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Apple Deprecating Quicktime For Windows, Micro Trends Urges Users To Uninstall (trendmicro.com)

harryjohnston writes: Usually when a vendor deprecates a software product and stops releasing security updates, they provide some sort of advance notice that they're intending to do so. The least we would expect is for them to announce an unexpected end-of-life themselves. However, Trend Micro released a security advisory today describing two zero-day vulnerabilities for Quicktime for Windows, and according to them, Apple told Trend Micro -- but apparently nobody else -- that they have deprecated Quicktime for Windows and will not be releasing a patch. The Register has an article on the announcement. Apple did not respond to their request for comment.

6 of 212 comments (clear)

  1. Not the first time... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Apple simply stopped updating Safari for Windows, no announcement or notice, just quietly stopped releasing updates.

    1. Re:Not the first time... by TheReaperD · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Flash is being depreciated and Adobe has already given a timeline for the discontinuation of the product so that companies that currently rely on it will be able to migrate to a different product with a minimum of hassle. Of course, many will still wait until after it is discontinued and they get hit by a horrendous attack to try and migrate. I have no sympathy for them.

      --
      "Be particularly skeptical when presented with evidence confirming what you already believe." -
    2. Re:Not the first time... by phishybongwaters · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Honestly, I wouldn't stop at their win apps, below the bells and whistles they layer ontop of the same OS they release every damn year, you'll see a trend of half-assed-ness that's beyond disgraceful. And I'm talking about their products on their platforms here. I'm not even talking about them purposefully gimping non apple software on apple devices (when MS did this, it was pure evil remember) and I'm not even mentioning the nasty certificate authority that was handing out forged certs for a bunch of google services that Apple decided to keep allowing while every other responsible company blocked the shit out of that CA. At this point, without a fundamental shift inside the company, I wouldn't even trust them with slapping skins on other peoples software.

  2. Re:Micro Trends, Trend Micro, same thing, right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is it really any different from when CmdrTaco ran Slashdot?

    There were always plenty of dupes. Stories were full of misspellings and awful grammar. Some of the summaries had significant problems with them. Taco wrote a rant and posted it as a story one time saying that he wanted Slashdot to be that way. He defended the story selection in another rant.

    And people always complained about Slashdot sucking and said it used to be better. They hated user accounts, moderation, Slash 2.0, the friends/foes system, D2, and so many other things. Most of the comments in any JonKatz story were complaining about JonKatz. They complained the quality of comments had declined. One person in particular, Bruce Perens, threw a huge fit saying that there were too many user IDs with names similar to his, which is why Slashdot shows the user ID numbers in comments to this day.

    There have been some changes to how stories get posted. For one, there haven't been any Forbes links posted in a long time. This seems to be an editorial policy in response to the demands of users.

    The single biggest issue I have is that Slashdot's CMS should be open source like it used to be. I firmly believe the new management could do that right now if they desired it. As a show of good faith, release the source and put it back on Sourceforge. That's the one thing that really irks me.

    Otherwise, I think most of the complaints are BS. If you don't like the stories being posted, vote them down in Firehose and submit better ones. Fix the grammar and resubmit the story to Firehose before it gets posted. Grow some stones and do something instead of bitching about stuff that actually is in your power to change.

  3. Re:What Else To Use? by UnsignedInt32 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    VLC actually "plays" QuickTime (well, mostly MP4 these days?) files just fine.

    The problem is creating the file. I work in a video game industry, and for things like trailers, sometimes clients/partners requires use of certain settings which assumes QuickTime is in use. I have tried some alternative software to do this task, but I have often observed them often creates non-satisfactory result, especially when it deals with non-PC consoles.

    Having said that recently, software like blender, start to be able to produce fairly consistent/reliable results, it has been very messy to generate appropriately formatted results, and I can see there still may be edge cases where lack of access to QuickTime can be an issue. (Though, I'd say, 90% of them, it no longer is a problem.)

  4. Knife the Baby by Rob+Lister · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Blast from the past ...

    According to Tevanian, Apple executive Peter Hoddie asked Microsoft officials, "'Are you asking us to kill playback? Are you asking us to knife the baby?'" He said Microsoft official Christopher Phillips responded, "'Yes, we want you to knife the baby.' It was very clear."

    http://www.businessweek.com/mi...
    So the baby has finally been knifed, some 18 years later.