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(at work) I'd like to, but it always depends on 3rd party support.
(at home) I'd like to, but I need to update hardware; current hardware is lacking (even on Win7)
I'd rather be phishing!
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Tim Carmichael wrote: it is a prevalent product in the workforce Yes, for the moment. Just like DBaseIV once was a leader.
A single bad version is easily skipped, but it appears not to be limited to a single version; if you ignore Win7 you see a clear path of degradation. It will remain in the office for quite some time to come - even if you actively try to kill old technology, someone will still be out there using it (hello VB6).
Personally, I started moving toward different Linux-distro's after the release of Vista. It has been a pleasant experience, at a price that Microsoft simlpy cannot beat.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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I switched to OSX as my main OS when Windows 8 came out.
At work, I used to be 100% Windows (.NET development) but I'm currently on about 75% Windows, 25% Mac (iOS development) these days.
With the direction .NET is going in (Roslyn, Visual Studio Code, Office 2016), I'm looking forward to seeing some good stuff from Microsoft in terms of IDE somewhere down the line, while at the same time enabling me to leave the crappy Windows platform behind for good
I don't think that Windows really has much of a future unless they do something radical with it.
How do you know so much about swallows? Well, you have to know these things when you're a king, you know.
modified 31-Aug-21 21:01pm.
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Upgrade from 7 to 10 is free, so why not?
"Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence."
<< please vote!! >></div>
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As a programmer, whether I like Windows 10 or not it doesn't really matter. I'll have to support my applications on it so I might as well use it so I know it. I'm on 8.1 now and don't have a problems with it, going back to the start menu on Windows 10 really slows me down now that I'm used to not using it. Personally don't see the big deal, rarely used the start menu in Win7 either.
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The work machines are controlled by our IT department, who will probably wait until the system is replaced.
I learned my lesson on my personal machines doing the 8.0 -> 8.1 *grade. Upgrade, never, only clean install. Short story, the performance of the upgraded machines stink. Worse, Lenovo doesn't support my laptop running any OS version other than the one it shipped with, so now that it's no longer the nice machine to use, it's my fault for upgrading and I'm SOL (well, till I restore it back to 8.0, but I've been too busy).
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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Offhand, this time I think I'm just going to let "nature take it's course" (if you will) and let my systems upgrade. I've been at this a long time and have been, for the lack of better term, "micromanaging" things quite a bit. As long as the upgrades don't break my development system (I mean, nothing major) then I'm just going to sit back and let them do the upgrades. Generally speaking, version upgrades of Windows haven't really broken anything significant (for me anyway). At this point I'd rather just focus on the content I produce (my software, websites, etc.) than what version of the O/S is present on the machine. You might say I'm a bit tired of fighting the thing.
-CM
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Yesterday and today I've started to be flooded with junk email - the sort you don't subscribe to. I run Exchange Server 2010, and it supposedly has the junk filter on it. Has anyone else had this?
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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Why don't you send us your private email address and we will let you know!
Life is too shor
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No, but that's probably because my ISP filters out all known spam. I get, maybe, 10 spam emails a year now.
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Your ISP does that? Sounds a bit intrusive.
I too only have been receiving stuff I've opted in to until two days ago. I can only assume that 'they' have found a combination which gets through the filter, or Windows Update has downgraded me or something. 12 emails, mostly all the same came through in my lunch hour.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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Rob Philpott wrote: Sounds a bit intrusive.
There's the downside. But, the upside? I don't deal with spam! I'll take it.
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So where do you find czech girls or nigerian dying princes when you need some ?
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I go through an intermediary that arranges everything for me. Completely anonymous!
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I used to do that (well it was the e-mail host rather than the ISP), but for some reason they started considering invoice requests, confirmation emails from my mobile phone provider and even emails from .gov.uk addresses (I'm still waiting on that tax refund) as spam.
So now I just have spam filters that run locally, that way I can take a look every now and then to make sure nothing important has been marked as spam.
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I never have a problem with it.
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I was checking flight information for my gf's weekend trip to GA for a cousin's wedding, and now all of a sudden I'm getting spammed with discount airline ticket emails. WTF? I didn't realize how freaking invasive GMail is. And I never logged in to Southwest, so they didn't have my email address, unless they got it somehow, but at the moment, I blame GMail.
Marc
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That's alarming. When you say checking flight information - do you mean just on the web? I'm struggling to see how the link between web/email works.
That said, I have a good idea when my wife looks at things on Amazon at home, because the web at works starts advertising them to me. Not sure how all that works. Cookies probably, or some other dark web magic.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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Rob Philpott wrote: do you mean just on the web?
Yes, just on the web.
I noticed my phone figured out that there was flight information in an email, there was an airplane icon (not the airplane mode icon).
You know what I realize it was: I used the "send me an alert" function on the Southwest website and provided my email address. Argh. That must be why I started getting spammed.
Marc
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I was looking a cottages for a holiday yesterday.
Three minutes later I get an email saying something like "did you find what you were looking for when you were on our site?"
My first thought was - is the CIA/MI5 selling my web browsing information?
I then realised that I have an account on the site and somehow the wretched thing logged me in automatically when I visited the site and searched for BDSM holidays.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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Confirmation email address every month or more. And this while I'm logged in.
Also, I cannot vote due to "You must have a confirmed email" blah blah.
Which I just confirmed. Again. And again.
And I'm member since 1999 with the same email and password.
And pages are more slow to load each visit. (Different computers, company LAN, company laptop, personal laptop, 3 different OSes etc etc).
Someone else encountering this confirmation email thing? (Which is by far the most annoying).
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Best to report it here[^]
Otherwise, I don't notice anything wrong.
They did just move from hosting center so things are still falling into place.
Tom
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Just as a data point - I have not been experiencing these problems (and have been a member since 2002) & mostly use CP with IE11 on Windows 8.1 desktop. Good luck!
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Did anyone upgrade their Windows 7 instance to Windows 10?
I get a button "Get Windows 10" and am not sure if I should press it.
So should I take the red pill, or the blue one ?
Any experience anyone?
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It doesn't do it yet: it just "reserves you a copy", which it will download automatically when it comes out at the end of next month. It will then ask you to install it at "a time convenient to you", apparently.
Clicking it is safe, but it doesn't get rid of the icon...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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