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10 things I want from Windows 8

 
 
clifford_cooley clifford_cooley is online now
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      08-21-2009
10 things I want from Windows 8

This article was written by Thrax. I enjoyed it and thought must of you would too.

Please leave a message for Thrax telling him how much you enjoyed it. These are things he would like to see, so don't leave a message stating how much you disagree.

Loved the article Thrax
 
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faun faun is offline
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      08-21-2009
?! I read that! i had no idea our own thrax wrote it though! bloody hell. Hes like a celebrity to me now. haha
 
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danperteet danperteet is offline
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      08-21-2009
great article!
 
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Thrax Thrax is offline
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      08-21-2009
Haha, thanks guys. Windows 7 has been the love of my electronic life as of late, but there are little things that bother me. I certainly don't think any of my changes need to be made on the surface, but having the option to change them -- even if buried -- would make me happy.
 
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Kougar Kougar is offline
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      08-21-2009
Hm, speaking of butchering there's some Flash 10 script on that page that locks Opera, I have to wait until I get an Adobe Flash 10 player warning before I can kill it and get my browser back. Works peachy in Firefox at least.



My biggest peeve is who at Microsoft decided that it was more important to forcibly reboot hundreds of thousands of computers to finish an update that most of the time only applies to some minor unimportant fix?

I've personally lost hours of work on computers that rebooted themselves, either because the data was outright lost or because I didn't find out the machine rebooted until two or three days later. Now I have to remember to disable this on every OS install I make, and I don't always remember.

The idea behind the premise of forcing restarts on computers to apply an update is to ensure security vulnerabilities get fixed. But I wonder if it ever occured to Microsoft that a very large number of users simply disable Auto-Updates outright so they don't have their computers rebooting on them, thereby leaving their machines even more vulnerable and less updated than they would have been beforehand?

I can't begin to put a number to all the people I've met, talk with, or good friends of mine that have done exactly this because Windows Update forced them to OK a reboot in the middle of their work, videogame, or whatever they were doing at the time. Would it really be the end of the world if they could choose to reboot when they wanted, or when they turned in later that evening rather than a mandatory 4 hours from whenever the auto-update occured? That's something I'd like to see changed, and it doesn't have to wait until Windows 8 to happen either.

Last edited by Kougar; 08-21-2009 at 09:47 PM..
 
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      08-22-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kougar View Post
My biggest peeve is who at Microsoft decided that it was more important to forcibly reboot hundreds of thousands of computers to finish an update that most of the time only applies to some minor unimportant fix?
I don't mind the automatic updates but hate the forced reboots. I for one reboot frequently anyway but at a time of my choosing.

After all shouldn't a warning be sufficient anyway. I mean do the parents really look at the little stickers on the toys for specific age groups? They can't be forced into buying the appropriate toy for their kid. They can only be warned.
 
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Sycthus Sycthus is offline
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      09-03-2009
I loved the article, top-notch.

I argee with pretty much everything, but I have 2 questions:

1. I've never had the blue screen of death. Is this rare?
2. When you talk about "Application settings storage", are you suggesting we go back to .ini or something more complicated? I'm not disagreeing, but I can't see anything wrong with the registry. Isn't a virtual registry likely to have just as many problems as a physical registry?
 
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      09-03-2009
What Thrax is suggesting if I followed correctly. Is for each program to store their own settings in their own folder rather than in the registry. It doesn't have to be in the form of an ini file. With this approach the programs can store their own setting in which ever format they choose. This would allow less errors and clutter in the registry.
 
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Sycthus Sycthus is offline
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      09-03-2009
Ahh, so what would the difference to .ini be then?
 
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      09-03-2009
An ini file is a simple text file and can be read by any text editor and changed without any problems other than the ones you create because you edited the file if you dont know what you are doing.
 
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