Microsoft Worried OEM 'Craplets' Will Harm Vista 527
elsilver writes "An article at the CBC indicates that Microsoft is worried that the assorted crap most OEM companies load onto a new machine may affect users' opinion of Vista. An unnamed executive is concerned that the user will conclude the instability of the non-MS-certified applications is Vista's fault. Is this a serious concern, or is MS trying to bully OEMs into only including Vista-certified apps? As for the OEMs, one "removed older DVD-writing software they found was incompatible and replaced it with Vista's own software." — do they get points for realizing it was both buggy AND redundant?"
Craplets? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Informative)
It's been in the Jagon File [catb.org] for ages..
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Funny)
Application at the USPTO:
Application for patent by Microsoft Corporation.
Craplet: Microsoft Certified Module for the Windows Vista Operating System.
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True, but notice the wording of the entry: it says "A worthless applet, esp. a Java widget. Last time that I checked "esp." means "especially". So, yes, it was mostly used for what you describe but it doesn't need to be. Any applet that is crap can apply. Ever had a Control Panel Applet that was badly behaved? Like those installed along with Creative Drivers? That are crapplets too, even though they are not written in Java.
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1. Buy box (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Buy box.
2. Reformat drive.
3. Install OS clean from media without all the crap, or use an existing corporate image.
But the idea of blaming third-party products for Vista's perception problems is the clumsiest FUD to come out of Microsoft's spin-doctor department in years. They have bugs that log to system files in WinXP that haven't been fixed for THREE YEARS or longer, so I don't buy the "it's the driver" excuses any more.
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Actually, many PCs these days don't even go that far. I saw a new HP that only came with a picture of a CD printed on a piece of paper, with instructions on how to burn your own system restore CDs from the rescue partition on the hard drive, and directions to boot from the rescue partition to reinstall Wind
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Many PCs these days don't ship with a Windows CD. They only come with a set of "System Restore" CDs which will put the system back to out-of-box configuration, including Windows and all preinstalled apps.
The last few I have did come with a separate "OS restore" CD, which was actually just an OEM windows image. I don't know why they couldn't just call it "Windows Install", but it was 'os restore' for three different companies.
Actually, many PCs these days don't even go that far. I saw a new HP that only came with a picture of a CD printed on a piece of paper, with instructions on how to burn your own system restore CDs from the rescue partition on the hard drive, and directions to boot from the rescue partition to reinstall Windows if the hard drive gets screwed up.
The inherent irony there is breathtaking.
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Insightful)
Can I see all the crap and bloat of OEM-installed apps (all for the Benjamins, of course) tainting a person's view of the OS (and even the "Dell"/other brand?) - abso-freikin-lootly.
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OK, lets look at this from a "normal" person's POV.
"Normal" people buy computers of two types. Macs or PeeCees. Macs come from one manufacturer, with one OS. PeeCees come from various manufacturers with one OS.
If something goes wrong with their computer, it gets slow, it crashes, or any of that they blame the manufacturer or
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Interesting)
Business vs. Home (Score:3, Insightful)
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Unless you want a laptop.
Barring a gigantic influx of cash I would never buy a prebuilt desktop unless it was a refurb. Sometimes that can get you a system dramatically cheaper than you can even build it. But for a laptop, you have no options but to simply buy one.
Re:Craplets? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not sure whose side I'm on with this one.. on one hand I could see where OEMs would want to preload with useful utilities but on the other hand they often go far beyond that and install outright crap. Even with XP I've gotten a lot of business by showing up at people's houses or offices and uninstalling some strange DVD burning software that was barely tolerable with windows 98 but now it just crashes XP and doesn't work even half way as well as the cd burning wizard that is built into XP.
Use the Decrapifier !!!! (Score:5, Informative)
Although this is only for XP, I'll bet a version for Vista will come along soon. Or at least one could hope.
Don't add the Crap to begin with (Score:3, Insightful)
The bigger problem comes with the computers I bought that only had those "Recovery" disks instead of actual Windows installation disks. The last time I dealt with one of those I actually went out and bought a copy of Wind
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Then there is that fucking disaster they ca
Mod parent up! (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the best description of those craptacular add-ons from OEM suppliers I've seen yet. Circusware, hehe. I remember the first time installing a retail copy of Windows on a home built PC. Startling in how clean it was. No trial anti-virus or AOL logos (okay, it was a while ago).
I thought it was interesting that Michael Dell asked how much people would pay to get a clean copy of the OS without all the bundled crapware. You can read it in this article: Zdnet blog [zdnet.com]
I would've asked how much it was worth to him to get me to stop building my own PC's and buy another Dell? The arrogance of the position that I would have to pay extra to get rid of crap I didn't want in the first place really chaps my undies. Screw you, Mikey. You can take your cheap ass hardware and OEM circusware, along with your call center techs who don't speak English as a native language, and stick it all right up your ass. Don't act like you have a right to my business. If you want my money, earn it you arrogant bitch.
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This is true for the laptops as well. I don't remember who the OEM is off the top of my head, but Dell does not manufacturer any computers.
Possibly true with their low-end desktop units, but definately not the case with their laptops, especially the higher end ones. In fact, their parts often remain uniform and consistent across multiple product families. (for example, Inspiron 8000,8100, and 8200 all using a compatible video card interface)
The only
Best advice: re-install the OS (Score:3, Insightful)
For corporate environments, Dell, HP (etc.) will pre-load a specified image with the corporate setup. Alternative is to use ghost or similar to build your machines.
The manufacturers get a couple of dollars for each crapware loaded (does any one know the real amount?) On Dells, the Optiplex (business line) has less crap than the Dimension (consumer), but they've started puttin
It IS Vista's fault (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It IS Vista's fault (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a legit concern... although I'd say that's part of rolling out any new piece of software that other software is dependent on, so they just need to deal with it.
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Re:It IS Vista's fault (Score:4, Funny)
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Sometimes, OEMs are installing this extra software
Re:It IS Vista's fault (Score:5, Insightful)
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thats rubbish. i can write a program what would crash ANY OS if it was preloaded on there.
Probably not if you only run it with user privileges on a well-secured Unix box. Which would be the point.
Re:It IS Vista's fault (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:It IS Vista's fault (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, this is a real problem on OS X. A load of sysctls haven't been tweaked since the NeXT days, and the default limit is 100 processes per uid. If you've got a few terminals open then it's very easy to hit this limit, and once you do it's pretty much impossible to do anything unless you can ssh in as another user (I miss virtual terminals on OS X). Mind you, it's much easier to kill OS X by simply allocating a load of memory a page at a time. Hopefully Leopard will include a less broken VM subsystem, but I'm not holding my breath.
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We must note that for 10 years straight MS has been targeting their product to the uneducated majority (I mean not computer educated). They have been able to bear the fruits of that stupidity (as in not-wanting-to-switch, afraid-of-thinking, that kind of things) for so many years.
Now when the tables are turned, and the stupidity is against them (negative PR because of 'craplets'), they don't want it. Sorry, but you can't have the cake and eat
Re:It isn't Vista's fault (Score:3, Insightful)
cat
So, is linux buggy?
Something from userland? Here it is:
int main()
{
while(1) {
fork();
}
}
Re:It isn't Vista's fault (Score:5, Informative)
bash:
As for the forkbomb, have a look at "ulimit -u"
I agree with you that it's not always the OS fault, but a _properly configured_ operating system should not become unstable when it is running crappy code.
How do you do "ulimit -u" on Windows btw?
My guess (Score:5, Interesting)
A company like apple, which monopolises the whole process to fit with their brand, is in a better position here. I mean, from a marketing perspective, all it takes is one lousy OEM company to install buggy shit on their computers and you can ruin the Vista brand.
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I concur (Score:4, Interesting)
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I don't care about the machine, I can write crap software to bu
Re:My guess (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually it takes only 1 application that you use frequently that sucks and your overall feeling of the OS is down. Just take an example, how often have you heard "linux sucks because I XXX does not work".
Same happen in Windows. Buy a new laptop and see it painfully load 35 icons in the systray, replace the default association of JPG file to another crapware that display a 30 seconds modal popup dialog that says the viewer you are using is shareware and open IE on the HowTo buy page. The feeling of the user will be: Vista sucks, and I paid 2000$ and my machine is slow like a dog because of Vista. Natural feeling.
The same feeling that people in Europe that have been provided with the XP-E edition ( no media player ) think that XP is shit because it cannot read a stupid AVI file.
Re:My guess (Score:5, Informative)
This is ignorant bullshit. The sans-WMP version was aimed at OEMs who would then install an other player (since, you know, that was the fucking point of it all) so the user would receive a computer that has a media player. The chances that an end user would end up buying an "Edition N" (since that's how it's called) are rather slim and most probably he would have to get out of his way to get one.
(Also, from what I have seen, in a default Win XP install WMP probably is not able to play DivX/Xvid encoded avis.)
Re:My guess (Score:5, Interesting)
Problem is that the customer is RIGHT in that statement. I am demoing Vista here at the office because the Boss wants us to test it as many of our customers are the "oooooh new shiney!" type.
I am running it in slow hardware... Pentium 4 3.2ghz 1gig ram and SATA drives.
and it is in fact SLOW AS A DOG compared to XP.... Yes, I only have a low end Nvidia 6600GT video card with 256 meg of ram, so that might be the problem as well.
But the honest truth is that Vista is very slow compared to XP. if I turn off all the crap it gets better but most people wont turn off the crap because the difference between vista and XP disappears.
And that is what customers want... Purdy shiney flashey! they do not give a rats ass about anything they cant see and feel.
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I call BS. I'm running Vista (RTM) on a P4 2.66GHz (Northwood) system with a GeForce 6200 (AGP, 128M) and 768MB of memory. It's not what I'd call fast, but it's not "SLOW AS A DOG" either.
Keep in mind that the NVIDIA drivers included with Vista are old and slow. Upgrading to the latest build (now officially available and WHQL certified) improved performance substantially.
Vista needs AT LEAST 512M of memory to run decently, preferably 1GB. Memory, not CPU ti
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So which one OS do you know which will perform just as well as a clean install if you load a ton of crapware on every startup?
I suppose it should be a magical one, where if you load ten apps each taking 10 MB of RAM and 3% of CPU idling, you still end up with all of your free RAM and 0% CPU usage.
The "fundimental" problem is with you.
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Vista. An unnamed executive is concerned that the user will conclude the instability of the non-MS-certified applications is Vista's fault.
Bloatware != Unstable programs.
Unstable programs != Unstable OS
(exception: kernel mode drivers)
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I wonder if that will stop MS trying to shove Windows Live in your face when you first start Vista. They certainly did it in the beta release, and it would be hard to see how they could justify that if they seek to ban other AV / Firewall products from being installed by Dell or whoever. It's like what they did when they bundled MSN with Windows 95.
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Those Craplets are the keys to Microsoft's success (Score:5, Interesting)
We payed the OEMs handsomely for the privilige of reducing the functionality of our software - both in discounts and in revenue-share kickbacks for upgrades.
I'm pretty certain the money the OEMs makes from this crippleware *MORE* than pays for the cost of Windows (especially the discounted OEM windows) - and is the #1 reason HP, Dell, etc like Windows over Linux.
Get rid of the paid-for-crippleware, and OEMs will jump to Linux very quickly.
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Besides, why is Vista so special? From what I can tell it should be more resistant to OEM software bugs than 95/98/ME, and no less resist
Craplets you say? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Crap, cruft, call it whatever you wish... It's stuff installed on the OS when I wish to have a clean copy of my OS from the start.
You can call the OS *itself* crap, sure, but then you shouldn't purchase a laptop with Windows preinstalled.
There exist several alternatives for that option these days.
It won't work - Drivers need the OEM tweaks (Score:2, Insightful)
Sorry, that simply won't work. On many OEM laptops (many Sony, some Dell, some HP) you have components that simply won't work right with the default Windows drivers. The truth is that the OEMs actually do quite a bit of work digging up exact working versions of drivers; and debugging the dependances between them; and going back to the HW and SW vendors to resolve problems. I'd go so far as to say
Good! (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm used to starting with a clean hard drive and installing an OEM Windows, so I was horrified by how many apps were running in the syste
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People crap all over Dell here, but to their credit I get a (clean) reinstall CD with every business machine I purchase, and many of the consumer models. Even better, their deal with MS allows their OEM CDs to reinstall on any Dell machine (firmware check, iirc). Most
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Certain others I won't name are substantially worse.
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Naturally, I had blatted this partition when I installed fedora. Then, when a few weeks latter I decided I actually wanted to dual boot I seemed to be SOL. However, in Dell's credit and despite consistent negative press regarding their technical suppo
you get what you pay for. (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's pick on Dell, since they're what I'm most familiar with in my professional dealings:
Part of the reason many of their machines, -especially- the Dell Inspiron laptops, are so cheap is because the cost of the machine is being heavily subsidised by 3rd-party product placements. They also outsource technical support for consumer-level hardware to second-rate call facilities in India that don't have the capability to escalate problems to technicians in the United States.
If you buy a Dell Precision laptop, you'll get the proper media and you won't be subject to piles of shovelware. Yes, it's somewhat more expensive, but you get treated much better. The build quality of the Precision line is miles better, to boot; it's more likely to last the rigours of four, five years of use.
Always remember: You get what you pay for.
good and evil (Score:5, Insightful)
Evil: This is about as immune to abuse as a government controlled press.
Does this mean... (Score:2)
In all seriousness, this is great news. I'm all in favor of Packard-Bell supporting a group home for the criminally insane and mentally handicapped, but don't have them write software. The first thing I do when I get a new computer is to wipe the Hard Disk, reinstall Windows, and one by one copy drivers I need off of the Manufacturers' website.
Understandable (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Understandable (Score:4, Funny)
Is there a good laptop manufacturer who will sell me a "blank slate" laptop?
Yes [apple.com]
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Seriously, though, I would think Apple or just about any flavor of Linux would fit this description. If the GP meant manufacturers who sell Win machines, look at the Dell Latitude and Precision lines (God, I sound like a Dell fanboi myself). They have significantly scaled back the crap for the business machines.
Re:Understandable (Score:5, Insightful)
I like the Apple hardware products and the OSX, but to say that Apple doesn't load their new laptops with crapware and sleazeware would be disingenuous. If I buy a $3K MacBook Pro, should I expect to get a popup asking if I want to upgrade my trial copy of QuickTime? I enjoy the iLife suite of software, but I didn't have much of a choice to buy the laptop without it. I don't think the trial edition of OpenBase or the inclusion of OmniOutliner or ComicChat can really be considered a "blank slate."
The only thing in Apple's favor here (and it's a big point in their favor) is that it's absolutely and amazingly trivial to wipe the slate clean myself: drag unwanted items to trashcan, Empty Trash. I am still annoyed that a preinstalled QuickTime on a flagship hardware image is nagware. Hello, the 70s called and want their nags back. If the alternatives like VLC and Mplayer would really integrate as a replacement for QuickTime, I'd probably use them instead.
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However. How many of these apps automatically load on startup? I don't ever remember OmniOutliner or ComicChat starting up every single time I start up.
Want to remove iLife, OmniOutliner, etc? Drag them to the trash. Empty trash. Try removing Dell Media App, Dell Quick Sets, RealPlayer and AOL on XP and tell me how long it takes.
Oh... and Apple at least still bundles the Install DVD so you can go to a completely blank slate if you really want to.
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Also, Alienware PCs and Laptops are supposedly free of bloatware.
Make Crap Optional (Score:2, Interesting)
By providing the original installation media without installing it, Microsoft is happy that the software doesn't come pre-loaded, the end user is happy that they don't have to remove stuff once they buy their computer, and the OEM distributor should be happy because they will ge
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Yes (Score:5, Interesting)
My computer came with XP and a preinstalled keyboard shortcut program. This program had the nasty side effect of crashing ANY fullscreen app that tried to launch, with the single exception of Jedi Outcast.
At the time, none of these other games I had were designed with XP in mind, so I immediately assumed that XP's compatibility was abysmal and I was NOT happy. Fortunately I was able to correct the REAL problem soon enough.
finally! (Score:3, Insightful)
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Back when Windows 95 first came out, Compaq had a build of 95 that was so overloaded, I referred to it as CompaqOS. Looking at it you would have no idea that MS even made the OS, since just about every branded Windows Item was Replaced with Presario. Even the Login prompts were different, with a graphical user interface similar to the Welcome screen but w
I for one agree (Score:5, Informative)
Part of the reason for this is because I don't want to upgrade to Vista within 18 months, which I'll pretty much have to if I don't have an easy way to downgrade. However, even without Vista on the horizon I'd be doing this. The reason is that even buying PC's aimed squarely at businesses through business suppliers, I wind up with OEM builds which have all sorts of odd things on them. For instance:
Because of Microsoft's leaning on these vendors, I can't get a straight, simple Windows install CD with these PCs. Instead, I get an automatic "system restore" CD which includes all this extra rubbish. And the product key on the PC only works with CDs supplied by the vendor.
So what I'm working on now is my own automatic-building CD which installs a plain, boring Windows setup, handles drivers and installs basic stuff like office. I've spent the last 3 days on this solid, and it's soul destroying. You wind up spending half the day watching Windows install, getting to the end and finding that you made some simple mistake and now it's back to fix that, recreate the CD and try again. Ghost isn't really an option, as I've got more different hardware configurations than I know what to do with and I don't have the budget to replace every single desktop and laptop in one go.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
No idea if it's kosher with the licensing, but you could just use a pirated key on install and then use the tool to force the original serial back onto the machine.
I'm with MS on this one (Score:2)
I agree (Score:2)
Yes, I think it is... I remember a recent Dell laptop we got... It was so riddled with crap that at the first boot, before we had uninstalled a lot of stuff like antivirus tool *trials* and whatnot, we had confirmations and requests to do stuff basically whatever step we tried to take in Windows. Why can't these just set up their Windows installs with whatever drivers they need (drivers, not applications) and leave the user with a stack of CD's to install. They could even call the
And they are right (Score:2)
Microsoft is dead correct, this software is virtually always terrible.
I won 2 excellent systems from... (Score:2, Interesting)
Observations (Score:5, Insightful)
It's also funny that volunteer projects like Debian and Gentoo seem to have no problem making a great distribution out of widely scattered and disorganized software, whereas the commercial vendors who ship customized versions of Windows seem to be universally succeeding only in making Windows crappier to the point that you really don't want to use the customized version.
I guess that Microsoft middle road between providing just the bare bones like Linux and the FSF do on one hand, and providing a complete package, like Apple does, on the other hand, really isn't working well.
Microsofts own fault (Score:2, Interesting)
At some point they changed this policy,and now reward those manufacturer who sell systems with restore CDs. Of course the manufacturers jumped the chance, and included as many "craplets" as they could. And with most manufacturers shipping ONLY restore CDs and no install CDs, the only way to get a clean
They should ban startup apps from the registry (Score:5, Insightful)
In the meantime (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/uti
It enumerates pretty much everything set to launch at start up and gives you the option to turn it off.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Lol (Score:4, Insightful)
*XP is released, Dell sells a billion computers*
Customers: Why the hell won't your computer allow me to edit my pictures, and why do I have a virus?
Tech Support: Well you need to install this third party software and...
Customers: AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It's too hard!!!!!!!!!!!! Do it for me!!!!!!!!!!!
System Builders: OK, it's all installed.
Customers: Why the hell is my computer so slow?
Tech Support: Well you said that you wanted us to install this software for you and...
Customers: AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Make my computer faster!!!!!!!!!!!
System Builders: OK, it's a bare build again.
*Vista is released*
Customers: Why the hell won't your computer allow me to edit my pictures and why do I have a virus?
Terminology (Score:3, Funny)
I just want to make sure I have my terminology right for when the shit hits the fan.
Hang on a mo... (Score:4, Informative)
Hmm.
* Windows Media Player
* Windows Movie Maker
* CD burning wizard
* Zip files wizard
* Outlook Express (you try explaining why it's needed on a server OS, or removing it...)
* MSN
* Windows Messenger
I'm sure I've missed something, please feel free to enlighten me.
results from years of OS crashes due to app failur (Score:3, Insightful)
Device drivers are another story but still, tech support should be able to troubleshoot the problem instead of telling most people to reinstall the OS.
Forcing developers to get MS certification is just another way to control the development market and allow Microsofts own developers advantages when they feel they want the market. It is interesting how Microsoft is already concerned about who will get blamed for poor user experiences with their NEW operating system. I guess businesses must be having a grand time with it already.
LoB
Now that you mention it... (Score:2)
1) MS is finally seeing that trusting third parties to do the important stuff is bogus, and like Mac & Nintendo before it, is attempting to monopolize on the software so that the end-user experience is owed to MS:
2) Vista is such a drastic new paradigm that nothing works on it, ergo they want to hide this problem as long as possible.
Re:Now that you mention it... (Score:4, Informative)
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"We won't sell Windows to you unless you offer your users the option of a clean install with all the apps you want to bundle on seperate media."
I don't think the DoJ would have any problem with Microsoft forcing vendors to let the user decide what they want.
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1) power on and see if hardware and drivers all work
2) copy drivers off
3) format the partition and install just windows an
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A.Any product considered Spyware (the definition microsoft uses when they generate the MS anti-spyware lists would be a good place to start)
B.Anything that is time limited,feature limited etc and requires extra purchases to unlock functionality that would be available if you bought the program from a store. (so WOW is ok because the subscription money has to be paid even for a s
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Did you lose your train of thought halfway through?