I've just bought a new box of bits (building a PC) put it all together... Installed Windows 7 home premium...Whilst installing various programs, it appeared very glitchy. I thought I'd built a donut.... After.. oohh.. about 3 hours turned it off.....ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN important updates... How the F**K can Microsoft condone this kind of workmanship... If my products need one update my customers sneer down their noses..
Anyone else have a similar deal..
thats why I use Norton for antivirus protectioncr0sh said:Also - just think - you can install all of those updates - and still get hacked/trojan'd/infected/etc...
Since win7 has been out for awhile, and I assume you were installing base without service packs, i'm not surprised. Better to patch than to ignore the problem. Wanna know how many viruses i've had on linux?
A friend of mine use linux and he also has a mac.... He's always telling me to shift over...But as I am one of those people supplying public needs.... I'm pretty much tied in to the MS clan
I have used linux extensively... I had Ubuntu on a work machine for years..
I had a DVD bootable copy of Knoppix, I used at home... Its a family thing... you know... women. They couldn't get the hang of it.. EVEN though KDE was as simple to use as windows..
At work Ubuntu had to go as I needed the resources for the likes of ISIS... MPLAB etc... (don't tell me about MPIDE for linux, didn't work) I use Visual studio alot aswell.
Windows update... three days later and all seems to be good.... I really don't understand why it updated 82 (important updates) and then service pack 1 ????.
Ah well.....Its kinda funny how windows 7 looks and feels like Linux now...
i personally think windows 7 is as bad as vista or millennium more or less, id stick with either some linux distro or windows XP pro.
On February 24th 2006, 3DLABS refocused its business and stopped developing its workstation graphics cards for the PC and announced it would focus on its new DMS™ low-power media-rich application processors.
3DLABS continues to support its legacy graphics cards while under their warranty conditions but no longer sells or develops PC graphics cards.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?