Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 6th Feb 2013 11:23 UTC
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Again all of it is trivial to turn off.
Of course it is, if you understand the concepts. Remember, from the point of view of the majority of users, they just "installed that Adobe Reader thingy" and now their computer slowed down a bit. We know we can turn these background updaters and plugins off. Unfortunately, most people don't even have a concept that a program is multiple parts. It's "that Flash thing" or "that pdf thing" and they no more understand all the crap it installs than most of us would understand the inner workings of subatomic particles.
Also tbh, any OS does this (MacOSX does the same, I hear the designers say the same).
Well, strictly speaking, it's not the os that does it in either case. I will say though, most OS X programs are much better behaved (although, of course, Adobe products are an exception). Most programs on OS X don't run background updaters, they check for updates when you launch the program and either install them automatically (Chrome) or alert you and let you decide. This is not an inherent strength of OS X, just a consequence of better application design. I'd like to see this design be used more often in Windows programs, and there is no reason why this couldn't happen except for laziness on the part of the application developers.




Member since:
2009-08-18
Again all of it is trivial to turn off. Also tbh, any OS does this (MacOSX does the same, I hear the designers say the same).
It a consequence of being able to run what you want.
Edited 2013-02-07 15:13 UTC