On 3/8/22 09:58, D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk wrote:
I want to keep my systems up to date.  Not everyone does.

As I understand it, Windows Update does not update the Linux portion.
Yet another step to keep a Windows system safe as possible.  My drill:

- Run Windows update.  If it actually applied an update, you should
   run it again in case the update enables a subsequent update (you
   cannot tell by its cheerful declaration that your system is up to
   date).  Rinse and repeat.
   BTW, Windows Update seems unreasonably slow.  And prone to
   inscrutable failures.

- go to the Microsoft App Store and get updates.  Be careful, it too
   can prematurely say that your apps are up to date.

- ask the machine vendor's software if it has driver or firmware
   updates (Dell, Lenovo, HP, ...).  Sometimes I have to manually
   download and install firmware updates.

- for WSL: "sudo apt update" and "sudo apt full-upgrade"

- for each piece of third party software, ask it if it has updates.
   This includes FireFox.

My Linux drill:

- [Fedora] "sudo dnf update"
   [debian family] "sudo apt update" and "sudo apt full-upgrade"

- once in a while: "sudo fwupdmgr get-updates".
   If the vendor doesn't support the Linux Firmware project, another
   process is required (maybe involving Windows).

Linux sure wins here!
I did this a while ago, but I noticed that exes were about twice as slow
as yum at the time. It was even worse for apt, about 3 times. Windows
packaging in exes is not that fast is the problem. If we're talking speed,
packaging in Arch wins. Even in a VM with 2GB
of RAM and 2 cores. It was able to do the install portion of 500MB
of software in 32-33 seconds. I believe that's 30 plus packages from
memory.

Nick
---
Post to this mailing list [email protected]
Unsubscribe from this mailing list https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
---
Post to this mailing list [email protected]
Unsubscribe from this mailing list https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk

Reply via email to