I just love phrases like 'rendered useless'. Now I am not a great fan of
MicroSoft products, but:
I ran a Pentium 3 with Windows 2000 for a year; running about 16 hours a day,
with not a single virus, trojan or relative of pinocchio causing problems. How
did I do it?
1. By realising that the makers of the OS probably didn't give a d**n about the
security of my computer, and in fact might favour my rig being a leaky sieve.
2. By realising that the only person who was likely to care about my rig was me.
3. By reading an awful lot of boring stuff about firewalls and then
implementing most of it.
4. Steering clear of 'funny' websites, and not downloading software (ran
FireFox and Open Office and nothing else).
So, I successfully rendered Windows 2000 useful.
Every time I install an operating system on a computer (doesn't really matter
who made the OS) I have to render it useful; this is because I start with the
idea that the system is probably fairly leaky. This takes considerable time and
effort. I spend quite some time every year helping people who bought PCs with
Windows pre-installed, because, of course, the person who installs these OEM
versions doesn't care about the customers, he/she has to install the max.
number of OSs in the minimum of time - by the quickest method (i.e. keep
clicking the default button).
I am quite sure that Windows Vista, for all its millions of jazzy windoids that
go on and on and on and on about security, is no better than half the
experienced people who find joy in breaking into operating systems. It would,
for the sake of argument, be perfectly possible to write a "nasty little
widget" in Runtime Revolution that would delete an awful lot of the 'C' drive
before anybody noticed; why anybody would want to do that beats me.
People who use phrases such as the header of this message to urge people to
change their OSs and/or computers also so look a bit silly as they beg the
question: how long will it be before there is a full-scale attack on the Mac
OS? or a Linux distro?
I'm digging out some Rhapsody DR2 disks that a friend gave me in about 1999
(neither he nor I ever used them) and going to have some "holiday fun"
installing them on a partition on my G3 iMac - why? well, lots of reasons
really; but one of them is that by using a fairly old and obscure OS I might be
less vulnerable online. I wonder if I can use the PC CD to breath some life
into a P2 I have lurking under the bed.
One should also pause and reflect on the fact that both Microsoft and Apple
produce their operating systems to make money, and if they waited until they
had a rock-solid OS that nobody could ever touch they would never make any
money at all and the computer industry would collapse, and people like you and
me would die of inanition.
sincerely, Richmond Mathewson.
____________________________________________________________
A Thorn in the flesh is better than a failed Systems Development Life Cycle.
____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________
Not happy with your email address?.
Get the one you really want - millions of new email addresses available now at
Yahoo! http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/ymail/new.html
_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[email protected]
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution