Re: how did Microsoft break away from OS/2?
- From: jasonmbowen@xxxxxxxxx
- Date: 4 May 2006 14:07:17 -0700
tholen@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Jason Bowen.org writes:
Leauki wrote:
Windows NT was slower and less compatible than OS/2, but it was always
more stable and more secure.
Not from my perspective. I've never had an infected OS/2 machine, whereas
a Windows laptop got infected simply by being connected to a network.
Specifically, what was your laptop infected with?
The systems people who discovered the excessive network traffic ran
a virus scan on it, the virus scan turned up nothing.
Whose Windows laptop got infected by simply connecting to a network in
the statement above?
Do you have a name
given by a body such as CERT or do you know the attack vector?
All I know is that the machine was trying to spread the virus by
sending out packets looking for open ports on other machines
connected to the same network. The systems people said that it
had sent out 20,000 attempts in the few hours it had been connected
to their network.
So this laptop wasn't your laptop correct? I've run OpenBSD, Linux,
Mac OS X, Windows 9x, Win 2k, Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Solaris
and OS/2 at home and have never had a problem. I know that a default
XP install without a virus scanner, and without installing all the
known patches, and without being behind a NATed firewall will succumb
to the massive scans on the Internet within minutes but I view that as
user error. If you stick a Solaris or Linux box without patches on the
Internet without the same precautions you will be rooted as well,
though it will take longer since less people look for holes in Solaris
or Linux.
Security patches are released to fix holes. If you run an operating
system without applying the patches you are leaving yourself open.
Most of the exploits on the internet use vectors that are known and
that have been fixed, most users just don't care to take the time to
apply updates. If people run a Sun Server without applying patches do
we say that Solaris is inherently insecure when they get compromised?
Security isn't a product, it is a process.
And I've had Windows crash on me surprisingly often, considering
its supposed stability.
What are the crashes based on?
Nothing obvious. Just complete lockup.
Accessing certain hardware or running a certain program?
Not that I could tell.
Are they reproducible?
No, which makes it hard to track down.
Hmmm odd, I've always been able to trouble shoot. It has been my
experience that if XP has a fatal error it comes back with a message
letting you know. If it just freezes, it is probably hardware since
the OS obviously has responded to a trap. You keep removing parts of
the equation until the error goes away. Random errors suggest hardware
problems. Replacing things like memory or other swappable devices
always helps. I couldn't install Warp 3 on a machine with a zip drive
back in the day. I had to open the case and disconnect the drive and
install with un-attached.
.
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