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#31
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It's a good day to upgrade
On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 12:17:44 -0500, Slimer wrote:
You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
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#32
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It's a good day to upgrade
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 4:51 PM, Moss Grimmik wrote: snip long quote Yeah but how many of those other OS that you mentioned use a key logger to nib**** your private stuff? If you have evidence that there is indeed a _keylogger_ in proprietary products which is absent from the free software, I would love to see it. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter "They're not problems. They're tired old FUD. Slimer's attack on nvidia drivers in particular fly in the face of very well established facts." - GNU/Linux "advocate" JEDIDIAH, denying that there are problems with NVIDIA's driver in the operating system. Message-ID: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWhz/2AAoJEIwFfgf/rr+utZ4H/1dgWar/OQQgm8VmY5J5UoXP xvKoc3VL5R5lyhQuXnriTg2JzXvahEH8cVEiHWr5f0azSiHbLt 4f8xQXGvQ0FXyH 92Ho2wFidFRa6bc4HM9FY5oM0I9lvybR5Ze4nTopv54x4cnpqy YjY7q0pjWQ2ZTg +KzvliDmkMdlAaRYwDiBuk13LLU48Bk5/EZAaPdOSQuYhf2D0XzSODsWpL6srvcD 8JhwKZS3n3/N7nhRE8s4QrLssvWrlptoGzU58bzY/rZfWeb3QH5wt6pL/QKx/Ats RKa5LSJYUEITY+f6jpi0YEhyB5S+h66dmgL8jW8GpfN5gOts16 M24mhoDDoSKuQ= =MRaY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#33
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It's a good day to upgrade
Ed Mullen wrote:
John Doe wrote: Ed Mullen wrote: Through a combination of tweaks and add-ons I've made W10 look pretty much like W7. Please provide screenshots... Here ya go: http://edmullen.net/temp/shot.jpg The Start menu is produced by the add-on Classic Start Menu/Classic Shell. http://www.classicshell.net/ I'm particularly interested in how you got rid of the upper right-hand window border weirdness where there is only the thinnest line, if you can grab it, for resizing the window. That nonsense started right after Windows XP. I have no problem grabbing any corner of a window and resizing it. If you can easily grab a single pixel on a modern high-resolution monitor, more power to you. Oh! If you mean a maximized window, yes. I'm talking about normal "restored" Windows, not maximized windows. Starting with Windows Vista, for some strange reason Microsoft removed the border around the upper right-hand buttons even when the window is not maximized. Apart from destroying the Windows' look and feel... One of the silliest things Microsoft has done I believe beginning with Windows XP is to put a border around maximized windows that interferes with effortless clicking on the scrollbar. Nowadays it's all mixed up. Some programs include that border and some don't. Consistency is lost. Not seeing what you're describing. It's been that way for 15 years... When the window is maximized, there's no need for a border. No border means you can easily click on the buttons in the upper right-hand side or an empty area of the scrollbar. But Microsoft royally screwed up that stuff by removing the upper right-hand border from non-maximized windows too. That area is barely functional for resizing the window. And before that, Microsoft put a border on a maximized window on the right-hand side where the scrollbar is. Totally retarded. Although apparently that practice has been somewhat rescinded since nowadays some programs do not have a right-hand side border. Here in X-News, both conditions exist with maximized windows... In this editing window, I can slap the mouse pointer against the right-hand side scrollbar and click to page-up or page-down. But in the message view window, there is a sliver of a border that prevents the mouse from scrolling the window (unless you back the mouse off of the side of the window a pixel or two). That maximized window right-hand side border nonsense was introduced in Windows XP. One nice thing about W10 is that you can mouse wheel scroll a window that does not have focus. If you mean without activating the window... That's certainly worth a try. If there is no other use for the scroll wheel when moving the pointer over inactive windows, it can't hurt anything. |
#34
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It's a good day to upgrade
Go play on a highway, troll...
-- Slimer .m nsn.s wrote in news:n67f6n$mv2$4 dont-email.me: Path: eternal-september.org!mx02.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Slimer .m nsn.s Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-8,alt.comp.os.windows-10 Subject: It's a good day to upgrade Date: Fri, 1 Jan 2016 22:15:00 -0500 Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 33 Message-ID: n67f6n$mv2$4 dont-email.me References: n61q7m$fcg$2 dont-email.me udda8b9ol2uah1j8u333jq2d0hqu3krj44 4ax.com n64biu$b4d$1 dont-email.me n66c6p$50j$1 dont-email.me MPG.30f0fecaaada5eca98f3db news.individual.net Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Injection-Date: Sat, 2 Jan 2016 03:12:23 -0000 (UTC) Injection-Info: mx02.eternal-september.org; posting-host="50ad8222d8625300d9b86063810b4a1e"; logging-data="23522"; mail-complaints-to="abuse eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1/J9Q+i6KI5SUqSLtaKBB9c2FD17+/ELd8=" User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.5.0 In-Reply-To: MPG.30f0fecaaada5eca98f3db news.individual.net Cancel-Lock: sha1:mDdY02uSw6M6H7t+VytvQhqnxRo= Xref: mx02.eternal-september.org alt.comp.os.windows-8:28742 alt.comp.os.windows-10:13460 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 9:23 PM, Stan Brown wrote: On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 12:17:44 -0500, Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter "They're not problems. They're tired old FUD. Slimer's attack on nvidia drivers in particular fly in the face of very well established facts." - - GNU/Linux "advocate" JEDIDIAH, denying that there are problems with NVIDIA's driver in the operating system. Message-ID: slrnn8b0ak.m7f.jedi nomad.mishnet -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWh0C0AAoJEIwFfgf/rr+u4pwH/iaASYGCuYAwHuNidQMu6Qqp j41AIQccAdjmSLzfMwAmlRTt3i3TvW/jeut8B9CiFydJqtX0yBwrjdLXnzpBlq+S zwkxrEumxU3Nl9P+JuLkJrMG55ys5JCjtcYaa4Qm3S+Ldjh91w 84suvKlbLXdCw4 JzAsM6SpO3X9zc1WIN3IJ1JwJi9c1xmM0qCHwj5V17+1z4A3wP oXzxj9a7pozzMr VE/zQWSyPgQRXqcEF4nSvqiZ30ckZJJpWENVr+P0bkPzsTgajIQl6 xi2hvzdcTyT x5TO4qNan1p+NbAc3/FVtMay64+iRPoTSr3jMdo/qySGSRaMqHzAFl3NxqJ+Rzs= =9C62 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#35
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It's a good day to upgrade
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 9:23 PM, Stan Brown wrote: On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 12:17:44 -0500, Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter "They're not problems. They're tired old FUD. Slimer's attack on nvidia drivers in particular fly in the face of very well established facts." - - GNU/Linux "advocate" JEDIDIAH, denying that there are problems with NVIDIA's driver in the operating system. Message-ID: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWh0C0AAoJEIwFfgf/rr+u4pwH/iaASYGCuYAwHuNidQMu6Qqp j41AIQccAdjmSLzfMwAmlRTt3i3TvW/jeut8B9CiFydJqtX0yBwrjdLXnzpBlq+S zwkxrEumxU3Nl9P+JuLkJrMG55ys5JCjtcYaa4Qm3S+Ldjh91w 84suvKlbLXdCw4 JzAsM6SpO3X9zc1WIN3IJ1JwJi9c1xmM0qCHwj5V17+1z4A3wP oXzxj9a7pozzMr VE/zQWSyPgQRXqcEF4nSvqiZ30ckZJJpWENVr+P0bkPzsTgajIQl6 xi2hvzdcTyT x5TO4qNan1p+NbAc3/FVtMay64+iRPoTSr3jMdo/qySGSRaMqHzAFl3NxqJ+Rzs= =9C62 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#36
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It's a good day to upgrade
Go play on a highway, troll...
-- Slimer .m nsn.s wrote in news:n67f0p$mv2$3 dont-email.me: Path: eternal-september.org!mx02.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Slimer .m nsn.s Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-8,alt.comp.os.windows-10 Subject: It's a good day to upgrade Date: Fri, 1 Jan 2016 22:11:50 -0500 Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 33 Message-ID: n67f0p$mv2$3 dont-email.me References: n61q7m$fcg$2 dont-email.me udda8b9ol2uah1j8u333jq2d0hqu3krj44 4ax.com n64biu$b4d$1 dont-email.me n66c6p$50j$1 dont-email.me RxChy.68963$cu5.1480 fx13.iad Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Injection-Date: Sat, 2 Jan 2016 03:09:13 -0000 (UTC) Injection-Info: mx02.eternal-september.org; posting-host="50ad8222d8625300d9b86063810b4a1e"; logging-data="23522"; mail-complaints-to="abuse eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX18/KrK8pFDoll+XqB+Vw9MqXE1qrp1CWR0=" User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.5.0 In-Reply-To: RxChy.68963$cu5.1480 fx13.iad Cancel-Lock: sha1:FXihTQKitOtbmTZnjyjEXi8eqNA= Xref: mx02.eternal-september.org alt.comp.os.windows-8:28741 alt.comp.os.windows-10:13459 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 4:51 PM, Moss Grimmik wrote: snip long quote Yeah but how many of those other OS that you mentioned use a key logger to nib**** your private stuff? If you have evidence that there is indeed a _keylogger_ in proprietary products which is absent from the free software, I would love to see it. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter "They're not problems. They're tired old FUD. Slimer's attack on nvidia drivers in particular fly in the face of very well established facts." - GNU/Linux "advocate" JEDIDIAH, denying that there are problems with NVIDIA's driver in the operating system. Message-ID: slrnn8b0ak.m7f.jedi nomad.mishnet -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWhz/2AAoJEIwFfgf/rr+utZ4H/1dgWar/OQQgm8VmY5J5UoXP xvKoc3VL5R5lyhQuXnriTg2JzXvahEH8cVEiHWr5f0azSiHbLt 4f8xQXGvQ0FXyH 92Ho2wFidFRa6bc4HM9FY5oM0I9lvybR5Ze4nTopv54x4cnpqy YjY7q0pjWQ2ZTg +KzvliDmkMdlAaRYwDiBuk13LLU48Bk5/EZAaPdOSQuYhf2D0XzSODsWpL6srvcD 8JhwKZS3n3/N7nhRE8s4QrLssvWrlptoGzU58bzY/rZfWeb3QH5wt6pL/QKx/Ats RKa5LSJYUEITY+f6jpi0YEhyB5S+h66dmgL8jW8GpfN5gOts16 M24mhoDDoSKuQ= =MRaY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#37
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It's a good day to upgrade
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 10:14 PM, John Doe wrote: Go play on a highway, troll... You have a very warped idea of what a troll is. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWh0YoAAoJEIwFfgf/rr+u874H/0QUo5CdfAEnCsFFp/es2Zt6 O3KEt8KXrqk1nIfm7PUHN67sVXlgXStaLWz9sAMkhbtur8Z8nx SrqRceOf/K8HHa naamtToniFlf6Sh4zTROmrSkWxpMpaK3N2dMOOLej9ay7qznS7 6seiJwaqD9Z3Cz 90V/+W+z9ndCITEF8bOYiBfGZqnDX5zTznuRYLiFXaX47bcj+9IGar ErD4mHony9 N0Siv3G63S9N7HjfDHvvIco2qHLiPvXTKIDpEb3pvgiSbnq8w+ h5Vo2VDWXBAott Hvi2VTBVH22LzEHdnolYXiBDBsFL2CBtE/xqMlVo4SVsPxSNwNAXciKDc9djpWQ= =ksWL -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#38
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It's a good day to upgrade
On 01/01/2016 22:07, bert wrote:
In article , Ed Mullen writes John Doe wrote on 12/30/2015 6:43 PM: Getting Windows 8 for $40 and now Windows 10 for free. Easy to understand why, because Microsoft is under humongous reverse pressure from ultraportable PCs and their operating systems. But I have a feeling it's going to effect more than the price of Windows. This reminds me of the big Microsoft antitrust trial prior to 2000. That's when Windows XP came out and ended the crappy consumer versions of Windows power users had to restart several times during the day. This huge pressure on Microsoft could result in another major improvement of quality. No more sitting on its hands, at least for a while. Time to upgrade. For me, much earlier than usual. I didn't even use Windows Vista or Windows 7. You missed out on W7. Great OS. So far I'm unimpressed by W10 by comparison. It's getting better but almost in secret. You have to dig around to find what's new and better. Like changing the program title bar color from that horrid white. Took out the ability then put it back in. Why didn't they just ask first? Or why even contemplate changing that? White? Uh, white? It's almost as if the MS Devs like being called idiots and cursed at. Geez. Lemme see, an MS Windows dev meeting ... "Let's make all the title bars white!" "Why?" "Because we can!" "Um, what if people don't like it?" "What!? Of course they will!!!" "Why?" "I don't care!" My wife bought a new laptop with 8.1 She was happy with it but upgraded to W10. Noticeably slower and she preferred the 8.1 tiles. So rolled back to 8.1 Now is unhappy with a partially ****ed up 8.1 Originally in Windows 10 you were only few clicks away from changing back to the full screen of tiles type start menu, which is I presume what she wanted. But they seem to have removed that feature now. :-( -- Brian Gregory (in the UK). To email me please remove all the letter vee from my email address. |
#39
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It's a good day to upgrade
On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 22:15:00 -0500, Slimer wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 9:23 PM, Stan Brown wrote: On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 12:17:44 -0500, Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. You already know them -- Windows 10 sends all sorts of private information to Microsoft. http://www.pcworld.com/article/29740...w-to-turn-off- windows-10s-keylogger-yes-it-still-has-one.html is just the first hit of many, when one does a Google search. Quote from Microsoft, requoted in that article: "When you interact with your Windows device by speaking, writing (handwriting), or typing, Microsoft collects speech, inking, and typing information?including information about your Calendar and People (also known as contacts)..." And the same stuff is retrofitted int9o Windows 7 and 8 unless you carefully reject any updates having to do with "telemetry". -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
#40
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It's a good day to upgrade
On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 22:11:50 -0500, Slimer wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 4:51 PM, Moss Grimmik wrote: snip long quote Yeah but how many of those other OS that you mentioned use a key logger to nib**** your private stuff? If you have evidence that there is indeed a _keylogger_ in proprietary products which is absent from the free software, I would love to see it. I doubt that you would, but here it is anyway: http://www.pcworld.com/article/29740...w-to-turn-off- windows-10s-keylogger-yes-it-still-has-one.html -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
#41
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It's a good day to upgrade
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-02 11:36 AM, Stan Brown wrote: On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 22:15:00 -0500, Slimer wrote: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 On 2016-01-01 9:23 PM, Stan Brown wrote: On Fri, 1 Jan 2016 12:17:44 -0500, Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. You already know them -- Windows 10 sends all sorts of private information to Microsoft. http://www.pcworld.com/article/29740...w-to-turn-off- windows-10s-keylogger-yes-it-still-has-one.html is just the first hit of many, when one does a Google search. Quote from Microsoft, requoted in that article: "When you interact with your Windows device by speaking, writing (handwriting), or typing, Microsoft collects speech, inking, and typing information?including information about your Calendar and People (also known as contacts)..." And the same stuff is retrofitted int9o Windows 7 and 8 unless you carefully reject any updates having to do with "telemetry". The problem that I have with PC World (and your) decision to call it a keylogger is that keyloggers were traditionally used for the express purpose of collecting usernames and passwords from unsuspecting victims. In this case, Microsoft is using the supposed keylogger to allow its search engine to predict what you are looking for (like Google) and to enhance the services it offers to the user. As far as I can tell, there is no real spying going on and they are not selling user data, monitoring your activities or anything of the sort the way Google does. It honestly feels like people are overreacting to something which is nothing more than a necessity to allow certain features to work correctly. I might be wrong but the amount of evidence articles have presented so far that Microsoft is doing something wrong has been very weak. - -- Slimer EFF & OpenMedia member / IFAW, Mozilla & PETA supporter -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWiAahAAoJEIwFfgf/rr+uxJ4H/02qshO0BzUS8cSx7uytquyM olKDKQbCWtV5TNjFpyibRBpuVTb8ta5zlqN92TnK69OyJeKzr3 Sl5l0Gi3rEmhqN 9zwOrnvWNOeAp/9fW5v9HFOI1q1ArHsUALxVOSfBPqiudkJMvRihU7abPMEIJ4Vl Sl0Nk/zeWHM7qtj65wFuhiouRh2qp8HlXlf2QMzHgbQ3tostwwNso4p4 C1BofqaW 0oR9ngF7Xk7a7hZMdzN8P4TxumFS3dwzvSTtIjXdExiHcIfBBf TS7rLwGx1D903P 3gP1U8VkYQq4mHMaWz/C53j8HKBLH5rYtDc2JlAsZMSdfDWAivrCijyRDSHs7a0= =YZw+ -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#42
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It's a good day to upgrade
Stan Brown wrote:
Slimer wrote: Stan Brown wrote: Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. You already know them -- Windows 10 sends all sorts of private information to Microsoft. http://www.pcworld.com/article/29740...l-has-one.html Most of that stuff is well known, but this one is interesting... choice.Microsoft.com That must be turned off in all of your browsers?! -- is just the first hit of many, when one does a Google search. Quote from Microsoft, requoted in that article: "When you interact with your Windows device by speaking, writing (handwriting), or typing, Microsoft collects speech, inking, and typing information?including information about your Calendar and People (also known as contacts)..." And the same stuff is retrofitted int9o Windows 7 and 8 unless you carefully reject any updates having to do with "telemetry". |
#43
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It's a good day to upgrade
I wrote:
Stan Brown wrote: Slimer wrote: Stan Brown wrote: Slimer wrote: You're ignoring Windows 7 which was a masterpiece and Windows 10 which, according to a list published today, is the version of Windows with the least vulnerabilities. Not counting the ones built in by Microsoft, of course. By all means, provide us with a list of these build-in vulnerabilities. You already know them -- Windows 10 sends all sorts of private information to Microsoft. http://www.pcworld.com/article/29740...l-has-one.html Most of that stuff is well known, but this one is interesting... choice.Microsoft.com That must be turned off in all of your browsers?! "To opt out of personalized ads in this browser, your browser must allow first-party and third-party cookies" I have to enable third-party cookies??? Future Microsoft privacy settings locations... you.weren't.supposed.to.find.this.Microsoft.com it.won't.be.so.easy.next.time.Microsoft.com |
#44
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It's a good day to upgrade
The counter argument would be... Luu Trans wrote X-News in Delphi or
some such language, not with Microsoft tools. But it was just an example. However... You can see the same maximized window scrollbar weirdness among Microsoft branded programs WordPad and Notepad. In a maximized WordPad window you will notice that the pointer flush against the right-hand side will scroll the window. But in Notepad, there is a border on the maximized window that doesn't allow such scrolling. I noticed it immediately, but I don't recall which version of Windows 95/98/XP. You don't need borders on a maximized window, but some Microsoft programmer or manager got the silly idea that you should have a border on a maximized window. And then there are other ridiculous things, like file manager not allowing keyboard up/down arrow navigation in the navigation pane. That nonsense was introduced after Windows XP. Microsoft has always known about it but just doesn't bother to fix it. I suspect Microsoft hasn't fixed the focus problem in file manager, either. Like when you're at the top of a file list and change the sorting because you're looking for a different file. Microsoft throws the focus to wherever the randomly highlighted file happens to be. Other programmers do not change the focus when the file sort order is changed. They might keep the file highlighted, but if it's out of view they don't throw you to that part of the list. |
#45
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It's a good day to upgrade
John Doe wrote on 1/2/2016 4:47 PM:
The counter argument would be... Luu Trans wrote X-News in Delphi or some such language, not with Microsoft tools. But it was just an example. However... You can see the same maximized window scrollbar weirdness among Microsoft branded programs WordPad and Notepad. In a maximized WordPad window you will notice that the pointer flush against the right-hand side will scroll the window. But in Notepad, there is a border on the maximized window that doesn't allow such scrolling. I noticed it immediately, but I don't recall which version of Windows 95/98/XP. You don't need borders on a maximized window, but some Microsoft programmer or manager got the silly idea that you should have a border on a maximized window. And then there are other ridiculous things, like file manager not allowing keyboard up/down arrow navigation in the navigation pane. That nonsense was introduced after Windows XP. Microsoft has always known about it but just doesn't bother to fix it. I suspect Microsoft hasn't fixed the focus problem in file manager, either. Like when you're at the top of a file list and change the sorting because you're looking for a different file. Microsoft throws the focus to wherever the randomly highlighted file happens to be. Other programmers do not change the focus when the file sort order is changed. They might keep the file highlighted, but if it's out of view they don't throw you to that part of the list. And don't you have to wonder about the programmatical logic behing that? Do these people actually USE the product? I doubt it. Seems they must be stuck in some programmer's dream state. -- Ed Mullen http://edmullen.net/ As the shopper placed her groceries on the checkout stand, the bagger asked her paper or plastic? Doesn't matter, she replied, I'm bisackual. |
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