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linux: the choice of a GNU generation (ksh@cis.ufl.edu put this on Tshirts in '93)


computers / alt.comp.os.windows-10 / Re: App

SubjectAuthor
* Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
+- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meNewyana2
+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling mePeter Johnson
|`* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
| `* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
|  +* AppSteve Hayes
|  |+* Re: AppAnton Shepelev
|  ||`- Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  |+* Re: AppJ. J. Lodder
|  ||`- Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  |+* Re: AppNewyana2
|  ||+* Re: AppJohn C.
|  |||+* Re: AppNewyana2
|  ||||`* Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  |||| +* Re: AppPaul
|  |||| |`* Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  |||| | +- Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  |||| | `- Re: AppNewyana2
|  |||| +* Re: AppNewyana2
|  |||| |`* Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  |||| | `- Re: AppNewyana2
|  |||| `* Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  ||||  `- Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  |||`* Re: AppSteve Hayes
|  ||| +* Re: AppPaul
|  ||| |+* Re: AppJohn Hall
|  ||| ||+- Re: AppPaul
|  ||| ||`- Re: AppFrank Slootweg
|  ||| |`* Re: AppSteve Hayes
|  ||| | +* Re: AppPaul
|  ||| | |`- Re: AppMark Lloyd
|  ||| | +* Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  ||| | |`* Re: AppSteve Hayes
|  ||| | | +- Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  ||| | | `- Re: AppKen Blake
|  ||| | +* Re: Applar3ryca
|  ||| | |`* Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  ||| | | `* Re: Applar3ryca
|  ||| | |  `* Re: AppJ. J. Lodder
|  ||| | |   `* Re: AppPaul
|  ||| | |    +* Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  ||| | |    |`* Re: AppChar Jackson
|  ||| | |    | `- Re: Applar3ryca
|  ||| | |    +* Re: Applar3ryca
|  ||| | |    |`- Re: AppPaul
|  ||| | |    `- Re: AppJ. J. Lodder
|  ||| | `* Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  ||| |  `- Re: AppSteve Hayes
|  ||| +- Re: App0rby
|  ||| `- Re: App0rby
|  ||+- Re: AppPeter Moylan
|  ||`- Re: AppPhil Carmody
|  |`* Re: AppPaul
|  | `- Re: AppBertel Lund Hansen
|  `- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meFrank Slootweg
|+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meStan Brown
||`* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
|| `* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
||  `* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
||   +- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
||   `- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
|+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meFrank Slootweg
||`- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
|`* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling memicky
| `* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
|  `- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling memicky
+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn Hall
|`* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
| +* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
| |`- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
| `- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling memicky
+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meVanguardLH
|`- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
+* Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling memicky
|`- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meJohn C.
`- Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling meBrian Gregory

Pages:1234
Re: App

<1qss2fn.18lc70a13itl95N%nospam@de-ster.demon.nl>

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From: nospam@de-ster.demon.nl (J. J. Lodder)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:45:15 +0200
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 by: J. J. Lodder - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 11:45 UTC

Steve Hayes <hayesstw@telkomsa.net> wrote:

> On Sun, 28 Apr 2024 13:58:55 -0500, VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
>
> >John C. <r9jmg0@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> >> I'm not running my scanner from a "smart" phone, I'm running it from my
> >> desktop computer. The software it uses is referred to correctly as an
> >> "application".
> >
> >Microsoft confused and conflated the terminology. Programs and
> >applications meant the same thing (Win32 programs), so application was
> >often abbreviated to "app". Then Microsoft came out with UWP (Universal
> >Windows Platform) apps. They didn't call them applications, or UWPs, or
> >newapps, but just apps. This confused the new UWP apps with the old
> >Win32 apps. So, now "app" means a UWP application, and application or
> >program means a Win32 application. Which terminology you lean towards
> >depends on how long you've been using PCs.
>
> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
> running, or system programs that are not apps.

It is anything with the extension .app

Jan
(avoiding the Evil Empire)

Re: App

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From: gadekryds@lundhansen.dk (Bertel Lund Hansen)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:47:35 +0200
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 by: Bertel Lund Hansen - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 11:47 UTC

J. J. Lodder wrote:

>> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
>> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
>> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
>> running, or system programs that are not apps.
>
> It is anything with the extension .app

A text file?

--
Bertel
Kolt, Denmark

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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From: r9jmg0@yahoo.com (John C.)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10
Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 05:53:06 -0700
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 by: John C. - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 12:53 UTC

VanguardLH wrote:
> John C. wrote:
>>
>> I'm not running my scanner from a "smart" phone, I'm running it from my
>> desktop computer. The software it uses is referred to correctly as an
>> "application".
>
> Microsoft confused and conflated the terminology. Programs and
> applications meant the same thing (Win32 programs), so application was
> often abbreviated to "app". Then Microsoft came out with UWP (Universal
> Windows Platform) apps. They didn't call them applications, or UWPs, or
> newapps, but just apps. This confused the new UWP apps with the old
> Win32 apps. So, now "app" means a UWP application, and application or
> program means a Win32 application. Which terminology you lean towards
> depends on how long you've been using PCs.

Totally agree. And my understanding of the term "app" as it applies to
smart phones is that it can mean either something installed on the phone
or else a web service.

--
John C.

Re: App

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Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
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 by: Newyana2 - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 12:59 UTC

On 4/28/2024 11:17 PM, Steve Hayes wrote:

>
> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
> running, or system programs that are not apps.
>

Whether we like it or not, I think V's explanation is entirely
accurate. App started with Steve Jobs and became a word
that meant cellphone applet. It was typical of Apple, creating
a cutesy, child-like environment that would placate and
entertain people afraid of tech, with icons that look like
they're designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her i's with
little hearts.

On Windows it's always been "programs". Only some
programmers say "application". (It could be worse. For
awhile people were talking about their programming
projects as "solutions".)

Having established that app means cellphone applet, MS
have made things more clear. They've gone from Metro to
RT to UWP to name essentially the same crippled, interpreted
applet software. Who knows those terms? No one outside of
Windows programming. With the Start Menu separating Programs
from Apps it becomes still more clear. These Metro applets are,
and are meant to be, more like cellphone applets than Windows
software. They're a completely different animal, closer to
dyanmic webpages than to complied executables. (Though,
frankly, I've never found a clear explanation of exactly how
they work. I've seen lists of restricted APIs. I've seen lists
of all the ways one can write a Metro applet -- from HTML to
C++. But I've never seen a technical explanation of exactly how
they operate and get interpreted.)

I often call them Metro apps because that's the first name
MS came up with and it's the only name with flavor. RT and UWP
are terms only geeks can like. Metro carries a connotation of
urban fashion. As though Bill Gates had decided to buy an iPhone,
get a haircut that costs more than $10, and invite some intelligentsia
over for winetasting. MS probably hoped that the flat, ugly,
borderless monotone of Metro apps, with the Apple-style slide
controls, would seem hip and artfully sparse.

That's an interesting pattern with fashions. For example, with
the use of color, rare and intense colors were prized for millennia.
Then we came up with "day-glo" fluorescent colors. All colors were
possible and cheap. So what were gourmands to do? Subtle variations
of beige became all the rage. Computers have been similar. We had
3-D. We had walnut burl windows. We had boombox windows. With
Win7 we had clever translucency and grass growing on window
frames. Garish and complicated had reached their limit. Where was
there to go? Hues of beige. That's basically what the Metro theme is.
The fashion sophisticate now goes for minimalist, ever since excess
became effortless. Though I'm not sure how much of the computing
public gets that particular joke.

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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From: r9jmg0@yahoo.com (John C.)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10
Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 06:15:05 -0700
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 by: John C. - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:15 UTC

VanguardLH wrote:
> John C. wrote:
>> VanguardLH wrote:
>>> Stan Brown wrote:
>>>> Frank Slootweg wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> How do you *know* the program was "removed" (uninstalled)? Was it
>>>>> listed in Control Panel (-> Programs -> Programs and Features) and
>>>>> is it no longer listed there?
>>
>> I know because I just installed the program. It runs in the background
>> with an icon on the Tray. I noticed when I started up the system a
>> couple of days ago that the icon was missing. When I tried to find the
>> program in my Start Menu, it wasn't there. When I looked in "Programs
>> and Features", it was no longer listed as an installed program.
>>
>> I did NOT uninstall the program myself. Period.
>
> There are installable and portable versions of WizMouse. The installer
> likely adds the Start menu and desktop shortcuts, and probably defaults
> to showing a systray icon. For the portable version, you merely copy
> the files (no shortcuts unless you create them). Could be there is an
> option of whether or not to show a systray icon, especially for the
> portable version (but then it really isn't portable if it gets added as
> a startup program since affects the registry for startup proggies).
>
> Seems you moved from Windows 7 to 10. Was that an upgrade from 7 to 10?

No, the option I chose during the move was to do a fresh install from
scratch rather than an upgrade. For some reason though, the process did
create a folder named "Windows.old" which contained the old $Recycle.bin
and complete "Users" folders. Glad it did so, too. And since I had my
data backed up, I was able to preserve that.

> Or did you do a fresh install of Win10, and then install (not copy the
> portable version of) WizMouse?

I did a fresh install.

> Do you run any cleanup tools (e.g., CCleaner, Bleachbit, etc)?

No. I didn't do that. Still haven't done that yet. Still checking out a
few things before I do.

> Where was the install folder for WizMouse?

"C:\Program Files (x86)\WizMouse\WizMouse.exe"

> Is that folder, or its parent, a target for a cleanup tool?

No, it is not.

>>>> Another possibility: Windows Security (formerly Windows Defender) or
>>>> the Malicious Software Removal Tool might have decided those programs
>>>> were dangerous and quarantined them.
>>
>> There was no notification and no mention of it being uninstalled that
>> I was able to find anywhere.
>>
>>>> To check that in Windows Security, open Settings; select
>>>> Update & Security
>>>> Windows Security
>>>> Virus & Threat Protection
>>>> Protection History
>>>> If there are any "This app has been blocked" notations, click on each
>>>> one in turn.
>
> To verify, did you check where Slootweg mentioned in Defender's history?

Yes, I did. There was no mention of the program being removed. In fact,
no mention of it at all.

What I *did* see was a repeated mention of:

"PUABundler:Win32/PhotoScapeBundler

which presumably was installed with PhotoScapeSetup V3.7, despite my
having refused the offer of third party crap during installation.

>>> I downloaded the portable version of WizMouse (so I could see the files
>>> instead of the installer executable). I submitted wizmouse.exe and
>>> wizmouse.dll to VirusTotal. The .exe had a couple hits on obscure AVs,
>>> but those are insignificant. The .dll had no hits. I don't think
>>> Defender saw wizmouse as malware, but only looking it its logs might
>>> show it decided it was a PUP (Probably Unwanted Program) or PUA
>>> (Potentially Unwanted Application).
>>
>> I was going to explore whether or not MS's implementation of the
>> feature did things like automatically move the background window to
>> the foreground when I scrolled it. I do not want this to happen.
>> However, before I was able to determine if this was the case or not,
>> the program disappeared.
>
> In Win10 settings, go to Mouse, and check if the option "Scroll inactive
> windows when I hover over them" is enabled. Scrolling the inactive
> window does not change focus (the inactive window does rise to the top).

Thanks for that. I did that just now and there was a checkmark there.
Doesn't seem to hurt anything to leave Wizmouse installed though, but if
it disappears again I probably won't reinstall it.

> For what you do not want for now (make the scrolled inactive window rise
> to the top), another option might look at is to make a window rise to
> the top just by hovering the mouse over it. This is called the X-mouse
> function. See:
>
> https://winaero.com/enable-xmouse-window-tracking-windows-10/
>
> Scrolling an inactive window means part of that window could be
> partially obliterated by another window. The x-mouse function lets you
> pop the target window to the top that you could then scroll. Hover the
> mouse over the prior window to have it get focus again. However, if I
> need the scrolled window to be completely visible, I just click on it.

That's also how I prefer to do things.

Thanks again for your help, VanguardLH.

--
John C.

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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From: r9jmg0@yahoo.com (John C.)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10
Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 06:23:18 -0700
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In-Reply-To: <sbu87950576x.dlg@v.nguard.lh>
 by: John C. - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:23 UTC

VanguardLH wrote:
> John C. wrote:
>> John Hall wrote:
>>> John C. wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Has anybody else experienced this problem (programs being uninstalled
>>>> without permission)
>>>
>>> I've been using 10 for about five years and, to the best of my
>>> knowledge, have never had that happen. Could your anti-virus have
>>> quarantined the program as suspicious without your being aware of it? It
>>> might be worth checking.
>>
>> That was about the first thing I checked. Nope, the program just
>> disappeared.
>
> With mention of anti-virus comes to mind possible other-actor malicious
> action whether deliberate or accidental.
>
> Have you enabled RDP to allow remote access to your computer? Is Remote
> Assistance disabled? See:
>
> https://winaero.com/disable-remote-assistance-windows-10/
>
> I disabled that long ago. Don't need it, won't allow it, and disabled
> it should there be any vulnerabilities.

Yes, along with file indexing, that's always the first thing I disable
when moving to a new version of Windows or doing a fresh install of the
version I'm using.

> Running any other remoting software (e.g., VNC, TeamViewer)? I have
> used both in the past, but never left them running (as a server to
> accept new outside connects).

No, I've never used anything like that.

> What you described I've not seen happen: suddenly installed programs
> disappearing. So, I'd make sure no one can remote into your computer to
> perform accidental or malicious actions.
>
> There is one condition where I've seen programs disappear: a corrupted
> Windows profile. There are online articles on how to mend, but I
> usually don't bother, create a new Windows profile, and start again. In
> fact, you can backup your Windows profile: run sysdm.cpl, Advanced tab,
> User Profiles, Copy To.

I always try to install programs for all users.

> However, I resort to using an image backup to restore the drives back to
> the exact state as before. The backups are scheduled. Relying on the
> user to perform a backup means unreliable backups. Do you have image
> backups to which you could restore your computer to when you saw the now
> missing programs? You could try using System Restore, but that does not
> revert the drive(s) back to their exact state as before. Restoring from
> image backups does. If you don't do backups then nothing on your
> computer is important.
>
> If you already did a restore from backup, could be the backup from which
> you restored was created before you installed the software or drivers.

There's been a lot of things going on in my life at this point. I guess
I should consider the possibility that I may have seen the notice on the
Wizmouse homepage:

https://antibody-software.com/wizmouse

that "Windows 10 already has this functionality built in so WizMouse is
most useful if you're using earlier versions of Windows..." and not
bothered to install it.

My memory of installing it is probably when I did so on another computer
I'm currently working on for somebody else. Since it's running W7, I did
install the program on that system.

If that was the case, then my apologies to everybody for the error.

--
John C.

Re: App

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From: r9jmg0@yahoo.com (John C.)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 06:33:38 -0700
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 by: John C. - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 13:33 UTC

Newyana2 wrote:
> Steve Hayes wrote:
>>
>> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
>> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
>> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
>> running, or system programs that are not apps.
>
>   Whether we like it or not, I think V's explanation is entirely
> accurate. App started with Steve Jobs and became a word
> that meant cellphone applet. It was typical of Apple, creating
> a cutesy, child-like environment that would placate and
> entertain people afraid of tech, with icons that look like
> they're designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her i's with
> little hearts.
>
>    On Windows it's always been "programs". Only some
> programmers say "application". (It could be worse. For
> awhile people were talking about their programming
> projects as "solutions".)

Yes, that wouldn't have been a good thing.

>    Having established that app means cellphone applet, MS
> have made things more clear. They've gone from Metro to
> RT to UWP to name essentially the same crippled, interpreted
> applet software. Who knows those terms? No one outside of
> Windows programming. With the Start Menu separating Programs
> from Apps it becomes still more clear. These Metro applets are,
> and are meant to be, more like cellphone applets than Windows
> software. They're a completely different animal, closer to
> dyanmic webpages than to complied executables. (Though,
> frankly, I've never found a clear explanation of exactly how
> they work. I've seen lists of restricted APIs. I've seen lists
> of all the ways one can write a Metro applet -- from HTML to
> C++. But I've never seen a technical explanation of exactly how
> they operate and get interpreted.)

My understanding of them is that they're more or less like a portable
app that uses callouts to modules which are standard in every Windows
version since W8. The "apps" are hidden in a folder named "C:/Program
Files/WindowsApps". You may think you can "uninstall" them, but all that
does is to (usually) turn them off if they normally run in the
background AND to eliminate access to them. The program files actually
remain in the WindowsApps folder. Steps to access to that folder are
easily found on the internet so that you can delete the program files,
but doing so can be risky if the files you delete are for "apps" that
come by default with Windows.

>   I often call them Metro apps because that's the first name
> MS came up with and it's the only name with flavor. RT and UWP
> are terms only geeks can like. Metro carries a connotation of
> urban fashion. As though Bill Gates had decided to buy an iPhone,
> get a haircut that costs more than $10, and invite some intelligentsia
> over for winetasting. MS probably hoped that the flat, ugly,
> borderless monotone of Metro apps, with the Apple-style slide
> controls, would seem hip and artfully sparse.

It made me gag.

>   That's an interesting pattern with fashions. For example, with
> the use of color, rare and intense colors were prized for millennia.
> Then we came up with "day-glo" fluorescent colors. All colors were
> possible and cheap. So what were gourmands to do? Subtle variations
> of beige became all the rage. Computers have been similar. We had
> 3-D. We had walnut burl windows. We had boombox windows. With
> Win7 we had clever translucency and grass growing on window
> frames. Garish and complicated had reached their limit. Where was
> there to go? Hues of beige. That's basically what the Metro theme is.
> The fashion sophisticate now goes for minimalist, ever since excess
> became effortless. Though I'm not sure how much of the computing
> public gets that particular joke.

For me, one of the most frustrating things about W10 is the massively
reduced UI configurability.

--
John C.

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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From: void-invalid-dead-dontuse@email.invalid (Brian Gregory)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10
Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 15:12:19 +0100
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 by: Brian Gregory - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 14:12 UTC

On 25/04/2024 11:57, John C. wrote:
> I have been attempting to get used to Windows 10, but now it had
> developed a problem that, if it ever happens again, will force me to
> either go back to Windows 7 *OR* finally make the move to Linux.
>
> What is happening is that I'm seeing programs which I was able to use
> without issue in Windows 7 and which I have installed in Windows 10
> suddenly, and completely, disappear.

Old programs are sometimes falsely recognized as malware by Defender and
deleted or quarantined. Go to setings / Windows security and see if
anything shows under Virus and Threat protection / protection history.
If that is what happened you can go to Virus and Threat protection /
Manage settings / Add or remove exclusions and add the effected file or
directory as excluded from virus / malware scans.

--
Brian Gregory (in England).

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
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 by: VanguardLH - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 17:00 UTC

VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

> In Win10 settings, go to Mouse, and check if the option "Scroll inactive
> windows when I hover over them" is enabled. Scrolling the inactive
> window does not change focus (the inactive window does rise to the top).
not ___/
Sometimes my brain
outpaces my fingers.

Re: App

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From: mayayana@invalid.nospam (Newyana2)
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 by: Newyana2 - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 17:38 UTC

On 4/29/2024 9:33 AM, John C. wrote:
> Newyana2 wrote:
>> Steve Hayes wrote:
>>>
>>> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
>>> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
>>> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
>>> running, or system programs that are not apps.
>>
>>   Whether we like it or not, I think V's explanation is entirely
>> accurate. App started with Steve Jobs and became a word
>> that meant cellphone applet. It was typical of Apple, creating
>> a cutesy, child-like environment that would placate and
>> entertain people afraid of tech, with icons that look like
>> they're designed by a 12 year old girl who dots her i's with
>> little hearts.
>>
>>    On Windows it's always been "programs". Only some
>> programmers say "application". (It could be worse. For
>> awhile people were talking about their programming
>> projects as "solutions".)
>
> Yes, that wouldn't have been a good thing.
>
>>    Having established that app means cellphone applet, MS
>> have made things more clear. They've gone from Metro to
>> RT to UWP to name essentially the same crippled, interpreted
>> applet software. Who knows those terms? No one outside of
>> Windows programming. With the Start Menu separating Programs
>> from Apps it becomes still more clear. These Metro applets are,
>> and are meant to be, more like cellphone applets than Windows
>> software. They're a completely different animal, closer to
>> dyanmic webpages than to complied executables. (Though,
>> frankly, I've never found a clear explanation of exactly how
>> they work. I've seen lists of restricted APIs. I've seen lists
>> of all the ways one can write a Metro applet -- from HTML to
>> C++. But I've never seen a technical explanation of exactly how
>> they operate and get interpreted.)
>
> My understanding of them is that they're more or less like a portable
> app that uses callouts to modules which are standard in every Windows
> version since W8. The "apps" are hidden in a folder named "C:/Program
> Files/WindowsApps". You may think you can "uninstall" them, but all that
> does is to (usually) turn them off if they normally run in the
> background AND to eliminate access to them. The program files actually
> remain in the WindowsApps folder. Steps to access to that folder are
> easily found on the internet so that you can delete the program files,
> but doing so can be risky if the files you delete are for "apps" that
> come by default with Windows.

They can be uninnstalled to some extent, but it's a tedious
process involving PowerShell, designed to make sure that virtually
no one tries it. Microsoft are clearly trying to force this crap
on people, getting everyone used to thinking of Windows as
a giant Metro cellphone, with plenty of ads and no control.

https://www.askvg.com/guide-how-to-remove-all-built-in-apps-in-windows-10/

I've uninstalled pretty much everything on my system. When I
set it up I wanted to get to a base starting point of max-clean,
min-size, no junk.

The WindowsApps
folder mostly just has .Net runtimes in it. I also left applets for display,
sounds and sound recorder. The rest is gone. The SystemApps folder
is similar. It seems to only have basic OS functionality. I tried to
remove SearchApp but id didn't work. I was able to shut it off, though,
by renaming the folder with a bat file.

Crazy nonsense. When I look at Sound Recorder I find a lot of crap
that looks like redundant config files, and an EXE that seems to be
a normal, compiled PE file.

> For me, one of the most frustrating things about W10 is the massively
> reduced UI configurability.
>

Yes. Odd, isn't it? I've found that with Classic Shell and
WinAero Tweaker I can get back some control. But it turned
out that I can't get window frames without Aero. And there's
no going back to a menu from the "ribbon". Fortunately I
don't use that very much. I've got it looking pretty much
like XP/7 with Classic style, for the most part. And actually,
some things are better. For example, I was able to change
most icons without too much trouble. I now have my own folder
icons and was aable to bring my red oak wasttebasket over
from XP. (Though Win10 often doesn't update the display
when I empty it.)

One annoyance still unsolved is folder windows. I tried runing
a Win7 script to make all windows the same size. It seems to
have worked. But then if I do something like maximize one window,
Win10 starts maxing all of them and I have to retrain it. That's
especially irritating because it's been broken since Win98.

On XP, every folder was set to remember its size and type, but
it didn't work because Explorer had a bug that made it record the
specs wrong. It was fixable with a Registry edit, but rather involved.

With Vista/7 MS broke the system again, swapping around the
Registry settings as though to deliberately thwart any effort to
make it work properly. Win7 has a way to remove all settings and then
create one setting for all folders, which is fine with me. I'm still not
certain whether it still works on Win10.

It involves deleting the keys
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Classes\Local
Settings\Software\Microsoft\Windows\Shell\BagMRU and Bags, which store
settings for each opened folder
but are undependable.

Then those two keys are recreated and the desired settings are
created in Bags\AllFolders\Shell ...It's not a project for the faint of
heart. :)

Re: App

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From: nospam@needed.invalid (Paul)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
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 by: Paul - Mon, 29 Apr 2024 21:05 UTC

On 4/28/2024 11:17 PM, Steve Hayes wrote:
> On Sun, 28 Apr 2024 13:58:55 -0500, VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:
>
>> John C. <r9jmg0@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I'm not running my scanner from a "smart" phone, I'm running it from my
>>> desktop computer. The software it uses is referred to correctly as an
>>> "application".
>>
>> Microsoft confused and conflated the terminology. Programs and
>> applications meant the same thing (Win32 programs), so application was
>> often abbreviated to "app". Then Microsoft came out with UWP (Universal
>> Windows Platform) apps. They didn't call them applications, or UWPs, or
>> newapps, but just apps. This confused the new UWP apps with the old
>> Win32 apps. So, now "app" means a UWP application, and application or
>> program means a Win32 application. Which terminology you lean towards
>> depends on how long you've been using PCs.
>
> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application program"
> and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used for. There
> are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining the computer's
> running, or system programs that are not apps.

On Windows, a Metro.App is not command line. It does not
"launch" in an ordinary way. No attempt was made to
integrate it into the Win32 infrastructure. You can't
chain Metro.App together in a script and "make something useful".

There is even trouble making "shortcuts". A shortcut, you cannot
pass parameters to a Metro.App via the shortcut.

It is purposefully "in-sensate" design.

"Apps" are different, and a special place in hell is reserved for their characteristic.

More than one ecosystem right now, is headed towards a "non-technical" "un-debuggable"
state. You have been warned.

Always keep tools so you can write your own applications. A day may come,
where you are the developer -- that will be because of how bad the
environment has become.

Ubuntu for example, is trying to replace everything with Snaps, which is
a way of dumbing down how Linux works. There is nothing "noteworthy"
about this commercial activity, except that it is "headed in the wrong direction".
The multiple packaging activities (Snap, Flatpak, AppImage) on Linux, have
no technical merit, but they're great for splitting customers into groups,
for harvest.

"Apps", unfortunately, are not a joke. They're a serious matter.

Here is a picture of the Groove Music Player (Groove.App).
Now, what is noteworthy about this ? It's licensed content. You
could click it and... it could stop playing and it would no
longer start. In other words, while it has a Manifest, and while
it will download a fresh copy if the files are adulterated, it
is also centrally controlled, and can be removed from your
desktop in the blink of an eye.

https://filestore.community.support.microsoft.com/api/images/cc39e98c-fef7-4404-bedd-aa8a3d4aa624?upload=true

Windows Media Player, is an item in transition. Only older versions
are fairly benign.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Media_Player

Whereas something like WinAmp, has an entirely different history.
This is not an App. Will they ruin it ? No. Not if they
want $10 a copy.

https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/audio/a23797304/winamp-is-coming-back-in-2019/

Paul

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 by: Peter Moylan - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 00:47 UTC

On 30/04/24 03:38, Newyana2 wrote:

> One annoyance still unsolved is folder windows. I tried runing a Win7
> script to make all windows the same size. It seems to have worked.
> But then if I do something like maximize one window, Win10 starts
> maxing all of them and I have to retrain it. That's especially
> irritating because it's been broken since Win98.

I dislike the Windows implementation of folder windows for several
reasons, but a major one is that they take up massive amounts of screen
real estate. Why do they have to be so big, and filled with a lot of
useless detail?

On my desktop (I run OS/2), each folder has separately specified display
attributes, such as whether in icon view the icons are located as
placed, or put in multiple columns, etc. (There's also a tree view and a
details view, and the details view does take a lot of space.) In the
case of a folder whose files are all of the same kind, e.g. all source
files, I usually choose to display only the names (no icons shown) in a
simple multi-column list, so that the folder window is very small. That
matters to me. During program development, in particular, I'll have a
number of folder windows open and a number of other windows (e.g.
command shells) open. I want to be able to get at those easily. Windows
seems to have been designed for people who only run one program at a time.

--
Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW

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 by: Peter Moylan - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 00:48 UTC

On 29/04/24 22:59, Newyana2 wrote:
> On 4/28/2024 11:17 PM, Steve Hayes wrote:
>
>> In my understanding and usage "app" is short for "application
>> program" and is distingushed from other programs by what it is used
>> for. There are programs like "utilities" that are for maintaining
>> the computer's running, or system programs that are not apps.
>>
>
> Whether we like it or not, I think V's explanation is entirely
> accurate. App started with Steve Jobs and became a word that meant
> cellphone applet. It was typical of Apple, creating a cutesy,
> child-like environment that would placate and entertain people afraid
> of tech, with icons that look like they're designed by a 12 year old
> girl who dots her i's with little hearts.

It's for that reason that my definition of "app" is "like a program, but
not as well written".

--
Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW

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From: nospam@needed.invalid (Paul)
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 by: Paul - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 02:21 UTC

On 4/29/2024 8:47 PM, Peter Moylan wrote:
> On 30/04/24 03:38, Newyana2 wrote:
>
>> One annoyance still unsolved is folder windows. I tried runing a Win7
>> script to make all windows the same size. It seems to have worked.
>> But then if I do something like maximize one window, Win10 starts
>> maxing all of them and I have to retrain it. That's especially
>> irritating because it's been broken since Win98.
>
> I dislike the Windows implementation of folder windows for several
> reasons, but a major one is that they take up massive amounts of screen
> real estate. Why do they have to be so big, and filled with a lot of
> useless detail?
>
> On my desktop (I run OS/2), each folder has separately specified display
> attributes, such as whether in icon view the icons are located as
> placed, or put in multiple columns, etc. (There's also a tree view and a
> details view, and the details view does take a lot of space.) In the
> case of a folder whose files are all of the same kind, e.g. all source
> files, I usually choose to display only the names (no icons shown) in a
> simple multi-column list, so that the folder window is very small. That
> matters to me. During program development, in particular, I'll have a
> number of folder windows open and a number of other windows (e.g.
> command shells) open. I want to be able to get at those easily. Windows
> seems to have been designed for people who only run one program at a time.
>

You can adjust the columns, de-select some of them, and put whatever
information you want in the window. Just because the default sucks,
don't give up.

[Picture] [The scale was doubled, to make it easier to read]

https://i.postimg.cc/K4XGLY9b/folder-W11.gif

If the built-in is not good enough, third party tools also exist.

Paul

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 by: Newyana2 - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 02:48 UTC

On 4/29/2024 8:47 PM, Peter Moylan wrote:

> On my desktop (I run OS/2), each folder has separately specified display
> attributes, such as whether in icon view the icons are located as
> placed, or put in multiple columns, etc.

That's what Windows is supposed to do, dating back to Win9x.
It's been broken with every rendition. Yet the settings are still
there -- thousands of keys in the Registry meant to spec the size
and orientation of each individual window. It's like building a
skyscraper and neglecting to put stairs... for 30 years... How do
they do that? Maybe it's an interesting story.

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 by: Peter Moylan - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 04:18 UTC

On 30/04/24 12:21, Paul wrote:
> On 4/29/2024 8:47 PM, Peter Moylan wrote:

>> I dislike the Windows implementation of folder windows for several
>> reasons, but a major one is that they take up massive amounts of
>> screen real estate. Why do they have to be so big, and filled with
>> a lot of useless detail?

[...]

> You can adjust the columns, de-select some of them, and put whatever
> information you want in the window. Just because the default sucks,
> don't give up.
>
> [Picture] [The scale was doubled, to make it easier to read]
>
> https://i.postimg.cc/K4XGLY9b/folder-W11.gif
>
> If the built-in is not good enough, third party tools also exist.

True, it's possible to do that much, but notice how much of your window
is taken up with things that aren't file names.

Here's a similar example on my computer
http://www.pmoylan.org/ftp/FolderView.png
(This is full-size, but even if doubled it wouldn't look large.) The
overhead (things that aren't file names) in this example consists of the
title bar, the menu bar, the scroll bar, and a summary at the bottom.
The decision not to display icons means that the titles are closer
together. If I do display icons, I can choose between normal icons and
small icons.

I could have made this smaller, by turning off the options to view the
menu bar and the status bar, but I usually leave those visible.

Microsoft could have chosen to do a similar thing, but they chose to
focus on bells and whistles.

Here's another view of the same folder, showing all details.
http://www.pmoylan.org/ftp/DetailsView.png
(So more comparable to the Windows default view.) The window is now a
lot larger, of course, but you could still fit plenty of other things on
the screen. And in practice it wouldn't be as wide because I don't
normally choose to display three separate timestamps for each file.

--
Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW

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 by: Peter Moylan - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 04:31 UTC

On 30/04/24 14:18, Peter Moylan wrote:

> Here's another view of the same folder, showing all details.
> http://www.pmoylan.org/ftp/DetailsView.png (So more comparable to the
> Windows default view.) The window is now a lot larger, of course, but
> you could still fit plenty of other things on the screen. And in
> practice it wouldn't be as wide because I don't normally choose to
> display three separate timestamps for each file.

Admission: the folder windows might get bigger in future. As my eyesight
weakens, I might end up using a larger font size for my most-used folders.

--
Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW

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From: gadekryds@lundhansen.dk (Bertel Lund Hansen)
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 by: Bertel Lund Hansen - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 07:27 UTC

Peter Moylan wrote:

> case of a folder whose files are all of the same kind, e.g. all source
> files, I usually choose to display only the names (no icons shown) in a
> simple multi-column list, so that the folder window is very small. That
> matters to me. During program development, in particular, I'll have a
> number of folder windows open and a number of other windows (e.g.
> command shells) open. I want to be able to get at those easily. Windows
> seems to have been designed for people who only run one program at a time.

I've always chosen a minimal display of the folders. Now with Linux I
have pretty much the same view as I had with Windows up to 10 (first
version). I have a small icon and the file name for each file in a
flowing display. In Linux (Mint) there is a one click access to the
detailed view where also the size, the time and the file time are
displayed. This choice is remembered though I'd prefer if it weren't.

--
Bertel
Kolt, Denmark

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From: gadekryds@lundhansen.dk (Bertel Lund Hansen)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 09:32:29 +0200
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 by: Bertel Lund Hansen - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 07:32 UTC

Newyana2 wrote:

> That's what Windows is supposed to do, dating back to Win9x.
> It's been broken with every rendition. Yet the settings are still
> there -- thousands of keys in the Registry meant to spec the size
> and orientation of each individual window. It's like building a
> skyscraper and neglecting to put stairs... for 30 years... How do
> they do that? Maybe it's an interesting story.

Thanks. That explains what I wondered about for a long time. Up till XP
the windows had individual settings. Suddenly with version 7 that was
gone.

--
Bertel
Kolt, Denmark

Re: App

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From: gadekryds@lundhansen.dk (Bertel Lund Hansen)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 09:35:48 +0200
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 by: Bertel Lund Hansen - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 07:35 UTC

Paul wrote:

> Windows Media Player, is an item in transition. Only older versions
> are fairly benign.

Thanks for VLC which I used under Windows and use now under Linux.

--
Bertel
Kolt, Denmark

Re: App

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From: gadekryds@lundhansen.dk (Bertel Lund Hansen)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
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 by: Bertel Lund Hansen - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 09:06 UTC

Bertel Lund Hansen wrote:

> detailed view where also the size, the time and the file time are

Second item should be "type".

--
Bertel
Kolt, Denmark

Re: App

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From: mayayana@invalid.nospam (Newyana2)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 08:45:25 -0400
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 by: Newyana2 - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 12:45 UTC

On 4/30/2024 12:18 AM, Peter Moylan wrote:

> True, it's possible to do that much, but notice how much of your window
> is taken up with things that aren't file names.
>
> Here's a similar example on my computer
>       http://www.pmoylan.org/ftp/FolderView.png

That's something I hadn't thought of. I dislike the ribbon bar
as unnecessary rejumbling of defaults. But it's also, as you say,
a massive space waster. It's basically spreading each submenu
out under the menu bar, without being able to close them.

You can, of course, remove what they call the Navigation Pane,
what used to be called the Explorer Bar or Explorer Treeview.
Though I use that. In XP I had made my own Explorer Bar with
links to commonly accessed folders and expanded file previews,
but I wrote it in VB6, which is 32-bit only, so I can't use it in
Win10-64 because it's an in-process shell extension. Bitness has
to match.

It's a big missed opportunity that MS don't provide some kind
of building block kit for people to arrange folders in whatever way
is most useful, without need for technical expertise. Though in my
most recent explorations of Linux, that seems to be even less flexible.
You can choose from all sorts of "window managers". Most are ugly
and minimal. KDE is a beautiful piece of work, but focused mainly
on looks, not functionality.

In the meantime I find that I've collected a row of folder shortcuts
on my Win10 Desktop, to make up for the convenience of my old Explorer
Bar. AppData, System32, Coding folder, etc. The original inspiration
for those links was actually Active Desktop. It wasn't my idea. It
was MS's idea to make all folder windows into webpages in IE. The
file view was a listbox on a webpage. So anything one could do with a
webpage could be done with folder windows. It was great. And any folder
could be custom, as well. But MS never made that functionality useful.
They only made Active Desktop to show that they were "webby", to
introduce ads on the Desktop, and to "cut off Netscape's air supply".
So they had this brilliant invention and only plopped a half-assed
image-preview control onto the left side.

I suppose part of the problem has always been the issue of architects
vs engineers. The architect designs a liveable space but is unconcerned
with technical issues like holding up the roof. The engineer designs
roof support, but ignores aesthetics. We have computer UIs designed
primarily by engineers. Those engineers assume that anyone not techy
is simpleminded, so they confuse usability with childishness, creating
silly icons and "my" everything. Apple takes that to an extreme. The
screen appearance looks like a daycare center, while access to control
and customization is almost entirely cut off... Never trust a techie who
gives you Looney Tunes for a GUI. :)

Re: App

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From: mayayana@invalid.nospam (Newyana2)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 09:28:59 -0400
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 by: Newyana2 - Tue, 30 Apr 2024 13:28 UTC

On 4/30/2024 3:32 AM, Bertel Lund Hansen wrote:
> Newyana2 wrote:
>
>> That's what Windows is supposed to do, dating back to Win9x.
>> It's been broken with every rendition. Yet the settings are still
>> there -- thousands of keys in the Registry meant to spec the size
>> and orientation of each individual window. It's like building a
>> skyscraper and neglecting to put stairs... for 30 years... How do
>> they do that? Maybe it's an interesting story.
>
> Thanks. That explains what I wondered about for a long time. Up till XP
> the windows had individual settings. Suddenly with version 7 that was
> gone.
>

XP had them, but they often didn't take. If you look at
HKCU\SOFTWARE\Classes\Local Settings\Software\Microsoft\
Windows\Shell\Bags
in Win10 you'll see that the settings are still there. But still,
Windows seems to be not saving them properly and thus forgets
them. On Win7 I found that I could fix it by properly configuring
Bags\AllFolders\Shell and deleting the rest of the Bags subkeys.
I'm still not sure whether that works on Win10. It seems that a
sample Shell key once again lacks the necessary settings.

It's complicated because this is all undocumented and MS
switch it up frivolously with every release. But there is a system.
Explorer is supposed to record the specs when a window closes.
If you look in those keys you may see values with names drawn
from Shell API parameters for displaying windows. WFlags specs
min/max/normal size. FFlags, ShowCmd, Vid (which specs display
options, not as 1-5 but as GUIDs!), etc.

Windows size and position are specced like so:
"WinPos" is followed by screen dimensions and API-style specs.
For example, I have WinPos1920x1080x96(1).top, with corresponding
bottom, left and right. All of these have to be redone if screen
resolution is changed. But Win10 Explorer is not propagating those
specs to Bags keys, so it doesn't know how a window should appear.
And of course, Win10 adds a few new values, willy nilly, which may
or may not actually be relevant... And a new wrinkle has been added
since Win7: The broken folder settings are now saved to a further
subkey -- Bags\[number]\Shell\{5C4F28B5-F869-4E84-8E60-F11DB97C5CC7}

That GUID signifies a generic folder type. Ther Softies just
can't seem to resist throwing in GUIDs to make things look
more official. Now there are folder types. 20-30 of them. (Generic,
communications, library....)

Sometimes I think half the time of MS developers must be spent
in the lunch room, competing to have the best secret decode ring
from some video game box.

Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me

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From: NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com (micky)
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Subject: Re: Windows 10 is randomly removing programs without telling me
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 by: micky - Wed, 1 May 2024 20:23 UTC

In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sun, 28 Apr 2024 07:50:00 -0700, "John C."
<r9jmg0@yahoo.com> wrote:

>John Hall wrote:
>> In message <v0dcu6$2v9ts$1@dont-email.me>, John C. <r9jmg0@yahoo.com>
>> writes
>> <big snip>
>>> Has anybody else experienced this problem (programs being uninstalled
>>> without permission)
>>
>> I've been using 10 for about five years and, to the best of my
>> knowledge, have never had that happen. Could your anti-virus have
>> quarantined the program as suspicious without your being aware of it? It
>> might be worth checking.
>
>That was about the first thing I checked. Nope, the program just
>disappeared.

Do you have more than one malware program?

Somehow I ended up with two.

Despite the warnings, they worked fine together for years.

Re: App

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From: hayesstw@telkomsa.net (Steve Hayes)
Newsgroups: alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage
Subject: Re: App
Date: Sat, 04 May 2024 07:01:05 +0200
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 by: Steve Hayes - Sat, 4 May 2024 05:01 UTC

On Mon, 29 Apr 2024 06:33:38 -0700, "John C." <r9jmg0@yahoo.com>
wrote:

>Newyana2 wrote:

>>    On Windows it's always been "programs". Only some
>> programmers say "application". (It could be worse. For
>> awhile people were talking about their programming
>> projects as "solutions".)
>
>Yes, that wouldn't have been a good thing.

I have seen advertisements for "solutions", but they never tell you
what problem they are claiming to be able to solve.

Yes, they're all programs, but some are applications, like word
processors, spreadsheets, databases etc.

But I have a program called "Glary Utilities", which is not an
application. It just helps the computer to run better. Likewise, the
operating system is a program, but not an application.

--
Steve Hayes from Tshwane, South Africa
Web: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm
Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com
E-mail - see web page, or parse: shayes at dunelm full stop org full stop uk


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