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| james |
Apr 28 2006, 12:09 PM
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![]() Group: Super Administrators Posts: 3246 Joined: 2-March 01 From: Surrey, UK Member No.: 13 |
Before anyone accuses me of unashamed Windows/MS bashing - yup, that's just what I am doing.
Check out this article from respected Windows journalist Paul Thurrott who is using this article in a series he has written to highlight some of the problems with Vista. It looks bad. Really really bad. QUOTE Let's look a typical example. One of the first things I do whenever I install a new Windows version is download and install Mozilla Firefox. If we forget, for a moment, the number of warning dialogs we get during the download and install process (including a brazen security warning from Windows Firewall for which Microsoft should be chastised), let's just examine one crucial, often overlooked issue. Once Firefox is installed, there are two icons on my Desktop I'd like to remove: The Setup application itself and a shortcut to Firefox. So I select both icons and drag them to the Recycle Bin. Simple, right? Wrong. Here's what you have to go through to actually delete those files in Windows Vista. First, you get a File Access Denied dialog (Figure) explaining that you don't, in fact, have permission to delete a ... shortcut?? To an application you just installed??? Seriously? OK, fine. You can click a Continue button to "complete this operation." But that doesn't complete anything. It just clears the desktop for the next dialog, which is a Windows Security window (Figure). Here, you need to give your permission to continue something opaquely called a "File Operation." Click Allow, and you're done. Hey, that's not too bad, right? Just two dialogs to read, understand, and then respond correctly to. What's the big deal? What if you're doing something a bit more complicated? Well, lucky you, the dialogs stack right up, one after the other, in a seemingly never-ending display of stupidity. Indeed, sometimes you'll find yourself unable to do certain things for no good reason, and you click Allow buttons until you're blue in the face. It will never stop bothering you, unless you agree to stop your silliness and leave that file on the desktop where it belongs. Mark my words, this will happen to you. And you will hate it. This apparent proliferation of dialogs will get old so quickly that users will just become accustomed to hitting 'ok' every time they pop up - and as this appears to be the cornerstone of the 'security features' of Vista, it certainly looks like Windows will continue to be the OS of choice for people who like security problems. Check out the bit about the glass windows as well - that is going to confuse the nuts off people. -------------------- "We are number one, all others are number two or lower!" - The Sphinx, Mystery Men
"A computer without a Microsoft operating system is like a dog without bricks tied to its head" - annon "What a terrible thing to have lost one's mind. Or not to have a mind at all. How true that is." - Dan Quayle |
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