[personal profile] drscott
Just mowed, edged, string-trimmed, and swept myself into a stupor. My back hurts.

A few weeks ago I had to spend two hours (at least) updating my adware removal tools and chasing after spyware; a web page had installed about 20 different forms of malware. It took days to get them all. I don't doubt that most home users are now running machines with 100s of different infestations.

I've been relatively free of viral nastiness -- I have a hardware firewall box protecting the home network, antivirus tools, high-security settings on most things, and have never suffered any infestations until now. The key problem is Microsoft -- they installed many "extensible" features with a mind to making workgroup networks easy enough for any idiot, but the same "features," along with a refusal to use a standard buffer package to avoid overwrites, makes their systems unusually vulnerable for home use. When you add in their overwhelming market dominance, Microsoft software is the target of choice for any miscreant.

One easy and useful thing to do if you're stuck with XP: at least dump IE in favor of Firefox, the Netscape-based Mozilla Project browser. I've been using it for a few days, and aside from losing the Google toolbar I've grown dependent on, it's great -- noticeably faster and much less likely to allow harmful ActiveX controls to operate. For those few sites that can't operate without IE, keep it around, just set Firefox as your default browser.

Date: 2004-08-25 04:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrdreamjeans.livejournal.com
I love my iMAC and Powerbook, have had very little reason to worry:). Ive just started using Safari at gotmoof's recommendation. It rocks!

Date: 2004-08-25 10:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
Until 1997 I was a Mac user -- actually I had interviewed for a job at Apple in 1984 after seeing the Mac demo at MIT, and talked to Larry Tesler about making Scheme a base language for Macs, and became a Mac developer later. But they lost me when they orphaned my recently-purchased Mac clone, a Powerbase, and I had to buy a PC to run a certain portfolio management program. Apple's market share appears stable at about 3-5%, but the pricing disparity is increasing and Apple makes almost no money on machines other than the iPod. They have to fund most software development themselves on a very small user base, and it's tough. Ideally someone like Sony will buy them and converge the Mac with PS4.

Profile

drscott

November 2013

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
171819 20212223
24252627282930

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 24th, 2026 10:44 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios