A week in the life of my Mac and PC

karavite

Registered
Despite wishing otherwise, I have a PC running W2000 that I use for my job. I work at home most of the time so my trusty Mac is right there by my side. Though I cannot access my companies network on my Mac (it just ins't possible), I often use the Mac for many tasks because it is faster, more able to handle having 10 applications running and is just plain more fun and productive. For example, using BBedit. Still, these arguments can be taken either way.

However, this past week, despite being a good PC citizen by being up on all my patches and running an equally up to date Norton virus scan EVERY DAY my PC became infected with the Coreflood.backdoor trojan horse. I had to restart the machine in safe mode, run Norton (took about 2 hours), delete the files it isloated then edit my Windows registry (after backing it up to a floppy of course - see you really do need a floppy in PCs!). A few days later I was alerted about yet another patch by MS (seems like it addresses Coreflood.backdoor) and had to take a little time to install that (about 1 hour tops - find it, read the instructions, take the various backup precautions recommended by MS- I was burned once before -, download it, install it, restart...).

Any way, this week alone, addressing threats to Windows cost me almost 4-5 hours of productivity. Though I am not as tech savvy as many of the people on this forum, I doubt most computer users would be able to do this quicker or at all (editing your Windows registry could lead to disaster). Unlike most everyone else in the world, I had a Mac to use while my PC chugged away. Even if I hadn't gotten the trojan horse, I still had to spend time on making my PC safe. Sure 1 hour doesn't seem like much (I am billed out by my company at about $140 an hour), but if you multiply the hourly wage/rate/productivity by the all the Windows users in the US (or world) then add in all the tech support time, how much is this costing business, education, healthcare, the government...? Even if every Windows user in the world knew what to do to prevent viruses and did it, it takes time away from work. Who pays for that time? Our employeers? Or should we do it at lunch? Can I send a bill to Bill Gates every week?
 
If only ALL people who hated this messy situation could send bills to Bill Gates :rolleyes:

He surely would deserve his name! BILL Gates! :p

I'm with you on this one and then some because I fix similar problems every single day! Multiply that by at least 2 Wintels/Amds each and every day... :(
 
Macs are just as bad. Turn it on, run the update program, find there are updates, check all boxes, click "Update now", enter password, click Agree, then work while it downloads/installs patches and reboot when you feel like it.
Usually cost me about 10 minutes every other week...

Damn you Apple!
 
Originally posted by voice-
Macs are just as bad. Turn it on, run the update program, find there are updates, check all boxes, click "Update now", enter password, click Agree, then work while it downloads/installs patches and reboot when you feel like it.
Usually cost me about 10 minutes every other week...

Damn you Apple!

LOL

:D

:D

;)
 
Yes, I really hate all those Apple updates they force me to run so easily! I mean where is the challenge, the risk, the adventure, the confusing language...? Why can't we have registries to edit, safe mode... and the added thrill of knowing if we make the slightest error our system will be completely hosed? Why can't we have the fun of knowing we can always boot my machine off a floppy diskette (that is if we took the time to create said floppy)! It just isn't fair. :)
 
But you can have the lovely experience of a Linux update ;)
Just login as 'root' and use the terminal mode: thrillin' moments, especially if you forgot the correct libraries... or better if you need to recompile the kernel. Or was this Darwin..? :p

Greetings
nervus
 
Yes, Mac OS X has more of an "Unsafe Mode:" Single-user mode.

Just think, Mac OS X works better than Windows, and even though it rarely has problems, when it crashes and burns, it does so much more spectacularly than Windows does! :)
 
I just remembered that little unix trick where you the system thinks bill gates is a process:

> Bill Gates
> Kill Gates?

Aw I just tried it again and it doesn't seem to work any more.

Anyway, you're right Arden. I started a new multimedia and sound engineering course the other week, it's all been quite basic until now, more or less how to use OSX but my lecturer had the same opinion - PCs crash more, but when a Mac does crash you'll know about it :) This happened to my mate's PowerBook last week - running fine then system folder becomes goosed for no reason and the CD drive dies. There's another few days I have to wait for that master he was doing for me :)
 
Well, needed to be said that if Mac had 95% of the market there would be more attacks on our OS from viruses and etc. Lucky for us we're in minority :p

I've used Apple computers since mid 80's and been online since -95 and I have to say I've never really thought about being careful of what I'm installing/downloading/opening witch by the way have been plenty of little obscure files. I have had only one virus and that was a long time ago before the internet age.

Viktor
 
Sometimes I think we should all bill Gates. ;-) ... Heh... Let's make that an e-Mail signature or something.

"Does Microsoft software reduce your productivity? Consider to bill Gates."
 
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