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Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief.
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Obliterated
Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Originally Posted by jagaboDon't sweat the petty things, just pet the sweaty things.
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RLT69 and SCDVD: You said it a lot better than I would have, so no further comment needed, other than in response to this:
Originally Posted by SCDVD
Originally Posted by rallynavvieWhen in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
Deleted
Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Originally Posted by SCDVD
Originally Posted by Dv8ted2I think that's the problem you don't. Because as EVERYONE else has stated, businesses are less likely to buy new software because they don't have the money or the current version is fine and there is not a business case to purchase the new version.
This is a simple fact. -
This is hilarious. Dv8ted2, the only thing that you have made abundantly clear is that you know nothing about business. I suppose you thing P&L means Pick (nose) and Lick (buggars) instead of Profit and Loss. An officer in a corporation who authorized a needless or premature enterprise wide software "upgrade" costing millions rightly would be fired by the Board of Directors and stockholders for gross mismanagement and misappropriation of company funds. Security specialist? What in the hell is that? Is that kind of like a sanitation specialist? Whatever it is, it gives you zero background or knowledge with respect to an operating business and its financial planning and budget management.
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Edit
Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Sorry everyone that it took this long to respond. I was drinking a cup of coffee when I read Dv8ted2's last comment and I laughed so hard I sprayed coffee on my monitor and had to clean it off. I then took a few minutes to email a link of this thread to a few business colleagues who could use a laugh. When you are busy running a business, it's good to take a laugh break occasionally.
I have to say, this is the most hilarious thread I have read on this forum for quite some time. -
I normally would have stayed out of this mess, but I feel compelled to say, Dv8ted2, that nuking your posts in this thread was probably not the wisest thing to do. Not only does behavior akin to screaming "I'm taking my ball and going home, so nyah-nyah on you!" not reflect well on you, it validates the claims of your detractors and hands them further ammunition to use against you. Besides, you can't get rid of the text that others have quoted in their replies, so what did this really accomplish?
Don't sweat the petty things, just pet the sweaty things. -
Originally Posted by edDV"Quality is cool, but don't forget... Content is King!"
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I missed the back-and-forth from earlier, but I see things both ways.
A -- People who still whine "XP is too bloated, I only use Win98 and Win2000" need to get with the times, a few cases excluded. XP is required to run a lot of decent software, including a number of lean apps based on .NET and other new tech.
B -- People who upgrade "just because". There's nothing dumber than buying something you don't need. I'd have to agree that most times these are kids (high school through college) who only play video games and type Word docs.
There is something to be said for having the latest updates, however. It really just depends on the conversation. For example: Adobe CS2 is years behind Adobe CS3, while Adobe CS4 has only incremental advances beyond CS3 (few areas excluded).Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by MJPollard
Most enterprises still have windows 2000 machines and still run applications in Internet Exploder 6. This represents security risks on many fronts, and my whole point was that Microsoft is trying to get people on more modern machines running operating systems that are kept up to date and still supported.Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Originally Posted by lordsmurfBelieving yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief.
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Originally Posted by Soopafresh
"The XP VM is great for Windows 7 developers who don't have the LOE to redesign all their legacy apps. It does require SA on those endpoints..." which cost just as much as the damn VECD licensing for our purpose anyway. M$ really needs to get their head out of their ass and stop looking at desktop OS licenses as being permanently tethered to one piece of hardware for the rest of its life. I'm sure you all realize that when you upgrade PCs you technically aren't supposed to carry over the OS to your new PC, you have to pitch it and buy a new Windows license keyFB-DIMM are the real cause of global warming -
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
(I'm finally just starting to make some serious use of XP. I like that it loads and shuts down so much faster than 2K. That's nice, certainly. I also like being able to use the IB-modded version of Shrink: 2K lacked a key driver or service for it that I think probably can't be retrofitted. But I could have continued to manage just fine with the original 3.2 version.)
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
Originally Posted by rallynavvieWhen in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
Originally Posted by Seeker47Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief.
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I would have agreed Win2K was better than WinXP .... in 2002.
Those days are long gone, in 2009 using Win2K is like running a marathon with a broken foot. You'll get there, but it will likely be slow and painful. After SP1, definitely after SP2, surely after SP3 -- XP is about as far away from 2000 as it gets.
I always turn off the stupid candy-coated/cartoon-like GUI, be it XP or Vista. It's set to classic look and feel, classic Start menu, etc.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by lordsmurf
* I will make one exception to this. There's a theme patch running around out there, based on Windows XP Media Center if I'm not mistaken, that provides a glossy black version of the "Fisher Price" theme (similar to Media Player 11). THAT is much more tolerable, but since it's not in regular XP...Don't sweat the petty things, just pet the sweaty things. -
Originally Posted by Dv8ted2
OK, How about this:
Originally Posted by Dv8ted2
You wouldn't accept the fact that there could be reasons why various businesses would not buy new software.
It was your callous and indifferent posts that caused the responses.
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When it comes to web browsers, I fully agree with this: "People that do not update their software to accommodate the changes in technology are their own wost enemy."
If you're still using IE6, I think you're an ass.Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
I have just upgraded to Windows 7 Ultimate(Evaluation copy) on my Macbook and it works much better then Vista so far. Haven't tried that much software yet but everything seems to work fine so far...firefox and filezilla.
On my desktop computer I still prefer winxp though. -
Originally Posted by RLT69
If companies are smart, they lease the hardware, so it can be switched out every three years, so that 2GB of RAM is a non-issue.
My comments were in no way meant to be callous. I know the ways of the Enterprise, and I know there is red tape. I would have to agree with Smurfy though. There is no justification for still using Internet Exploder 6. Even if you are using Active Directory to enforce group policy, there are enough security holes in IE6 to drive a semi through.Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Maybe I should have put ten smilies on the back of my statements. As formerly have run my own business, I know there are circumstances in which you can't spend the money to update hardware and software, but there are some companies that have the damn the torpedoes, spend the money anyways approach.
If companies are smart, they lease the hardware, so it can be switched out every three years, so that 2GB of RAM is a non-issue.
My comments were in no way meant to be callous. I know the ways of the Enterprise, and I know there is red tape. I would have to agree with Smurfy though. There is no justification for still using Internet Exploder 6. Even if you are using Active Directory to enforce group policy, there are enough security holes in IE6 to drive a semi through.
Again, you don't know what kind of purchasing agreements companies have to justify saying, "leasing is the way to go." We have a very aggressive procurement department. We don't lease our equipment. Is that wrong? Depends on the agreements we have in place.
Again, without knowing the reasons for using IE 6, you cannot say, "There is no justification for still using Internet Exploder 6." There can be very good reasons for not rolling out a different browser, software compatibility being a major issue. Rolling out updates in large corporations takes time, a lot of time. Updating to IE 7 or 8 is not automatic when you have systems validated to run on IE 6. The point is, the knee-jerk reaction, "You're an ass for running IE 6," is just asinine without knowing the reasons why IE 6 is being used.
That's the point we've been illustrating. You can't assume there is no good reason for using X,Y,Z without understanding the reasons.
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There is no legitimate reason to run a near-10-year-old browser for primary web surfing. It's stupid beyond stupid.
Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
FAQs: Best Blank Discs • Best TBCs • Best VCRs for capture • Restore VHS -
Originally Posted by RLT69
YMMV
Originally Posted by RLT69Believing yourself to be secure only takes one cracker to dispel your belief. -
Originally Posted by lordsmurfFB-DIMM are the real cause of global warming
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Originally Posted by lordsmurf
Originally Posted by rallynavvie
•IE is the corporate browser of choice, with 78 percent of enterprises using it as a default;
•IE 6 has 60 percent of the enterprise market, with IE 7 clocking in at 39 percent;
•Firefox has 18.2 percent of the enterprise market;
•Chrome has 2 percent;
•Safari has 1.4 percent.
The problem: Information workers live in browsers all day. And companies are giving them the equivalent of a Yugo.
Why? Companies are worried about custom apps that may fail on new browsers and security and compliance. In addition, companies limit the ability to upgrade. Seventy percent of companies restrict browser choice and Web content. Forrester notes that "IT control trumps technology populism." -
Sorry to change the subject but, those who have installed the RC1, how do you like it? I'm liking it. Feels better then the beta. IE8 is working better. IE8 hanged a lot with the beta for me.
I have not checked yet if the XP mode is availiable for the RC1, but I want to try the XP mode on a few kid games I have that only work in XP. Currently the one kid game I want to try works okay in a VM I build myself.
Thymej
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