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Old 04-21-17, 06:32 AM   #1
vienna
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I'm posting this as an informational item that may be of interest to some of you out there:

https://www.yahoo.com/tech/hack-lets...222921730.html

I can't vouch for its efficacy, so you're on your own...


EDIT:

Just noted the article does not have a specified link to the 'patch'; here is another article on same, with link:

http://www.computerworld.com/article...ned-patch.html




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Old 04-21-17, 07:55 AM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by vienna View Post
EDIT:

Just noted the article does not have a specified link to the 'patch'; here is another article on same, with link:

http://www.computerworld.com/article...ned-patch.html

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Shades of GWX Control Panel! As a permanent strategy, it's probably doomed, as Microsoft will just switch the CPU blacklist routine from file to file. But it is a great idea to force Microsoft to spend more time and money on Windows 7. That way they have less resources to further destroy Windows 10.

Sometimes it's not about fixing something. It's about punishing the bad guys.
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Old 04-22-17, 01:21 PM   #3
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A major problem with "hacks" like that, is that they are in "direct violation of the User's Agreement policy", and MS will either deep-six the hack with other updates, and / or they may resort to disabling of the user's OS, as per the license agreement... They have that "power" in Windows 10, and possibly in Win7 & 8, but I'm not sure. Probably depends on the "updates" that are installed. This is what we get with "Licensed Updates" aka "Subscription-based Software". Almost all the companies I used to purchase software from are doing this crap now, including, but not limited to: Microsoft, Adobe, Steven Slate, Waves, and others that I can't think of now. Absolutely disgusting. This is worse than the DRM garbage that prevents a "purchaser" of a DVD or BD from backing-up their original disk for archive purposes, but which also gets in the way of my "user-created content"... I better quit. I'm really disgusted with the "trend" of the digital world. They're even got this crap in refrigerators and clothes dryers... Yikes! - What? You mean my cell phone is spying on me ~too~?!?!?!!! Yes it is, even when you've turned it off... why else did they force you to upgrade to a minimum of 3G comm?...
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Last edited by propbeanie; 04-22-17 at 01:24 PM. Reason: Apparently, I use an MS Sprelling Checker...
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Old 04-22-17, 01:33 PM   #4
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Yes, the cloud. It's why I went out of my way to buy the last version of Adobe Illustrator the works without the cloud.

Some companies, like Autodesk, use it well. You can install their Fusion 360 CAD software for free if you sign on as a student/hobbyist.

Plus these subscriptions auto pay which rears the ugly head of an aging digital society having their money drained off when they become forgetful.
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Old 05-03-17, 05:50 AM   #5
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Microsoft is releasing a slimmed down version of Windows 10 aimed at the laptop market:

http://www.businessinsider.com/micro...ws-10-s-2017-4




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Old 05-03-17, 12:56 PM   #6
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It's a padded cell and you're in manacles. You can use any software you want as long as it's downloaded from the Microsoft Store, and that's only the beginning of the "captivity with a smile" campaign in this abortion of an operating system.

They are specifically going for the educational system, which has enthusiastically adopted Google Chromebooks. For Microsoft to succeed here, the schools must ditch all the hardware they've purchased in the last several years and replace it with more expensive stuff.

Chromebooks account for about 60% of the educational market with Apple and Microsoft at about 20% each. Schools are all very happy within the Chrome environment. Chances of Microsoft success? Somewhere less than zero.
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Old 05-03-17, 01:22 PM   #7
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ohh, poor MS wants sooo hard a piece of the pie, it's about to become pathetic..
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Old 05-04-17, 03:13 AM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rockin Robbins View Post
It's a padded cell and you're in manacles. You can use any software you want as long as it's downloaded from the Microsoft Store, and that's only the beginning of the "captivity with a smile" campaign in this abortion of an operating system.
The odd thing about this argument is Apple, by severely limiting not only the software that could be used on Mac desktops/laptops, but, also the very hardware available (not under Apple license? You can't use it...), has been doing exactly this since its inception, with very little outcry about Apple being unreasonably "controlling"; imagine the outcry if Microsoft had imposed the same restrictions as Apple on PC products...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rockin Robbins View Post
They are specifically going for the educational system, which has enthusiastically adopted Google Chromebooks. For Microsoft to succeed here, the schools must ditch all the hardware they've purchased in the last several years and replace it with more expensive stuff.
This would be true of any switch from any one OS/hardware platform to another. Apple, up until the last 5 or so years, was the dominant OS/hardware platform chiefly because they early on pretty much gave away or sold their product at extremely low prices to educational entities at all levels to ensure a firm hold on the market for later, higher priced sales; it was a model sort of loosely based on the stereotypical drug pusher motif: "Yeah, here, the first taste is free, but the next hit is gonna cost you..."

A few years back, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). a district encompassing over 960 square miles, about 735,000 students, over 26,000 teachers and a budget of about US$7.6 billion, at the urging of a senior administrator, initiated a program to give an IPad for each student in the LAUSD system. The project was a disastrous failure and cost the LAUSD staggering amounts of money, at taxpayer expense and to the enrichment of Apple. It was later discovered the senior administrator whose bright idea it was had a more than cozy relationship with Apple and was, in essence, a shill for Apple computers. The fact the administrator favored and pushed for the much more expensive Apple platform over proposed much less expensive PC-based alternative should have raised warning flags, but thus is the course of governmental procurement and bureaucracy...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rockin Robbins View Post
Chromebooks account for about 60% of the educational market with Apple and Microsoft at about 20% each. Schools are all very happy within the Chrome environment. Chances of Microsoft success? Somewhere less than zero.
Here is a March 2, 2017 NY Times article on market shares in US classrooms:

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/02/t...education.html

As can be seen in the article's graph, Apple has dipped slightly in share while PCs have gained slightly; Google really didn't become a factor until 2012 and didn't surpass Apple until some time in late 2013. A while back, I posted an opinion that, given the ubiquity of Android-based hardware such as cellphones, tablets, etc., Google would become the preeminent platform across all devices. Where Apple sought to gain a stranglehold on the education market by giveaways and low-balling prices, Android has the advantage of being literally the main entry level exposure to technology for newer student entering the school system; every kid either has or has access to an Android cell phone, tablet, or other device. Add to this the relatively inexpensive Android-based hardware and their availability, the ability to easily move across multiple devices, and it is no surprise Apple and MS are falling by the wayside...



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