Rat
Not bored. Never bored.,
I would be, too. What version was that with? It didn't come with 6, 7, 8, or 10.I was surprised when McAfee was installed with Adobe Acrobat, requiring removal.
I would be, too. What version was that with? It didn't come with 6, 7, 8, or 10.I was surprised when McAfee was installed with Adobe Acrobat, requiring removal.
That is way more than "a bit" for the majority of users, and you are hurting the pages you use by blocking ads.
Am I hurting the TV station if I get up and get a soda during the commercials?
Oh good! Another Mac vs Windows contest. I primarily use and enjoy Mac; you primarily use and enjoy Windows. We each probably have used both. Okay, let's leave it at that.
While that's quite true, it's also true that switching to a BSD Unix base in Mac OSX has made Macs far more appealing to savvy users. A whole lot of old Unix gurus have switched from Linux to Mac because they're both *NIX, and Mac has (if nothing else) better warranties on the software. Jamie ZawinskiWP, who helped create Netscape and XEmacs, runs Macs these days, and he's far from alone....
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I get frequent popups in the upper right corner, and a long sidebar with eligible females of all ages in my area.. Use only FF from when it was Mozilla.
I'll do a screen capture next time one of these shows up....
New thing. For the new tab that populates with shortcuts to your most visited sites, there will be "promoted websites" until you have enough history. This is because they get the vast majority of their funding from Google, and since there is Chrome this deal will be ending.
It doesn't matter how secure you make the OS or how well educated the users are, as long as they want free stuff they're going to have to accept that.
The day everyone stops installing bundled crapware is the day free software either stops being free, or finds an even more irritating way to fund its production.
I know this, and I'm pretty sure Cuddles does too. Most users do not know the difference, and in many senses freeware=free software, so the difference is not as clear as you make out. The entire problem is users who neither know nor care about free software ideals, and just want a program that does what they want, or that sounds appealing, and that they can download for nothing and install. Those users are not using Linux, and as things stand they never will. Indeed it's probably best if they don't, at least en masse; it would destroy the reputation of Linux if they did.They can get free/open source sofware, which doesn't have crap bundled with it.
As I and other posters have noted, there's plenty of software that doesn't do this, so it's far from being a necessity. Freeware != free software.
The entire problem is users who neither know nor care about free software ideals, and just want a program that does what they want, or that sounds appealing, and that they can download for nothing and install.
Those users are not using Linux, and as things stand they never will.
Indeed it's probably best if they don't, at least en masse; it would destroy the reputation of Linux if they did.
I don't know about that. Android seems to be pretty popular, for example.
They can get free/open source sofware, which doesn't have crap bundled with it.
As I and other posters have noted, there's plenty of software that doesn't do this, so it's far from being a necessity. Freeware != free software.
Some people may be willing to do some work for free, and some companies may be willing to provide funding for some projects, but it would be naive in the extreme to expect this ever to become a de facto standard for all software. If you want people to work full-time jobs creating software, the money for them to do so needs to come from somewhere.Wiki said:A report by Standish Group estimates that adoption of free software has caused a drop in revenue to the proprietary software industry by about $60 billion per year.
Yes, but the issue is malware, which most users can understand.
Also, I think that if you explain free software to most people, they can appreciate what you're telling them. It's not a complicated subject, it's just a foreign one
One of the most prominent advocates of open source software explicitly says that the concept is ambiguous and intimidating for businesses who pay people specifically to understand this sort of thing. The general public contains a lot of people who know far less about computers and software in the first place.Wiki said:Eric S. Raymond argues that the term free software is too ambiguous and intimidating for the business community. Raymond promotes the term open-source software as a friendlier alternative for the business and corporate world.
IIRC it's an opt-out check box option. I can't recall if that's in the install dialog or from their web page DL options. I know I accidently installed it with Reader on a machine that I did an OS reinstall on fairly recently (within the last year).I would be, too. What version was that with? It didn't come with 6, 7, 8, or 10.
I was being disingenuous. What I really meant was "Are you sure you don't mean Adobe Reader? Because that's a different product from Adobe Acrobat."IIRC it's an opt-out check box option. I can't recall if that's in the install dialog or from their web page DL options. I know I accidently installed it with Reader on a machine that I did an OS reinstall on fairly recently (within the last year).
I get you now; maybe we should all just refer to it as The App Formerly Known As Acrobat Reader?I was being disingenuous. What I really meant was "Are you sure you don't mean Adobe Reader? Because that's a different product from Adobe Acrobat."
You've clearly not tried installing uTorrent lately.I use a lot of freeware, and I'd say that most of it doesn't try to bundle anything else in.
You've clearly not tried installing uTorrent lately.