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Comment Came up with a list (Score 1) 966

Long-time Windows user. I'm comfortable with Linux and have used it for a number of projects, but when it comes to using it as the main OS on my "daily driver", I just can't grapple with it. I actually enjoy tinkering, so part of me would be interested in doing this, and I think about it from time to time. Recently I made a list of the things stopping me:

* I need seamless disk encryption — it looks like there are solutions for this but nothing as stupid simple to set up and deal with as BitLocker.
* Doesn't appear to be any way to get my fingerprint reader to work for login (Dell Precision FIPS) — I hate typing passwords.
* No good MS Exchange client from what I can tell, I need both email and calendaring working well.
* No OneDrive sync client.
* No OneNote client (I suppose I could switch to Evernote).
* No good Quicken alternative, I rely on it a lot for personal finance and managing a small business... Quicken has its own set of issues, but everything else I have tried totally pales in comparison.
* No good way to sync/manage my iPhone (need iTunes here).
* No good way to sync up my iCloud photo library (the Windows iCloud client is pretty terrible, but it does work).
* I use Adobe Lightroom for photo management and I dread having to switch to something else...

I'm actually totally interested in ideas to get around any of these, but I imagine that many of them involve totally changing up how I do things. For example, getting away from Microsoft services (i.e. OneDrive) or Apple services (i.e. iCloud for photos) to switch to something more "Linux-friendly" would impact my whole family. My extended family in the case of Apple. I've got too much going on in my life to take on that project. Looking at this list, I realize that switching to macOS is a lot more feasible; but, I really don't like the direction that Apple is taking with hardware as far as "PCs" are concerned... I don't think that I would be a very happy MacBook owner.

Things have been moving well in the opposite direction, though. With Microsoft's "Subsystem for Linux", when I need Linux for something I rarely actually have to boot it up anymore.

Comment Software solution (Score 1) 338

There are some services that offer a solution to this, for example, Google Voice lets you turn on "call screening" which requires the caller to say their name and press a button (or something) and then it will ask you if you want to take the call.

That's a hassle, you have to pick up the phone and listen to hear who is calling. Couldn't your smartphone automatically answer the call, provide a friendly voice prompt asking the caller to key in a random three-digit number sequence, upon success which it would say "please wait to be connected" and then start ringing your phone? This would only be for callers not in your contact list. I wonder if anyone has tried to implement something like this.

Comment Re:Last Win OS with Windows Media Center (Score 1) 216

I believe Windows Media Center could be installed as an optional component on Windows 8? You had to upgrade the edition from "Pro" to "Pro + Media Center" or something. There was a window of time to do this for free which has long passed.

That would only get you another ~3 years of support anyway...

Comment Re:Only upgrades (Score 2) 271

Most of the complaints are coming from users who upgraded but I have seen some from people who bought Pro keys. So, I wonder if the "guess" that only upgrades are impacted isn't quite right. It could be that only OEM installs are *not* impacted. Since the vast majority of installs are either OEM (machine shipped with Windows 10) or upgrade (during the free/promo period a few years back)... Users that actually purchased a Windows 10 standalone key might be lost in the shuffle.

In any case, this is clearly quickly becoming a hot topic and I'm sure Microsoft will address it soon... Doesn't say great things about their QC though. (Hey, where's that 1809 / October 2018 update at?)

Comment Kill automatic reboots (Score 5, Interesting) 277

A lot of things about Windows 10 I honestly don't mind, but this is absolutely ridiculous. Never-mind that I may leave stuff open and want to come back to it without interruption the next day. Sometimes I have a long-running video encode or compute job (i.e. multiple days). I don't need Windows randomly deciding to reboot and throw away my progress.

Why do we need machine learning for this? Just give users the option to decide when they want to reboot.

Anyway, to those who haven't figured it out yet, there's an easy way to stop this behavior.

Visit C:\Windows\System32\Tasks\Microsoft\Windows\UpdateOrchestrator.
Delete the file named "Reboot". This is the scheduled task that actually fires off the reboot after an update.
Create a folder in the same place named "Reboot". This prevents Windows from automatically re-creating the file that you deleted.
Done.

Comment Re:Peer review (Score 1) 68

I can only imagine that this would start a game, wherein nefarious add-on makers would create fake accounts to use to post positive peer reviews of their extension... There would have to be some kind of trust mechanism included and I'm not sure how that would work.

Comment Re:Will upgrade affect other software? (Score 1) 152

No... While the Windows update does include some back-end stuff that allows other applications to read HEIC/HEIF files, it looks like the applications will need to be updated in most cases. (It's probably trivial for many, just adding a few lines that are like, "if the file extension is HEIF, open this file using WIC" — but you can bet that Adobe won't be updating older Photoshop versions for this...)

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