Jump to content

login123

Experienced Members
  • Posts

    3,702
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by login123

  1. It seems that If your CPU is not compatible with SSE2,  the last version of CCleaner that will work properly  is ver 5.26. 

    You can use Speccy to check if your CPU is compatible. Post back what  works, would be helpful to others.  :)

    Check these 2 links:

     

     

     

  2. BurnAware Premium Ver 11.0 SoS is free for 1 day + 10 hours from now. Notice was posted on another forum by a member here, hayc59

    https://sharewareonsale.com/s/burnaware-giveaway-sale

    Author's description: 

    BurnAware is a full-fledged, easy-to-use burning software ... easy to use interface ...Besides standard options, BurnAware offers many advanced options such as BOOT settings, UDF partition and versions, ISO levels and restrictions, session selection, CD-Text for track and disc, byte by byte verification, direct copying and many more.
    Supports Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8/8.1, and 10 (32-bit and 64-bit)

    I installed it here on win xp.  Unlike many giveaways the installer hub allows you to save the full installer exe & run it later. 

    I did that and the program showed the registered version. The installer tries to phone home when it finishes but if it can't the program works anyway.

     

  3. 2 hours ago, Andavari said:

    What Win10, back when they were giving it away for free and when it upgraded on some systems without any user interaction?

    Some people have wondered why on Earth it was free, I always thought it was so people wouldn't really have a grounds to complain upon since it has the spying aspects of the OS (so essentially it isn't free per-say).

    I agree but I don't think that's the central issue. 

    In 2015 Mary Jo Foley and Paul Thurrott had an interview with Chris Capossela of microsoft.  It is very informative.  It is still available online but it's about 1 hour and 47 minutes. I saved it as an .mp4 file.  Plays on win xp with VLC player. 

    https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly/episodes/445?autostart=false

    About 38 or 39 minutes into it, Caposella says, in effect, that the bigger their win 10 install base is the better off their phone will be.  That, I think, points to the issue that drives microsoft on this win 10 give-away-free  auto-update setup.  More customers with unstoppable telemetry means more folks to help them tune up their OS, and more data available to help them target their other" stuff". 

    That has been the windows business model since its debut. Just get the product out and let your users tune it up as they go.  Lately a more objectionable imho initiative has begun.  The co-opting of hardware manufacturers.  For example,  Kaby Lake & Ryzen processors for win 10 only, HP changing firmware & not publishing drivers, etc. 

    Not judging here, just sayin'. Personally, I don't want an OS that I can't control, but for many it seems to be OK. 

     

  4. 4 hours ago, trium said:

    ps: the process "firefox" found with process explorer a few days before couldnt shut down (access denied or so). only the restart makes my day :-) perhaps a problem together with "classic shellmenu" and its shut down button, perhaps a problem with the last update from firefox esr... i dont know

    Try right click & start process explorer as administrator.  Works here on win 7, not needed on win xp. 

  5. I'm buying all the old computers I can find, made before kaby lake & ryzen. <- - - -    :lol:  Just kidding, don't call. 

    Win 10 caught up with win 7 in December 2018, according to these guys.  Only took 3 years of giving it away free.   Edit: make that December 2017.  Duhh.

    http://gs.statcounter.com/os-version-market-share/windows/desktop/worldwide

     

  6. 3 hours ago, Hav0c said:

    Do you mind elaborating on it a bit ?

    Sure thing.  For windows xp I use Powershadow, and for win 7 Shadow Defender.  Powershadow is free, Shadow Defender is not.  When these softwares are activated, the operating system runs in virtual mode.  What that means is that after they are activated, any changes to the OS partition are gone when you restart. 

    So I start the computer, update any software that needs it, disconnect from the net, then activate Powershadow or Shadow Defender, then go about business as usual.  So the anti-malware softwares and the OS are up to date (edit: and stay up to date while the OS is running virtualized). Only thing is, if any updates come along while your OS is running virtualized, you'll have to do them again after the next restart.  If any software worth saving comes along, it is saved to a different partition on this HDD, or to an external USB HDD, and it can be reinstalled permanently later. 

    For an additional layer of safety, I only run portable browsers inside Sandboxie while the OS is virtualized. Makes it very difficult to infect the OS immediately, and afaik impossible to set something inside C: partition to run on restart.  Many malwares do that, set up a file to run on restart and finish the infection process.

    Some folks have suggested that with such a setup one doesn't need anti-malware software. I want that stuff running in real time so if problems happen I can see them immediately.

    All that is about a bit more than just ad blockers or hosts files, but it's what will protect you in case all else fails. I imagine some of the moderators cringed when they read "Do you mind elaborating on it a bit ?", but there ya go, no harm done.   Everything I know in 5 easy paragraphs.  :P

     

  7. uBo is used here only to make the pages load quicker and look neater, not prevent malware. 

    For protection from issues other than ads,  I use Avast, Sandboxie, Spywareblaster, and a system virtualization software.

    If something does go wrong, a reboot and you're back in business. 

    Twice, maybe more, I have clicked on a perfectly harmless looking link on a perfectly benign website and gotten  hammered. 

     

     

  8. I went back through some old posts and found many links to Rule 10 concerning malware removal to be broken. 

    Like where a member had advised someone to see rule 10 and not give malware advice

    Some posts as recent as 2017.  Didn't check anything before 2015. 

  9. 15 hours ago, hazelnut said:

    That's one side of the coin I guess.My take on it is they just wanted people to buy a new phone and got caught.

    Greedy.

    Yep, think so. 

    Also they are facing a design issue. That battery isn't easy for most folks to replace.  I know some of you guys do it easily, but not most folks.  And there are warranty issues. 

    At $79 US a pop, the price was pretty high, at the reduced price of $29 they probably will still make profit.  Just a guess but i would bet on it. 

    At the core of this issue is transparency, imo.  If they just would have owned up early and said bring'em in for a battery, they might have been able to keep selling the service for $79. 

    Nothing like a barrage of international  class action lawsuits to generate sudden generosity. 

    Edit:  Nukecad, I still use a Blackberry, not the newest one.  I like it, it's still rated at or near the top for security.. Has everything I need, but it doesn't have the tons of apps that users want nowadays. 

  10. The original issue of a delayed installation just doesn't happen here, never has. 

    Finally did read Hazelnuts links from the unnumbered post above. Those were informative, thank you Hazelnut. :)

    Still not sure if this last installation created a new update task.  Don't think so, didn't find it.  Might have missed something.  In any case the last restart will have "reset" this system, so further checking must wait a bit. 

    Automatic update won't happen here.  I will block it.  Not sure how, it isn't an issue yet, but I will.  

    Mta, dinosaurs both organic and digital still live among us.  Birds and windows xp.  :lol: 

     

     

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.