
I have written
about if before: updating programs on your computer - if you're not using a Linux distribution, that is - is a total and utter mess. On Windows and Mac OS X, there are roughly four ways of updating applications. The application notifies of new updates, and then downloads them when you click 'yes', the application updates from within the application itself, or the application requires a special update program running in the background. These are all quite annoying, since they interfere with your workflow (as opposed to, say, running "apt-get upgrade" every morning). The fourth method is the official vendor channel, Windows/Microsoft Update in Windows and Software Update in Mac OS X. Paul Ellis argues that to alleviate the mess, Microsoft should
open up Microsoft Update for everyone else - and similar arguments are made concerning Apple's Software Update.
Member since:
2008-03-17
You're probably right...But I still think having a centralized blacklist/Whitelist ability is useful for users (who might not entirely trust an app for whatever reason). Also Allowing a user to whitelist an app for updates shifts responsibility from microsoft to the user for maintainance of any given app and makes certification a lot simpler by not making it mandatory
Edited 2008-07-30 22:54 UTC