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.
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
Haven't they already backported all their spyware to 7 and 8 and forced it down users' throats as "critical security updates?"
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?
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.
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....
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
On other news, linux distributions started downloading systemd to users that did not want it.
If you are running Windows in 2015 then be prepared for the OS to own you!
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?
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
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 ?
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
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.
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
Time to take the "last measure" against them.
"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.
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.
> 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.
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...
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.
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.
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)
It's uploading its warez onto your shit.
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.
She will be a perfect, unassailable test case in the airtight class action lawsuit Data Cap Victims v Microsoft Corporation.
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
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.
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.
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!
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.
Microsoft: You'll have Windows 10 and like it!
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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.
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?
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 /uninstall /kb:2952664 /uninstall /kb:2976978 /uninstall /kb:3021917 /uninstall /kb:3044374 /uninstall /kb:2990214
wusa
wusa
wusa
wusa
wusa
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
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?
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!
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.
It is stable, and I don't want to have to fix a bunch of shit which will inevitably break during the "upgrade."
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?
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.
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.
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.
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"
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.
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
> 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 $25 to liberate your library, or you can cheat.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/...
> Tax software
Since tax preparation software is only used once before it's replaced with the new version, I stopped downloading and installing it. Instead, I use TaxAct.com. It works well. For book keeping and accounting, I use Gnucash.
> The software to keep my GPS up to date?
Which GPS? For some, you simply copy the update to an SD card and put it in the GPS - the PC software doesn't really do anything. Some Garmin devices are easiest to update by using PC software. If you have one of those, you might want garminplugin:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:andreas-diesner/garminplugin
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install garminplugin
> The home design software I used when I needed to file a building permit?
Looking for this?:
http://www.sweethome3d.com/
You didn't really say what exactly you mean by "home design software", so I guessed at what you might need.
What? My comment was modded down with '100% Overrated'...but there are no other rating. How can it be overrated?
Goodbye Slashdot. You've changed.
Fuck you Micro$oft.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Stop using monospace to post you fucking idiot.
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.
Steve Ballmer understood giving the customer a product for cash. Something this new guy doesn't.
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?
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.
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 .
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?
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.
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?
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?
That's the way to break arrogance!
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.
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.
LOL, pow!!!!!!
Buy a Mac?
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'
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.
Because Ubuntu is the only Linux distro....
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?
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...
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?
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.
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.
I turned off Windows updates. I don't trust Microsoft anymore.
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)".
Sayonara!
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Express PCB runs in Wine.
Everything I've tried runs in VirtualBox/XP.
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.
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.
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).
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.
....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.
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.
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.
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).
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/
and neither is "Way to look needy..."
This could break folks who are on quotas. Where do they seek compensation should they go over the quota?
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".
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.
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...
"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."
It's totally broken for me too. It's like there's missing CSS and I don't even see a "save" button.
How is this news for nerds? Did any of you not already know this?
Also who really cares?
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.
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?
...after all these years.
Way to earn our trust.
I don't use hibernate on my linux machine, but it sleeps just fine. Most of the time that's sufficient.
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)
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.
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?
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.
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.
the world's tiniest open source violin.
That is a very specific and unusual set of applications...
Each of which has a use in my retro video game development workflow.
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?
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
I'll wait for a few updates to make it stable and all the software I use day to day has been migrated over.
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?
Wow.. are you sure? I haven't had that issue for many years now... I sleep soundly and so does my laptop!
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.
NetworkManager has no clue about "most things", especially none about suspend/resume.
Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
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/
Sorry - I don't have mod points today.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
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
This finally explains why so many are going to windows 10.
What a trick MS, well played....
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.
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?
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.
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.
I foresee a rather large lawsuit happening from those people whom have crappy internet caps fo x reason...
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.
Isn't this the classic definition of a "trojan"?
Meh. So much for Microsoft doing things differently.
-Ken
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.
....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.
NO ONE has the right to download anything onto anyone's PC without prior permission!
Sigh - Don't the Microsoft haters EVER get tired ?
Nice font man...