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bphlpt

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Everything posted by bphlpt

  1. Hey harkaz, It's nice to see that you are working on Win7. It's also great that your goal is that your cleanup stays "clean" as far as sfc etc are concerned. Your thorough approach should make things more stable and reliable even it doesn't produce as small a result as other approaches might. Will your tool be able to cleanup a "source" on which you have integrated all updates in addition to cleaning up an installed system? It would be very nice to not have to clean things up every time you install the OS. Cheers and Regards, my friend.
  2. Happy b'day Kel, and many, many happy returns, my very good friend! Cheers and Regards, John
  3. It might have been up yesterday, but it doesn't seem to be up today. No method I tried, FileZilla or command line per submix8c's link, worked. You could "log on", but no directory listing would work, it just hung with no response. Cheers and Regards
  4. Which is a subset of the list of updates from here - How to avoid being "upgraded to Win 10" against your will. Cheers and Regards
  5. Welcome to the light, Noel! I'm just sorry that you had to spend so much time suffering on the dark side. But better late than never. I am very glad, though, that you documented all your testing for the benefit of the rest of us. Now we'll have to find some other sucker brave soul to do that work. Cheers and Regards, my friend.
  6. If someone really wants it, it is STILL available on SoftPedia. (The European mirror only) Cheers and Regards
  7. This is from a guide on how to connect your new Honeywell Thermostat to a wireless network. If said SSID has been present "for a while" then it is likely a case where a technology is enabled by default where it probably shouldn't be. Maybe it's a case where the user never did the Wi-Fi Setup but just hooked it up and figured they didn't need to if they were only going to use it "manually"? Cheers and Regards
  8. Assuming he is not responding to anyone, (maybe it's just a language issue), but if he is asking legitimate questions then this just screams for a response from the MS support team. Let's hope they respond quickly. Cheers and Regards
  9. The easy way around this is to use the 'chrome-extension-downloader', in any browser you like, to download the requested Chrome Extension. Insert the web store url of the extension, or just the extension ID, into the box and click "Download Extension". You still might need to use "developer mode" to install. Cheers and Regards
  10. Did you lose any functionality at all? Such as was found by some of the commentators to the suggestion to simply delete the VsHub folder such as the ability to display performance information about the running process during debugging. Another suggestion by Frederik, below yours, suggested "blocking instantiation with your Anti Virus", but I'm not sure I understand exactly what that means or how to do that. Do you? ( I would ask at stackoverflow, but I don't have enough points there to comment on another person's answer, yet. ) Would this accomplish the same thing as your suggestion, or could it be used in addition for another layer of protection? Cheers and Regards
  11. FWIW, to help skrell, and anyone else who wishes to build a POSReady Addon, Molecule posted some wonderfully detailed instructions over at Ryan's. See here and here. (While it is only tested using RVMi, I believe the process might work as well using nLite, and in any case should be at least remotely on-topic for this thread. ) Cheers and Regards
  12. No argument from me. I'm just saying that one could take that argument to extremes. I mean after all, at some point they are going to produce systems that can no longer run Windows 10, so taking that approach we might just as well give up and quit using computers at all. Actually, that does have some merit since in some ways we as a society might be better off with less technology and more personal interactions. Being forced to think for and entertain ourselves would probably have some long term benefits. But in the meantime, "Our computers still work." So I'll keep on keeping on. Not with blinders on, mind you. But I still see no convincing argument to change, yet. Cheers and Regards
  13. No, but at least please provide a translation for the rest of us: Cheers and Regards
  14. Now Noel, I seem to remember that you said something similar about Windows 8.x, yet you now say you will be "left out in the cold" if you remain with Windows 8.1 as the other 8.x users are probably the most likely to switch to Windows 10, while those of us, many, many of us, who happily stuck with Windows 7 continue merrily along. I agree that Microsoft desperately wants us to "upgrade", and we very well might be forced to at some point due to "a failure of some sort", but yet there are devoted users of XP, Win2K, and even Win9x that valiantly continue on to this day. I also agree that the vast majority of "users do need to just surf the internet, maybe buy a few things, order pizza." That's where the lion's share of the user market will go, as long as the equipment is inexpensive, reliable, and familiar and/or easy to use. So I understand that's why MS tried to force the same interface across all platforms to build familiarity and make the decision for the user to pick a Windows mobile platform an easy one. But that effort failed in the mobile market and the interface was not familiar and easy for computer users so it is failing there, too, even when it's "free" to address the cost aspect. Not to mention the recent emphasis on privacy concerns, etc. Anyway, Windows 10 doesn't do anything better for the "vast majority" than the iPad, Android tablet, and the other such products including any smart phone, so those are what the "vast majority" will keep using. And as dencorso pointed out, many large businesses are just now switching from XP to Windows 7, so that market should continue for awhile. If I really need a computer, and dealing with a Microsoft product just becomes more trouble than it's worth, even I am looking more and more at Linux, maybe ChaletOS as bookie32 pointed out (Thanks bookie ), see here and/or here and here. since it seems inexpensive, easy, and has a familiar interface. And as you have said, with all the stuff that Microsoft is doing, even if we think it is crap and/or invasive, they will most likely continue to keep the lights on for some time to come. They are just continuing to lose our respect and their reputation as a market leader and innovator, at least to many of us. Cheers and Regards
  15. dhjohns has been able to add and configure enough 3rd party addons to make Windows 10 look good, as had NoelC, and it works for him. [ Though I think that even he would agree that the Windows 10 look out-of-the-box could definitely be improved.] He also has found some Modern apps that he likes. He also likes the new built-in virtual desktops. He is not concerned about the current storm about privacy issues. I don't mean to speak for him, but I think that correctly summarizes things, and as long as it works for him, then more power to him. Cheers and Regards
  16. The respect is mutual. I like to think that I'm just stubborn about it, not belligerent. You are also stubborn, maybe a little more enthusiastically so than I am , and you are definitely more active and you continuously and thoroughly test all current and new options to the benefit of the entire community. I sincerely thank you for your ongoing efforts. I, on the other hand, tend to take the approach, if it ain't broke, ... Edit: I'm keeping a very close eye on the privacy issues as they evolve and I plan to adopt your host and firewall recommendations. Cheers and Regards
  17. I have always had my Windows 7 update settings as "Notify only" and usually waited a week or two after "patch Tuesday" before installing anything. I also took dencorso's advice to heart from the first post in this thread, posted on April 12'th, and hid all suggested updates within a day or two from that time. As a result, I have never had the GWX folder or any associated files ever show up on my machine. As time goes on, I am feeling more and more justified and happy with my decision to stick with Windows 7. I have yet to see any persuasive argument to convince me to "upgrade". I'm not a gamer so I don't need the latest DirectX, I haven't seen a Modern app I can't live without, the very slightly faster boot time isn't significant in the overall scheme of things, and the "staying current" argument just hasn't impacted me yet. Windows 7 works with my hardware and the software I use and it meets my needs. Cheers and Regards
  18. Yes but I think you can move the icon outside of the visible area and it'll stay there, in effect, hidden. Try this experiment ; first check that your settings are not to "align on grid" nor "reorganize automatically". Increase screen resolution, temporarily; now frag the offending element to the right border (of larger resolution screen), finally restore screen to its usual resolution : does thumbs.db not stay off screen ? WOW! And you called simply deleting the files as jaclaz suggested "a poor work around in last recourse for a standing bug (imho)"? I guess we all have our own definition of "work around" or "hack". Cheers and Regards
  19. Just in the title of the thread. Please edit the title to correct this. And no, I know of no way to selectively display the system files. You either display them or you don't. Cheers and Regards
  20. To me it sometimes depends on the type of potato and how they are prepared. eg baked white potatoes I eat the skins, while baked sweet potatoes I don't. If you mash the potatoes and want the creamiest texture then you need to take the skins off, but coarse mashed or "chunked" potatoes are just as good, if not better. Many potatoes, especially "new" or baby potatoes, have very thin skins, while some types of potatoes have thicker skins. I also understand that the skins of the potatoes have a lot of the nutrients that make the potato part of a healthy diet, see here and here, for example. But overall, I say "Eat the skins." Cheers and Regards
  21. It's been awhile sine I've looked much at DirectX, but IIRC Windows 7 has never had a C:\Windows\System32\directx folder. Never. I believe that the DirectX DLL's are in C:\Windows\System32, and also in C:\Windows\SysWOW64 for Windows 7 x64. I believe that the only connection between DirectX and .NET is the optional DirectX for Managed Code, at least that's the way it used to be, and you very rarely hear much about that any more. Why are you convinced of the connection between DirectX and .NET? And like Trip, I don't understand your current anger about DirectX. The way DirectX works in Windows 7 hasn't changed since Windows 7 first came out, so why get mad now, 6 years later? I mean, I know you like to play the role of a bitter, angry old (young?) man, but still... Cheers and Regards
  22. I know that mathematicians have their own specialized terminology, I'm only an engineer after all, but anytime I see any kind of phrase that uses a percentage larger than 100, which in my mind means all of whatever they are trying to measure, coupled with terms like "less", "shorten", "decrease", or any other term that implies getting smaller in any way whatsoever, it just makes no logical sense to me. It's as if whoever wrote that is just trying to get the audience's attention with a huge number to make some kind of point, so they'll think "Wow! That's impressive!", or shocking, disgraceful, or whatever other emotion they are trying to engender. A bigger number has more of an impact than a smaller one, right? "300% more!" sounds bigger than "3 times larger!", doesn't it? That's fine until things are getting smaller. They try to use the same effect in the other direction, and to me it just sounds wrong. Cheers and Regards
  23. I assume you mean significantly better in measurable ways like performance, stability, compatibility, functionality, etc. (And not just better by a percent or two.) I assume you do not mean things like looks, a few seconds faster boot time, being "current", etc. And while better game performance might eventually be a factor for some people, I assume you don't care about that unless it is very significantly better in a game you happen to play. Any other conditions you want to mention or changes you want to make to what I mentioned here? Not that having the latest OS, or having the absolutely fastest OS no matter how little the improvement, or having a look that you like are not valid reasons for using any particular OS. But I assume those are not reasons that you are talking about. Cheers and Regards
  24. I'm not aware of any reason. I've asked the question myself - http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/173379-windows-10/page-38#entry1103095 - and have addressed Noel's current thinking - http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/174228-the-weighing-of-the-positives-and-negatives/?p=1105071. Unless there is: I just don't see any reason to change from Windows 7, nor recommend any later OS to other users. But I would also love to hear from other users who feel differently. Cheers and Regards
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