<p>My personal peeve is when I step away from a windows 7 machine for a bit, and come back to find it rebooted due to a background update.</p>
<p>More annoying is when I'm in a game and windows yanks me out to say "windows needs to reboot in order to apply an update" ... Grrrr</p>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Oct 20, 2011 10:20 AM, "D. Hugh Redelmeier" <<a href="mailto:hugh-pmF8o41NoarQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org">hugh-pmF8o41NoarQT0dZR+AlfA@public.gmane.org</a>> wrote:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
Every once in a while, I run MS Windows. Usually just to do updates.<br>
Some kind of compulsion like obsessive hand washing.<br>
<br>
I rebooted my Fedora 15 desktop machine because of Fedora updates, so I<br>
took the opportunity to update the Vista that came with the machine.<br>
<br>
Infelicities that I remember:<br>
<br>
- Microsoft updates are slow and require a reboot<br>
<br>
- upon reboot, more updates appear. Why? No explanation given (I<br>
could invent some reasons). They too require a reboot.<br>
<br>
- one of the updates prompts for permission to install (ie9, I think).<br>
But it puts the prompt UNDER the Windows Update window so I let the<br>
machine sit there invisibly waiting for me for quite some time until<br>
I moved the Windows Update window and could see it. DUMB.<br>
<br>
- several other non-Microsoft things clamour to be updated and<br>
sometimes require reboots: java, Adobe Flash, Adobe Reader, ATI<br>
Video driver<br>
<br>
- I have to "agree" to multi-page terms at several junctures<br>
<br>
- I have no clue about which upgrades can be done in parallel and<br>
which might step on each others toes. So I do this serially.<br>
<br>
- HP Updates tool says I should update the Intel Matrix driver (for<br>
the hard drives). It stalls during download (0 bytes downloaded).<br>
Perhaps it is a firewall setting, but I get no help as to what the<br>
problem is. (Trying again, after all the other updates, seems to<br>
work. No idea why.)<br>
<br>
- At virtually every step, Vista says that a program is doing<br>
something serious, and do I want to let it?<br>
<br>
- Firefox 3.x doesn't automatically upgrade, so I asked it to check<br>
for updates. It then asked to update to 3.6.y, I said OK, and it<br>
did. After that, it asked if I wanted to update to the latest<br>
version. I then had to download and run an executable that took<br>
several steps.<br>
<br>
- Microsoft Security Essentials is now nagging me about an update. I<br>
guess that means that it isn't updated by Windows Update. No, it<br>
turns out that it was already updated but the notification thingee<br>
hadn't noticed.<br>
<br>
Updating Fedora is much easier.<br>
<br>
BTW, I recently updated my iPad to iOS 5. Even that was more awkward<br>
than Fedora updates. Typing in my WPA key again, through the<br>
touchscreen, was particularly annoying. And yes, I still speak<br>
English. Of course I had to fire up a Windows box to run iTunes to do<br>
the update.<br>
<br>
In contrast, the HP TouchPad update I did yesterday was much easier. I<br>
didn't need to tether it, only one reboot, taken care of<br>
automatically.<br>
<br>
Ubuntu updates are as easy as Fedora updates except in the odd case<br>
where a config file is being changed. Two bad things happen:<br>
<br>
- the update hangs on a prompt (that's against Red Hat rules)<br>
so unattended updates don't work<br>
<br>
- the system wants the operator to specify what it should do with the<br>
conflicting config files. I am usually unprepared to answer<br>
questions about obscure programs' obscure config files.<br>
<br>
I admit that doing better safely is hard.<br>
<br>
CentOS updates are as easy as Fedora updates. But for much of this<br>
year, CentOS didn't issue any updates -- somewhat worrying. They are<br>
back at it now.<br>
--<br>
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</blockquote></div>