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WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10"
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... -- Adrian C |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/16 13:17, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... Well since they are firmly wedded to android, what do you think if the next batch come with Linux Mint pre-installed? And the lord knows who many dollars of fees they would have paid to Microsoft, goes to a third party company to support it? -- Future generations will wonder in bemused amazement that the early twenty-first centurys developed world went into hysterical panic over a globally average temperature increase of a few tenths of a degree, and, on the basis of gross exaggerations of highly uncertain computer projections combined into implausible chains of inference, proceeded to contemplate a rollback of the industrial age. Richard Lindzen |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:17:57 +0100, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... Wonder if Samsung will pay the upgrade fee once it is no longer free? -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:17:57 +0100, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... The problem appears to be incompatible Broadcom wifi cards - an issue that MS and Broadcom need to sort out between them - if it is possible to do so. However, the problem may be one that can't be resolved. Broadcom seem to specialise in wifi chipsets that have compatibility problems. I have encountered numerous examples of Linux installations that have to be tweaked post-installation because of driver issues with Broadcom wifi cards. To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. It's unfortunate but not particularly unusual that some old hardware doesn't run on a later OS. This is not a scandal or a major oversight by MS, just "one of those things". What now needs to happen (if it hasn't already) is that, until a solution is found, the Win 10 install routine needs to check for this and refuse to install if an incompatible wireless card is detected. Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. -- Tony '09 FJR1300, '07 Street Triple OMF#24 |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote:
Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' -- Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people. But Marxism is the crack cocaine. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 15:10, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. Remove https://www.amazon.co.uk/Atheros-AR5.../dp/B00DUQTBX8 and fit https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intel-7260-.../dp/B00N7474CS |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... +1 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' I've never seen a laptop where wireless is not provided by a plug-in card of some description. (Although they may exist.) Changing them is not usually too difficult - I do it all the time to avoid the few remaining chip-sets that are hard to get working in Linux. An alternative would be one of the tiny USB wireless devices; these do work quite well. Much better to use something other than W10 of course! Chris -- Remove prejudice to reply. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/16 15:41, dennis@home wrote:
On 31/05/2016 15:10, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Remove https://www.amazon.co.uk/Atheros-AR5.../dp/B00DUQTBX8 and fit https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intel-7260-.../dp/B00N7474CS -- New Socialism consists essentially in being seen to have your heart in the right place whilst your head is in the clouds and your hand is in someone else's pocket. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 15:53, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Well I have swapped them in Fujitsu, dell, samsung, toshiba and lenovo laptops so I guess yours are too old to have modern stuff. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 16:05:42 +0100, dennis@home
wrote: On 31/05/2016 15:53, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Well I have swapped them in Fujitsu, dell, samsung, toshiba and lenovo laptops so I guess yours are too old to have modern stuff. I don't think he has *ever* taken a laptop to bits because every laptop (of the many) I have has an add-on WiFi card. Even my Fujitsu Q550 X86 tablets have them! Here is a little 'Where's Wifi' game for him (on a 27" iMac, being it's the same as in many laptops): https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...0for%20TNP.jpg The reason I've had to change the cards on many laptops was (in *every* case) to placate Linux. Cheers, T i m |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:58:55 -0000 (UTC)
TMack wrote: To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. Those sounds like the words of a MSFT apologist. MSFT is pushing the WinX "upgrade" on everything since Windows 7, which launched September 2009, so they /really/ need to be sure they support common hardware from then if they're going to maintain any credibility (some would say that horse has already bolted). |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 15:10:27 +0100
The Natural Philosopher wrote: 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' I thought laptops have mini-PCI or mini-PCI-Express slots for that sort of thing. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 18:04, Rob Morley wrote:
On Tue, 31 May 2016 15:10:27 +0100 The Natural Philosopher wrote: 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' I thought laptops have mini-PCI or mini-PCI-Express slots for that sort of thing. IME Wifi is put on a separate module. (Dell and HP). |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 15:10:27 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... I didn't suggest otherwise. 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' I have never found an example of a laptop or notebook that didn't have a removable wireless card. It will involves some disassembly to get to it but they are removable and can be replaced. I have done quite a few replacements over the years. They are usually found in mini pcie slots. For example, AFAIK the Samsung NP- R590 referred to in the article has one of these: http://www.zlectronic.com/crms/bigpi.../37694_3_z.jpg -- Tony '09 FJR1300, '07 Street Triple OMF#24 |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 15:10, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' Use a USB wifi dongle? Personally networking via USB makes my skin crawl, but if needs must... -- Chris |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 18:01:26 +0100, Rob Morley
wrote: On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:58:55 -0000 (UTC) TMack wrote: To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. Those sounds like the words of a MSFT apologist. MSFT is pushing the WinX "upgrade" on everything since Windows 7, which launched September 2009, so they /really/ need to be sure they support common hardware from then if they're going to maintain any credibility (some would say that horse has already bolted). Whilst that horse had the chance to bolt several times over the years (and the Linux donkey jump into it's place) it hasn't happened yet and doesn't look likely to. ;-( GNU / Linux is and has always been in an even worse position re drivers because of how few manufacturers don't cater for it and how few men_in_sheds there are reverse engineering the more important ones (and / or doing so fully and effectively when they do). Don't get me wrong, I'd be using Linux more if it worked (fully) on the hardware I happen to have (I'm not going out buying stuff specifically for Linux) and if it ran more of the things *I* want and need to use. However, if you actually buy something that has been tested to be 'Linux compatible' and you are happy with the (limited) range of software available for it (and don't still have to run Windows, on raw iron / dual boot / VM to cover the stuff Linux can't) or just use your PC as a web terminal (and don't own an iPod/Phone and want to use the iTMS etc) then you could be equally serviced running Linux. I must have 6 x P4 spec machines here I need to get rid of and it would be an ideal position for me to be able to stick say Mint 17 on them and give them away ... if only Mint 17 would run on them and anyone would want them with Linux. ;-( And I think it says something that you can't give a free OS away pre-installed on free hardware! (And I've tried). ;-( Cheers, T i m |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 18:01:26 +0100, Rob Morley wrote:
On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:58:55 -0000 (UTC) TMack wrote: To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. Those sounds like the words of a MSFT apologist. MSFT is pushing the WinX "upgrade" on everything since Windows 7, which launched September 2009, so they /really/ need to be sure they support common hardware from then if they're going to maintain any credibility (some would say that horse has already bolted). I am no great fan of Windows or MS. However, I like to add a bit of balance to discussions. I am not particularly outraged to find that Win 10 has problems with some old hardware, particularly when that hardware is a wifi card with a Broadcom chipset. As I said, I have experienced lots of hassle in the past with Broadcom chipsets under Linux too. FWIW. it's arguable how "common" the problem wifi cards are. They aren't all that common. However, Samsung appear to have used quite a lot of them - probably because they were cheap. Unfortunately they were/are both cheap and nasty. They didn't work well with 8.1 and they seem to have fundamental problems with Win 10. Samsung, Broadcom and MS will have to try to sort it out because they all bear some responsibility. However, I doubt that they will be in a rush to do so because it's old hardware and they are more interested in contemporary stuff. I have great sympathy with anyone caught out by the MS push to get Win 10 on everything. However, I suspect that MS would rather bear the cost of a few ****ed-off punters for the sake of further rolling out their 30GB spyware/keylogger. Possibly those Samsung owners should be grateful that it doesn't run on their PCs. As for me, I have killed Cortana permanently, switched off all the data logging options and installed Classic Shell. I am quite happy with the remaining parts of Win 10. -- Tony '09 FJR1300, '07 Street Triple OMF#24 |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 15:53, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 31/05/16 15:41, dennis@home wrote: On 31/05/2016 15:10, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Modern laptops (read anything 5 years old or less) almost always have their WiFi module as a plug in internal unit. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
John Rumm wrote:
The Natural Philosopher wrote: dennis@home wrote: Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Modern laptops (read anything 5 years old or less) almost always have their WiFi module as a plug in internal unit. Five years? Make that fifteen! |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tue, 31 May 2016 19:31:22 +0100, Andy Burns
wrote: John Rumm wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: dennis@home wrote: Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Modern laptops (read anything 5 years old or less) almost always have their WiFi module as a plug in internal unit. Five years? Make that fifteen! +1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI_Express#MINI-CARD Cheers, T i m |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
"dennis@home" wrote in message web.com... On 31/05/2016 15:10, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 31/05/16 14:58, TMack wrote: Meanwhile, Samsung owners desperate to run Win 10 need to swap out their Broadcom cards for something that is compatible. 1/. Who is that desperate? Most people I know are struggling to avoid it... 2/. How do you change the wifi card on an integrated laptop where built in wifi is standard? And there are no 'card slots' Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. BULL****. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. BULL****. I have swapped a few of them in the past to get faster WiFi. Remove https://www.amazon.co.uk/Atheros-AR5.../dp/B00DUQTBX8 and fit https://www.amazon.co.uk/Intel-7260-.../dp/B00N7474CS |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 31/05/2016 19:31, Andy Burns wrote:
John Rumm wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: dennis@home wrote: Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Modern laptops (read anything 5 years old or less) almost always have their WiFi module as a plug in internal unit. Five years? Make that fifteen! I was deliberately being a little conservative, however 15 may be pushing it a bit. Many of the separate card solutions then were proprietary and not interchangeable. Quite a few of the early 2000's machines did not yet have WiFi as standard IIRC. (or even ethernet for that matter; I remember buying a new Dell Lattitude about that time, and had to buy a modem and ethernet on a 3Com PCMCIA card!) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:58:59 UTC+1, TMack wrote:
On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:17:57 +0100, Adrian Caspersz wrote: Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. It's unfortunate but not particularly unusual that some old hardware doesn't run on a later OS. This is not a scandal or a major oversight by MS, just "one of those things". So, obviously it won't run on Linux either. And yet? If all those amateurs can do it... Not just one or two extremely good ones... |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Wednesday, 1 June 2016 21:18:21 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:58:59 UTC+1, TMack wrote: On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:17:57 +0100, Adrian Caspersz wrote: Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. It's unfortunate but not particularly unusual that some old hardware doesn't run on a later OS. This is not a scandal or a major oversight by MS, just "one of those things". So, obviously it won't run on Linux either. And yet? If all those amateurs can do it... Not just one or two extremely good ones... I do rememeber having problems with getting Linux working on some nefarious system once but then I got hold of Ultimate Edition and never had that experience again. Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Wednesday, June 1, 2016 at 2:47:03 PM UTC+1, John Rumm wrote:
On 31/05/2016 19:31, Andy Burns wrote: John Rumm wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: dennis@home wrote: Very few laptops have the WiFi on the mainboard. Most use a mini PCI card or similar. No laptop I have ever dissassembled has this. Modern laptops (read anything 5 years old or less) almost always have their WiFi module as a plug in internal unit. Five years? Make that fifteen! I was deliberately being a little conservative, however 15 may be pushing it a bit. Many of the separate card solutions then were proprietary and not interchangeable. Quite a few of the early 2000's machines did not yet have WiFi as standard IIRC. (or even ethernet for that matter; I remember buying a new Dell Lattitude about that time, and had to buy a modem and ethernet on a 3Com PCMCIA card!) Wow, ancient history! I remember colleagues and I using laptops the size, weight and shape of a couple of paving slabs with PCMCIA modems to dial in to customers' servers and running pcAnywhere. Ah, happy times, said nobody, ever. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 01/06/16 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Wednesday, 1 June 2016 21:18:21 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote: On Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:58:59 UTC+1, TMack wrote: On Tue, 31 May 2016 13:17:57 +0100, Adrian Caspersz wrote: Advice for Samsung laptop or PC owners... "Don't upgrade to Windows 10" http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/05..._samsung_fail/ Whoops ... To be fair to MS, the Broadcom hardware that is incompatible was introduced before 2010. So...we have a wireless chipset that was at least 6 years old at the time Win 10 was introduced, which turns out to be incompatible. It's unfortunate but not particularly unusual that some old hardware doesn't run on a later OS. This is not a scandal or a major oversight by MS, just "one of those things". So, obviously it won't run on Linux either. And yet? If all those amateurs can do it... Not just one or two extremely good ones... I do rememeber having problems with getting Linux working on some nefarious system once but then I got hold of Ultimate Edition and never had that experience again. Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. That's cos linux drives a cart and horse through most DRM. Sadly not e-books though. I have almost given up the thought of buying ebooks, because reading them is so difficult and anyway, you don't 'own' them. You just rent them it seems. Meanwhile, on a happier note,. its now established that Windows is more malicious than a virus.... Ransomware. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/06...re_no_way_out/ I wonder how long before the rush to Linux gets under way... -- No Apple devices were knowingly used in the preparation of this post. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Wed, 1 Jun 2016 14:14:30 -0700 (PDT), Weatherlawyer
wrote: snip I do rememeber having problems with getting Linux working on some nefarious system once but then I got hold of Ultimate Edition and never had that experience again. Googles If it's this http://ultimateedition.info/ the guy seems to have been smoking some pretty strong stuff! ;-) I'm not sure I really get what UE is (other than yet another Linux respin)? Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. Reset or set. I bought a new DVDRW for a laptop I was sorting for a mate and the *drive* needed setting for the right DVD region (like many DVDs and players are, not just those running Windows). No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. I don't think I've ever tried to play a DVD on a Linux box and especially not a BluRay. Can you play Blurays on Linux OOI? Does UE support the iTunes Music Store and playing Windows games, Photoshop and my vehicle diagnostics software do you know please? I have Linux (dual boot) on nearly all my hardware so have a pretty good idea of what works (especially OOTB), what sort_of_works (network printers that will print but not scan) and what simply doesn't work, or can't be made work unless you are willing to take up programming as a new hobby or interest. So, what worries me, is just how bad does Windows have to get (according to some) before Linux becomes a real / viable option for the masses? I mean, it's free (of cost, few care about any other type), works (to some degree and that's getting better) on most std hardware and has support for most of the basic software (WEB browsers, Email, Office apps etc). The *problem* is it doesn't (and never likely to) have support for things millions (billions?) of people need like iTunes (to access the iTMS) and real MS Office (for people working together and need change control) and some of the more specialist hardware and software. Being 'free' (of cost) doesn't seem to be a real draw for anyone I've offered Linux to (supplied and installed for free) and many that I have given Linux to with it all running and working as well as it can (eg, No iTunes support) carry on using Windows because (they tell me) 'they prefer it' and often for some little thing that is important to them they can't do or get going. So it seems it's a bit like lawnmower racing. Very few know about it and most of those who do aren't interested in it (watching or trying) but those who are into it are or become fanatical advocates, on one hand, trying to introduce the sport to others but on the other, not willing to really offer to help others get started or want to share their minority interest hobby with anyone else. If I had the time or interest to get one going, I'd probably enjoy it, if only for one race. ;-) Cheers, T i m |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Thu, 2 Jun 2016 08:40:40 +0100, The Natural Philosopher
wrote: snip I wonder how long before the rush to Linux gets under way... Yeah, me too. After all, it's been around a while now, it's free (of cost) and getting easier to install on most (reasonably modern) hardware and many of the mainstream distros (like Ubuntu and Mint), comes with a pretty comprehensive suite of apps that should cover the needs of most, and doesn't need as much AV software etc. Now, there have been several instances where Linux could have increased it's userbase, Windows ME, Vista, W8,8.1 and even W10 but over and over, nothing seems to change. ;-( The only way I can see it getting a foothold amongst ordinary computer users (most of whom have no interest in computers or programming) this late in the (desktop / laptop) game is or it to be available in a generic form 'The Linux' [1] that is officially supported by most of the hardware manufacturers and software developers and available at a *much* reduced cost on pre installed machines. Only then (or maybe not even then) some people might be bothered to take a look, but as soon as someone finds they can't run iTunes or their GPS / mobile phone software, or even MS Office for that matter and especially their favourite PC game, they will be asking the likes of me to install Windows 10 on it instead. ;-( http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_os.asp March 2003, Linux 2.2% March 2016, Linux 5.5% (and seems to have been stuck around 5% since 2010). Cheers, T i m [1] And it won't of course because all the 'geeks' will have a fit because it goes against the whole open / free / forked_beyond_belief concept that has been holding Linux back for so long. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
John Rumm wrote:
I was deliberately being a little conservative, however 15 may be pushing it a bit. Many of the separate card solutions then were proprietary and not interchangeable. Quite a few of the early 2000's machines did not yet have WiFi as standard IIRC. 'Centrino' was the first major push for wifi in laptops - that was 2003. I've definitely swapped out the wireless card on a 2004 Centrino laptop. Theo |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 02/06/2016 11:22, Theo wrote:
John Rumm wrote: I was deliberately being a little conservative, however 15 may be pushing it a bit. Many of the separate card solutions then were proprietary and not interchangeable. Quite a few of the early 2000's machines did not yet have WiFi as standard IIRC. 'Centrino' was the first major push for wifi in laptops - that was 2003. I've definitely swapped out the wireless card on a 2004 Centrino laptop. Yup that was a complete chipset solution so more standardised than previously. (even if Intel did get into trouble with the advertising regulators for neglecting to mention the whole "work anywhere" bit was only true when near a WiFi network!) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
John Rumm wrote:
Andy Burns wrote: Five years? Make that fifteen! I was deliberately being a little conservative, however 15 may be pushing it a bit. Looking back to when I bought the machine I was thinking of, yes it was only 13 years ago. Quite a few of the early 2000's machines did not yet have WiFi as standard IIRC. (or even ethernet for that matter; I remember buying a new Dell Lattitude about that time, and had to buy a modem and ethernet on a 3Com PCMCIA card!) My Latitude D800 had gigabit wired but only 11Mbps WiFi, I had to grey import a bluetooth module for it, eventually it was upgraded to 54Mbps WiFi. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote:
Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. Andy |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On Thu, 2 Jun 2016 21:39:09 +0100, Vir Campestris
wrote: On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. You still often have to jump though hoops to do 'everyday' stuff in Linux though (and accept the restrictions). http://www.howtogeek.com/240636/ever...edia-on-linux/ "None of these options are perfectly convenient, but it’s what we have for now–and at least it (mostly) works." Cheers, T i m |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 02/06/2016 21:39, Vir Campestris wrote:
On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. The protection is built into the DVD drives themselves these days (RPC2 rather than RPC1). That means you can only set the region a limited number of times before the drive permanently locks to the region. Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO). There are also sites that carry modified firmware for lots of the drives to make them RPC1. (MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/16 00:04, John Rumm wrote:
Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO) I want aware that any drives had De-DRM hardware. It thoughyt it was all done in software. There is an issue with linux in that some distros say 'oh dear, we cant supply the decrypt libs because its illegal, so you will have to find them somewhere else' --- link to somewhere else Anyway as far as I am concerned its all been a massive own goal. The way I work is to buy the digital whatever, rip it by whatever means are possible, and put it on my server where all my devices can get at it. If they stop me doing that, I simply don't buy it at all. DRM has made reading e-books less reliable than buying the paper. Pure Ludditeism. -- Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. Groucho Marx |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/2016 00:04, John Rumm wrote:
On 02/06/2016 21:39, Vir Campestris wrote: On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. The protection is built into the DVD drives themselves these days (RPC2 rather than RPC1). That means you can only set the region a limited number of times before the drive permanently locks to the region. Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO). There are also sites that carry modified firmware for lots of the drives to make them RPC1. (MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) That's because they have to pay royalties to include it, unlike Linux where they just point the user to somewhere they can steal it. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/16 12:34, dennis@home wrote:
On 03/06/2016 00:04, John Rumm wrote: On 02/06/2016 21:39, Vir Campestris wrote: On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. The protection is built into the DVD drives themselves these days (RPC2 rather than RPC1). That means you can only set the region a limited number of times before the drive permanently locks to the region. Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO). There are also sites that carry modified firmware for lots of the drives to make them RPC1. (MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) That's because they have to pay royalties to include it, unlike Linux where they just point the user to somewhere they can steal it. No, you don't steal the DE DRM program, anymore than you steal a key to unlock your briefcase full of books. The theft is arguably by the media companies who demand payment to let you view their content, when you have already bought the right to do just that. The legal situation of ripping a DVD is very much not clear. The legal situation of providing the tools to do it is much clearer. Its almost certainly not against the law of the country you download it from or here either. It might be against Californian law, but what isn't? I just realised I spent 5 minutes giving a sensible answer to dennis. Before realising that as per usual, he's got the wrong end of the stick completely and is al twitter and bisted about his fanboi OS, Winders, being crap, as usual. -- Karl Marx said religion is the opium of the people. But Marxism is the crack cocaine. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/2016 13:31, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 03/06/16 12:34, dennis@home wrote: On 03/06/2016 00:04, John Rumm wrote: On 02/06/2016 21:39, Vir Campestris wrote: On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. The protection is built into the DVD drives themselves these days (RPC2 rather than RPC1). That means you can only set the region a limited number of times before the drive permanently locks to the region. Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO). There are also sites that carry modified firmware for lots of the drives to make them RPC1. (MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) That's because they have to pay royalties to include it, unlike Linux where they just point the user to somewhere they can steal it. No, you don't steal the DE DRM program, anymore than you steal a key to unlock your briefcase full of books. If its not your key and you don't have permission to use it then you have stolen it. If you lose your car key you don't go out and steal someone else's, you go and buy a new one. Well us honest folk do. The theft is arguably by the media companies who demand payment to let you view their content, when you have already bought the right to do just that. They own the copyright, its theirs to do as they want or do you think everything is GPL? Do you steal other peoples software and other ideas too? The legal situation of ripping a DVD is very much not clear. The legal situation of providing the tools to do it is much clearer. Its almost certainly not against the law of the country you download it from or here either. It might be against Californian law, but what isn't? I just realised I spent 5 minutes giving a sensible answer to dennis. It may be sensible to you but its also wrong. Linux doesn't ship with a licensed DVD player as it wouldn't be free if it did ship with a licensed DVD player. Then who would download it? Its illegal in the UK to bypass DRM such as that on DVDs. The linux distributors rely on the user downloading software and committing the crime. Not that anyone cares much as long as they don't rip it and upload it to t'internet or car boot sales. Before realising that as per usual, he's got the wrong end of the stick completely and is al twitter and bisted about his fanboi OS, Winders, being crap, as usual. Looking at that bit of the post I think its easy to see who is bitter and twisted and its not me. |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/16 15:12, dennis@home wrote:
On 03/06/2016 13:31, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 03/06/16 12:34, dennis@home wrote: On 03/06/2016 00:04, John Rumm wrote: On 02/06/2016 21:39, Vir Campestris wrote: On 01/06/2016 22:14, Weatherlawyer wrote: Here is a daft one concerning regional discs . Windows 7 tells me I need to reset my computer to allow it to play region 2. What on earth is tha silliness about. No version of Linux bothers with that sort of thinking. the story I heard was: Hollywood spoke to MS, and asked them nicely if they'd help out with the regional protection scam. MS agreed. The Linux guys response was short and Anglo-Saxon. The protection is built into the DVD drives themselves these days (RPC2 rather than RPC1). That means you can only set the region a limited number of times before the drive permanently locks to the region. Obviously you can opt to let the drive fail to decrypt and do it in software later these days (AnyDVD being one of the nicest solutions IMHO). There are also sites that carry modified firmware for lots of the drives to make them RPC1. (MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) That's because they have to pay royalties to include it, unlike Linux where they just point the user to somewhere they can steal it. No, you don't steal the DE DRM program, anymore than you steal a key to unlock your briefcase full of books. If its not your key and you don't have permission to use it then you have stolen it. But oince I have downloaded it it ios my key and I do have permission to use it If you lose your car key you don't go out and steal someone else's, you go and buy a new one. Well us honest folk do. If I lose my car keys I Have the bloody locks changed. The theft is arguably by the media companies who demand payment to let you view their content, when you have already bought the right to do just that. They own the copyright, its theirs to do as they want or do you think everything is GPL? Do you steal other peoples software and other ideas too? They may own the copyright but that doesn't mean they own the copy. The legal situation of ripping a DVD is very much not clear. The legal situation of providing the tools to do it is much clearer. Its almost certainly not against the law of the country you download it from or here either. It might be against Californian law, but what isn't? I just realised I spent 5 minutes giving a sensible answer to dennis. It may be sensible to you but its also wrong. Linux doesn't ship with a licensed DVD player as it wouldn't be free if it did ship with a licensed DVD player. Then who would download it? Its illegal in the UK to bypass DRM such as that on DVDs. No it isn't. In the EU, if it isn't for commercial purposes, its not a crime. The linux distributors rely on the user downloading software and committing the crime. There is no crime. Its legal to rip DVDs as long as you don't sell the ripped copy in. EU equivalent of law of Tort applies. No gain, no pain. Not that anyone cares much as long as they don't rip it and upload it to t'internet or car boot sales. Before realising that as per usual, he's got the wrong end of the stick completely and is al twitter and bisted about his fanboi OS, Winders, being crap, as usual. Looking at that bit of the post I think its easy to see who is bitter and twisted and its me. -- "I am inclined to tell the truth and dislike people who lie consistently. This makes me unfit for the company of people of a Left persuasion, and all women" |
WIN10EXIT: Don't upgrade if Samsung
On 03/06/16 12:34, dennis@home wrote:
(MS have given up on DVD these days it seems - you don't even get a DVD player program included with recent versions of windows) That's because they have to pay royalties to include it, unlike Linux where they just point the user to somewhere they can steal it. Use of libdvdcss is free and not illegal here/EU. In the US the situation is different as they observe software patents. In the event no keys were stolen to create that software library which is widely used on Linux and Windows. The ancient DeCSS is another matter. -- Adrian C |
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