• Hello there guest and Welcome to The #1 Classic Mustang forum!
    To gain full access you must Register. Registration is free and it takes only a few moments to complete.
    Already a member? Login here then!

New Computer Upgrade: Woes and Rants

Midlife

Well-Known Member
Staff member
Moderator
Donator
I've been using a laptop as my primary computer since 2010, and it ran Windows XP. It is a great workhorse, although some of the keys are getting sticky (get your heads out of the gutters, you twits!). I still run some old apps from 1998 (!!!) which won't work on Windows Vista and higher. Since no one supports XP anymore, including FireFox, I figured it was time to upgrade.

I bought a Windows 10 box, and fired it up for the big transition Sunday afternoon, figuring it would take a good 2 days to get it to a fully functional state. Yes, I am taking this week off, so I had plenty of time. I managed to get all of my applications to load except two of them, which is pretty damn good! I found Dos In a Box, which allows old games and DOS programs to run in a 64 bit environment. I found a way of transferring my entire FireFox profile from the old machine to the new one, which saved an incredible amount of time and effort.

Both machines were running off of the same wireless network, but it was incredibly difficult to get the two computers to talk with one another. The new machine could see the old one, but not vice versa. I think the Windows Firewall on the new machine was the cause. I transferred all of the data wireless over from the old to the new, keeping the same file structure. I keep all my data separated from applications by partitioning the hard drive, so all the data is in its own partition. That makes archiving and backups a whole-lot easier as well.

I'm now up and running, but I do have many complaints about Windows 10, even though I'm running it as an administrator. When firing it up for the first time, Microsoft wanted to know everything about me and what I do, so I told them to stuff it. At least they allow you to turn that crap off. But still, does MS really expect everyone to go into a fully share mode with a huge corporation, like Google, Facebook, and such? Hell no...I just want a computer to do my thing! Second gripe: Even though I am the administrator, any time I need to run an .exe file, Windows asks me "Do you really want to do this?" C'mon...of course I do! Windows 10 is the ultimate in Nanny-State-ism. Third gripe: where are all of the damn games MS used to supply? They're gone! Bastids! I transferred over the games from XP and they run well in 10. Fourth gripe: where's the Classic Windows theme? And what's up with all of those damn tiles? I found a way to get the theme and remove the tiles, but the theme messes up my spreadsheet formats, so I went back to a standard theme.

All in all, not as bad an experience as I was expecting for an upgrade, but really, MS...leave us poor schnooks alone, will ya? We all don't want to be part of your whole-Internet-experience thingamajig.

Sincerely,
An old fart, curmudgeon, about to be a Luddite.
 
I was very annoyed years ago ago to find that XP would not run some of my Win98 stuff, including a game I had just bought. FROM Microsoft. (Midtown madness, for the record) But after a while I grew to like XP very much. If I had my way I'd still be using it. As long as I can hang onto it, Win7 is my first choice at home. At work I run Win10. For the heck of it I tried some of those old Win98 games like Sportscar GT that I haven't played in years and they amazed me by running under 10. Not without some tweaking, but ran!
One thing I've found is a freeware program called "Classic Shell" that replaces the Start menu with your choice of three styles of retro Windows Start menus. One of the first things I put on a new computer. Tiles I can't abide. I recently put together a 21" touchscreen Win10 PC in the shop and decided to try tiles again. Even with a bigass touchscreen they're still dumb. Delete, Classic Shell to the rescue again.
 
At least you sound to be somewhat computer literate, Mid. I didn't even follow half of what you wrote! I do share the frustration, though. The company shipped me a new laptop over a month ago and it still sits on the shelf in my office. I won't touch it. One of our tech guys at work is also a full on computer nerd so whenever I need changes I just have him swing by the house. Need to get him over here to fire that thing up for me.
 
Xp? You escape the Wannacry epidemic? We had thousands of win7 pcs catch it at work.

Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk
 
Ha! I work for the Feds, and we have to be taught 6x a year about cybersecurity issues. I practice safe browsing at home, and don't open any attachments in e-mails from folks I don't know. I also work behind a network router (at home) that acts as a firewall, so no one can access my computer. In 20+ years, I've only gotten two viruses, both during dial-ups at hotels. The last was circa 2001.

I also backup things religiously, once a month. Like I said, safe se---err...computing.

The most suspicious site I open is StangFix...
 
There are good Feds and not-so-good secret Feds; I'm from the former group, aka Uncivil Civil Servant.
 
I still have XP on my work laptop. However, I got the "time for an upgrade" email so I think next week I will get Windows 10
 
If you have things that need xp, why not just run a virtual machine of it?
Next pc I build will have to run win 10 natively, and virtual machines of 10, 8, 7, xp, maybe server 2008, and Kali Linux. All this for security and penetration testing.
 
If you have things that need xp, why not just run a virtual machine of it?
Next pc I build will have to run win 10 natively, and virtual machines of 10, 8, 7, xp, maybe server 2008, and Kali Linux. All this for security and penetration testing.
Uhhhhhh he said penetration
 
Back
Top