- New Low for Microsoft - 4 Updates
nunnurbiz <whodunit@notme.org>: Mar 15 06:52AM > snip.... > reads like a troll, smells like a troll, quacks like a troll, must be a > troll..... If you dummies knew how to use google search, you would see that MS has a license expiration date on most of it's OS versions, including Win10-7. This allows them to shut down or limit your OS until you have what they consider a "genuine" version of windoze. They also built in hardware recognition such that you cannot change your hardware and continue to use the same OS you were always using prior to the change. There are several hack programs to overide this hijacking by Microsuck. And if you search further you will find that it is difficult but not impossible to turn off windows update. Even if you set one of the many setting to no update, Microsuck takes control of your machine and updates anyways. As to the asshole thief, con man Billy BOy gates. There was a movie made about him and how he STOLE DOS from a professor, then STOLE windows from Apple. He is a fucking dishonest thief. A thief does not change its colors, he will always be a thief. These movies are NOT released until they go through a panel of attorneys to eliminate anything untrue and potentially libelous. So, you see, he IS a thief and he did steal to get where he is today. You can scream spam all you want, but the fact is, you're ignorant. |
Paul <nospam@needed.invalid>: Mar 15 06:30AM -0400 nunnurbiz wrote: > potentially libelous. So, you see, he IS a thief and he did steal to get > where he is today. > You can scream spam all you want, but the fact is, you're ignorant. You toss some of the usual terms around, but you seem to have them a bit twisted. 1) It *is* possible for install media to be booby-trapped. I've seen this precisely once. They can arrange "winload.exe" to have a signing certificate that expires. During the boot process, booting will stop if this signing is not valid. Such mechanisms are intended to stop the hacking of media, at least for some simple changes. I think that might have been one Windows Insider version, valid for about a week or so. The signing was only valid for several months perhaps. No other media I've used, suffers from such a setting. 2) When you install the OS, there is a thing called the "grace period". The OS is not dependent on the key at that time. This mechanism exists so IT personnel can build an image, do SYSPERP or sealing or the like. The grace period can be rearmed. On the 29th day or 59th day slmgr.vbs -rearm rundll32.exe syssetup,SetupOobeBnk # WinXP that resets the grace period. On some OS, this can be repeated up to four times, for 150 days of grace period usage (possibly Enterprise). Someone in the groups once claimed to be able to do this forever - YMMV. 3) The OS response to the grace period varies. Windows 10 installs outside grace period, continue to run. Windows 7 Enterprise (I have a VM) continues to run outside the grace period. It will run for around 30 minutes, before it spontaneously reboots (dirty shutdown and all). This is, again, a courtesy to IT staff, allowing them to retrieve files or do tiny things, on an out-of-grace image. I have a compiler seated in that OS, and I can "squeak in a compile" in the 30 minutes :-) I keep MinGW in there. On some of the older OSes, if you move the hard drive, the OS basically "Seizes up" or "freezes". That's the worst. Of course, you could get 30 days grace by just installing that OS over again. Not a big deal. 4) Some of the install media is "gated by keys". It won't allow you to install, without a key. There are three possibilities. a) doesn't care about key (Win10) - you can load a key later b) will accept an available install-only key (Win8) c) absolutely needs a key (WinXP SP3 maybe? varied between WinXP Service Pack versions, four different discs) 5) Ability to move a licensed product is clearly defined in the terms of use. A "System Builder OEM" stays with the original hardware it is installed on. This can be remedied with a phone calls, if you haven't been abusing the license key. A person who installed once, had a hardware failure two years later, could request that their install work on a new replacement motherboard which isn't actually the same. The automated telephone challenge might be all that's needed. There are "Retail" SKUs that allow moving the OS, but the license had better not be "visible" on the old machine, or it could be cut off. The "Retail" SKU, because of this flexibility, the market will bear a higher price for this (if not, they'd never sell any). 6) There are tools for activating stuff anyway, like "DAZ's loader". And there are enough abuses of volume licensing by mom and pop computer stores, to make even your "installed by mom and pop" OS, not be legitimate. That's why mom or pop "only charged $50 for the job". You can really have, just about anything you want, at any price you're willing to pay. Right now, you could use the Heidoc downloader to generate a URL for Win7 ISO media. Download the media. Then use DAZ's loader to make it "legit". And be off and running with no grace period. And it costs you... nothing. Just a little hair loss. And I don't think Gates had too much of a hand in the software itself. He wasn't a coding machine or anything. And GUI/UI concepts are reused from all sorts of OSes, when making newer OSes. Lots of ideas were "borrowed" from Xerox PARC, once upon a time. Paul |
micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com>: Mar 15 06:34PM +0200 In alt.windows7.general, on Wed, 13 Mar 2019 19:50:38 +0000 (UTC), >New Low for microSUCK asshole shit company, dishonest and started by the >THIEF Bill Gates. >They are NOW sending VIRUSES to you Windows OS without notification or I read in a software journal that they do do this, but only to people who use foul language online. |
ItsJoan NotJoann <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Mar 15 10:33AM -0700 On Friday, March 15, 2019 at 5:30:30 AM UTC-5, Paul wrote: > You toss some of the usual terms around, but you seem to have > them a bit twisted. > Paul (LOTS of helpful information from Paul snipped for length.) Careful there Paul, you're confusing someone off their medications with facts. It will not be appreciated by the original poster. :-) |
You received this digest because you're subscribed to updates for this group. You can change your settings on the group membership page. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it send an email to misc.consumers.frugal-living+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. |
No comments:
Post a Comment