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01-29-2021, 06:52 PM
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#61
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Moderator emeritus
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Boerne, Texas
Posts: 92,326
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Well, Shawn, I'll agree that's one of the things I don't like.
Please, someone tell me why, oh why, when they had a perfectly functional system with Windows 7 (won't even beg for XP) would they create something like Windows 10. What was the supposed improvement?
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01-30-2021, 09:22 AM
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#62
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Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Fairfax, Va
Posts: 3,946
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CX
What was the supposed improvement?
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Microsoft's bottom line, I imagine.
There were likely those who though Windows 3.1 was an unnecessary "improvement" over DOS.
There are features and security challenges that just cannot be addressed with old OS's. But of course new OS's often introduce security problems not found during development and the baddies are adept at sniffing those out. We, the consuming public, are the beta testers for all OS's, even the mature ones.
As far as anti-virus goes, cx, for how you likely use your machine Windows Defender is built into the OS and is pretty good, automatically updates, and is quite free. I wouldn't rely on it if you leave your pc running and connected to the internet 24/7 but for typical use it will be fine.
Your router is the first line of defense, though. Be sure it isn't using the default password it came with.
__________________
Dan
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If I recall correctly my memory is excellent, but my ability to access it is intermittent.
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01-30-2021, 10:23 AM
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#63
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Moderator emeritus
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Boerne, Texas
Posts: 92,326
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Well, as an early user of DOS, Dan, I think it would be difficult not to see most any upgrade as an improvement. I may be a Neanderthal, but.....
At home I do tend to leave my machine on and wirelessly connected to the intrawebs 24/7. Other than just a wider opportunity for the hackers, what's the danger there and what's the defense?
By router, you're talking about the one from which I get my wireless connection, or something in my own machine?
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01-30-2021, 10:27 AM
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#64
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 113
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Hi CX - perhaps chiming in late, but when I buy computers I target 16GB RAM and ideally a SSD HD, and then economize on CPU speed. I also never buy current year laptops.
I also use google docs for everything (my computer boots into linux 99% of the time, and windows 10 otherwise). Literally the only thing I've had trouble with is adding a caption to a floating figure, which cannot be done and then re-opened in google docs. This is being typed on a 3 year old chromebook, which handles most of my needs, and runs google docs offline in a pinch.
__________________
Mark
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01-30-2021, 10:31 AM
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#65
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2020
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 113
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As long as you're on a secure connection, no danger of being connected 24/7. These days most data breaches happen with information you give to websites outside your control anyway. You will sleep better when switching to two-factor identification for everything.
__________________
Mark
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Yesterday, 08:01 PM
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#66
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Moderator emeritus
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Boerne, Texas
Posts: 92,326
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Thanks for weighing in, Mark. Once upon a time, maybe 12 or so years back, a couple of the guys here at TYW convinced me to at least try Linux and gave me a program where I could run Linux and Microsoft side by side and see if I could learn to use it and wean myownself away from ol' Bill Gates. Soon thereafter I burned all three of my existing computers (loooong story) and never got back to trying it again. Today I'm in the age group where we try almost desperately to simply remember how to use such systems as we already know. And not always with 100 percent success, I might add.
I may well buy another 8 Gig of RAM for this machine, but I can't say I've suffered from having only 8 Gig to date.
I am connected wirelessly to a secure network here at home, but I do so much buying online that I wouldn't possibly know where any breach might have come from should it happen. Cost of doing business, I suppose.
I've gotten functional on Windows 10, but there are still things I just can't figger out how to do like I did on Windows 7. How the hell they call some of these changes improvements is beyond me. Really, what was wrong with XP?
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