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Windows 10 free: Why is Microsoft giving away its new operating system?

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    #31
    Originally posted by ronw View Post
    From the link Qqmike posted:

    “We are upgrading all qualified PCs, genuine and non-genuine, to Windows 10,” says Terry Myerson, Microsoft’s Windows chief, in an interview with Reuters.

    Someone must be spiking the water in Redmond.
    There is an enormous cost borne by Microsoft and by the public at large that stems from non-genuine installs. Think: cleaning up after massively wide-spread malware infections. Converting everyone to genuine will in the end save a lot of money.

    Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
    Did the voters of Washington follow the lead of Colorado's voters?
    Hey! We can think for ourselves up here in this dank corner of the nation! 'Scuze me while I refill my bong.

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      #32
      Originally posted by jpenguin View Post
      I think a lot of apps are going to be subscription like Office365 or Adobe CS GO
      And this is an enormous benefit to organizations that historically have had to buy their own software. In other words, all of them.

      You own a company that makes widgets. You beat your competitors by offering better widgets, lower prices, or some combination of both. When you spend money, you want to spend it on improvements to your widgets.

      Why in the world would you want to staff up a complete IT department, filled with people who know nothing about widgets and likely don't care? Most of what happens in modern IT departments is completely orthogonal to the business. It's expensive, it's slow. It never ends -- support staff endlessly cater to servers and desktops. "Undifferentiated heavy lifting," as we called it at Amazon Web Services (I love that phrase).

      Subscriptions eliminate a lot of this unnecessary work. Fire up your web browser, go to $EMAIL or $WORDPROCESSOR, and enjoy the latest version continually updated as necessary. The security is better, the availability is better. There is simply no justifiable reason for not using the cloud now for routine (and even not so routine) corporate IT.

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        #33
        Originally posted by SteveRiley View Post
        ...

        Subscriptions eliminate a lot of this unnecessary work. Fire up your web browser, go to $EMAIL or $WORDPROCESSOR, and enjoy the latest version continually updated as necessary. The security is better, the availability is better. There is simply no justifiable reason for not using the cloud now for routine (and even not so routine) corporate IT.
        When I first started working at the dept of revenue the head of IT, who was in charge of maintaining the Novell Network, didn't have a clue about what he was doing. Almost every week we could count on a half a day vacation, albeit at work, because the net was down and our tools and data were not accessible. I moved copies of my dev tools, source and databases to my workstation HD so I could continue to work while he educated himself. Moral: you get what you pay for so choose your cloud wisely.

        Doing all your work via the cloud makes your efficiency dependent on the speed and reliability of your internet connection and the speed of your browser. And it's security as well. In effect the browser becomes your Client interface and your OS. Catastrophic weather, solar storms, hackers and gov intrusions become your major threats. On the good side you can carry your "computer" on a memory stick and fire up a secure Linux Live USB and work from any box without its bug infested system bothering your work!
        Last edited by GreyGeek; Jul 30, 2015, 07:33 AM.
        "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
        – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

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          #34
          Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
          Doing all your work via the cloud makes your efficiency dependent on the speed and reliability of your internet connection and the speed of your browser. And it's security as well. In effect the browser becomes your Client interface and your OS. Catastrophic weather, solar storms, hackers and gov intrusions become your major threats. On the good side you can carry your "computer" on a memory stick and fire up a secure Linux Live USB and work from any box without its bug infested system bothering your work!
          True. However, over the years a body of sound cloud architecture has arisen that mitigates most of these concerns. Interestingly, when properly designed, workloads placed in clouds can achieve 100% uptime. Geographic redundancy, the elimination of dependencies using message passing schemes, automatic scaling up and down for on-demand elasticity, and appropriate use of encryption and digital signatures make the cloud a more resilient place than traditional on-premises IT.

          These will be useful reading if you'd like to learn more. They are from AWS's Architecture Center. Many of the principles apply to other clouds, too.

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            #35
            Somehow this looks like a big collection of spyware
            Attached Files

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              #36
              Originally posted by reyfer View Post
              Somehow this looks like a big collection of spyware
              Do you have a larger, high resolution version of that?

              Comment


                #37
                Originally posted by SteveRiley View Post
                There is simply no justifiable reason for not using the cloud now for routine (and even not so routine) corporate IT.
                What if your internet connection goes down? How are you going to use the services then?

                The Chromebook is a good idea, but when you lose internet connection it becomes a useless piece of hardware that you can't do anything with.

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by SteveRiley View Post
                  Do you have a larger, high resolution version of that?
                  http://cdn.overclock.net/d/d9/d9fcbaaa_QP5DBAz.jpeg

                  Comment


                    #39
                    W10 has a keyboard logger!

                    That means that MS, and any other agency they give such info to, will know your login name and password for every online account you access through W10. "They" could log into your accounts and browse around or do anything they wanted and it would look like YOU did it. IP addresses are available only to MS and law enforcement agencies. They are not likely to finger themselves. THAT reason alone is enough never to run W10.
                    "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
                    – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

                    Comment


                      #40
                      Windows Defender -- and adequate anti-virus protection for Windows 10? Expert opinions?
                      An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski

                      Comment


                        #41
                        Originally posted by Qqmike View Post
                        Windows Defender -- and adequate anti-virus protection for Windows 10? Expert opinions?
                        For the price it can't be beat, but you get what you pay for.

                        http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,1926596,00.asp

                        http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,1926596,00.asp

                        Of the ten products included in the latest report from
                        Dennis Technology Labs, Microsoft was the only one that didn't receive certification at any level. On a scale where 300 is a perfect score, Microsoft earned negative 86 points. It did manage a perfect score on the false positives test, meaning that it didn't block any legitimate programs.
                        PC Mag recommends Panda Free Antivirus 2015.
                        "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
                        – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

                        Comment


                          #42
                          Originally posted by reyfer View Post
                          Somehow this looks like a big collection of spyware
                          Cortana collecting data. how else will it do what it does? "Cortana, call Alice." It has to look at contact details to find Alice's phone number. Cortana executes not locally on your phone (not nearly enough computational power) but instead in Azure, Microsoft's cloud. BTW: Siri and Google Now behave the same.

                          Real-time protection. Some third party software still requires disabling malware scanning to install. Automatic re-enabling helps protect the computer and overall increases safety of the Internet. "Herd immunity" in PCs matters just as much as it does in humans.

                          No option to disable updates. Yeah, this one bugs me. Of course, do remember that you're looking at screenshots from the preview edition. To maximize the value of the preview, updates need to be kept current. I wonder if the actual release has the ability to disable updates. I don't feel like Googling at the moment, heh.

                          App and content suggestions in the Start menu. Yeah, this is dumb. Nobody wants this; some product manager on the Windows team got funded by advertisers to push this little turd, I bet.

                          Gripe about cloud services. The claim is true: Windows 10 will behave better when integrated with their services, for certain definitions of "better." Just like Android phones behave better when integrated with Google, and iThings behave better when integrated with Apple. Some people like this extra functionality, some don't. Shut it off if it bothers you.

                          Key logger. It's actually not a key logger. Instead, the preview edition samples keystrokes "for purposes such as improving autocomplete and spellcheck features" (source). It is well known that the preview has this. The release version does not. The whole point of a technical preview is to study how people use a system. You shouldn't use an unfinished operating system to, for example, log into your bank. Duh.

                          Wi-Fi Sense. It doesn't share actual passwords. Furthermore, the first time you connect to a network, you have to grant permission for that connection to be shared. There is no "pay it forward"; if Alice shares a connection with Bob, Bob can't share it with Carol. It's not the security risk that some people complain about, but I can certainly imagine implementation bugs that might enlarge a computer's attack surface. Still, though, it's another example of a feature that no one actually wants. How many people in your Hotmail/Outlook contact list ever visit your house?

                          Telemetry. This is indeed a dumb "feature," given how it's implemented.
                          Last edited by SteveRiley; Jul 31, 2015, 10:02 PM.

                          Comment


                            #43
                            Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
                            W10 has a keyboard logger! ... THAT reason alone is enough never to run W10.
                            Not so bad as that, Jerry. See my earlier reply.

                            Comment


                              #44
                              Originally posted by Qqmike View Post
                              Windows Defender -- and adequate anti-virus protection for Windows 10? Expert opinions?
                              I used to be a supporter of Microsoft's own security tools, but I no longer am. A neighbor down the street got hit with a slew of drive-by malware that Defender and Security Essentials (on Windows 7) completely missed. I used MalwareBytes and Hitman Pro to clean the machine.

                              Comment


                                #45
                                Oh my. Installing a torrent network by default. What could possibly go wrong.

                                http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/w...timization-faq

                                "In addition to downloading updates and apps from Microsoft, Windows will get updates and apps from other PCs that already have them."
                                "PCs on your local network and PCs on the Internet. Windows uses the same process as when getting updates and apps from PCs on your local network, and also looks for PCs on the Internet that can be used as a source to download parts of updates and apps." (emphasis added)
                                "When Delivery Optimization is turned on, your PC sends parts of apps or updates that you’ve downloaded using Delivery Optimization to other PCs on your local network, or on the Internet, depending on your settings."
                                "Which versions of Windows 10 have Delivery Optimization turned on by default?
                                Delivery Optimization is turned on by default for all editions of Windows 10, with the following differences:

                                Windows 10 Enterprise and Windows 10 Education: The PCs on your local network option is turned on by default.

                                All other editions of Windows 10: The PCs on your local network and PCs on the Internet option is turned on by default. (emphasis added)"
                                "Can Delivery Optimization access my personal files?
                                Delivery Optimization doesn’t access your personal files or folders or change any files on your PC."
                                A cynical person would point out that the question asks "Can it do it?" and the answer is not, "No it can't", it is "it doesn't".
                                Last edited by ronw; Jul 31, 2015, 10:12 PM. Reason: Replaced 'botnet' with 'torrent network'

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