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#1
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
.....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have
a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. |
#2
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote:
....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. |
#3
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
"wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. |
#4
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On 3/11/2018 5:28 AM, HB wrote:
What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Have you tried FireFox? https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/ It comes in two versions. One installs normally, and the other installs as a portable version which can save space on your main drive. One advantage is you no longer are tied to MS. I have been using it for years and never had a problem, it is secure and easy to use. -- 2018: The year we learn to play the great game of Euchre |
#5
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
"Keith Nuttle" wrote in message news On 3/11/2018 5:28 AM, HB wrote: What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Have you tried FireFox? https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/ It comes in two versions. One installs normally, and the other installs as a portable version which can save space on your main drive. One advantage is you no longer are tied to MS. I have been using it for years and never had a problem, it is secure and easy to use. I've been using MFF for years now. I'm not sure what this Browser has to do with an OS. If we switch to Macs we'd have a lot of software we couldn't use. -- 2018: The year we learn to play the great game of Euchre |
#6
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On 03/11/2018 06:04 AM, Keith Nuttle wrote:
[snip] system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Have you tried FireFox? https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/ Firefox is a browser. The mail program from the same source is Thunderbird (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/). It comes in two versions.Â* One installs normally, and the other installs as a portable version which can save space on your main drive. One advantage is you no longer are tied to MS. Yes. Avoid MS browsers and Windows Media Player too (VLC from http://www.videolan.org/vlc/ seems to work well here). I have been using it for years and never had a problem, it is secure and easy to use. I left Outlook Express when Windows 98 was the latest version. I'm not sure what I was using for mail then, but now it's Thunderbird. -- Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ "Religion stills a thinking mind." |
#7
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
"Mark Lloyd" wrote in message ... On 03/11/2018 06:04 AM, Keith Nuttle wrote: [snip] system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Have you tried FireFox? https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/ Firefox is a browser. The mail program from the same source is Thunderbird (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/). It comes in two versions. One installs normally, and the other installs as a portable version which can save space on your main drive. One advantage is you no longer are tied to MS. Yes. Avoid MS browsers and Windows Media Player too (VLC from http://www.videolan.org/vlc/ seems to work well here). I have been using it for years and never had a problem, it is secure and easy to use. I left Outlook Express when Windows 98 was the latest version. I'm not sure what I was using for mail then, but now it's Thunderbird. I'm downloading it now. I'll give it another shot. Thanks. -- Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ "Religion stills a thinking mind." |
#8
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
HB wrote:
"wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. You can run a VM (virtual machine). You'll need a WinXP license to use. While Microsoft offered "XP Mode", a 500MB download with a copy of WinXP inside, that was intended for Win7 users, and the same methods don't work in Win10. The "Windows Virtual PC" (related to VPC2007), a 20MB download, used to host "XP Mode". But, Microsoft was careful to prevent "Windows Virtual PC" from running on Win10. And the Hyper-V that does run on Windows 10, doesn't have any special support for XP Mode. Since Hyper-V is a bit of a pudge (needs SLAT/EPT), we use VirtualBox instead. This is a product financed by Oracle/Sun. https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads If the Virtual PC method had worked, it would have been perfectly free (in some strained sense of the word free). To succeed at this today, you need one of: 1) A license key. A Retail license key from a PC you no longer use, could be re-purposed for the job. 2) Use a hack to activate the WinXP virtual machine. You'll also benefit from having a WinXP installer CD. You use that to put a copy of Windows into the VM environment, or use it to repair the VM if it's corrupted or something. WinXP then runs inside a "window" on your screen. Outlook Express would then be a window within that "window". Kinda like Russian dolls. In terms of RAM usage, the reasonable bare minimum is a machine with 2GB of RAM. That's a good start. I run VMs on this machine, and it's got 8GB (still not a very big machine). I've had as many as three (older) VMs running on this machine at the same time. Win98SE would run with 256MB. WinXP would run with 512MB. The more modern OSes will run with 1GB or more. I even run a Win10 VM on this machine, but that really needs more CPU cores to speed things up. Paul |
#9
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
"Paul" wrote in message news HB wrote: "wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. You can run a VM (virtual machine). You'll need a WinXP license to use. While Microsoft offered "XP Mode", a 500MB download with a copy of WinXP inside, that was intended for Win7 users, and the same methods don't work in Win10. The "Windows Virtual PC" (related to VPC2007), a 20MB download, used to host "XP Mode". But, Microsoft was careful to prevent "Windows Virtual PC" from running on Win10. And the Hyper-V that does run on Windows 10, doesn't have any special support for XP Mode. Since Hyper-V is a bit of a pudge (needs SLAT/EPT), we use VirtualBox instead. This is a product financed by Oracle/Sun. https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads If the Virtual PC method had worked, it would have been perfectly free (in some strained sense of the word free). To succeed at this today, you need one of: 1) A license key. A Retail license key from a PC you no longer use, could be re-purposed for the job. 2) Use a hack to activate the WinXP virtual machine. You'll also benefit from having a WinXP installer CD. You use that to put a copy of Windows into the VM environment, or use it to repair the VM if it's corrupted or something. WinXP then runs inside a "window" on your screen. Outlook Express would then be a window within that "window". Kinda like Russian dolls. In terms of RAM usage, the reasonable bare minimum is a machine with 2GB of RAM. That's a good start. I run VMs on this machine, and it's got 8GB (still not a very big machine). I've had as many as three (older) VMs running on this machine at the same time. Win98SE would run with 256MB. WinXP would run with 512MB. The more modern OSes will run with 1GB or more. I even run a Win10 VM on this machine, but that really needs more CPU cores to speed things up. Paul Thanks Paul. It's over my head. Setting something like that up. The laptop in question has 8 GBs of RAM and a 1 TB HD. I have no idea where I'd get the keys (or a hack) since those old PCs are long gone and their info with them. |
#10
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
HB wrote:
"Paul" wrote in message news HB wrote: "wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. You can run a VM (virtual machine). You'll need a WinXP license to use. While Microsoft offered "XP Mode", a 500MB download with a copy of WinXP inside, that was intended for Win7 users, and the same methods don't work in Win10. The "Windows Virtual PC" (related to VPC2007), a 20MB download, used to host "XP Mode". But, Microsoft was careful to prevent "Windows Virtual PC" from running on Win10. And the Hyper-V that does run on Windows 10, doesn't have any special support for XP Mode. Since Hyper-V is a bit of a pudge (needs SLAT/EPT), we use VirtualBox instead. This is a product financed by Oracle/Sun. https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads If the Virtual PC method had worked, it would have been perfectly free (in some strained sense of the word free). To succeed at this today, you need one of: 1) A license key. A Retail license key from a PC you no longer use, could be re-purposed for the job. 2) Use a hack to activate the WinXP virtual machine. You'll also benefit from having a WinXP installer CD. You use that to put a copy of Windows into the VM environment, or use it to repair the VM if it's corrupted or something. WinXP then runs inside a "window" on your screen. Outlook Express would then be a window within that "window". Kinda like Russian dolls. In terms of RAM usage, the reasonable bare minimum is a machine with 2GB of RAM. That's a good start. I run VMs on this machine, and it's got 8GB (still not a very big machine). I've had as many as three (older) VMs running on this machine at the same time. Win98SE would run with 256MB. WinXP would run with 512MB. The more modern OSes will run with 1GB or more. I even run a Win10 VM on this machine, but that really needs more CPU cores to speed things up. Paul Thanks Paul. It's over my head. Setting something like that up. The laptop in question has 8 GBs of RAM and a 1 TB HD. I have no idea where I'd get the keys (or a hack) since those old PCs are long gone and their info with them. You start at the beginning. https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads VirtualBox 5.2.8 platform packages Windows hosts = https://download.virtualbox.org/virt...121009-Win.exe After that one is installed, you can download this one. Double-clicking this one, because you accepted the file extensions that VirtualBox likes to use, this file triggers the starting of VirtualBox, and it adds things such as passthru USB support (so a USB scanner can be seen from inside the Guest OS). https://download.virtualbox.org/virt...8.vbox-extpack Before you become a whiz kid at VMs, you can start with an Appliance. Microsoft offers these, for free. They have no license key. The grace period (like with normal licensing matters) is 30 days, with up to 3 re-arms (if they haven't used up the re-arms on purpose). https://developer.microsoft.com/en-u...vms/#downloads Select the VM you want to play with (for the purposes of seeing what a VM is like). IE8 on Win7 (x86) Select the Platform. Because you installed VirtualBox, use... VirtualBox The ZIP file offered, will be on the order of 4GB in size. Don't use an OS with a FAT32 C: drive, because of the danger the downloaded file will be too big. Your existing machine with its NTFS C: drive, won't have a problem with it. https://az792536.vo.msecnd.net/vms/V...VirtualBox.zip Inside there is a .ova. If you double-click the .ova, VirtualBox should open and agree to unpack it. If you accept the defaults, a new entry should appear in the left hand side of the VirtualBox setup screen. Double-clicking that, would start the virtual machine running. The Microsoft password is "Passw0rd!" for the IEUser account. The window might open at 1024x768 or so. If inside the Guest OS, you use the Display control panel, you can request a different size, and make the "window" containing the OS larger. Grabbing the corner of a VirtualBox window doesn't always work the best. And asking the VM to make its own window larger works OK. Inside the Guest, you use the menus like you always did. It will take a little getting used to, to occasionally need to use a hot key for something. You need one of the keys to make the mouse "escape" from the Guest OS window. One of my tools uses "right-control" key, another uses "Alt" key for this. You'll get the hang of that after a while. And in the usual place, you can select shutdown in the Guest, and it will stop running. There are lots of other details that are important in VirtualBox, but that's a "5GB trial run" for you :-) ******* The appliance for WinXP is not offered for download any more on the Microsoft site. It seems to be in archive.org but they're not giving it to me :-) :-) I find it unbelievable that the CDN at Microsoft got archived. You'd think there was a norobots file on it. The checksum by the way, is of the copy I've got. I don't have a working download today to compare it to. IE8.XP.For.Windows.VirtualBox.zip 1,229,679,520 bytes SHA256: 0613AD942B46DCB9C83CA44644F7D4961606389C85C149FCB3 AC59169DCFAEE5 https://web.archive.org/web/20151013...VirtualBox.zip Paul |
#11
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On 2018-03-11, HB wrote:
What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Run Windows XP in a virtual machine for OE and other older applications that have trouble running directly on Windows 10. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger Blake (Posts from Google Groups killfiled due to excess spam.) NSA sedition and treason -- http://www.DeathToNSAthugs.com Don't talk to cops! -- http://www.DontTalkToCops.com Badges don't grant extra rights -- http://www.CopBlock.org ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#12
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
"Roger Blake" wrote in message ... On 2018-03-11, HB wrote: What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Run Windows XP in a virtual machine for OE and other older applications that have trouble running directly on Windows 10. Where would I start? This looks way beyond what I can handle without screwing up the new laptop. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger Blake (Posts from Google Groups killfiled due to excess spam.) NSA sedition and treason -- http://www.DeathToNSAthugs.com Don't talk to cops! -- http://www.DontTalkToCops.com Badges don't grant extra rights -- http://www.CopBlock.org ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#13
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On 2018-03-11, HB wrote:
Where would I start? This looks way beyond what I can handle without screwing up the new laptop. First things you need are a Windows XP license key and the matching type of XP installation CD. To stay legal you would need to use a retail edition of XP. (However, I have seen where people have used an OEM edition with the key salvaged from a dead XP computer and it worked and activated OK. Of course I would never suggest that anyone actually do such a thing since it violates Microsoft's licensing.) Then you have your choice of virtualization software. The one I'm most familiar with is Virtualbox (virtualbox.org) which is free for noncommercial use. You create the new virtual machine with the desired amount of memory and storage, install XP, and then install the Virtualbox guest software for seamless operation. Here's a tutorial, there are plenty of others around as well: http://www.tomshardware.com/faq/id-1...irtualbox.html Needless to say you need enough memory and disk space to allocate to the virtual machine but that's seldom a problem on modern hardware, especially for Windows XP whose requirements are minimal by today's standards. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger Blake (Posts from Google Groups killfiled due to excess spam.) NSA sedition and treason -- http://www.DeathToNSAthugs.com Don't talk to cops! -- http://www.DontTalkToCops.com Badges don't grant extra rights -- http://www.CopBlock.org ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#14
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
HB wrote:
"wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Indeed! Classic example of shooting the messenger, instead of blaming Microsoft for not providing an alternative for Outlook Express / Windows Mail. |
#15
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MS unwanted updates tonight...
On 11 Mar 2018 16:09:34 GMT, Frank Slootweg, thunk thusly:
HB wrote: "wg_2002" wrote in message news On Sun, 11 Mar 2018 04:29:14 -0400, HB wrote: ....wiped out OE6. It's still there but will not work anymore. So now I have a laptop I can't use for email. I don't understand why the hell MS would give a &^%$ that someone would want to use OE. And what really eats my lunch is these updates are FORCED on us. Our choice was taken away. There has to be a way to stop them, maybe in the regestry. Someone on this group must know how to stop these updates. It's an archaic piece of software that is best put out to pasture just like the OS that is shipped with. If you do not care for the update cycle of Windows10 you can always choose another alternative. What other alternative is there where the kids can play their games created to run on Windows, or the wife's interior design software created for windows, or music editing software my son uses, the image editing software my daughter uses... all this software would be useless on a Mac or other system. And we all used OE6 and WindowsMail before that. Indeed! Classic example of shooting the messenger, instead of blaming Microsoft for not providing an alternative for Outlook Express / Windows Mail. I run Windows Live Mail on Windows 10, so that's an option. -- Brick Mortar |
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