There speaks someone who has no idea how software works.
If you add a function into a program that calls upon hardware to enhance the game then these need libraries. If the hardware isn't there, the program still needs to call the libraries installed (even if all the library does is check that...
The reason Nero are doing this is basically there are dozens of perfectly good free CD burners now and of course every time you buy a computer it comes with a piece of trial CD burning software on it!
Take - ImgBurn - a fine example of basic functionality of CD burning.
Nero has done what a...
Yes there is a portable version of Firefox that you can keep on a USB stick, CD, DVD whatever you wish.
See http://portableapps.com/news/2009-07-17_-_firefox_portable_3.5.1
IE8 URL is http://www.microsoft.com/windows/internet-explorer/worldwide-sites.aspx
BTW, a lot of Shops will probably be...
I guess you've looked at all your shortcuts in the Start menu?
Run a free program called CCleaner and only get it to examine your Shortcuts.
http://www.ccleaner.com/
See System: Start Menu Shortcuts
If that doesn't help then you need to dig deeper and use the free ShellExView program. This...
Explorer in XP is single minded so takes an age to do anything that has a slow network object on it, like a shortcut to another drive or computer across a network or the Internet for example.
So if you have a bad shortcut (or bad image if its a graphic file), XP tries to render the icon and...
I said "he'll be editing an open document".
A document could be a text file, a letter, a graphic image or a technical drawing of a circuit board or maybe even a 3D analysis of a molecule.
I said nothing about open source software.
MS Office is dirt cheap compared to a 10+ layer electronic...
IE7 is much more useful than IE6 as it is far less buggy when it comes to CSS. I can't wait for IE8. finally we'll get a strict mode as standard.
Maybe this will force people to write html/css correctly rather than what seems to work. I still come across web sites with spaces in their URLs! :-)...
Who said it was Office? Last time I looked it wasn't the only piece of software in the World.
you need to get out more. :)
I didn't say I don't have test machines. I did mention I had one machine with SP3 on it. In any case it is just that in the real world no matter how much testing you do...
WMP11 is included with SP3 but not IE7. Microsoft do have a list of what's in SP3. Just go to the MS site and take a look.
IE7 is not an essential component of Windows XP but an add-on and was subject to various anti-trust laws across the world hence it's not in the SP but WMP11 is.
No doubt...
Doesn't work that way in the real world. :)
If the engineer is working when it goes down chances are he'll be editing an open document so any changes he's made from 9am up to 12.45pm may be lost if it goes down before that.
Depends if he remembers to save the doc or if indeed the program does...
But to really test it I'd need a engineer to do their work on it. that's the only way to see if problems relating to our way of working show up problems.
I can't set aside a £80,000 a year engineer to do this as much as I'd like to!
:laugh:
So same scenario, same end result.
Why give myself more work?
If a PC goes down here, it costs us £50 an hour in downtime.
The latest XP I've just set up today has SP3 in it. That'll do for now.
I'm not a version junkie. Leaflet junkie maybe... :laugh:
This is software we're talking about not a vegetable or fruit on a shelf. :laugh:
No need for that whatsoever.
Also there is more than just security updates in SP3, your network security stack is virtually re-written for NAPS for example.
hehe, that's hardly a qualification to install it yet. :lick:
I'll wait until my AV and other major 3rd party software publishers I use say their software is compatible with it.
If I did install it any time within the next month and it broken something, then it's my silly fault.
I've been...
Out of self interest I ran the MU on IE6 on my own XP Pro sp2 machine, I have the IE7 block on, and I see that IE7 is not listed at all.
I even checked my 'Restore hidden updates' option on the page just to check if IE7 was hidden away by me at some point. But it's not in there either.
I also...
It's not a core Windows component... :)
BTW if your copy of Windows has the IE7 install administration policy restriction applied then perhaps that is why it may not show up in your MU?
This was designed to stop users installing IE7 via the autoupdates.
I've applied this to my network, I...
No it is not! :eek:
IE6 is a Windows component.
Since the EU anti-competitive legal case IE7 is not a core component. Which is why it is listed in Microsoft Update and not Windows update.
Try to keep up...:)
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