Category Archives: Windows

Windows 8.1 available to manufacturers in late August

On July 8, at the Worldwide Partner Conference in Houston, Microsoft executives announced that Windows 8.1 will be released to manufacturing in late August. Still no word on when the update will become available to consumers in retail stores or through other channels.

Another question that remains is whether Windows 8.1 will be available through Windows Update or Windows automatic updates. If so, will it be a forced update, or will it be optional? In the past, Windows Service Packs (which are the closest analog to the 8.1 update) were available via Windows/auto update and – at least initially – not forced.

Windows 8.1 makes search even less useful

Microsoft has been gradually destroying Windows’ search capabilities since Vista. When I originally evaluated Vista, I discovered that searching for file contents would mysteriously fail if the search string only existed past the first ten kilobytes in the files being searched. I posted a video on Youtube to demonstrate the problem.

Vista search had a lot of problems, but I had discovered workarounds for most of its bizarre limitations. The 10K problem looked like a bug, so I dutifully reported it to Microsoft. After several hours on the phone with Microsoft Support, they were able to reproduce the problem and it was fixed in Vista Service Pack 1.

But the damage was done. With each new version of Windows, search has become increasingly useless, and I’m reluctant to trust it. I still try to use it, but I always go back to third party tools such as Everything and Fileseek, or even (when desperate), ancient DOS tools like FINDSTR.

The root of this gradual decline in Windows’ search functionality seems to be one of perspective. As clearly demonstrated by the Windows 8 UI, Microsoft no longer cares about ‘enthusiast’ users, which include power users, system administrators and software developers. For these elite users, the new UI just gets in the way, and the search tools are almost entirely useless.

<rant>Microsoft is making Windows a consumer-oriented O/S. What Microsoft doesn’t seem to realize is that while this change may solidify Windows as the consumer O/S of choice, and reduce support costs, they are driving enthusiast users, including me, to Linux. Worse, business IT departments are staffed with enthusiast users, and these are the people who evaluate software and make organization-wide recommendations. Eventually, these people are going to get tired of fighting Microsoft and look elsewhere for a corporate O/S.</rant>

All of which leads me to wonder how the otherwise reliable Ars Technica could publish an article extolling the virtues of the search changes coming in Windows 8.1. Possibly Ars has realized that Windows is now a consumer-grade O/S and adjusted their viewpoint to suit.

In Windows 8.1, search will be entirely integrated with the Bing web search engine. Any time you search for something, Windows will assume you want to search the web as well as certain specific areas of your local system. This also means that you’ll start seeing advertisements in your Windows search results.

Problems I see with this change:

  • Blurring the line between local and web search is dangerous for privacy.
  • For me, as with many users, there are distinct search use cases; there is almost never any reason to search the web when I’m looking for something on my local system, or search my local system when I’m looking for something on the web.
  • The same applies when searching for locally installed programs or features; it’s an activity that’s completely separate from web searching.
  • I was previously able (in Windows XP) to easily search local files in a particular folder and its subfolders, by file name and/or contents. Now that functionality has been eliminated: it is simply no longer possible to perform useful local searches and third party software is required.

Advance notification for July 2013 Patch Tuesday

The next batch of updates from Microsoft will become available starting at about 10am PST on July 9. This month’s patches comprise seven bulletins – four of which are flagged as critical – addressing vulnerabilities in Windows, the .NET Framework, Silverlight, Internet Explorer and the GDI+ subsystem.

Related posts from Microsoft:

A good reason to avoid Windows 8.1: advertising

When Microsoft first started talking about making the Windows user interface more like the XBox 360 UI, I wondered if that also meant we would be seeing advertising in Windows 8. I was both surprised and relieved to see that the Windows 8 Start screen was not filled with ads, which alas cannot be said of the XBox 360 UI.

Well, that relief was short-lived. It was recently announced by Microsoft that the search function built into Windows will display advertising, starting with the Windows 8.1 update. As you read the announcement, marvel at the way advertising will “mak[e] it easier for consumers to complete tasks.” Nice try.

Update for Adobe Flash

Adobe has just announced another Flash update. The new version is 11.7.700.224. As always, this update addresses “vulnerabilities that could cause a crash and potentially allow an attacker to take control of the affected system.”

The official bulletin has all the technical details. The runtime announcement has additional details.

An equivalent patch for Internet Explorer 10 on Windows 8 will be available from Microsoft Update. The new version of Flash in IE10 will be 11.7.700.224.

Google Chrome has also been updated to include a new version of Flash: 11.7.700.225. Chrome normally updates its own version of Flash automatically.

Update 2013Jun14: The Internet Explorer 10 Flash update is now available.

Patch Tuesday for June 2013

This month there are five bulletins, addressing 23 vulnerabilities in Windows, Office and Internet Explorer. Only one (MS13-047, affecting Internet Explorer) is marked as Critical.

The bulletin summary has all the technical details.

Related links:
Improved cryptography infrastructure and the June 2013 bulletins
SANS: Microsoft June 2013 Black Tuesday Overview

Infoworld proposes a design for the next version of Windows

It seems clear that Microsoft isn’t going to fix Windows 8 with Windows 8.1. The changes in 8.1 are trivial and do not address the major concerns about Windows 8.

Infoworld has a solution: a new design for the next version of Windows, code-named Windows Red. This is a serious re-thinking of the design choices made by Microsoft and an attempt to rectify Windows 8’s problems.

All of Infoworld’s changes make sense to me. It would be wonderful if Microsoft paid attention to this design and actually used some or all of it. But knowing Microsoft, they’ll ignore it completely.

Infoworld also posted a useful followup with additional details on Windows Red.