linux people have it completely backwards.

    20. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      Use Windows in a virtual machine

      Which still costs the price of a Windows 7 license and still downloads Windows 10 in the virtual machine without asking.

    21. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      then what happens when you buy more music on iTunes, do it again?

      Once you have switched to Linux, you won't "buy more music on iTunes" anymore. Use Amazon.

      Try a Garmin

      In this comment, raymorris recommended a Garmin plug-in for what appears to be Ubuntu.

    22. Re:We'll be here to help by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      As indicated in the second part of my post... I use NavFree USA for offline GPS.

    23. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah? And my existing iTunes library? My tax software? The software to keep my GPS up to date? The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?

      I've used Linux off and on since Slackware 0.99 in 1993 ... and there still remain gaps in some places where you find it's not possible to ditch Windows because there's still pieces you need.

      There just always seems to be a couple of things you still need, and for which the open source alternatives are either non-existent or absolutely terrible. At a certain point, building something which almost works from a kit ceases to be enjoyable.

      And it's those places which put me back to having a Windows machine as my main machine.

      Of course, you know, it's linux, if there are gaps the obvious solution and the one that all these people who want The Year Of The Linux Desktop to happen will tell you is to code it yourself, because that's how linux works.

    24. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      You buy a computer to run your software

      Agreed, and I can rephrase my question along those lines.

      I want to load Firefox, Python, a text editor, GIMP, GCC, GNU Make, and FCEUX onto a device that fits in my bag. I could use the MinGW versions of GCC and GNU Make or Wine to run FCEUX if needed. I currently carry a five-year-old 10.1" laptop in my satchel, and I want something to replace it once it dies. I prefer the 10" size and require working suspend because I take public transit and want to quickly close it and reopen it when transferring from one bus to another with the state of Firefox and the text editor preserved. I do not want to waste gigabytes of the internal drive on a major upgrade to the operating system that I have not yet chosen to install. Which laptops or detachable laptops of the same size meet these specifications?

    25. Re:We'll be here to help by Khyber · · Score: 0

      "Those of us who have been Microsoft-free for decades will be here to help whenever you're ready."

      You're only ready to help when you can get your man pages and documentation in an actual readable fucking condition, which is why most people I try to get to use Linu go "Fuck that noise."

      And then it doesn't help you and your bretheren scream "READ THE MANUAL!" when someone asks for help. Your fucking manual might as well be written in Martian.

      Learn how to explain the how and whys of things in your documentation, and maybe you'll get more users.

      Until then, you guys are going to forever remain shit-tier in desktop rankings.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    26. Re:We'll be here to help by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "It's an unbelievable headache to get your average GPS unit updated with Windows (I'm familiar with TomTom), much less any other alternatives you might suggest."

      1. Remove SD card from GPS unit
      2. Plug card into computer
      3. Download upgrade software onto SD card
      4. Insert SD card into GPS device
      5. Turn it on.

      It's been that way with every TomTom, Garmin, and other GPS unit I've used. What shitty unit are you using that requires Windows to update it?

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    27. Re:We'll be here to help by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      I [do x,y,and z] without Windows or Mac. We have different definitions of "to need".

      Congratulations. Did you have any installed base? any investment in peripherals? any need to be compatible with someone else (required whether or not you LIKE what they use)? If not, you're fine. But don't ignore the real issue of vendor lock-in (or standards lock-in) that people have already been forced to accommodate. As a similar example, consider changing away from the standard light bulb sockets and see how far you get.

    28. Re:We'll be here to help by b0bby · · Score: 1

      I can't comprehend why people still buy Germans and the like when they are inferior to cell phones in pretty much every way.

      I run Waze for 90% of my navigation. However, I still have a Garmin. The main reasons:
      - I travel to areas with no cell/data service on a regular basis (~10 weekends a year). Until Here for Android was released, the options for offline maps were pretty crappy; the Garmin just works.
      - The "find me the nearest Starbucks" type stuff on the Garmin is fast, needs no data, and is easy enough that I can do it while driving. With Waze et al, it can be a lot more steps, and my wife doesn't like messing with that when I'm driving. It doesn't have everything, but I really only use it to get to a Starbucks anyway.
      - It's always there, and turns itself on when the car starts. If I want to use my phone for Pandora or whatever, I still have my directions.
      - It was ~$120, and I have lifetime maps and traffic. So why not have it?

    29. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then what are you whining about?

    30. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that is vendor lock-in at its finest. To allow oneself to be able to not be caught in situations such as the one Microsoft is currently creating, one has to be able to avoid vendor lock-in, or at least mitigate its consequences as much as possible.

      This is far from an effortless task, and Microsoft can rest easily in the knowledge that most people will not weigh their privacy heavy enough to counter the strain of breaking free from proprietary software.

      If (a big "if") it were the goal of all users and developers of free and open software to grow its user base, their best action would be to create as compatible and drop-in-ready software as possible. On the one hand, this might not at all be the goal for many projects; they rather want to create their own work-flows and paradigms since that enables them to optimize for their needs, rather than what Adobe/Mathworks/Wolfram/Microsoft tries to peddle. On the other, at the same time the aforementioned companies use their massive financial muscles to counter any attempt by anyone to break their deadlock. Extremely willful obstruction.

      The odds are not great for free solutions to even be competitive, but still: we have free software of extraordinary quality to an extent that many are able to, if not go RMS-style "pure", at least keep the usage of lock-in software at a minimum. This is not something to snicker at.

      I am in the camp that find it ideologically important enough that I would gladly trade some convenience for the possibility to avoid lock-in. Different people have different things in life that they feel are important, but this is an area where I try to take a firm ideological stand.

    31. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tax? Only the little people pay tax.

      Seriously, I solved my problems with QuickTax on Linux, by moving to the UAE.

    32. Re:We'll be here to help by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      Google Maps being used as the example in the AC's post that I initially replied under. Google Maps' inferior handling of offline cases can be used as an argument FOR purchasing an independent GPS unit. As I initially stated, I wasn't arguing against his argument per se... but he needed to use a better application as an example of why the phone is superior to standalone GPS. As a turn-by-turn navigation app, Google Maps is a pathetic offering compared to other available apps.

    33. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well all the windows zealots around here are attacking the linux zealots because they have nothing to say about Microsoft force feeding you Win 10

    34. Re:We'll be here to help by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      The TomTom Go units used to require a crazy mess made up of a USB driver, a Win32 application that calls their website, which requires a browser plugin, which all had to be started in a very specific sequence. The process is then managed through said website.

      For Windows 8, they simplified this by eliminating the browser plugin. The whole thing still feels like it's running in a browser behind the scenes, though, and the driver needs to be manually installed, even though it is included with the application and is signed.

    35. Re:We'll be here to help by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Tax software has all moved to the web.

    36. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Once you have switched to Linux, you won't "buy more music on iTunes" anymore. Use Amazon.

      And that, right there, shows the backwards thinking of Linux users...

      Change your life to cater to the OS, rather than the OS cater to your life.

      Perhaps the user doesn't want to leave iTunes, perhaps they are happy with their iPhone/iPad/iPod.

    37. Re:We'll be here to help by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      How do I print USPS and UPS postage labels for packages on Linux?

      I can answer this one.

      For USPS, you have two options:
      1) Use PayPal. It has USPS labels built in; you pay out of the funds in your PP account. You don't have to pay for any kind of monthly service unlike Encidia/Stamps.com.
      2) Use USPS.com. It doesn't let you print first class package labels however.

      For UPS, you have two options:
      1) Again, use PayPal like above.
      2) Use UPS.com. Anyone can get an account there, so why would you pay for a 3rd-party service for it? This is the preferred method too, since you don't have to pre-pay for labels. Like FedEx, UPS doesn't charge you for shipping when you have an actual account with them, until you actually ship it. That means you can print out labels all you want, but until they are attached to a package and then scanned in by UPS personnel, you pay nothing. So you don't have to worry about, for instance, getting a refund for a label you never shipped. This also means that you don't really have to be accurate about weight: you get charged based on how much the package actually weighs, not how much you claimed it weighs when you made the label, so it's not a problem if you screw up and say it's lighter than it really is (which with the USPS can result in it being returned to you for "insufficient postage"). At the end of the month, you get a bill from UPS for all your charges.

      How do I develop and test applications for non-Linux operating systems on Linux?

      This is a problem with any OS and dev environment. How do you develop and test applications for MacOSX on Windows? Answer: you don't (not normally at least, Mac devs usually use Xcode). You always have to separately develop and test your application on the target platform. If it's a desktop GUI app, you could use Qt and do most of your development with that, and then compiling for other platforms is pretty easy, but you'll still need to test on every platform you target, just like with any kind of development. If you're into .NET and C# you can supposedly use Mono to develop, but again you'll have to do final testing for Windows users on a Windows box (and I have no idea how or if this would work for Mac).

    38. Re:We'll be here to help by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So you're OK with MS forcing telemetry updates on your PC which send all your keystrokes to MS servers?

      Just how much abuse does it take for you to abandon that platform?

    39. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I want to load Firefox, Python, a text editor, GIMP, GCC, GNU Make, and FCEUX onto a device that fits in my bag.

      That is a very specific and unusual set of applications...

      But fair enough... remind me why those don't run on Windows 10 again?

      ---

      You say you want the 10" size, but it sounds like you'd be a good candidate for a Microsoft Surface Pro 3.

      If that is more than you want to spend, how about this:

      http://www.amazon.com/Dell-11-...

      $379 for a touch screen dual core machine with 2-in-1 features (it is a tablet and a laptop).

    40. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Force feeding? Lord you have some bias...

      Windows 10 is superior to Windows 8 and MS is giving it away for free.

      I'm sure there is someone, somewhere, due to some strange set of specific circumstances, that needs to stay on Windows 8.

      Except for HIM, everyone else should take the upgrade and go to Windows 10. This is the most painless, easiest, and trouble free Windows upgrade I'd ever seen.

      I have never, ever done an upgrade before on my main production machine. I've always clean installed. Frankly, I used to clean install every year or two, just to keep Windows running nicely. This time, nope... My Windows 7 install was 5 years old, it had a LOT of stuff added and removed over the years, several hardware changes including a motherboard change.

      Windows 10 upgraded right over it and if anything, it runs better than Windows 7 did. Not a single problem, and I've got a LOT of hardware attached to that machine. 4 printers, 3 monitors, a dozen hard drives and SSDs, and multiple other USB devices. Everything worked perfectly at the first reboot.

      I've since upgraded another dozen machines, ranging from a Core2Quad testing machine to a several year old AMD laptop to a HP touchscreen tablet. Total number of problems upgrading a dozen machines of various ages and hardware? Zero.

      I've been doing this a long time, since before Windows 3.0. I'm sure someone, somewhere has had a problem with Windows 10, but I've never seen an upgrade go this cleanly.

      It is almost "Apple like" in the way it... wait for it... "It just works..."

      Get over your anger and try it, you might discover that you like it. :)

    41. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      So you're OK with MS forcing telemetry updates on your PC which send all your keystrokes to MS servers?

      I am, actually... that doesn't bother me because MS isn't sitting there watching me type and caring about me specifically. They also aren't trying to steal my CC info or hack my computer.

      They are asking for more information so they can improve future versions of Windows. This is a "Good Thing".

      If I did anything special or secret, if I did something that competed with Microsoft, then yes, I'd turn some of that stuff off and setup a hardware firewall to completely block MS telemetry info.

      Since I don't, I don't care.

      Just how much abuse does it take for you to abandon that platform?

      It isn't abuse, and that you would use such a term implies a bias that you're unable or unwilling to look past.

      The Tech Preview had that stuff turned on and it couldn't be disabled, but in the released version, it can be. Either at install or later.

      http://arstechnica.com/informa...

      Plenty of places on the web talk about how to turn off the keylogging and other tracking stuff, if that bothers you.

      Where it WOULD be abuse and wrong is if MS hid it in such a way as to try and do it without telling you, and then did things with the info that hurt you.

      Since they don't, and don't, it isn't abuse.

    42. Re:We'll be here to help by Toshito · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the tip.

      So, how do I accomplish the task of running Photoshop on Linux?

      --
      Try it! Library of Babel
    43. Re:We'll be here to help by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Tom Tom Go 300. Download update from Tom Tom website, copy to card, plug into Tom Tom, turn on Tom Tom. Done.

      I've never had to do anything else for any other Tom Tom with removable storage.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    44. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      perhaps they are happy with their iPhone/iPad/iPod.

      For a satisfied user of iOS looking to switch from Windows, I recommend a Mac.

    45. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could get a Windows Phone, where the excellent Here Drive gives you Worldwide turn-by-turn navigation on or offline even on a $90 handset

    46. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      For a satisfied user of iOS looking to switch from Windows, I recommend a Mac.

      So would I, if they had reasonably priced Macs to pick from.

      Since they don't, that really isn't a choice for most people.

      http://www.amazon.com/gp/produ...

      I'm typing this message on the above laptop. I paid $349 for it from Amazon.

      It has a nice Core i3 CPU, 4GB of RAM, 500GB HDD (which I swapped out for a 512GB SSD for $131), a 1080p 15.6" display, a DVD burner, and many hours of battery life. It also isn't too heavy, comes with Windows 10 already on it (no upgrading!), and for anything other than games or serious image/video editing, is plenty fast enough.

      What Mac would compete with this machine?

      None.

      Exactly, that is why Mac doesn't have much market share either.

    47. Re:We'll be here to help by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      Go away shill. On a story thread about Microshit's latest bullshit and you think ANYONE with brains is going to go for a WinPhone? I'd go for an iPhone before I go WinPhone...and I wouldn't be caught dead with an iPhone.

    48. Re:We'll be here to help by tepples · · Score: 1

      If that is more than you want to spend, how about this

      Thank you for recommending the Dell Inspiron 11 convertible. I've added it to my shortlist.

    49. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once you have switched to Linux, you won't "buy more music on iTunes" anymore. Use Amazon.

      And that, right there, shows the backwards thinking of Linux users...

      Change your life to cater to the OS, rather than the OS cater to your life.

      Perhaps the user doesn't want to leave iTunes, perhaps they are happy with their iPhone/iPad/iPod.

      Amarok syncs an iPod, including playlists. Just went through it myself. Losing iTunes doesn't mean losing your iPod, and the fact that iTunes as it is isn't available on Linux is not the fault of Linux. Look to vendors for blame, there.

    50. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you avoid using OSS software on Linux? You know, the unsecure kind that keeps cropping up practically daily now? Not all OSS bugs have nifty names for them, like HeartBleed.

    51. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then perhaps the user should just get a MacBook instead, it'll fit in better with their iDevices.

    52. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Those of us who have been Microsoft-free for decades will be here to help whenever you're ready"

      By typing in all caps RTFM, then by ignoring any questions even relevant ones.

    53. Re:We'll be here to help by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's why Windows totally owns the tablet market. No-one's willing to dump Windows lock-in to buy a device from Apple or Google.

      Back in the real world, most of the 'lock-in' is in people's heads. It's not that they MUST RUN WIZZYWORD 2000, which is only available on Windows, but that they can't be bothered to learn anything else without a good reason to switch.

    54. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 8 doesn't come with spyware or built-in ads and lets me control updates. Those things alone make Windows 8 vastly superior to Windows 10.

    55. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they didn't care, why are they collecting your data and refusing to allow you to disable any of it?

      I bet you think the NSA spies on you to make your life better too.

    56. Re:We'll be here to help by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      That's ok. You have a certain disability - you can't switch away from MS windows. Some of it is due to making choices in the past without a data migration plan (or a bad plan) to switch to an alternative some day - e.g. getting an iPhone and/or buying significant amount of music with iTunes. Some of it might be due to specific life situations.

      But many others have other disabilities - blindness, deafness, learning disabilities. They have to live with it, you have to live with "Microsoft Downloading Windows 10 without asking".

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    57. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone who uses Linux buys their music on Amazon. Not everyone who uses Linux wants you to change your life to suit their OS. Most people who use Linux don't give a shit how you use your software. Except...

      I want more people to use Linux on the desktop, simply for the sake of having larger market representation, so that Linux will be an attractive build target for the companies that produce fine commercial software and hardware.

      The advantages of Linux will NEVER be afforded to you by commercial OS vendors. But the rest of the vendors will continue to increase their support for Linux as the user base grows.

      Wouldn't you rather run an OS that respects you, instead of exploiting you as described in the article?

    58. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Windows 8.1 tablet comes with a built in (ok, it came with an update) ad for Windows 10. It has actually been telling me that Windows 10 has been released since January or so, long before Windows 10 was released.

    59. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glass houses, dude. Glass houses.

    60. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the user doesn't want to leave iTunes, perhaps they are happy with their iPhone/iPad/iPod.

      Ughh....The poor buggers.

      I hope that's not terminal :/

    61. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry about this post, I was drunk when I wrote it. Please disregard it.

      Also, I am a faggot and I suck a lot of cocks.

    62. Re:We'll be here to help by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't you rather run an OS that respects you, instead of exploiting you as described in the article?

      No, I'd rather run an OS that runs my programs.

      Today, that is Windows.

      Rest assured, I get it, it would be nice if we had a real choice in desktop OS options. We really don't. But installing and putting up with the troubles of Linux won't change that.

    63. Re:We'll be here to help by DutchUncle · · Score: 1

      You're conflating two incompatibilities. Replacing one desktop (or laptop) with another is one thing; getting a tablet is different because nobody expects to plug their accessories or printers into a tablet quite the same way. Plus by the time tablets became common the need for network-attached independently-intelligent devices had become so prevalent that the infrastructure was there. There are still industrial and other control computers out there running XP or 95 or older, which wouldn't be so strange-looking if they were embedded systems with customized OSes that nobody even knew about.

    64. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. I love iTunes, but unless I can't get an album elsewhere, I'd just as soon buy it on Amazon or Google. If the iTunes software were not on my computer, I would probably have no more reason to buy music on iTunes, and would switch to Amazon or Google or some other online music store. I do not use an iPhone or iPod or iPad -- I use an Android phone, a Kindle Fire, and a Windows PC. If I can re-download DRM-free copies of my iTunes tracks, I can actually rid myself of a slow and bloated program (Windows PC -- iTunes is okay for a Mac, but it lags so much on my computer that I barely use it).

      If you use iTunes and listen to most of your music on PC, and not on other iDevices, changing from iTunes is not changing your life, it is changing your interface. Yes, it will require extra work, but there are at least 8 programs that show up readily in a search for "managing iPod on Linux," so even if you use these iDevices, you can still manage the library on them through a linux machine, without iTunes, and you no longer require iTunes to be your music store.

    65. Re:We'll be here to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're catering your life to iTunes at the expense of getting the benefits of a better operating system.

    66. Re:We'll be here to help by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      I have a Windows xp installation on VirtualBox for that. Several of them in fact, each dedicated to the task at hand, started as clones. They don't take much space or other resources.

    67. Re:We'll be here to help by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      1) not removable. 2) connect tomtom to computer using usb cord 3) go to tomtom website. update plugin not available for your device. No downloads offered. 4) sigh, boot into windows

  18. it gets worse too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i've got a dell venue 11 pro 7140 lowend(64GB) and after install it has created a ~10GB rollback os file. that said even 6GB on 64GB is alot, however i can upgrade the ssd in this and plan to do so.

    you think that they'd at least try checking total storage and storage available an NOT push it unless, say 100+GB of free space was available...

  19. Assholes .. by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm so damned glad I've not allowed automatic updates. I'm seriously contemplating never applying a damned update to my Windows 8.1 desktop ever again.

    Microsoft seems to have simply decided that the user has no choice in the matter, and that Microsoft is going to manage your computer for you.

    Throw in all of the telemetry and other shitware they've been putting into the OS and Windows is rapidly becoming very hostile to the people who actually own the computers.

    They're really acting like a bunch of assholes in how they're handling this damned update, and making it harder and harder to tell what is a "real" update and what is just shit they've put in for their own purposes.

    What part of "this is my Windows 8.1 machine, I am not interested in Windows 10, fuck off and go away" is so hard to understand? Don't keep sneaking it in via stealthy means ... because if you have to do this shit behind people's backs, you should take that as a sign nobody wants it.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    1. Re:Assholes .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What part of "this is my Windows 8.1 machine, I am not interested in Windows 10, fuck off and go away" is so hard to understand?

      They understand. They don't care. To them, you aren't a customer, you're a data point. Data to be collected, collated, and sold. They will upgrade your computer because that is in their interest. They will track everything you do because it is in their interest. Your interest is irrelevant to them. You won't be assimilated, but your data will be.

      Personally, I don't think Microsoft should be the first up against the wall, come the revolution. Second or third will do just fine.

    2. Re:Assholes .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are honestly better off not.

      I've seriously never applied an update since 2007 to XP. I still have it on right now, on this very machine.

      Learn how to disable every service in Win8.1, get a good hardware firewall and software firewall, whitelist your programs, ban everything else, problem solved.
      Unless you piss off a government, you'll be perfectly fine.

      Windows is only insecure, for the most part, due to its horrifically shitty default settings and services.
      Linux can be made almost as equally insecure by enabling a shitload of services that you likely won't ever need and running as an admin like they stupidly did on XP by default, never incarnations are much better in that regard, even though UAC is still awful and breeds "get this stupid message box away" behaviours.

    3. Re:Assholes .. by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      Where can I find a good list of which services to stop (or which to keep), please?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    4. Re:Assholes .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.blackviper.com/

      Not a simple 'list'. But it gives you the info you need to decide if a service is worth leaving enabled.

    5. Re:Assholes .. by PW2 · · Score: 1

      I already decided to not update any of my Windows computers ever again -- they are all offline computers used for content generation -- I use a Linux computer for content uploading, Apple computers for FB, email, banking and tablets for everything else; as the family IT guy, people near by me are not likely to be led to purchasing a Windows PC;

      I'm really surprised that HP, Dell and others haven't pulled Microsoft aside and told them to 'stop it!!' and 'fix this!!'

    6. Re:Assholes .. by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      Many thanks.

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    7. Re:Assholes .. by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      HP, Dell and the others get paid by Microsoft to promote Windows.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  20. Spyware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    When I saw win 10 offered for free, I knew it was poisoned with something. MS is trying to force it on the world. It's clearly not ready for release yet it is being forced on the user base.

    We already know it is spying on users but I'm guessing its far worse than we realize.

    Got to have win 10 running on as many computers as possible before whatever the next false flag "scare us into submission" event happens.

  21. Windows 7 is my last Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    By the time I really can't use Windows anymore I expect Steam or someone to have pushed game publishers to offer more than token support for Linux.

    I dual boot Linux and use it a bit more than Windows now. And unlike some Linux users I'm actually buying games for Linux, instead of waiting for them to be open sourced. (that'll be a long wait)

  22. That would be UPLOADING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's uploading its warez onto your shit.

    1. Re:That would be UPLOADING by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      What? You must check what you mean.

      Uploading - it's something that you send from your computer to a server on the net.
      Downloading - it's something you get to your computer from a server on the net.

      What M$ do is to trick your computer to download crap from their servers. Much like malware.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  23. Been doing this for few weeks now by X.25 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had to travel recently, so I took a laptop with clean Windows 8.1 Pro install.

    At my destination, I've purchased a SIM (they only had 1GB data packages) and put it into the 3G/wifi router I carry.

    I powered the laptop, connected to Internet via said router, checked few things, then went away for few hours.

    When I got back to apartment, my data package (and Internet connectivity) was killed because Microsoft idiots decided to start downloading Windows 10 even though I have explicitly closed/rejected all the 'offers'.

    Those retards did not take into account the possibility that not everyone running Windows is on unlimited broadband data package. Great planning there.

    At home I did a plain install of 8.1 on another computer, and same thing happened - even though I explicitly rejected everything related to Windows 10, idiots made it so download starts anyway. I had to 'hide' the Windows 10 in Windows Update in order to stop it from being downloaded.

    1. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You're "supposed" to set the connection as "metered" which will prevent Windows from downloading any updates at all. (Or at least it's supposed to. It wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if it turns out that it doesn't.)

      Not surprisingly, while marking a connection as "metered" in Windows 8 is trivial (right click on the network and choose "set as metered"), it's nearly impossible to do it under Windows 10. You have to go to Settings, Network Connections, Advanced Options, and then there's a "metered" option hiding somewhere in those options.

      Of course, if you're using Windows 7, you're screwed. The "metered" setting is a new Windows 8 feature, and can't be done in Windows 7.

    2. Re: Been doing this for few weeks now by mattcoz · · Score: 1

      Isn't there an option to not download updates on a metered connection? I know there is in 10.

    3. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those retards did not take into account the possibility that not everyone running Windows is on unlimited broadband data package

      Of course they did. They just don't give a damn. We are talking about a multi-billion dollar corporation. They ran the numbers and concluded that pissing off a certain percentage of users is an acceptable price to pay for propagating their spyware (i.e. windows 10).

    4. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by amorsen · · Score: 1

      It is really annoying that "metered" isn't something that the network can announce. Can we get it in IPv6 Router Advertisements please?

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    5. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a stupid motherfucker leaves ANY computer unattended with connected to the Internet over a cellular connection.

    6. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by phayes · · Score: 1

      My Home Win7 VM tells me that I CANNOT update to Win10 because the VMWare display adapter is incompatible with Win10 (until/unless I upgrade to the latest VMWare this is exactly what I want). Here's hoping that Win10 hasn't stealth downloaded anyway.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    7. Re: Been doing this for few weeks now by tepples · · Score: 2

      I think the ability to mark connections as metered was new in Windows 8.

    8. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Agreed on that, yeah. You'd think the cellular, etc. providers would be all over it too, given all their complaining about heavy data users. Of course, it might cut into their revenue streams from people going overhead because they forget to limit the usage.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    9. Re: Been doing this for few weeks now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, if you're using Windows 7, you're screwed. The "metered" setting is a new Windows 8 feature, and can't be done in Windows 7.

      Reading is hard, isn't it?

    10. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      So you found the magic key here - install some hardware that isn't supported by Win 10 and it won't consider a forced upgrade for now.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    11. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Cederic · · Score: 1

      That'll be 1.4 billion smartphone users, just to get us started.

      Or maybe there's another definition of 'stupid motherfucker' that we should use?

    12. Re:Been doing this for few weeks now by Espectr0 · · Score: 2

      If you use plain old ethernet cat cable you can't set a metered connection

  24. 1-800-sue-em by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She will be a perfect, unassailable test case in the airtight class action lawsuit Data Cap Victims v Microsoft Corporation.

  25. We need to publicly call out Microsoft by acoustix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think the most effective way to approach this is to take to social media and call out Microsoft. What gives them the right to push an unwanted upgrade to my computer without my consent? You're planning to upgrade my computer, without any knowledge of how it will affect my software and hardware that has specific requirements.

    Can you imagine what will happen to small business running specialty software and hardware that isn't support on Windows 10 yet? What about the data plans of it's customers? We're talking about potentially millions of dollars that consumers will be charged in data overages.

    I have already taken to Twitter to start my bitching. And I don't tweet very often. We need to make this painful for Microsoft.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shout and shout. If the public outcry doesn't result in reduced income, Microsoft won't care.

    2. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, please don't! Think of my Microsoft stock...

    3. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by Khyber · · Score: 1

      I've done the same. This unplanned upgrade hosed two production systems of mine, after spending two months getting everything set to actually work on Windows 7.

      Hosed my music production machine and the machine used for coding my game project.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    4. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      What gives them the right to push an unwanted upgrade to my computer without my consent?

      You may want to watch the South Park episode regarding software EULA's.

    5. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by acoustix · · Score: 1

      You may want to watch the South Park episode regarding software EULA's.

      Yeah, but that was for evil Apple. Who would have thought that Microsoft would be evil too.

      Yes, that was sarcasm.

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    6. Re:We need to publicly call out Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, read your EULA....
      you agreed to this. We all did.

  26. Ok, I'm outta here by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Seems I have to abandon Windows earlier than anticipated.

    Anyone know a good PCB layouting software for Linux? And how well do games run these days?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eagle is rather good, but you have to pay for more than 2 layers and layouts over a certain size. There are more than a few open source schematic capture/layout programs, but I have not used them.

    2. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

      Switch but run your "PCB layouting software" in a windows VM.

      Then block that VM's MAC address and IP at the firewall!

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    3. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Try WINE as a first step, it allows you to run most Windows programs on Linux without problems so you can keep using most of your preferred software.

      As for games - I recall hearing that many Linux-native games actually run 5-10% faster on Linux than their Windows-native versions run on Windows. Alternately you can usually run the Windows version through WINE if a Linux version isn't available(so I've heard, haven't tried it myself), but I think you typically take a modest performance hit. I seem to recall there was also a commercial WINE alternative (fork?) focused on gaming with better performance and compatibility.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    4. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      eagle runs on linux. I've heard rumors that there are hacked versions of eagle for linux..

      kicad is getting a lot of attention and its free.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    5. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone know a good PCB layouting software for Linux? And how well do games run these days?

      Kicad. Not exactly Altium, but better than Eagle. Should be in most distro repos.

      Games.. Mixed bag. Some good stuiff on Steam, some nice Indies. Getting better.

    6. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by sglow · · Score: 1

      I do a lot of work with the gEDA tools (gschem for schematic capture, pcb for layout). Not quite as polished as the commercial packages, but free and open.

      In particular, I like the fact that all the file formats are open as ASCII based. Very handy for tracking changes in designs.

      http://www.geda-project.org/

    7. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would probably skip WINE and go straight to a Win VM. Dual-boot in the worst case.

    8. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems I have to abandon Windows earlier than anticipated.

      Anyone know a good PCB layouting software for Linux? And how well do games run these days?

      Congratulations brother, Tux welcomes you to computational bliss!

      Eagle PCB runs on Linux, and there are many others out there. Games? Meh! I play the free stuff that comes with Linux mint, but I am told that Valve runs on Linux these days.

    9. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Immerman · · Score: 1

      If you find a VM that runs 3D games decently please let me know - everything I've tried has atrocious 3D performance.

      As for everything else - if you're trying to keep Windows from spying on you, putting it in a VM isn't going to help a whole lot - nothing that setting up a decent firewall on your router wouldn't do at least (well, assuming most of your computer usage is Windows programs). And if you're jumping ship because you're sick of supporting an abusive monopoly then a VM won't help at all - in fact it will likely make things worse since you'll need a full-price retail or OEM copy of Windows, In addition to the $20 or so that went to MS for the pre-installed copy that was probably pre-installed on your computer.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    10. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll need a CPU with VT-d. I'm actually surprised that my Haswell i7 only supports VT-x, so I can't even go the VM route for gaming.

    11. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only one that I know of which we used in school .. Eagle. To my surprise a few months ago I learned that there exists a Linux Version of it.

    12. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Ah, I hadn't realized virtualization had advanced to that point. Thanks for the tip, I'm now finding lots of guided to VM gaming. Sadly they would require a completely new machine with VT-d support so aren't going to be relevant any time soon. Still, it's a feature to keep in mind for the next upgrade.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    13. Re:Ok, I'm outta here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VT-d requires chipset support. That's most likely the problem on your system since I think most haswell i7 processors can do it.

  27. Rather have W10 than U2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd rather have Windows 10 than U2, if I had a choice. Um... I don't have a choice. That's the whole point.

  28. I feel bad for poor people who can't afford Macs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being unsuccessful is bad enough, having no options but Windows is insult to injury. Stay in school, work hard, stay away from drugs and video games, or you could be stuck in an abusive relationship with Microsoft!

  29. Friends don't let friends run Windows Update by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why you never let Windows Update run at all and only ever run it at regular intervals, and check everything.

    Shit like this tends to get cleared up after enough people complain their ass off and threaten lawsuits.

  30. And the other shoe drops... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft: You'll have Windows 10 and like it!

  31. This explains why my parents called by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and were wondering if I had gotten the same huge update that crashed their laptop too. At least now I have a heads up as to what kind of headache will be involved when I go visit this weekend. FUCK YOU MICROSOFT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  32. Considering the source.. by bsdasym · · Score: 1

    Is this actually verified by anyone? I have two Win7 machines, desktop and laptop, and both are set to automatically download but not install updates. Neither one has had this update show up. If it's legit, where's the KB # to go with it? Right now it's just more unverified inquirer nonsense and a dogpile. Status quo in other words.

    1. Re:Considering the source.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry about AC'ing this, just checked the Win7 box across the room, there, in all it's glory, is the hidden 4.5 GB folder
      b.stards.

    2. Re:Considering the source.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that if you install updates manually and hide any with a name like "Windows 10 upgrade" you should be okay. It appears as Optional but pre-selected to be installed!!
      I have a $Windows.$BT directory but it's only 160MB and if I delete it it soon re creates itself as the same 160MB size but that's way better than 3GB.

  33. Terms and Conditions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, Windows 10 is the privacy and user rights nightmare incarnated, with terms and conditions running over several dozens of pages. What if Windows 7/8 users do not agree to letting themselves screwed back-, forward- and sideways? Does their system then become inoperatable? With what justification, considering that they paid for it and agreed to the terms for those versions?

    How can Microsoft back out of a made deal and, in essence, onesidedly "negotiate" something different?

  34. This is VERY EASY to stop... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IMPORTANT ONE IS GROUP POLICY (gpedit.msc):

    Go to Control Panel, Administrative Templates, System
    Internet Communication Management, Internet Communication Settings

    ENABLE (to turn it on, it is a disabler)

    "Turn off Windows Customer Experience Improvement Program"

    (IF YOU HAVE Windows "home" (less than Pro models), export the section of the registry involved from a Pro system & merge the .reg file you exported - should work well enough to do the job here for those of you using that lesser model of Windows)

    ---

    TO REMOVE THE BOGUS OPTIONAL TELEMETRY HOTFIXES MANUALLY:

    Open command prompt
    Type powershell
    issue these commands

    ---

    TO SEE WHAT ONES ARE INSTALLED:

    get-hotfix -id KB3035583, KB2952664,KB2976978,KB3021917,KB3044374,KB2990214

    ---

    TO UNINSTALL THEM (these for sure, per url next below):

    wusa /uninstall /kb:3035583
    wusa /uninstall /kb:2952664
    wusa /uninstall /kb:2976978
    wusa /uninstall /kb:3021917
    wusa /uninstall /kb:3044374
    wusa /uninstall /kb:2990214

    per http://www.ghacks.net/2015/04/...

    ---

    DESCRIPTIONS OF EACH (these uninstalled properly):

    KB3068708 (Telemetry)
    KB3075249 (Telemetry)
    KB3080149 (Telemetry)

    KB3022345 (Telemetry)
    KB2977759 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation)
    KB3021917 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparatioon + Telemetry)
    KB3035583 (Windows 10 upgrade preparation)

    ---

    I GOT "NOT INSTALLED ON THIS COMPUTER" ON THESE INITIALLY SINCE I HAD IE11 installed (PROBABLY ONES FOR IE9/10/11 &/or Windows 10 (I use Win7 here)):

    KB3075249
    KB3080149
    KB2505438
    * KB2670838 (See IE 9/10/11 notes below)
    KB3044374
    KB2990214 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation)
    KB2505438 (Although it claims to fix performance issues, it often breaks fonts)
    KB2976978 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation)

    ---

    I GOT "NOT INSTALLED ON THIS COMPUTER" ON THESE (*PRIOR* TO PULLING KB2670838):

    * KB2670838 (This update often breaks AERO on Windows 7 and makes some fonts on websites fuzzy. A Windows 7 specific update only
                            (do not install IE10 or 11 otherwise it will be bundled with them, IE9 is the max version you should install to avoid this).

    THESE RE-APPEAR AFTER UNINSTALLING IE11 RIGHT ON RESTARTING & CHECKING WINDOWS UPDATE:

    * KB2952664 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation prior to IE9/10/11 install)
    * KB3021917 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation prior to IE9/10/11 install)
    * KB3068708 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation prior to IE9/10/11 install)
    * KB3092627 (Windows 10 Upgrade preparation prior to IE9/10/11 install)

    ---

    run cmd as administrator

    sc stop Diagtrack
    sc delete Diagtrack

    ---

    *Task Scheduler Library:

    Everything under "Application Experience"
    Everything under "Autochk"
    Everything under "Customer Experience Improvement Program"
    Under "Disk Diagnostic" only the "Microsoft-Windows-DiskDiagnosticDataCollector"
    Under "Maintenance" "WinSAT"
    "Media Center" and click the "status" column, then select all non-disabled entries and disable them.

    *services.msc:

    "Remote Registry" to "Disabled" instead of "Manual".

    APK

    P.S.=> ... & "VOILA" - the subject line above's true & works... apk

  35. Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by tepples · · Score: 2

    The probably is that your average Linux gamer is a cheapskate

    If this is true, then in the pay-what-you-want Humble Bundles, why have X11/Linux gamers paid more on average per person?

    1. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by qbast · · Score: 1

      Because that's pretty much the only game released for Linux that year?

    2. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Or because people who use Linux understand computers better than people who use Windows and therefore have higher paying jobs.

    3. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by mlw4428 · · Score: 1

      I'm curious to see the data set that you're pulling from. Generally it's a small percentage of Linux users who actually pay for software, most prefer to use Open Source/free software.

    4. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by jwdb · · Score: 1

      Go check the humble bundle website any time there's a deal on. They post statistics versus OS, and most of the time Linux comes out on top in terms of how much they pay. I'll admit I haven't checked the last few bundles, though.

      Most Linux users probably do use free software, but that doesn't make them cheapskates, and HB's stats in fact show the opposite: when there's software that's *worth* paying for, Linux users voluntarily pay more.

    5. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

      And most Humble Bundles are filled with indie shovelware or commercial games whose sales-potential has long since slipped into irrelevance on Steam/Origin. They are not a proxy for the "proper" commercial games market.

    6. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by mlw4428 · · Score: 1

      You're also only suggesting one store which sells primarily indie games. Indie devs are willing to target other OSes, often because their games are not as complex (speaking from a game dev point of view) they have the flexibility to choose different platforms. That's also a single store, Steam shows a great level of detail showing how small the Linux platform is. The sales aren't there. That's been the common theme that I've heard during the round table discussions in the past and it's an image Linux needs to shrug off. There's also the entire argument that DirectX is perceived to be a better supported and better liked graphics platform than OpenGL. For PC gaming of course.

    7. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by moronoxyd · · Score: 3, Informative

      The data set is pretty much every Humble Bundle that contains games for Windows and Linux (which is most game bundles).

      Let's have a look at one currently running bundle: https://www.humblebundle.com/w...
      Average purchase: $2.82
      Average Windows: $2.71
      Average Mac: $3.25
      Average Linux:$3.89

      So Linux users are willing to pay 40% more than Windows users on a pay what you want scheme.

    8. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by tepples · · Score: 1

      I'm curious to see the data set that you're pulling from.

      Citations: Geek.com (2011); Softpedia (2012); Humble Bundle (October 2014)

      Generally it's a small percentage of Linux users who actually pay for software, most prefer to use Open Source/free software.

      The business case for developing free software for productivity has not historically extended to video games.

    9. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by argnn · · Score: 2

      So Linux users are willing to pay 40% more than Windows users on a pay what you want scheme.

      Linux users that purchase games publicly are willing to pay more. That's because they're actively trying to make a point, it doesn't represent the average.

    10. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      So Linux users are willing to pay 40% more than Windows users on a pay what you want scheme.

      Boy, that sure sounds good...

      So I guess if I release my new AAA game for $60 on Windows, then Linux gamers will be willing to pay $100 for it, right?

      Right?

    11. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm curious to see the data set that you're pulling from. Generally it's a small percentage of Linux users who actually pay for software, most prefer to use Open Source/free software.

      It's at the bottom of this page. Average Windows user pays $8.34, average Mac user pays $8.66, average Linux user pays $9.15. Of course, the totals are roughly in line with the OS penetration.

      Some of us Linux users are quite happy with open-source variants which are roughly equivalent to their closed-source alternatives. There are those of us for whom compromise is not an option - especially where we make money from using the software - and we're willing to pay in these cases.

    12. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by gmack · · Score: 1

      Much of the problem has been the quality of Linux ports in the past with some of them being so bad that it's just easier to keep a Windows machine around if you are into gaming. You can't just port a title by compiling against the Wine libs.

      Also even Steam's store makes being on anything other than Windows to be an absolute nightmare. If you sort by OS you cannot sort by any other category. Want a Linux RPG? You get to either search by "Linux" and sort through a ton of FPS and other crap. Or search by RPG and have to scroll past a ton of Windows only titles. Basically, Once I find a game I want to play, I find the experience on par with Windows. But quite honestly, if someone doesn't tell me about a good Linux game they like, I can't be bothered to hunt for them and so Steam has made a lot less money from me than if their store was actually functional for me.

      I also can't be bothered to keep a Windows machine around anymore, I gave my last Windows machine away when I realized I hadn't booted it in 3 months and that was for updates.

    13. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, because most of those games along with the ones on gog.com are much better than the absolute buggy, linear "AAA" crap that gets shit out nowadays.

      I would much rather play something like Star Control II than Battlefield of Duty XVII.

    14. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by mlw4428 · · Score: 1

      I haven't had a chance to view the one reply from Tepples, but based on your information I'm wondering if the data set is valid. I guess when most people talk video games coming to Linux, they mean so from a AAA title or a top studio. I'd be curious to see statistics showing sales numbers when the cost of the game jumps over $40. My own experience and bias leads me to think that the number of Linux purchases drops significantly.

    15. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well considering I buy all my games on steam sale I will wait till it is 75% off and buy it. Id pay 25 dollars for a good AAA game that I enjoy. In fact I do that routinely anyways.

    16. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by jwdb · · Score: 1

      I'm arguing against OP's characterization of Linux users as tightwads, and never suggested that Linux had a large market share (will freely admit that's not the case). Don't know why you're suddenly going off in a different direction.

    17. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Linux and humblebundle fanboi as much as the next guy, but there's a problem with your statement. Namely, the buyers of the bundles are a self-selected sample. A very small sample of people who care about games and since there aren't that many on Linux they're willing to pay more.

      Yes, they may pay 40% more, but you're in no way addressing this:
      >Generally it's a small percentage of Linux users who actually pay for software

    18. Re:Linux users bid higher for Humble Bundles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean $84? $100 would be a 66.67% increase not 40% as GP said had specified.

  36. Which update to uninstall?!?! by monkeyzoo · · Score: 1

    I had previously uninstalled and hidden the following:
    KB3022345 - Created a new Windows service called the Diagnostics Tracking service. (Retracted)
    KB3068708 - Update to 3022345.
    KB3075249 - Enhanced the User Account Control (UAC) feature to enable it to collect more information from the elevation prompts.
    KB3080149 - Update to 3022345/3068708.

    However, I still got the new massive download yesterday. Which update is to blame and needs to be uninstalled? The article doesn't say!

    1. Re:Which update to uninstall?!?! by Badooleoo · · Score: 1
  37. Known this for a month by wbr1 · · Score: 1
    I do not know which KB kicks it off but you will get a windows.bt folder on your main OS drive with about 22k files in it. We saw it as failures for our backup customers, as the folder is locked from file level and shadow copy access and our backup software logged the failures.

    For people with little storage it makes no sense, but I have not seen it perform this operation on a machine with very limited space. Otherwise it is just a pre-download so that installs proceed faster when a user decides to go. I have much less of a problem with this than the telemetry issues.

    --
    Silence is a state of mime.
    1. Re:Known this for a month by Megane · · Score: 1

      To be specific, the folder is named "C:\$WINDOWS.$BT", has the hidden attribute set (so DIR /A to see it), and it is over six. fucking. gigabytes. I'm happy I wasn't on a low data cap connection. Classy act there, MICROS~1!

      I had previously set Windows Update (about two months ago?) to "download updates and ask me to install them", and found that it was set to "automatically install updates". I wonder if there's any chance that another update changed this setting over the past few weeks?

      I've removed and hidden all the KB updates named in this thread, deferring restarts until I was finished, and half an hour after telling it to restart it's still "Preparing to configure Windows. Do not turn off your computer." Since this is just a gaming laptop, I'm willing to go without games for a few hours while this crap uninstalls.

      Not that I trust hiding the KB updates... one of the optional updates waiting for me was Silver(b)light. I tried to hide it but it just kept coming back. Yeah, now I'm putting it on "check for updates and don't download". I want to stay on Windows 7, capiche?

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  38. Please, MS leave my win7 install alone. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is stable, and I don't want to have to fix a bunch of shit which will inevitably break during the "upgrade."

  39. Completely redesigning the game for touch by tepples · · Score: 1

    The Windows Phone market share is larger than the Linux Desktop market share

    It may also be easier to port a Mac game to X11/Linux than to port a Windows game to Windows Phone. An existing OpenGL engine for OS X will likely work on X11/Linux with few changes. Porting a mouse and keyboard game to Windows Phone forces the developer to completely redesign the input system for a 5" touch screen and, if the game is real-time, rebalance all game interactions for the limits of touch input. Porting a Mac game to X11/Linux does not, as both platforms use a mouse and keyboard.

    and the games/apps for phones are considerably less complex than those of their desktop counterparts

    Are touch-driven games for Windows Phone "considerably less complex than" touch-driven UWP games for Windows 8.1 and 10? Is it hardware power, or is it touch input?

    1. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      "port a Windows game to Windows Phone"

      Step 1: Come up with touchscreen interface for your game and program it along with mouse and keyboard.
      Step 2: In Visual Studio, compile as a universal Windows application.
      Step 3: Publish.

      Performance issues aside (phones will never match desktops), porting to Windows on phones has become trivial.

    2. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by stooo · · Score: 0

      Yeah. It's just that MS obsoletes the entire device inventory at every upgrade, so nobody wants a soon to be obsolete MS phone.

      --
      aaaaaaa
    3. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by tepples · · Score: 1

      completely redesign the input system for a 5" touch screen

      Come up with touchscreen interface for your game

      What I appear to have failed to get across is that "[c]om[ing] up with touchscreen interface for your game" is often easier said than done. How would a game similar to, say, Mega Man or Street Fighter series be made enjoyable with a touch screen?

    4. Re: Completely redesigning the game for touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I played Mortal kombat X on my iPhone. For the first couple days it was ok. Then it got repetitive and way to easy to win. I was around in middle school swapping fatality moves with classmates for the original mortal kombat(toastyyyyyyy).

    5. Re: Completely redesigning the game for touch by tepples · · Score: 1

      I played Mortal kombat X on my iPhone.

      According to this page, it uses taps and swipes for attacks. But what does it use for moving your kombatant around? I don't own a phone made by Apple, nor am I in the market to buy one any time soon, so I can't try it for myself.

    6. Re: Completely redesigning the game for touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a new feature. You can't! The new walked garden rules indicate you can't have moving fighting games. ;)

    7. Re: Completely redesigning the game for touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then try NBA Jam on Android. That is how you do controls properly for a side scroller.

    8. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      Spare the bullshit. Windows Phone 8 devices will receive Windows 10 Mobile.

      The WP7 to WP8 transition was poorly-handled, but probably necessary.

    9. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      Strictly speaking, only the menus need a touch interface, since (hardware allowing) USB OTG allows for Xbox 360 (and Xbox One, but those are less popular) controllers.

      It limits the audience, but it was already limited by the nature of the games.

    10. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by tepples · · Score: 1

      It limits the audience, but it was already limited by the nature of the games.

      Just because your audience is already limited by the genre (non-endless-running platformer or fighting game) doesn't mean you have to limit the audience even further with a choice of platform. If a game plays well with a keyboard or a gamepad, then your first port targets are going to be platforms that ship with a keyboard or a gamepad. External gamepads, such as MFi gamepads on iOS or HID, Xbox 360, or MOGA gamepads on Android, probably have a smaller market share than even the PlayStation Vita.

    11. Re:Completely redesigning the game for touch by stooo · · Score: 1

      WM6 to WP7 transition dumped the entire user base
      WP7 to WP8 transition dumped the entire user base
      For WP10, they say they "work with the manufacturers to support most devices" ...

      --
      aaaaaaa
  40. Windows 10 is a default optional update by mikeca426074 · · Score: 1

    I have all my Win 7 computers set to let me manually select updates. Now every time a patch comes out, the Win 10 optional update is automatically selected, and I have to go to a different list from the important updates to de-select it before installing updates. Win7 also stopped giving me a reminder in the lower right that updates were available. Instead it changed the default start menu from switch user to shutdown, which will also install updates including Win 10. All of this seems to be designed to trick the user into installing Win 10 without realizing it.

    1. Re:Windows 10 is a default optional update by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      i've had the same issues with my girlfriends machine. Microsoft Windows is a pox, i must get my girlfriend off Windows and onto Linux then i'll have total piece of mind.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  41. Xbox One port by tepples · · Score: 2

    If you stuck to Directx for some reason, you'll be stuck with Windows (or Wine).

    A DirectX game will run on Windows, Windows Phone, and Xbox One. (In fact, DirectX is where the X in Xbox came from.) If your game is designed for use with a gamepad, especially multiple gamepads, you might see more sales on Xbox One than on iOS, Android, OS X, and X11/Linux combined.

    1. Re:Xbox One port by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unity, Unreal Engine and Source 2 all support Vulkan, which will work on Windows, Linux, Android, MacOS, iOS and PS4.

      Then there's also the fact that DX11 outperforms the overly hyped DX12.

    2. Re:Xbox One port by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      "A DirectX game will run on Windows, Windows Phone, and Xbox One"

      That is it will run on Windows, Windows, and Windows ....

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    3. Re:Xbox One port by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weird. Max Payne and Deus Ex are both DX games. Won't work on XP or later. They run, but the voiceover and many of the music and sound cues are missing.

      It works better on Linux than it does Windows.

  42. A pox on you all. by flacco · · Score: 0

    I threw out windows 15 years ago and have never, ever missed Windows.

    Since then, with each new Microsoft fiasco or customer abuse scandal, I have have seen post after post from people whining that they're not going to take it anymore, and that they're going to drop Windows as soon as "my favorite game" runs on Linux, or "photoshop comes to Linux", or some other bullshit reason.

    If this latest move by MS isn't your final straw, just shut the fuck up. Either bite the bullet and jump, or just shut up and admit that you are weak, helpless captives to Microsoft and that you love the abuse.

    Pathetic.

    Goddamn it.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    1. Re:A pox on you all. by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

      Pretty much my entire PC games library is Windows only. If you think that is "some bullshit reason" for sticking with Windows, you are sadly deluded.

  43. Not sold by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    I have been pretty annoyed by the popup already. I have not upgraded, in fact, I built this system from new parts within the past 6 months, then went out and got new copy of OEM windows 7 and installed it. I put 7 on here intentionally FFS.

    I have seen absolutely nothing to convince me I might want anything in 8 or 10. I know I will eventually have to update, but, windows is for gaming. I don't do serious work in windows. I want to run into as few errors as possible because fighting errors is part of my day job.

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  44. Why I never accept security updates by frovingslosh · · Score: 4, Informative

    One time, years ago, I got a new laptop and deferred accepting the "security update" for over a month while I learned the details of my new laptop and new Win XP OS. When I did accept the security update I could no longer access the Internet from Linux. This was particularly strange since I was running Linux from a Knoppix Live CD, and I even confirmed that the CD had not changed (both by checking the md5 and by making another CD). What I eventually tracked down was that the "security update" had changed the EEPROM on my built-in NIC so that it wouldn't work properly under Linux any more (all modern NICs use EEPROM to store information including the MAC address). Windows bypassed what was done and it could still access the Internet.

    As Windows is that only malware that successfully has been able to do damage to any of my computers that I couldn't undo, I no longer allow Windows to do the automatic updates. Some say that I'm foolish. This article indicates otherwise.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    1. Re:Why I never accept security updates by Wolfrider · · Score: 1

      --Thanks for that. I strongly suspect this is what happened to an older dual-core PC I was using to test Win10 before the general release - both NICs suddenly stopped working under Linux, the internal one and a PCI card. Incredibly annoying, especially when the Win10 preview EXPIRES and then REFUSES TO BOOT with a cryptic error message. Bah. Win10 is only on 1 machine I own (upgrade in-place from Win7), and that's where it's going to stop!!

      --
      .
      == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
    2. Re:Why I never accept security updates by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

      I'm not certain that you saw the exact same thing as I did, although the two may be related. In my case it was years ago and while that (and some later Knoppix releases) were unable to access the Internet after booting, eventually Linux seemed to learn what Microsoft was up to and corrected the problem. After they did I could run later copies of Linux without problems.

      To give you a little more info on the issue, as I said NICs have EEPROM to store the MAC address of the device. That makes it easy for the manufacturer to create thousands of NICs all with unique MAC addresses. That MAC address does not take up all of the EEPROM, there is space left, and my NIC (and I suspect most or all others) used remaining space to store configuration parameters. That way you could configure how you wanted the NIC to operate, things like speed and duplex mode. What I found was that, while the MAC address had not changed, these configuration parameters were now meaningless garbage and the NIC was coming up in a state that couldn't talk to anything else. Windows was ignoring the configuration parameters in the NIC and setting it's own, so the NIC worked OK (although you lost the ability to configure how you wanted the NIC to behave in hardware and had to do it in Windows if you wanted anything other than the default). I also found that I could force a reset of the NIC and then configure the NIC parameters under Linux on the failing Knoppix CD, and was thus eventually able to use that disc, but with a lot more hassle that it used to take. Before the "security update" I had booted and run Knoppix on the network many times without any issues.

      --
      I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  45. Laptop gone poof by scsirob · · Score: 3, Informative

    Our housekeeper had a Win7 laptop which ran so-so. Win10 downloaded automatically and nagged for install every boot. She finally clicked OK. Laptop thrundled for an hour, rebooted, screen went black, never came back. Each attempt to boot turns the screen black. No recovery, no backup.

    She got a Chromebook and couldn't be happier. Thank you Microsoft.

    --
    To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
    1. Re:Laptop gone poof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our housekeeper had a Win7 laptop which ran so-so. Win10 downloaded automatically and nagged for install every boot. She finally clicked OK. Laptop thrundled for an hour, rebooted, screen went black, never came back. Each attempt to boot turns the screen black. No recovery, no backup.

      She got a Chromebook and couldn't be happier. Thank you Microsoft.

      Unfortunately they will still be sure to count your Housekeeper in their marketing stats as another "happy customer" who downloaded Windows 10 in the first month.

  46. mp3, TaxAct, garminplugin, SweetHome 3D by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > Yeah? And my existing iTunes library? My tax software? The software to keep my GPS up to date? The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?

    I'd be glad to answer those questions.

    > My existing iTunes library
    Seven years ago, iTunes started selling music without DRM, so you can just copy your music files to any device, running any operating system. If you bought DRM music, Apple will charge you $25 to liberate your library, or you can cheat.
    http://www.usatoday.com/story/...

    > Tax software

    Since tax preparation software is only used once before it's replaced with the new version, I stopped downloading and installing it. Instead, I use TaxAct.com. It works well. For book keeping and accounting, I use Gnucash.

    > The software to keep my GPS up to date?

    Which GPS? For some, you simply copy the update to an SD card and put it in the GPS - the PC software doesn't really do anything. Some Garmin devices are easiest to update by using PC software. If you have one of those, you might want garminplugin:
    sudo add-apt-repository ppa:andreas-diesner/garminplugin
    sudo apt-get update
    sudo apt-get install garminplugin

    > The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?

    Looking for this?:
    http://www.sweethome3d.com/

    You didn't really say what exactly you mean by "home design software", so I guessed at what you might need.

    1. Re:mp3, TaxAct, garminplugin, SweetHome 3D by tepples · · Score: 1

      Seven years ago, iTunes started selling music without DRM

      Perhaps gstoddart has a big pile of movies, TV shows, and books.

  47. Re:Bloating chicken by jfbilodeau · · Score: 0

    What? My comment was modded down with '100% Overrated'...but there are no other rating. How can it be overrated?

    --
    Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
  48. Just one word: by fredrated · · Score: 1

    Fuck you Micro$oft.

    1. Re:Just one word: by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      That's 3 words.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    2. Re:Just one word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to be picky, but that's not just one word.

  49. One little shark by MrKaos · · Score: 1
    • one little shark
    • swimming in the sea
    • one little shark
    • watching Fonzie
    • one little shark
    • examining his skis
    • one little shark
    • swimming in the sea
    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  50. Re:Bloating chicken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Stop using monospace to post you fucking idiot.

  51. Microsoft Are beyond Contempt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows 10 should be the last nail in the Microsoft coffin.

    Anyone using it after the utterly contemptible attitude Microsoft have show to users privacy, and their sad attempt to force it on users of their other operating systems, is a fool.

  52. I want Ballmer back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steve Ballmer understood giving the customer a product for cash. Something this new guy doesn't.

    1. Re:I want Ballmer back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. Even Ballmer was better than the marketing wog they've got in charge now.

  53. Session restore by tepples · · Score: 1

    But how fast do the applications that you had open restore their state after you restart and log in again? And does your web browser restore the pages that were open in tabs after restarting the computer, even if you are offline when you restart?

    1. Re:Session restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You hear that wooshing noise? You might if you stopped talking for a minute.

      So Linux is absolutely horrible, what is your suggestion instead of windows then? Mac? Comon tepples back on topic here. I know you love to bash the linux lovers but its getting old when you report he same offtopic comment ten times.

    2. Re:Session restore by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      When you have an SSD that boots Linux in less than 20 seconds, who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly

      People who want their sessions to be restored correctly. Or which web browser will correctly reopen pages that had been opened in tabs, even if the machine is offline when the user logs back in?

      Weird. I can shut my Mac down and everything will reopen exactly where it was - if I want it to. Just a little checkbox - Do you mean the superior Windows system cannot do that?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re:Session restore by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Firefox. Just set it to load tab only on click after restore.

      Though if you are not suspending/hibernating, just connect to network *before* starting the browser?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    4. Re:Session restore by tepples · · Score: 1

      Though if you are not suspending/hibernating, just connect to network *before* starting the browser?

      My point is that lack of suspend breaks my workaround to save the cost of a cellular data plan for my laptop. Often I come out of suspend while riding public transit, and buses in my city do not offer Wi-Fi.

    5. Re:Session restore by tepples · · Score: 1

      I can shut my Mac down and everything will reopen exactly where it was - if I want it to. Just a little checkbox

      Does Safari restore open web pages after your Mac restarts, even if your Mac is disconnected from the network after it restarts? If so, I'll add a MacBook Air to my short list.

    6. Re:Session restore by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      I can shut my Mac down and everything will reopen exactly where it was - if I want it to. Just a little checkbox

      Does Safari restore open web pages after your Mac restarts, even if your Mac is disconnected from the network after it restarts? If so, I'll add a MacBook Air to my short list.

      DIsclaimer - I'm using an iMac

      I tried your query, with the exception of disconnecting from the internet, I restarted the computer and checked to "reopen windows" when logging back in. Here's what happened:

      Mail and Safarit re-opened, and having some 8 tabs opened, it saved those tabs in my history upon restarting. So I opened them, and there they were.

      It was paying attention, because I have it normally set to clear history when I quit Safari.

      Your needs appear to be a tad esoteric.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    7. Re:Session restore by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Often I come out of suspend while riding public transit, and buses in my city do not offer Wi-Fi.

      You haven't defined "correctly" in your statement "which web browser will correctly reopen pages". So everyone is interpreting it differently. In general, if a computer does something, it is by definition "correct" unless user specifies exact correct behaviour.

      From your other replies in this thread, it seems you want the page to show the content as if internet is active, even though internet is not active. In this, Linux beats MS Windows handily (and Firefox beats Internet Explorer by a small margin)

      1. Firefox desktop has an option to save a page to "pocket". Which does what my guess of your badly stated requirement is - save the page content to be viewable offline.

      2. Firefox Android has something similar.

      3. It is a million times easier to "Print to PDF" in Linux as compared to Windows. Out of the box in main distros for last 15 years. This beats screenshots by a wide margin because screenshots work horribly for scrollable web pages

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    8. Re:Session restore by lott11 · · Score: 1

      the would be OPERA!

    9. Re:Session restore by lott11 · · Score: 1

      like said OPERA and VIVALDI https://vivaldi.com/download/ they both will work on all OS. and they both will retain the web page and at the spot that you left off.

    10. Re:Session restore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vivaldi browser is pure garbage.

  54. Windows 10 by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

    Yesterday morning I had a migraine. In the afternoon I let one of my PCs "upgrade" to Windows 10 after I reinstalled Win 8. I'm not sure which was worse.

    At least the PC managed to roll itself back to Windows 8 when the 10 install failed. This was on a simple Asus motherboard, clean Win 8 install, AMD APU, no expansion cards, and only a KB and mouse connected to USB.

  55. yeah, several good options. For you, one best by raymorris · · Score: 1

    I know what you mean about hearing different opinions. Asking which is the BEST distribution is a bit like asking which is the best car. You probably want to know which is the easiest/ best FOR A NEWBIE. That's like asking which vehicle is best FOR A HANDYMAN, it narrows down the choices considerably.

    If you focus on the opinions which actually seem to answer the FOR A NEWBIE question, two or three choices will get the modt votes. Ubuntu and Mint will be suggested, and maybe CentOS. None of those is wrong! Any of three would be good.

        I would suggest that for initial setup you get some help from a friend who uses Linux, although there are eady installation guides for all of those distributions. If you DO get some help, the "best" choice for you is whichever of the three above that your helper is most accustomed to. I install CentOS for people because I can most easily answer CentOS questions over the phone. If your friend uses Ubuntu, he or she will be bedt able to help you if you also use Ubuntu.

    You may also see Fedora suggested. Fedora is designed for people who want to always be on the cutting edge, updating regularly, and don't mind dealing with rough edges on new software. It's good for some people, but not the best choice for newbies .

    1. Re:yeah, several good options. For you, one best by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I would suggest that for initial setup you get some help from a friend who uses Linux

      If I need help from a friend who uses Linux, then what the frack am I moving to Linux for?

      Windows is easy to install and use, no help required. Clean installing? Stick the USB stick or DVD in the drive, boot up, it installs.

      That's it.

      Windows finds all the drivers, even sets the screen resolution correctly. Sign in with a MS account and it offers to set itself up as another computer you have already used.

      It couldn't be any bloody easier.

    2. Re:yeah, several good options. For you, one best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you prevent Microsoft from trying to shove an OS down my throat?

      Is there a checkbox in that Microsoft account? You tool.

  56. Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by tepples · · Score: 1

    All reports I've read state that ASUS Transformer Book detachable laptops fail to suspend under Linux. Which non-dud 10.1" laptop should people buy instead?

    1. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Try a Thinkpad.

    2. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Google result for 10 inch thinkpad is $878.99 on Amazon. What this tells me is that your suggestion for Linux-compatible hardware costs three times as much as Linux-incompatible hardware in the same size class. This can be spun as one advantage of Windows over Linux.

    3. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Then get a used one. It's not like computers are getting significantly faster any more. Why would you want some POS laptop made of plastic anyway, when you can have one with a magnesium frame? There's a reason business-class laptops cost more: they're made a lot better, and don't fall apart in a year with regular handling. My Dell E64xx laptops all work great with Linux, are made of magnesium and aluminum, can handle rough treatment, and look much nicer and have far better keyboards than that consumer-level crap. Consumer laptops are completely unusable because the keyboards are so bad; only Thinkpads and Dell Latitudes have usable keyboards.

    4. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Then get a used one.

      I would if it were warranted and, more specifically, warranted for use with Linux. That's why I bought a Dell Inspiron mini 1012: it shipped with Linux and a warranty. It's just that those are discontinued.

    5. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound dangerously like "you're holding it wrong" / "you don't really need this" Apple fanboi crowd.

    6. Re:Then which non-dud 10" laptop? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Huh? How so? I'm advocating for quality products, not fashion accessories. Did you miss the part about quality laptops being able to handle rough treatment?

  57. Re: Recovering from suspend by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Even though I tell Windows 10 to do nothing when the laptop is closed it still acts groggy when I have it closed for awhile and open it back up.

  58. Session restore by tepples · · Score: 2

    When you have an SSD that boots Linux in less than 20 seconds, who the hell *cares* if it doesn't hibernate correctly

    People who want their sessions to be restored correctly. Or which web browser will correctly reopen pages that had been opened in tabs, even if the machine is offline when the user logs back in?

  59. Manual says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/10 by tepples · · Score: 2

    Which manual should I read: the manual for the laptop, which gives only the instructions for Windows, or the manual for the Linux distribution, which says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/10?

  60. Sueing Microsoft for damages! by burni2 · · Score: 1

    That's the way to break arrogance!

  61. usps.gov, Mono, same testing by raymorris · · Score: 1

    I'm not a hardware guy, so I'll lave the first question to other people.

    I print my mailing labels directly from ups.com and usps.gov. UPS has pretty decent account management on their web site.

    I write Windows programs using Mono, which is .Net on Linux. If you write Windows software for a living, and have spent thousands of dollars on Microsoft development tools, you probably want to keep Windows. One of my best friends is a professional Windows programmer. He uses Windows at work, and only at work.

    You can of course test your Mono/.Net software on any Linux. That's advantageous because it helps ensure that you aren't relying on an API that is specific to a certain version of Windows, or at least let you know when you are. If you choose to do testing on specific different versions of Windows , you will of course want to use those versions of Windows , regardless of which OS you use for development. Whether you develop on Windows or Linux, virtual machines make sense for testing on six different versions of Windows. CentOS, and probably other distros, makes virtualization easy with virt-manager, a point-and-click GUI for installing and running virtual machines.

    1. Re:usps.gov, Mono, same testing by tepples · · Score: 2

      I print my mailing labels directly from ups.com and usps.gov.

      So how do you automatically paste package weights from your scale and shipping addresses and declared values from your order manager into ups.com and usps.gov, how do you specify that labels shall be printed on a label printer instead of the computer's primary plain-paper inkjet or laser printer, and how do you automatically copy the tracking number and postage amount back out into your order manager? That's what it would take to get several packages per minute out the door. Our current application communicates with Endicia DAZzle and UPS WorldShip through XML files.

      You can of course test your Mono/.Net software on any Linux.

      Will an application tested on Mono for Linux necessarily work on .NET Framework on Windows? I thought there were subtle implementation differences that could break an application if a developer inadvertently relies on unspecified or undefined behavior.

      virtual machines make sense for testing on six different versions of Windows.

      And all these six different versions of Windows need six different licenses and will try to download five different copies of Windows 10 without asking (except for the one that's already Windows 10).

    2. Re:usps.gov, Mono, same testing by raymorris · · Score: 1

      > Will an application tested on Mono for Linux necessarily work on .NET Framework on Windows?
      > I thought there were subtle implementation differences that could break an application if a developer inadvertently relies on unspecified or undefined behavior.

      The subtle implementation differences between versions that break unexpectedly are exactly what developing first on Linux will prevent. You won't use some fragile thing specific to a certain version of Windows, with a certain version of MS Office installed along with a specific version of IE. You're forced to either use standard interfaces in the standard way, or EXPLICITLY add a platform-dependent section for those cases where you need to interact deeply with the OS. To put it another way:
      If it works on Windows 7 and Vista, it _might_ work on Windows 8. If it works on Linux and Windows 8, it'll almost surely work on Windows 7 too.

      > automatically paste package weights from your scale and shipping addresses and declared values from your order manager into ups.com and usps.gov,
      > how do you specify that labels shall be printed on a label printer instead of the computer's primary plain-paper inkjet or laser printer, and how do you automatically copy the tracking number and postage amount back out into your order manager?
      > That's what it would take to get several packages per minute out the door.

      If you're doing several packages per minute, that sounds like more of a shipping appliance than a desktop. If you're happy with your current shipping appliance, by all means keep using it. If not, I haven't researched existing high-speed shipping systems that run on Linux. I could implement those things you've described in a couple hours using Perl. I see that both USPS and UPS use Linux/Unix internally, so their systems are of course quite compatible.

  62. Watching updates like a hawk now. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always used to leave my updates on autopilot but with all the shenanigans recently I've taken to setting them to simply notify me that there are updates and then slogging through them manually to determine which ones are legit and which ones are tantamount to spyware. Which is significantly less than convenient but apparently sadly necessary.

    I keep saying it and I keep meaning it but if it wasn't for games I would have just switched to Linux.

    1. Re:Watching updates like a hawk now. by spiffyspiff · · Score: 1

      stuff it.

      i've just given up and pulled the network connection from my win7 vm: it won't be phoning home any more.

      i'm not going to sit here wading through loads of kbs trying to work out what to switch off all the time....

    2. Re:Watching updates like a hawk now. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I took the more sensible route of disabling updates and forgetting about it. I used to manually check for updates and just apply whatever security fixes were in there (but never the optional bullshit). Now I simply won't apply updates at all. It might leave me vulnerable, but not more than having Spyware 10 on my PC.

    3. Re:Watching updates like a hawk now. by spiffyspiff · · Score: 1

      yeah, i get what you're saying, killing the net connection sounds pretty severe.

      but now, it can't phone home even if i missed uninstalling / not installing some kb's (and i probably did). Any other existing backdoors / telemetry / bit-torrented windows downloads / unauthorisd activity / snooping etc etc etc are all dead in the water too.

      and i can still download the security essentials signatures myself on the linux host when i feel like it.

      in retrospect, i can't really see any downsides and i wish i'd done it earlier.

      things have come to a bit of a sorry conclusion when you have to effectively abandon an OS because it is actively working AGAINST YOU, and you -really- can't trust it AT ALL.

  63. Re: Manual says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL, pow!!!!!!

  64. Buy A Mac! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buy a Mac?

  65. Aaaaand it's gone. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Between the constant surveillance, NSA backdoors and this, I'm done with Windows. I've been using Linux off-and-on since Redhat 5.2, so I know enough to get around (settled with Fedora). This is getting way out of hand.

    CAPTCHA: 'grudge'

  66. What is shovelware? by tepples · · Score: 1

    And most Humble Bundles are filled with indie shovelware

    What makes a game "shovelware" to you?

    They are not a proxy for the "proper" commercial games market.

    But they are how new developers enter the "proper" commercial games market and bring their lack of Windows-only mentality with them.

    1. Re:What is shovelware? by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

      Shovelware? Try the pseudo-8-bit-retro-sprite-art-roguelike-zombie-crafting-survival games that spam the Steam front page daily and seem to make up 75% of the Humble Bundles (with most of the remainder being elderly franchise titles pushed out by a mainstream publisher, usually as promotion for a new entry in said franchise which will go nowhere near such a bundle.

      And the major studios are not failing, for the most part, to produce non-Windows PC games because of a lack of experienced developers. They are refusing to produce them because almost everybody who tries finds that the returns don't justify it. The decisions over which platforms to port a commercial game to are not made by coders, but by businessmen.

      The indie scene these days increasingly looks like a toxic swamp filled with egomaniacs who don't have the discipline to pay their dues working for an established studio, but who want to grab some kickstarter funds to put out their oh-so-unique special artistic vision, which either fails before it gets to release, produces a dull piece of hipster garbage of no interest to anybody outside of a very niche community, or, more often, produces yet another pseudo-8-bit-retro-sprite-art-roguelike-zombie-crafting-survival game.

    2. Re:What is shovelware? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The indie scene these days increasingly looks like a toxic swamp filled with egomaniacs who don't have the discipline to pay their dues working for an established studio, but who want to grab some kickstarter funds to put out their oh-so-unique special artistic vision

      Have you been living under a rock and missed all the stories about the horrible work environments at the established studios like EA? Who wants to get lousy pay and be expected to work 100 hours a week? On top of that, gamers seem to complain a lot that the games published by places like EA are all boring, buggy, and derivative. How many more Madden games do we need? Maybe most of these indie games are crap too, but I can see why developers would want to pursue that avenue instead of "paying their dues" working for a shitty, abusive company like EA. And personally, while I haven't tried any, I'd much rather play a pseudo-8-bit-retro-sprite-art game than any typical modern EA game; thanks for the tip, I'll have to check these out.

    3. Re:What is shovelware? by RogueyWon · · Score: 1

      And the problem here is one of supply and demand. Or rather, that the supply of people who want to work in the games industry vastly outstrips demand for developers. So developers get treated like disposable assets.

      The indie gaming scene is not a wonderful, exciting alternative. There are a handful of genuinely talented small studios, most of whom have been around since before the start of the present indie boom, and a lot of millennial narcissists burning through either mommy and daddy's savings or a pile of kickstarter funds they have no ability to manage. As they do so, for every hour they spend developing, they spend three in reddit and twitter bitch fights. That Gamergate shitspolosion? It came from the indie scene and mostly stayed in the indie scene (none of the established developers wanted to be anywhere near it). A product, on both sides, of the rampant immaturity and narcissism that characterise the indie gaming subculture.

      And while all that was going on, AAA gaming was getting interesting again. Shadow of Mordor, Alien: Isolation, Bloodborne, Witcher 3, Metal Gear Solid 5... all of those are well executed games, with high production values and, crucially, more creativity and new ideas than anything that's come out of the indie scene over the same period. Outside of Call of Duty and Battlefield, the days of the 6-hour corridor shooter are basically over in AAA gaming.

      The issues with working practices at some AAA studios are real, but indie gaming isn't the solution. It's just a path to impoverished parents and ripped-off kickstarter backers. Ultimately, we don't need so many people working in the video games industry. Until we stop pushing people into it as a career and start giving a reality check to teenagers who want to make games for a living because they really enjoy playing them, the problem for those working in the industry won't go away.

  67. Re:Manual says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because Ubuntu is the only Linux distro....

  68. Huh? What? Help out a geezer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not understanding this. I've had to fight off the "Upgrade to Windows 10 Pro failed" for the better part of a month, maybe because Microsoft flagged something in it as an Important upgrade, maybe because one of my Dells was bundled with two update helpers. Don't know, but it's wasted much time, and I won't upgrade Win8 PCs that need Win10 until Microsoft gets its crap together. My main protection is that the upgrade won't succeed on a computer that's joined to a domain. Help for "Upgrade to Windows 10 Pro failed" has been worthless at microsoft.com, so I've been fixing Windows Update, clearing out the cache, then using one of two registry-based tips from Microsoft for disabling the upgrade.

    What exactly does Patch Tuesday have to do with any of this?

  69. Tap Scroll down Save new offline map by raymorris · · Score: 1

    For a little while now you've been able to save maps of your intended area in order to use Google maps offline. Turn-by-turn directions offline are coming soon.
    http://trendblog.net/google-ma...

  70. Wait, my bandwidth went WHERE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, Microsoft IS going to reimburse me for the bandwidth costs in case I go over this month, right? I mean, surely they didn't think pushing something that's several gigabytes in size wouldn't be the least bit inconvenient for people who may not have the best internet (see: most people in America) right?
    RIGHT?

  71. Seeing this "$Windows.~BT" hidden folder now by TheDarkener · · Score: 3, Informative

    I usually install "Optional" Windows updates as part of my preventive maintenance routine with my clients. I was taken off guard when I saw this suspicious looking folder. After a second of research I found it was the Windows 10 install files, which I never asked for (my clients always defer things like that to me).

    Along with some other questionable optional Win7 updates as of late (like the one that tracks you akin to Win10), I'm wondering whether I need to research each individual update now before installing it. Fuck, Microsoft. Why do you have to make my job even more time consuming than it already is just keeping your damn OS running correctly?

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Seeing this "$Windows.~BT" hidden folder now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you hate on MS when it seems like they have just HELPED you up Billable Hours!?!? Sheesh, some people!

    2. Re:Seeing this "$Windows.~BT" hidden folder now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My own personal policy is to only ever install "Security Updates" for Win7.

      I can't identify a single reason to install any of the others.

      If Microsoft starts to abuse even "Security Updates" then I'll finally be motivated to migrate all of my clients to Linux.

  72. A-ha! by tekrat · · Score: 1

    THIS explains why Starbuck's WiFi is maxed out!
    I thought someone was downloading porn.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  73. I turned it off by AndyKron · · Score: 1

    I turned off Windows updates. I don't trust Microsoft anymore.

  74. Re:Manual says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/1 by tepples · · Score: 1

    Then which distro should I use instead of Xubuntu on a Transformer Book? Google asus transformer book linux suspend brought this disappointing result: "suspend not working at all" and "Reboot doesn't work either, seems like acpi is broken." Likewise Debian has "Sleep / Suspend: Error (Couldn't get it working)".

  75. And last Win boxen convert to Linux in our lab by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Sayonara!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  76. PC board layout on Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Express PCB runs in Wine.
    Everything I've tried runs in VirtualBox/XP.

  77. Re:Bloating chicken by jfbilodeau · · Score: 1

    But I'm a developer. I work in monospace!

    ...but if it pisses you off, I'll go back to plain text.

    ...as soon as Slashdot fixes the Options dialog that is broken for me right now...

    --
    Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
  78. And... FUCK YOU for burning up my data plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use Cellular for home internet access and I had been wondering why I was suddenly 20GB over, at a cost of THREE HUNDRED DOLLARS.

    1. Re:And... FUCK YOU for burning up my data plan! by ledow · · Score: 1

      Next time, stick a up-to-$50 device/software in there somewhere to monitor and limit and thus make sure it can't happen again.

      Hell, you might even have spotted it earlier and stopped it before it became a problem.

  79. Re:Tap Scroll down Save new offline map by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

    Umm...that's Great if I'm just reading the map without data...but If I need turn by turn in the meantime? I'll stick with a GPS app that already has that feature enabled (there's several).

  80. Microsoft's Computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you install Microsoft software on a computer, that computer essentially becomes property of Microsoft, especially if it's an OEM computer.

    Microsoft can do whatever it wants to its computers.

    Reserve some disk space and make it unusable to you, CHECK.

    Reserve some RAM and make it protected: CHECK.

    Reserve some bandwidth for it's own purposes: CHECK

    Deny You access to some files and folders: CHECK

    Run anti-piracy checks: CHECK and CHECK

    You have to allow Microsoft to update their computer, it's not "My Computer" anymore , it's just "Computer", a computer owned by MSFT.

  81. Call me crazy, I disabled Windows 7 from updating by blind+biker · · Score: 1

    ....on all my computers. In fact, I did that quite some time ago, when the first rumors of MS installing malware started circulating. I did that encouraged by one of my laptops on which the Windows 7 had updates disabled for years, and I got no viruses, malware, or other unwanted software. It seems that your computer's safety is almost entirely a question of common sense and not falling for social engineering tricks.

    I should add that I have ClamWin Antivirus running on all my machines, including the one that didn't have updates for years. It's the most lightweight, least intrusive AV I've ever seen, and I highly recommend it.

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  82. Re:Manual says Suspend/Resume: Not yet working 0/1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then which distro should I use instead of Xubuntu on a Transformer Book?

    I don't know, surprise me.

    Personally, I use Linux Mint on an Alienware 17 (2014 model) and it works fine. No issues with suspend at all. Contrast that with Windows on the same laptop, resuming from sleep mode is buggy and causes my USB devices to not wake unless I unplug and replug them.

  83. Microsoft Has to do this.. by Striikerr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft has to do this in order to boost figures which they spread around via marketing. Look how many times Windows 10 has been downloaded by users! Have a look at THIS headline as proof..
    The Appeal of Free: 75 Million Users Download Windows 10 in First Month

    Obviously the intent here is to inflate their numbers and make the deployment look better than it really is. While I have no doubt that many are taking advantage of the free upgrade option (which apparently expires in a year or so), not all who download are going to install (shoveling the upgrade onto systems) or stick with it.

    1. Re:Microsoft Has to do this.. by sabbede · · Score: 1
      That's just silly. The first month was over before this happened, so there's nothing bullshitty about that number.

      And have you used it? I've been running it since it's release and regret nothing. Simply put, it's far superior to the previous versions. It sounds to me like you simply don't like Windows and want reasons to support your opinion. Which is fine, you don't have to like it. But you should really just say that instead of trying to come up with reasons to make yourself feel superior for having that opinion.

    2. Re:Microsoft Has to do this.. by Striikerr · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has been pushing out downloads to users so that number will include these pre-staged downloads for later installation. My comment was aimed at the fact that Microsoft is essentially opting in everyone to Windows 10 and pushing the files onto their devices. They do this (in part) to be able to showcase the large download numbers and tell the world that the uptake on Windows 10 is exceptional. The fact that they are reporting number of downloads and not total installed base further solidifies this position. These upgrades should be opt-in and not automatically downloaded to every computer which has automatic updates enabled as those were for security and stability updates, not full operating system updates).

      As for my opinion of Windows, I do use Windows 7 (disliked Windows 8) and I support a work environment which has Windows 7, 8.1 and 10 computers (along with various versions of Server). I did not say that Windows 10 sucks, I said that Microsoft really needs this to be a success and will use every tool at its disposal to do so and that starts with marketing (via boosting the number of downloads which implies actual installs). I do not like this approach but understand why they are doing this and for some people, it will help them to upgrade as they probably want to do. I am not storage or bandwidth constrained so it doesn't impact me as it may others. It's just this philosophy of shoveling it onto every device possible is pretty disingenuous when they market those figures as an early sign of success.

    3. Re:Microsoft Has to do this.. by sabbede · · Score: 1

      Whether or not this move means they changed it to opt-out, it was expressly opt-in during the reported time frame.

  84. Steam recommends Ubuntu by raymorris · · Score: 1

    I'll give you two answers. First, I'll point you to my reply to the same question a few hours ago:
    http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

    In that reply I said that Ubuntu is a good choice for newbies. Since Steam is important to you, the fact that Steam officially supports Ubuntu LTS is an additional good reason to choose Ubuntu.

    Suppose that in a couple of years you've really gotten into Linux, understanding what is going on under the covers. Ubuntu (which is good for newbies) is descended from Debian, and SteamOS (currently in beta) is also built from Debian. So I'd expect that over the next year or so Steam support on Debian will become very good. Debian is targeted more to advanced users.

    So if web browsing and Steam were my main interests, I'd use Ubuntu now. After a while, if you want to change, I'd consider changing to Debian (or even SteamOS).

    1. Re:Steam recommends Ubuntu by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      Thanks. Sorry, never saw your reply, it got buried.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  85. First line is misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple never forced download of the U2 album. It merely showed up on your iTunes account history (and as iTunes in the Cloud). The only way it would auto-download is if you had that option checked for Store purchases. Which is not enabled by default.

    Even CNN understood the distinction: http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/15/tech/mobile/apple-u2-return/

  86. Just so you know... is not english by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and neither is "Way to look needy..."

  87. Quota breaker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This could break folks who are on quotas. Where do they seek compensation should they go over the quota?

  88. Restoring Firefox session while offline by tepples · · Score: 2

    When Firefox starts: Show my windows and tabs from last time

    This saves only the URL in each tab, not the contents of the page in each tab. If I restart the computer, log in, and launch Firefox while offline, all the tabs will say "Problem loading page".

    1. Re:Restoring Firefox session while offline by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      There is a function in Firefox to not try to load the restored tabs till you activate them. I recommend it. I hate about chrome that 5 youtube videos start playing at the same time whenever I start the browser.

    2. Re:Restoring Firefox session while offline by tepples · · Score: 1

      There is a function in Firefox to not try to load the restored tabs till you activate them.

      The trouble is, if I use shutdown with session saving instead of suspend, when I activate the tabs, I will be offline.

  89. I don't care about the download but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft screwed my house by not offering Windows Media Center for Windows 10. FIne. I have a old 8.1 machine that I use for that. They can put the upgrade on the disk all the want but if they do a forced upgrade, I will sue. I like 10 despite its security flaws but until they release WMC that machine needs to remain under windows 8.1.

  90. Tell Windows it's a capped connection by cbhacking · · Score: 1

    Should have been using Win8.1's "Metered Network" feature. You can mark a network as metered (just right-click on it in the network list) and then Windows won't use data on it without your authorization, including downloading updates. In fact, it's one way to block Win10 from downloading unwanted updates.

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    1. Re:Tell Windows it's a capped connection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I'll get on the phone with Grandma right now and tell her to do that. Facepalm.

    2. Re:Tell Windows it's a capped connection by bigmadwolf · · Score: 1

      That's all very well but is the average Joe or Jill going to know to do that?

    3. Re:Tell Windows it's a capped connection by Ramadog · · Score: 1

      That option is only for wifi. There is no option to set ethernet as unmetered and the ms faq explicitly says ethernet can not be set unmetered. I found the same using usb tether which I use in preference to wifi hot spot. Both win 8.1 and 10 will happily set a wifi hot spot on a metered mobile phone connection as unmetered.

  91. Not only arrogance, also incompetence and ABUSE by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    "Windows 10 is just completely, hilariously broken, to the point that Windows 8 seems amazing by comparison."

    I agree, except that I wouldn't use the word "hilariously". My own characterization:

    Microsoft is shockingly poorly managed. My Slashdot comment explains Microsoft's control over Firefox and Mozilla Foundation. That control may explain why the user interfaces of Thunderbird and SeaMonkey have been damaged in recent versions.

    Yahoo is badly managed. From that story "Marissa Mayer's second-in-command 'leaves with $109m' on being fired from Yahoo after just 15 months". An incompetent executive got $109,000,000 for leaving a short job.

    As I said earlier, Microsoft has a LONG history of being badly managed. Quotes: Steve Ballmer is "Monkey Boy" and, from a May 12, 2012 story, "Without a doubt, Mr. Ballmer is the worst CEO of a large publicly traded American company today."

  92. Re:Bloating chicken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's totally broken for me too. It's like there's missing CSS and I don't even see a "save" button.

  93. So what. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is this news for nerds? Did any of you not already know this?

    Also who really cares?

  94. Where is the DOJ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, where is the Department of Justice? This is about as anti-competitive as you can get at every level. Where is the people seeking advice from attorneys? Where's the news coverage? The only reason this is happening is because Windows users are not doing anything about it and just allowing it to happen; later whining about it online. Hence: Slashdot.

    Hey, I know. I'm a Linux user, but I'm not going to rub it in. Windows users have a choice too. But if you're truly outraged, then this is something that would have hit the TV by now with the DOJ receiving millions of complaints and an "investigation starting" is the next headline we'd hear about it.

  95. Small Claims court. by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    Just file there. Though the filing fee will likely cost you more than your overage charge, you can always try.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  96. Still arrogant... by Simulant · · Score: 1

    ...after all these years.

    Way to earn our trust.

  97. sleep seems to work though by Chirs · · Score: 1

    I don't use hibernate on my linux machine, but it sleeps just fine. Most of the time that's sufficient.

  98. Here is the fix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MAKE ALL YOUR NETWORK CONNECTIONS' COSTS 'variable'. (metered)

    And then tell windows to not download updates over metered connections and then manually control your updates.

    Sucks, but this is what happens when you can no longer trust your OS... you have to put it on a short leash. And seriously consider running windows in a VM and use Linux for daytoday stuff. (you can have office without windows now)

  99. Autodesk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Upgrading to Windows 10 is all fun, but some backyard software companies with a few dollar market cap still don't support any of there products on Windows 10.

  100. Are they sharing over lan? by devslash0 · · Score: 1

    I have not confirmed this myself but a long-known IT support specialist told me a few days ago that Windows 10 is sharing it's installation files with other computers on your LAN. That could be yet another reason why they download the files regardless of your settings. It's now become a proper malware I guess?

  101. Not happening for me by jonwil · · Score: 1

    I uninstalled the nag thing pushing me to upgrade to Windows 10 and I haven't gotten any of the big space-hogging Windows 10 stuff.

  102. It's a matter of getting order info in and out by tepples · · Score: 1

    For USPS, you have two options: [...] PayPal [or] USPS.com

    How well does either of these options integrate with other order fulfillment systems? For example, does the user of PayPal.com have to manually match up the package's receipt with the transaction number on PayPal.com, key the weight from the scale into PayPal.com, and then copy and paste the tracking number from PayPal.com into the fulfillment system? And how well does it work with Amazon purchases, which don't go through PayPal payment? Currently DAZzle lets us use XML to get the addresses and weights in and get the tracking numbers out without having to manually copy and paste every order.

    Use UPS.com. Anyone can get an account there

    We have an account. Currently UPS's WorldShip application for Windows lets us use XML get the addresses and weights in and get the tracking numbers out without having to manually copy and paste every order.

    1. Re:It's a matter of getting order info in and out by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What order fulfillment system are you using?

      Anyway, unfortunately the answer is no. When you have a big system with multiple components are designed to run on one OS, it just isn't going to be trivial to switch to another OS; all the components have to have versions for the new OS. You only asked about USPS and UPS shipping, so I just pointed out that it is possible to print those labels that way, but integration with other software is a whole other can of worms.

      Honestly, the USPS really sucks about doing any kind of integration. They seem to be actively against it; they have some "webtools" APIs, but that's just to get some address-correction information and the like, not for purchasing and printing postage. For that, they only want to work with third-party vendors like encidia.com and stamps.com (which I hear is a big scam), as well as PayPal (which works through Pitney Bowes, not directly through the USPS). UPS is better I believe; from what I hear, they have an XML API you can use with their site, if you want to roll your own.

    2. Re:It's a matter of getting order info in and out by tepples · · Score: 1

      What order fulfillment system are you using?

      For a while we were using Stone Edge, then we went to one custom web-based system, and now we're considering another. Stone Edge had its own built-in UPS functions, but it likewise required DAZzle to be installed in order to print USPS postage. Over the years, strict dependence on Windows has been cut down to this one application of turning a PC into a shipping appliance. It's a Python script that runs on Windows and communicates with running copies of DAZzle and WorldShip through XML.

  103. Richard Stallman is stilll playing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  104. Forced reboots by tepples · · Score: 1

    That is a very specific and unusual set of applications...

    Each of which has a use in my retro video game development workflow.

    • Firefox: Read documentation and participate in discussion
    • Notepad++ or gedit: Edit source code
    • GIMP or other bitmap image editor: Create graphics for an application
    • GCC and Python: Build and run custom data conversion tools
    • GNU Make: Decide which files need to be retranslated when making changes to an application under development
    • FCEUX: Run the application

    Why 10 inch? For use while riding the bus to and from my other job.

    But fair enough... remind me why those don't run on Windows 10 again?

    They do run on Windows 10 and Windows 8.1 and Windows 7. In fact, one of them (FCEUX) requires Windows or Wine in order to activate the debugger. One drawback of Windows 10 is that you can't opt out of all telemetry. Another is its forced reboot policy, which causes loss of open documents, loss of unsaved changes, loss of loaded web pages until next Internet connection. And the drawback of older Windows is eating up 4 GB of SSD space for a copy of Windows 10 should an administrator decide to install it. Or should I file bugs against each GUI application that I use to request that the developer implement session saving?

    1. Re:Forced reboots by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      "Indeed. While what this article reveals is somewhat disconcerting, a lot of what MS mentions in its privacy policy is stuff that the product needs to function as intended (i.e. OneDrive, various Live Tile apps / etc) and people are just fearmongering the hell out of it."

      That is a quote from one of the comments below the article you linked to. I think it is a fair point, much of what Windows is doing is providing the connected online services that come with Windows, that didn't come with Windows 7 before it.

      ---

      I suppose part of the difference is that I've simply accepted a 24/7 connected online world and that to have the rich services provided for free, tradeoffs have to be made. One of those is that my computers will be talking to MS computers on a regular basis.

      Honestly, I don't have a problem with this.

      That being said, if you want your computer to NOT talk to MS, then yes, I'd agree that should be an option, with the understanding that you'll lose a lot of function of Windows due to things like OneDrive, Cortana, live tiles, etc. not working without it.

      But perhaps MS doesn't want to offer that option, or they are trying to make it harder to obtain to push everyone to being connected. Well, they are a for profit business, I can't fault them for that.

      This reminds me of my Mother, who is happy with her old feature flip phone and doesn't want to change. She fought tooth and nail leaving Windows XP, wasn't happy about it at all. She has Windows 7 on her computer now and doesn't want Windows 10. Not because she is afraid of it or cares about the telemetry, but because she doesn't want change. The very concept of OneDrive hurts her brain. She is 71 years old, so frankly she's done making changes and that is of course her choice.

      But technology moves so quickly, it can be hard to just put the brakes on and say, "ok, I'm happy here, I'm getting off the wagon". Which was fine to do before 24/7 online everything. Your 386DX-25 can continue right on happy running DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.1 until the end of time and it doesn't care that it is 2015 and the world moved on.

      But that isn't really true of more recent versions of Windows on more recent computers that expect to see an Internet connection.

    2. Re:Forced reboots by tepples · · Score: 1

      if you want your computer to NOT talk to MS, then yes, I'd agree that should be an option, with the understanding that you'll lose a lot of function of Windows due to things like OneDrive, Cortana, live tiles, etc. not working without it.

      There's a big difference between Windows communicating with application service providers that the user has made an explicit choice to trust (OneDrive, Cortana, and publishers of live tiles) and the browser's phishing filter sending every URL you visit to an organization that works closely with the MPAA.

      Well, they are a for profit business, I can't fault them for that.

      The problem is that each PC manufacturer is also "a for profit business," and many PC manufacturers have made a business decision not to cooperate with operating system businesses other than Microsoft.

      This reminds me of my Mother, who is happy with her old feature flip phone and doesn't want to change.

      I too use a flip phone, mostly because smartphones still cost much more per month to operate.

    3. Re:Forced reboots by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference between Windows communicating with application service providers that the user has made an explicit choice to trust (OneDrive, Cortana, and publishers of live tiles) and the browser's phishing filter sending every URL you visit to an organization that works closely with the MPAA.

      From your own link:

      Torrent trackers freak out over perceived Windows 10 anti-piracy measures

      Based on extremely thin evidence, several private torrent trackers believe Microsoft is setting up for a big piracy crackdown in Windows 10.

      ---

      Well let me know if it turns out to be true, as it stands, it seems like a lot of fearmongering...

      That being said... If you're downloading stuff you shouldn't be, why are you complaining? Stop that crap, it is stupid.

      The problem is that each PC manufacturer is also "a for profit business," and many PC manufacturers have made a business decision not to cooperate with operating system businesses other than Microsoft.

      Two points.

      1. They have tried it, multiple times... I know Dell twice in the past 15 years has tried selling systems with Linux on it, and stopped due to various problems.

      2. What other "operating system businesses"? Linux isn't really a "business", more a loose collection of various builds of varying degree of compatibility.

      And thus you have the problem. If HP or Dell goes and sells a PC with Linux on it, ok, what flavor? Lets say it is Linux Mint. Fine, then the customer downloads a program that is meant for Ubuntu. Now what happens when it doesn't work?

      http://www.skype.com/en/downlo...

      Lets say the HP Linux customer wants to install Skype. Which version does he download and install on Linux Mint?

      I see multiple versions listed there, including TWO versions for Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and OpenSUSE, and one marked Dynamic.

      If you go to the Windows page for Skype, there is one button to click and no choices:

      http://www.skype.com/en/downlo...

      Because it knows what to do. That one button works for Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, and 10.

    4. Re:Forced reboots by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I too use a flip phone, mostly because smartphones still cost much more per month to operate.

      $30 a month for unlimited everything is too much?

      https://www.metropcs.com/30-ph...

    5. Re:Forced reboots by tepples · · Score: 1

      From the linked page: "Limited time offer, not valid in Indiana." I live in Indiana.

    6. Re:Forced reboots by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Somewhere there was a *woosh* heard...

      You of course missed the point, but that's ok...

    7. Re:Forced reboots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That being said, if you want your computer to NOT talk to MS, then yes, I'd agree that should be an option, with the understanding that you'll lose a lot of function of Windows due to things like OneDrive, Cortana, live tiles, etc. not working without it.

      Those are all utterly worthless services that have no place as part of a default PC OS installation. If you want to clutter your computer with garbage like that, you can go download them yourself.

  105. Microsoft is walking on systemd footsteps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good to see Microsoft follow our Glorious Leader Lennart Poettering and finally take steps to free its users from the clutches of choice. Now if only installation were mandatory* they could be officially recommended by our Glorious Leader.

    * unless the user moves to Windows ME or some other version nobody uses

  106. You guys have fun beta-testing Windows 10 by leftie · · Score: 1

    I'll wait for a few updates to make it stable and all the software I use day to day has been migrated over.

  107. Turn the services off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just disable the automatic updates service? you can go to run and type services.msc, and disable the service totally, or set up a WSUS server, and do it from there?

  108. No problems here! Re:That was easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow.. are you sure? I haven't had that issue for many years now... I sleep soundly and so does my laptop!

  109. Re:Data Plan Blew Up - so blame the victim? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, the ISP is NOT the villain. It's MS. If somebody is going to download multiple gigabytes to my computer then I expect them to stop and ask, and provide an option for downloading in segments that fit within my data cap (or get it some other way) if I really want it. MS directly damaged the in-laws and should pay for the overage charge. They *could* sue for that in small claims court, but the fees would be higher than the recovery absent punitive damages.

    For me, the damage was mainly in usability. My Uverse router/gateway kept crashing, or slowing down to where my uplink speed actually was higher than apparent downlink in several Speedtest runs. It also overloaded the wireless LAN preventing access to local servers and causing random disconnects of the printer (was it trying to upgrade THAT too???). Luckily, the Uverse cap is high enough that at my link speed the damage was to operation rather than bank balance, but when I tracked the problems down they all occurred at times when one or more of the Win 7/8 computers in the house acquired the Win10 package (6+ GB) without user permission, knowledge, or intervention.

    For those with Windows 7, this would seem like time for a class action for theft of hard disk space and network services (Windows 8 and 10 users can't do that - the EULA prohibits suing MS). Of course, one of those "Important" updates probably "updated" the EULA for older versions, too.

  110. wrong by bingoUV · · Score: 1

    NetworkManager has no clue about "most things", especially none about suspend/resume.

    --
    Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    1. Re: wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I "fixed" this by making an icon to restart NM as needed, Not automatic but it works

  111. Look here for a solution to the telemtry updates. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Be careful of the parts of the script that route microsoft servers to nul with route -p . That broke a game I was playing and a website I used frequently.
    http://www.hakspek.com/security/windows-script-to-remove-all-windows-10-telemetry-updates/

  112. Re:Bloating chicken by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

    Sorry - I don't have mod points today.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  113. Yes-i had to fight it off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did try 2wks of 10, before going back to 7. 2 other laptops keep getting the 10 dowload. Finally got it to stop. Apple and parallels are running most of the windows stuff i need and i must say are a better windows. Guess some day i'll have to go to windows for those apps that only work on windows - enterprise developped apps

  114. I understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This finally explains why so many are going to windows 10.
    What a trick MS, well played....

  115. So is this connected to Comcast's announcements? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yesterday afternoon we had a problem with our Comcast service taking us to the, "Activate your service!" window. (An hour and a half later and four separate support calls later it was fixed.)

    The thing is, when I got to the technical support option, the Comcast menu announced something like, "If you are calling about a Windows 10 device, or have a Windows 10 device installed in your home, Microsoft is aware of the problem and is working on a solution." Since I don't haven anything Windows 10 (and I'm on a locked-down self-owned WiFi which is connected to my modem,) I thought nothing of it. Now I wonder fundamental problem Windows 10 has that screws up Comcast service, though, to a degree that they'd put it out on their phone tree menus.

  116. 240p art style; paying dues by tepples · · Score: 1

    pseudo-8-bit-retro-sprite-art

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but you appear to claim that 240p is not a viable art style. The fact that these are making it onto GOG and Steam shows that enough people like it or at the very least tolerate it. Is the 240p art style bad objectively, or is it just against the preference of RogueyWon?

    The indie scene these days increasingly looks like a toxic swamp filled with egomaniacs who don't have the discipline to pay their dues working for an established studio

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but you appear to claim that starting a video game studio in your home town is the wrong way, and leaving your support network behind, moving to another state, and joining an established studio is the right way. If so, an established studio needs some way to choose the most skilled candidates for an interview, especially if that involves flying the candidate out to the studio's office. So how should a candidate for a job at an established studio demonstrate his skills other than through completing a game?

  117. Re:Data Plan Blew Up - so blame the victim? by Cederic · · Score: 1

    They *could* sue for that in small claims court, but the fees would be higher than the recovery absent punitive damages.

    Curious. In the UK you just add the admin cost of the small claims process to the amount claimed.

  118. Offline is the important part by tepples · · Score: 1

    with the exception of disconnecting from the internet

    This is the key difference. When I resume my laptop on the city bus, it has no Internet connection.

    Mail and Safarit re-opened, and having some 8 tabs opened, it saved those tabs in my history upon restarting.

    Firefox also restores open tabs when it is restarted. But if the PC is offline when a tab is restored, the tab is restored as "Problem loading page" instead of being correctly restored from cache.

    Your needs appear to be a tad esoteric.

    I prefer the term "thrifty". Suspend allows me to save $500 per year by not subscribing to cellular Internet.

    1. Re:Offline is the important part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you just save whatever pages you want to read on the bus to your local drive?

    2. Re:Offline is the important part by tepples · · Score: 1

      Why don't you just save whatever pages you want to read on the bus to your local drive?

      Does each browser have a built-in function or extension to save all pages currently open in tabs to the local drive? If so, I will. If not, because such a built-in function or extension does not exist.

    3. Re:Offline is the important part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any browser worth using will. That includes Opera and Firefox. Opera can save pages as a single MHT. Firefox can save pages, but only as HTML + directory containing the page assets.

      I'm positive Chrome can save pages too, but I don't know if it can save as MHT since I don't use it.

    4. Re:Offline is the important part by tepples · · Score: 1

      But can Opera and Firefox do foreach (all open tabs) { save the page in this tab; }?

    5. Re:Offline is the important part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You taking Greyhound across the country or something? Just how much content are you trying to read on your bus trip?

      Don't be so lazy, it only takes 2 seconds to save a page.

  119. Bandwidth limits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I foresee a rather large lawsuit happening from those people whom have crappy internet caps fo x reason...

  120. Borderline derivative work cases by tepples · · Score: 1

    That being said... If you're downloading stuff you shouldn't be, why are you complaining?

    I know to avoid The Pirate Bay and similar sites that flagrantly disregard copyright. But not all sites are quite as obviously infringing as those, and I don't see how a non-lawyer can precisely determine what he should and shouldn't be downloading. When people purchased a download of the song "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams from Amazon, Google, or iTunes, how could they know they were downloading a song that turned out to be infringing (Gaye v. Thicke)? And how can someone downloading a copy of Emacs tell whether the M-x tetris function in Emacs infringes the copyright in Tetris ? And is Nintendo planning to go after users of RomHacking.net, which contains a commentary on the program of Super Mario Bros. ?

    Or in practice, does an end user have little to worry about when visiting sites that aren't bright-line infringers?

    What other "operating system businesses"?

    I was primarily referring to Canonical Ltd., which maintains the Ubuntu operating system.

    Later on you refer to binary incompatibility for proprietary applications among different distributions of X11/Linux. This is something that Valve has been trying to solve with Steam Runtime.

    1. Re:Borderline derivative work cases by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Or in practice, does an end user have little to worry about when visiting sites that aren't bright-line infringers?

      ^ This... You can always come up with a fringe example, but lets be honest, it is people going to The Pirate Bay and downloading "The Hurt Locker" or "The Avengers" that have to worry.

      I was primarily referring to Canonical Ltd., which maintains the Ubuntu operating system.

      Later on you refer to binary incompatibility for proprietary applications among different distributions of X11/Linux. This is something that Valve has been trying to solve with Steam Runtime.

      Keep in mind that Valve is also a private, for profit company. If they ever get a decent share of the OS market going, they'll end up in the same place MS is. Gabe isn't some angel on wings come to save us all, he is a person, like all other people, running a business.

      My example with Skype is meant to show the problems with trying to offer something besides Windows. It isn't as simple as saying, "Install Linux", when even basic programs like Skype require a half dozen different versions, and maybe none of them run on Linux Mint (a version often suggested for new Linux users).

      What happens if Intuit were to offer TurboTax in a Linux version? How do they support that? What versions and what binaries do they have to provide? What a mess.

      It isn't just a matter of having Linux get above 2% desktop marketshare. It could be 10% tomorrow, but if that share is split among 10 different versions of Linux, you're going to be hard pressed to have more than 1 or 2 of them supported. Then everyone starts running the "supported one" and you end up with only a single choice again.

  121. Anti-virus should be picking this one up... by kcorey · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the classic definition of a "trojan"?

    Meh. So much for Microsoft doing things differently.

    -Ken

    1. Re:Anti-virus should be picking this one up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I can picture it now. Some anti-virus software identifies Windows 7, 8, 8.1 and 10 telemetry and forced Win 10 updates as malware. The AV software has some measures to try to stop all of this, with varying degrees of success.

      All of that anti-virus company's software products are added to Microsoft's malicious software list. CPUs with DEP try to prevent the AV from running.

      I would really enjoy a war between Microsoft and every anti-virus / anti-malware software shop.

  122. I'm trying to buy compatible HW by tepples · · Score: 1

    buy hardware compatible with Linux

    That's what I did last time, and that's what I'm trying to do this time. It's just that I'm having a heck of a time finding a new 10" laptop, convertible laptop, or detachable laptop that is compatible with Linux. The ASUS Transformer Book sure isn't.

  123. Re:Call me crazy, I disabled Windows 7 from updati by almechist · · Score: 1

    ....on all my computers. In fact, I did that quite some time ago, when the first rumors of MS installing malware started circulating. I did that encouraged by one of my laptops on which the Windows 7 had updates disabled for years, and I got no viruses, malware, or other unwanted software. It seems that your computer's safety is almost entirely a question of common sense and not falling for social engineering tricks.

    I should add that I have ClamWin Antivirus running on all my machines, including the one that didn't have updates for years. It's the most lightweight, least intrusive AV I've ever seen, and I highly recommend it.

    I basically did the same thing long ago on my Sony VAIO laptop running Vista. Hell, I never even installed SP2! And you know what? The computer still runs fine, maybe a tad slower because of 7 years accumulated Windows Rot, but I've never had any problems with viruses, or now that I think about it even so much as a single problematic BSOD, which is pretty amazing. The funny thing is that Vista was so hugely reviled in its day, but now I'm really glad I never tried to upgrade or downgrade, since Vista seems to be the last version of Windows immune from the current round of MS mal-loading. The lesson I guess is that proper security-minded behavior by the user counts for more than the OS or even the virus scanner. Don't do dangerous things online, it's that simple.

    Anytime a program wants to go to automatic updates, I make sure the setting stays on "notify me first". And when a program decides that that option will no longer be offered, well, that program ceases to be updated on my machine, forever. Note that I'm not advising anybody to do as I have done, it's admittedly potentially dangerous, but it's worked for me, so far.

  124. That's no better than a "virus"! by iq145 · · Score: 1

    NO ONE has the right to download anything onto anyone's PC without prior permission!

  125. Just another Microsoft Hater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sigh - Don't the Microsoft haters EVER get tired ?

  126. Re:Bloating chicken by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

    Nice font man...