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nukecad

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Everything posted by nukecad

  1. As long as it works as they are saying it will then these changes sound good and WD is becoming a 'grown up' AV. THB since I moved to Win 8.1 and then Win 10 I have left my AV requirements up to WD (with MBAE running as well plus a weekly scan with MBAMv2), no 3rd party AV at all. Never had any problem, the one time I was 'attacked', by a drive-by on a website, WD spotted it and stopped it before the page had fully loaded.
  2. There is a difference between 'Update' and 'Upgrade'. Update is an improvement (sic) to your current version to give improved cleaning, fix known bugs/issues, etc. and often some changes/corrections to the user interface. Upgrade is a change from the 'Free' product to the 'Paid For' product.
  3. Windows Defender (a full AV on Windows 8 and later) will automatically turn itself off if you have a 3rd party AV running. It will turn itself back on if you uninstall the other AV. Since the Win10 aniversary update WD will now still perform a file scan occasionally (if you set it to) even if you have another AV running. http://www.windowscentral.com/whats-new-windows-defender-windows-10-anniversary-update There is also a major update to WD due this year as part of the Win10 'Creators Update',(due in April?) which among other things will mean that WD will automatically turn itself back on if your 3rd party AV subscription/licence expires. https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2017/01/23/introducing-windows-defender-security-center/#ziXpqq4gWsieM3uZ.97
  4. The free version didn't have that large 'Upgrade' button until a few versions ago. I think that it was about version 5.15 when it was introduced. (But can't check because Windows 10 now won't let me install any version before 5.22). TBH it's not a big deal, it's just another reminder that you are using the free version and that you can Upgrade to the Pro version for a price. If you get, or already have, the Pro/Pro+ version then the button is not there, there is nothing to upgrade to.
  5. You couldn't make it up - Colgate's new toothpaste turns BLUE as you brush; now that must be a gimmick. http://www.colgate.co.uk/app/ColgateTotal/UK/EN/Products/Colgate-Total-Proof-Toothpaste/Home.cwsp Read the reviews for a laugh; people complaining about it putting blue spots on their washbasins, towels, and even clothes.
  6. If I want to find out what cookies a particular website uses the I open my browser, go to that website and nowhere else, close the browser, open CC and look what cookies are in the 'Cookies on Computer' list. If you need to refine it more than that then try visiting the same site with the opt-outs off and with the opt-outs on, and compare the 2 lists of cokies.
  7. There is a difference between respecting your privacy and "right to be Forgotten" and the content that you yourself post openly for the whole world to see. If you have put any of your personal details in public view then that's your own decision/mistake. As soon as you put anything online it will be scanned, copied, and filed on their servers, by Google, Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckgo, Amazon, Wikipedia, and many other search engines and bots. This is how they work, Google and the rest wouldn't be much good if they didn't catalogue everything so that it showed up in searches. If you want to get something removed from everywhere then good luck with that. This is also why forums let you use any username you like, so you don't have to use your real name. If you no longer want to take part then just stop posting and let your account go inactive. You've probably had more people look at your profile since you posted this than ever would before. If you had'nt posted everyone would have forgotten about you. If you are bothered about the possibility of your password or email addy being hacked, then just change them to some junk that you are never going to use again and forget them yourself. The "Right to be Forgotten" as applied in the EU and many other countries is limited in just what you can ask to be removed from a website. You can't just ask for everything about you to be removed, especially if it is something you put there yourself. PS. You've just told everyone that you live in Belgium/France.
  8. Let me know if your comming to this years 750th anniversary Crab Fair, it's going to be very busy but I'm sure we could meet up for a pint ot two.
  9. Well it's telling everyone where I live, but I'm not paranoid about that, I've been tracked down before by a forum menber elsewhere who only had the name Nukecad, a photo from our village fair, and the fact that Facebook has my hometown in the wrong Country. The house I'm in now was built in 1604, it's had bits built on and knocked off of course, and was split into 2 somtime in the 1800s to give a small pub (still open) and where I live now with a shop below which is currently used as a local heritage museum. There is also internal evidence that it was changed from 3 stories to 2 stories with higher ceilings at that time. That ruin is Egremont Castle, built in the 12th century, although it's believed there was an earlier fortification on the site. It is also the subject of a Wordsworth poem, The Horn of Egremont, and has appeared in a few fairly famous paintings and at least one album cover (The Big Lad in the Windmill, by It Bites). http://www.visitcumbria.com/wc/egremont-castle/ http://www.britainexpress.com/attractions.htm?attraction=2331 We also have what is widely believed to be the oldest continuously held(except for the war years) village fair in the world. Egremont Crab fair has it's 750th aniversary this year, you may already know it from the World Gurning Championships which are held during the fair and usually make international news cameos. http://metro.co.uk/2016/09/21/world-gurning-championships-are-as-brilliant-as-you-would-expect-6142686/
  10. Thanks for that hazelnut, so it's now using a different process for the UI than for the page content. Don't realy see the point unless you are constantly visiting dodgy pages that crash all the time, but presumably it's been done for a reason.
  11. I haven't joined in here as I use the same Desktop all the time. It's a photo taken from just outside my front door about 80 or 90 years ago, window top right is one of my bedroom windows. (I haven't managed to track down the exact date yet, going off the 2 cars it looks pre WW2. The number plate on the one on the right, 2 letters 4 numbers, dates it as registered before the mid 1930's). It's interesting that not much has changed. The road surface of course - its now off road parking, the building on the left has changed slightly, the one on the right with the guy at the door now has a double shopfront window, the canopy over the pub has gone as have the tree and old lampost, and there is now a War Memorial that should just be visible on the left. I keep meaning to take a modern photo from the same viewpoint, probably early Sunday morning when there are no cars parked up. Maybe this will prompt me to get around to it, I'll post it if/when I do. I've had to stretch it a little to fit the desktop but it actually looks better like that.
  12. I think that Willy2 has probably hit on your answer, you don't have enough disc space allocated for SRPs. You can set the amount of disc space used for restore points in: Control Panel, System, System Protection tab, Configure button. It tells you there- "As space fills up, older restore points will be deleted to make room for new ones." So if you don't allocate enough space then when a new SRP is created Windows will delete the old(est) ones. Give it more space and it will keep (more of) the old ones.
  13. Does anybody know why Firefox 50.1.0 now opens 2 processes when launched? If you look in task manager it opens as an Application and as a background process at the same time. I've never seen this with previous versions, it used to just open as an application. (And no, I have not changed anything in the settings, no new add-ons or extensions, it just seems to do it on it's own). It's not a problem, I'm just curious. Windows 10 Home, version 1607, build 14393.693
  14. I'm off to make a TV ad. 30 seconds of- "Alexa, order Nukecad's latest overpriced product,...., yes" repeating over and over. Should make me a fortune.
  15. The mind boggles, does it have a webcam? (That might explain some of the stranger porn spam that I see as a moderator on another forum).
  16. Why the FFFFF would you want a bluetooth connected toothbrush? Is anyone realy that stupid that they need an online 'Oral Hygenist' to tell them when to brush their teeth? Apart from anything else 'Bluetooth' is a bit if an unfortunate description for a toothbrush. It's all gimmicks; Ever seen the medicinal gadgets they came up with when electricity was a new thing? I've even seen AC electric belts touted as a cure for impotence (and everything else) - http://www.museumofquackery.com/ephemera/heidelberg.htm They are even still selling similar products as the 'latest revolutionary training gear' for giving you a six-pack. Some applications do work tough, TENS pain relief machines for example. Or how about Radium in your drinking water, or even your bread? Common in the 1920's and 30's http://www.orau.org/ptp/collection/quackcures/quackcures.htm There again we also use radiation therapy to treat cancer. I suspect that in a few years we will be falling on the floor laughing at some of the IoT ideas as well.
  17. I find the voice activated IoT stuff particularly worrying. Alexa, Cortana, Siri, et-al. Why would you want to put a microphone bug in your property? (Not to mention devices with built in webcams). Mi5, NSA, ISS, etc. must be rubbing their hands with glee. No warrant needed, no need to sneak in and place a bug, they can just hack into the wifi connection of the bugs you have already placed yourself. And who else could be hacked in and listening to (watching) what you (or your kids) are doing?
  18. nukecad

    Welcome 2017

    I've spent the last 2 months of 2016 in and out of hospital (Cardiac arrest, follow up heart stenting, and then to cap it a gallbladder infection on Boxing day) so 2017 has got to start better - hasn't it? (PS. the heart stuff was fairly painless, the gallbladder was agony even morphine injections only took the edge off). Best Wishes to all, have a good year.
  19. I wasn't suggesting that JRT would remove Chrome, just that it would shut it down completely to allow CC to clean it. JRT does what it says and removes Junkware (aka. Bloatware), the sort of unwanted stuff that manufacturers bundle with a new PC or that may have been included with a download you make. It won't see Chrome itself as being Junkware, many people do prefer Chrome for some reason, so it won't remove it. It may see some Chrome extensions and add-ons as junkware, depends what they are. One slight issue with JRT is that it does not (yet) give you a choice as to what it removes; if it matches JRT's list it goes. It does tell you just what (if anything) it has removed. It does create a Windows restore point everytime it runs so you can restore that if it removes something that you did want. The developer is pretty quick at updating the list of what to remove and what not when asked to on the Malwarebytes forum.
  20. A bit of a work round but if you get Junkware Removal Tool from MalwareBytes this closes nearly every running process before running a scan, including all browsers. The scan itself takes a couple of minutes depending on your system. So if you run that first it closes everything before you run CC. The JRT interface is not ideal, it's a command window with very few options but it works OK.
  21. LOL. Sorry for that Dennis, it's not one of my OCD's. (I've now edited it to concatenate the first 2 sentences though, is that better?). I do, usually but not always, try to seperate sentences by white space, IMO it makes things easier to read. (2 lines here too ).
  22. I know exactly what you are looking to achieve, I used to wonder about it for many years (and occasionaly tried hard to get it to happen). I have no doubt that many others would like to see the same, all the little squares 'joined up' at the start of the display. It's not going to happen with any defragmenter, (I won't say never, that's tempting fate) and to be frank it doesn't matter, it is not going to make any difference apart from looking 'pretty' on the display. I suggest that you resign yourself, like most of us have, that wishing for things like this are just a part of having OCD, which everyone messing with computers has to have to a greater or lesser extent. Of course if you can code something that will actually do it (not just look like it does on a display - that would soon be debunked) then you could probably make a lot of money selling it to the rest of us with the same OCD.
  23. Boop; The ccsetup515's are just old downloads that haven't been deleted from the downloads folder after installing. (515 would have been downloaded about last February/March) You must have downloaded it 3 times for some reason- the first download is named ccsetup515, the second 515(1), the third 515(2). If you look at the files in list view you will see they have been downloaded at different times. It is something that windows does if you download a file more than once, it adds the copy number in brackets after the filename. You can safely delete them, no special process needed, just delete them as you would any other file. PS. The reason Windows Forum is saying not to use Ccleaner is because it contains a registry cleaner. Registry cleaners can be dangerous and can mess up your computer completely if you don't know what you are doing. They are an advanced tool and like any powerful tool should not be used unless you understand them. Microsoft have decided that because of this danger they don't want people using registry cleaners. Stay safe, don't use the registry cleaner unless you understand what it does and understand that using it it may stop your computer working. (If you do use it then always use the option to make a backup before cleaning the registry). Despite what you may read elsewhere registry cleaning does not 'speed up' your computer. (It is used to solve other problems, and only when they happen). Using Ccleaner to clear out temporary files, cookies, etc. is perfectly safe, just stay away from the registry cleaner unless you understand it.
  24. Microsoft support have gone back to the 90's - "IT department - have you tried turning it off and then on again".
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