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#31
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references for changing to Win7 from XP?
On Tue, 08 Jan 2019 09:42:30 -0800, pyotr filipivich
wrote: Ken Blake on Tue, 08 Jan 2019 07:57:08 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 17:27:05 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 12:43:07 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 09:58:50 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 08:00:28 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it "here" - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are "backwards." Do not tell me that it is 'better'. Better or not, to me, it's the same thing. Every time I've gotten a new car, it took me only a few minutes to learn the difference from my old one. Even if I rent a car, I get comfortable with its controls very quickly. And muscle memory - where you automatically reach (because for the last ten years, that is where it was), and in the new car, it isn't there. Ever stall a car out, because you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it? No, but I've stalled rental cars in Europe simply because it had been so long since I drove a car with a clutch. Exactly, you'd "forgotten" abut that 'detail'. No. I hadn't forgotten about anything. I was way out of practice and lost my skills at changing gears. I still knew exactly how to do it. Right. In this case you were going back to an older version of "car interface", so it came back to you. Wrong. Nothing "came back" to me. It was never gone. I was still able to do it. Nine times out of ten, I did it with no problem, but every once in a while, being out of practice, I did it somewhat clumsily and I stalled. That was completely different from what you said: "But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it 'here' - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are 'backwards' " and "you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it?I knew exactly where the clutch pedal was and exactly how to use it." I haven't driven a car with a manual transmission in ten or fifteen years. But put me behind the wheel of one right now, and I could still do it without a problem, since I've forgotten nothing about how to do it (although I probably would stall every now and then because I switched gears clumsily--*not* because I "forgot about the clutch"). |
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#32
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How to (safely) run Out-of-Support Windows versions? (was: references for changing to Win7 from XP?)
On 6 Jan 2019 20:10:52 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
If you don't get any security updates, then how do you keep your system 'safe'? Just by using Anti-Virus/Anti-Malware software? Other means? * Everybody thinks it's equivalent to wearing a tinfoil that, but I do nearly all my web surfing without Javascript. (Only my banks and Amazon regularly require it.) * Flash is in "click to enable, every time" mode in my browser. * AdBlock Plus prevents injected ads from being seen, let alone executing malicious code. * I have antivirus running in "real-time protection mode", and in addition I do a Malwarebytes scan at frequent intervals. Malwarebytes occasionally finds a false positive, but neither one has ever found a real positive. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
#33
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references for changing to Win7 from XP?
Ken Blake on Tue, 08 Jan 2019 10:59:56 -0700
typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Tue, 08 Jan 2019 09:42:30 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Tue, 08 Jan 2019 07:57:08 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 17:27:05 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 12:43:07 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 09:58:50 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 08:00:28 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it "here" - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are "backwards." Do not tell me that it is 'better'. Better or not, to me, it's the same thing. Every time I've gotten a new car, it took me only a few minutes to learn the difference from my old one. Even if I rent a car, I get comfortable with its controls very quickly. And muscle memory - where you automatically reach (because for the last ten years, that is where it was), and in the new car, it isn't there. Ever stall a car out, because you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it? No, but I've stalled rental cars in Europe simply because it had been so long since I drove a car with a clutch. Exactly, you'd "forgotten" abut that 'detail'. No. I hadn't forgotten about anything. I was way out of practice and lost my skills at changing gears. I still knew exactly how to do it. Right. In this case you were going back to an older version of "car interface", so it came back to you. Wrong. Nothing "came back" to me. It was never gone. I was still able to do it. Nine times out of ten, I did it with no problem, but every once in a while, being out of practice, I did it somewhat clumsily and I stalled. That was completely different from what you said: "But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it 'here' - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are 'backwards' " and "you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it?I knew exactly where the clutch pedal was and exactly how to use it." I haven't driven a car with a manual transmission in ten or fifteen years. But put me behind the wheel of one right now, and I could still do it without a problem, since I've forgotten nothing about how to do it (although I probably would stall every now and then because I switched gears clumsily--*not* because I "forgot about the clutch"). Sigh. I'm not sure why, but you seem to keep missing the point. The actions I took on a daily basis in using Windows XP _do not work_ in Windows 7. - The icon I am looking for, is not there. - The navigation window I look for, is not open. Call it better all you want, but if I swap out your keyboard for a different layout "because it is 'better'" and "you can easily pick it up", doesn't change the fact that the way which did work is no longer. "It wasn't broken, it didn't need fixing." -- pyotr filipivich Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing? |
#34
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references for changing to Win7 from XP?
"pyotr filipivich" wrote
| Sigh. I'm not sure why, but you seem to keep missing the point. | The actions I took on a daily basis in using Windows XP _do not work_ | in Windows 7. He tends to be defensive, even in the face of your gentle manner. I know what you mean. My first pickup had the horn near the outside, so the position depended on the turn of the wheel! I finally got used to that and then the next one had the horn back in the center. Similarly, my emergency brake used to be under the dashboard. Now it's on the floor as a pull-up arm. I practice using it once in a while so that I won't reach for the dash in an emergency. Unfortunately, a lot of the changes in Windows are merely frivolous or committee decisions. Why do they keep changing the app data folder path or the program files path? Why do they keep changing the left side panel in dialogues and folder windows, then restrict access to customize them? No reason, really. Except maybe that most people judge the update by the GUI. That's why so many people were mad when they bought Vista limited, with no Aero. With the "classic" GUI it looked like XP. Why spend all that money if it doesn't "look like the future"? I customized the 5 quick-change options in dialogues in Win7 at one point. I think they were things I've never used, like Documents, My Pictures, etc. But somehow I ended up with 2 desktop icons. I keep meaning to fix that but just don't get around to figuring out the tweak all over again. Other changes are done with good intentions but are not necessarily successful. For instance, you have to jump through hoops to get the Quick Launch toolbar back in Win7. The ability to "pin" is not the same. They broke it deliberately to stop badly behaving installers from filling up Quick Launch without asking. But they ended up breaking well behaved installers. I still make installers with a QL icon option, but most people won't benefit because they don't understand that it's broken, nor that they can get it back. |
#35
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references for changing to Win7 from XP?
On Wed, 09 Jan 2019 11:52:34 -0800, pyotr filipivich
wrote: Ken Blake on Tue, 08 Jan 2019 10:59:56 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Tue, 08 Jan 2019 09:42:30 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Tue, 08 Jan 2019 07:57:08 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 17:27:05 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 12:43:07 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: On Mon, 07 Jan 2019 09:58:50 -0800, pyotr filipivich wrote: Ken Blake on Mon, 07 Jan 2019 08:00:28 -0700 typed in alt.windows7.general the following: But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it "here" - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are "backwards." Do not tell me that it is 'better'. Better or not, to me, it's the same thing. Every time I've gotten a new car, it took me only a few minutes to learn the difference from my old one. Even if I rent a car, I get comfortable with its controls very quickly. And muscle memory - where you automatically reach (because for the last ten years, that is where it was), and in the new car, it isn't there. Ever stall a car out, because you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it? No, but I've stalled rental cars in Europe simply because it had been so long since I drove a car with a clutch. Exactly, you'd "forgotten" abut that 'detail'. No. I hadn't forgotten about anything. I was way out of practice and lost my skills at changing gears. I still knew exactly how to do it. Right. In this case you were going back to an older version of "car interface", so it came back to you. Wrong. Nothing "came back" to me. It was never gone. I was still able to do it. Nine times out of ten, I did it with no problem, but every once in a while, being out of practice, I did it somewhat clumsily and I stalled. That was completely different from what you said: "But when I'm having to stop what I've done for a long time, to find out where/how to do it 'here' - it throws me out. Very much like getting a new car, and the light switch and wiper controls are 'backwards' " and "you forgot about the clutch (Your regular car not having one), and in the 'emergency' you didn't have time to think about it?I knew exactly where the clutch pedal was and exactly how to use it." I haven't driven a car with a manual transmission in ten or fifteen years. But put me behind the wheel of one right now, and I could still do it without a problem, since I've forgotten nothing about how to do it (although I probably would stall every now and then because I switched gears clumsily--*not* because I "forgot about the clutch"). Sigh. I'm not sure why, but you seem to keep missing the point. The actions I took on a daily basis in using Windows XP _do not work_ in Windows 7. - The icon I am looking for, is not there. - The navigation window I look for, is not open. Call it better all you want, but if I swap out your keyboard for a different layout "because it is 'better'" and "you can easily pick it up", doesn't change the fact that the way which did work is no longer. "It wasn't broken, it didn't need fixing." What was your original point is irrelevant to all the comments I've made in this thread. If you say "The actions I took on a daily basis in using Windows XP _do not work_ in Windows 7" I'll believe you. I was never responding to your original point. I was responding to other points you made later and are completely wrong, as far as I'm concerned. |
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