• Re: Nobody ditching Win10?

    From Petzl@petzlx@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 09:58:47 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    --
    Petzl
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Petzl@petzlx@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 10:15:16 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 08:33:13 +1100, Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 07:44:18 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 25 Oct 2025 20:35:51 +1000, noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 09:59:01 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your >>>> old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till >>>> the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates) >>>> program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    only if you give your soul to MS.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls. >>>anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze over >>>before that happens here.

    Seems after maybe because of Windows 11 the tide is turning against >>Microsoft?
    Possibly Microsoft are trying to get the rest of EU not to follow.

    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece, bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it. wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,
    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that. >>Skype I had for years dumped that (really bad news for me, I used to
    make overseas phone calls), a Windows phone they dumped that again the >>APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.
    Personally would advise others to swap computer platforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,
    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    Germany and Denmark's governments are not using Microsoft, with the
    German state of Schleswig-Holstein leading the shift to open-source >>alternatives like LibreOffice and Linux, and the Danish Ministry of
    Digital Affairs following suit. Both are making the transition to
    reduce dependency on foreign tech companies, lower costs, and increase >>digital sovereignty. Denmark's move, which began in the summer of
    2025, is part of a four-year digital strategy, with cities like
    Copenhagen and Aarhus also adopting open-source solutions.
    <https://www.uctoday.com/unified-communications/denmark-now-germany-is-the-public-sector-migrating-away-from-the-microsoft-suite/>
    https://tinyurl.com/36ad9jfj
    Denmark, Now Germany: Is the Public Sector Migrating Away from the >>Microsoft Suite?
    The Danish government and its top municipalities, alongside a state in >>Germany, are migrating away from Microsoft in a move that could cause
    an avalanche

    I have just had a popup from MSoft informing me of the demise of
    Publisher in 12 months time. Thereafter it's irreclaimable.
    I can convert the files to Word, but who knows what's next.

    Doubt if MS users count in MS's equation.
    MS believe they are to big to fail.
    Swedish maker of FACIT computers thought so also!
    Started in 1918. The only thing salvageable was it's worldwide
    distribution network

    I see Chrome operating system has and is developing.
    Big let down was Australian Internet was slow (Web Based Linux system)
    Now speed should not be a problem. Easy to install, possibly will come installed if asked for?
    Key Advantages
    Fast boot and low system resource usage.
    Built-in malware protection and verified boot.
    Cloud integration through Google Drive and Google Workspace.
    Easy management for schools and organizations via admin controls.?
    Overall, ChromeOS is best suited for users who primarily work online,
    use Google apps heavily, and value speed, simplicity, and automatic
    maintenance over offline flexibility
    --
    Petzl
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 11:28:33 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Petzl wrote:
    On 25 Oct 2025 20:35:51 +1000, noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 09:59:01 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your >>> old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till >>> the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates) >>> program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    only if you give your soul to MS.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze over
    before that happens here.

    Seems after maybe because of Windows 11 the tide is turning against Microsoft?

    yep

    Possibly Microsoft are trying to get the rest of EU not to follow.

    yes


    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    except there may be alternative programs you can use that work just as
    well. I haven't needed any windoze programs since I switched to Linux


    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece, bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it.

    you can use it online for free, but Linux Libre Office does everything
    M$ Office does, and it's free and not online, so you have total control

    wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,
    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that.
    Skype I had for years dumped that (really bad news for me, I used to
    make overseas phone calls), a Windows phone they dumped that

    that was a poor decision. no way would i ever buy a phone with a M$ OS

    again the
    APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.
    Personally would advise others to swap computer platforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,
    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    well they lied when they said w10 would be the last windoze ever, so who
    knows what they will do next? maybe make the whole windows OS online
    only? you can't trust M$. you should have learnt that by now


    Germany and Denmark's governments are not using Microsoft, with the
    German state of Schleswig-Holstein leading the shift to open-source alternatives like LibreOffice and Linux, and the Danish Ministry of
    Digital Affairs following suit. Both are making the transition to
    reduce dependency on foreign tech companies, lower costs, and increase digital sovereignty. Denmark's move, which began in the summer of
    2025, is part of a four-year digital strategy, with cities like
    Copenhagen and Aarhus also adopting open-source solutions.

    <https://www.uctoday.com/unified-communications/denmark-now-germany-is-the-public-sector-migrating-away-from-the-microsoft-suite/>
    https://tinyurl.com/36ad9jfj
    Denmark, Now Germany: Is the Public Sector Migrating Away from the
    Microsoft Suite?
    The Danish government and its top municipalities, alongside a state in Germany, are migrating away from Microsoft in a move that could cause
    an avalanche
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 11:32:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Petzl wrote:
    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your >>> old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till >>> the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates) >>> program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    all you need to do when selling a used PC is remove the drive. simplez!
    or you can wipe it using a high level erase tool
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 11:34:14 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).


    I agree
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Petzl@petzlx@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 11:44:11 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 11:28:33 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:


    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    except there may be alternative programs you can use that work just as
    well. I haven't needed any windoze programs since I switched to Linux


    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece, bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it.

    you can use it online for free, but Linux Libre Office does everything
    M$ Office does, and it's free and not online, so you have total control

    wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,
    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that.
    Skype I had for years dumped that (really bad news for me, I used to
    make overseas phone calls), a Windows phone they dumped that

    that was a poor decision. no way would i ever buy a phone with a M$ OS

    again the
    APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.
    Personally would advise others to swap computer platforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,
    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    well they lied when they said w10 would be the last windoze ever, so who >knows what they will do next? maybe make the whole windows OS online
    only? you can't trust M$. you should have learnt that by now


    I'vve had it with them been using since DOS came out
    Not that they care
    They think Microsoft are to big to fail.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Petzl@petzlx@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 11:52:25 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 11:32:02 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Petzl wrote:
    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your >>>> old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till >>>> the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security Updates) >>>> program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    all you need to do when selling a used PC is remove the drive. simplez!
    or you can wipe it using a high level erase tool

    By the time I've dumped a computer they have little value
    I just remove drive and bin it
    My Mobile I so far refuse to use it for money transactions, I do have
    Paid version of bitdefender on it, but tends to be nagware
    Don't want to lock screen, don't want fingerprint login, etc
    My mobile provider seems very good at blocking spam txt and callers.
    don't need theirs.
    Don't want to be told daily I haven't activated these.

    Looking at dumping them
    --
    Petzl
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 12:10:31 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote
    noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote
    Frank Slootweg wrote
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote

    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    only if you give your soul to MS.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze
    over before that happens here.

    Seems after maybe because of Windows 11 the tide is turning against Microsoft?

    Fantasy. You dont even know if someone collected the verge dumps

    Possibly Microsoft are trying to get the rest of EU not to follow.

    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    And you are too stupid to use it anyway

    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece,

    More of your mindless bullshit

    bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it. wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,

    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that.
    Skype I had for years dumped that

    They just moved to Teams which does FAR more

    (really bad news for me, I used to make overseas phone calls),

    And you are too stupid to work out that
    plenty of mobile sims do that for free

    Windows phone they dumped that again the
    APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.

    Personally would advise others to swap computerplatforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,

    More of your mindless bullshit

    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    Not a chance

    Germany and Denmark's governments are not using Microsoft,

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit

    with the
    German state of Schleswig-Holstein leading the shift to open-source alternatives like LibreOffice and Linux,

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit

    and the Danish Ministry of Digital Affairs following suit.

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit

    Both are making the transition to
    reduce dependency on foreign tech companies, lower costs, and increase digital sovereignty.

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit

    Denmark's move, which began in the summer of
    2025, is part of a four-year digital strategy, with cities like
    Copenhagen and Aarhus also adopting open-source solutions.

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit

    <https://www.uctoday.com/unified-communications/denmark-now-germany-is-the-public-sector-migrating-away-from-the-microsoft-suite/>
    https://tinyurl.com/36ad9jfj

    Wota s stunningly impeccible source

    Denmark, Now Germany: Is the Public Sector Migrating Away from the
    Microsoft Suite?
    The Danish government and its top municipalities, alongside a state in Germany, are migrating away from Microsoft in a move that could cause
    an avalanche

    More of your mindless pig ignorant bullshit
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 12:13:26 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 12:29:33 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 10:15:16 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 08:33:13 +1100, Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 07:44:18 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 25 Oct 2025 20:35:51 +1000, noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 09:59:01 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is >>>>>> quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked >>>>>> out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer >>>>> your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date >>>>> till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    only if you give your soul to MS.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze >>>> over
    before that happens here.

    Seems after maybe because of Windows 11 the tide is turning against
    Microsoft?
    Possibly Microsoft are trying to get the rest of EU not to follow.

    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece, bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it. wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,
    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that.
    Skype I had for years dumped that (really bad news for me, I used to
    make overseas phone calls), a Windows phone they dumped that again the
    APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.
    Personally would advise others to swap computer platforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,
    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    Germany and Denmark's governments are not using Microsoft, with the
    German state of Schleswig-Holstein leading the shift to open-source
    alternatives like LibreOffice and Linux, and the Danish Ministry of
    Digital Affairs following suit. Both are making the transition to
    reduce dependency on foreign tech companies, lower costs, and increase
    digital sovereignty. Denmark's move, which began in the summer of
    2025, is part of a four-year digital strategy, with cities like
    Copenhagen and Aarhus also adopting open-source solutions.

    <https://www.uctoday.com/unified-communications/denmark-now-germany-is-the-public-sector-migrating-away-from-the-microsoft-suite/>
    https://tinyurl.com/36ad9jfj
    Denmark, Now Germany: Is the Public Sector Migrating Away from the
    Microsoft Suite?
    The Danish government and its top municipalities, alongside a state in
    Germany, are migrating away from Microsoft in a move that could cause
    an avalanche

    I have just had a popup from MSoft informing me of the demise of
    Publisher in 12 months time. Thereafter it's irreclaimable.
    I can convert the files to Word, but who knows what's next.

    Doubt if MS users count in MS's equation.
    MS believe they are to big to fail.

    And they are

    Swedish maker of FACIT computers thought so also!
    Started in 1918. The only thing salvageable was it's worldwide
    distribution network

    Irrelevant to Microsoft

    I see Chrome operating system has and is developing.

    More fool you given how pathetic it is

    Big let down was Australian Internet was slow (Web Based Linux system)
    Now speed should not be a problem. Easy to install, possibly will come installed if asked for?
    Key Advantages
    Fast boot and low system resource usage.
    Built-in malware protection and verified boot.

    True in spades of Win11

    Cloud integration through Google Drive and Google Workspace.
    Easy management for schools and organizations via admin controls.?
    Overall, ChromeOS is best suited for users who primarily work online,
    use Google apps heavily, and value speed, simplicity, and automatic maintenance over offline flexibility

    Its just as fucked as chromebooks
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 12:32:07 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 11:28:33 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Petzl wrote:
    On 25 Oct 2025 20:35:51 +1000, noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 09:59:01 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is
    quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked >>>>> out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer
    your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date
    till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    only if you give your soul to MS.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze
    over
    before that happens here.

    Seems after maybe because of Windows 11 the tide is turning against
    Microsoft?

    yep

    Possibly Microsoft are trying to get the rest of EU not to follow.

    yes


    For me to go to Linux means I lose programs and devices
    I've come to use.

    except there may be alternative programs you can use that work just as well. I haven't needed any windoze programs since I switched to Linux


    But this is happening ever since I bought Microsoft, the company
    suddenly gives up on it's customers, Early in the piece, bought the
    whole Microsoft office (from Harvey Norman) after some years MS
    decided my copy was pirated and disabled it.

    you can use it online for free, but Linux Libre Office does everything
    M$ Office does,

    Bullshit it does with Access

    and it's free and not online, so you have total control

    wanted me to scan the box
    and send image, did not have a $$$scanner then,
    Bought a photography program put them out as *.MIX format dumped that.
    Skype I had for years dumped that (really bad news for me, I used to
    make overseas phone calls), a Windows phone they dumped that

    that was a poor decision. no way would i ever buy a phone with a M$ OS

    again the
    APP's are not transferable, a Bird APP was not cheap.
    Personally would advise others to swap computer platforms as well
    Windows 11 is their best stinker yet,
    what's the betting MS shortly dump that?

    well they lied when they said w10 would be the last windoze ever, so who knows what they will do next? maybe make the whole windows OS online
    only? you can't trust M$. you should have learnt that by now


    Germany and Denmark's governments are not using Microsoft, with the
    German state of Schleswig-Holstein leading the shift to open-source
    alternatives like LibreOffice and Linux, and the Danish Ministry of
    Digital Affairs following suit. Both are making the transition to
    reduce dependency on foreign tech companies, lower costs, and increase
    digital sovereignty. Denmark's move, which began in the summer of
    2025, is part of a four-year digital strategy, with cities like
    Copenhagen and Aarhus also adopting open-source solutions.

    <https://www.uctoday.com/unified-communications/denmark-now-germany-is-the-public-sector-migrating-away-from-the-microsoft-suite/>
    https://tinyurl.com/36ad9jfj
    Denmark, Now Germany: Is the Public Sector Migrating Away from the
    Microsoft Suite?
    The Danish government and its top municipalities, alongside a state in
    Germany, are migrating away from Microsoft in a move that could cause
    an avalanche

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From keithr0@me@bugger.off.com.au to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 14:22:53 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On 26/10/2025 10:32 am, Felix wrote:
    Petzl wrote:
    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.
    -a-a Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer >>>> your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    -a-a And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date >>>> till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)
    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    -a problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    all you need to do when selling a used PC is remove the drive. simplez!
    or you can wipe it using a high level erase tool

    If it is a SATA drive, it has a full wipe built into the firmware.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From noel@deletethis@invalid.lan to aus.computers on Sun Oct 26 14:54:00 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 11:34:45 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:



    Nope. I assumed that this was common knowledge in the Windows groups:


    I don't do windows unless desperate, but I have 2 business soft3ares that
    wont work under wine, so only boot the win10 laptop when I need them, or
    to do updates, so if it sits on w10 for next 5 years wont mater, by time script kiddies find it, it'll likely being switched off already.


    'Consumer ESU Enrollment' <https://github.com/Toysoft/ConsumerESU?tab=readme-ov-file>

    I do not have a Microsoft Acccount, used this script and Windows
    Update says I'm enrolled.


    I have one, but I remove their spyware - aka onedrive, all my backups are
    held locally on a nfs/samba server, I dont get why tehyd offer free ESU
    if you use one drive, apart from another way they can pervertly spy on
    you, maybe the NSA conned them into that idea, dunno, dont care, I'm not falling into that hole :)


    There is a rumor (no details) that this might not work anymore,
    because Microsoft alledgedly closed some door on October 8.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze
    over before that happens here.

    The github script method is worldwide and the script was made before Microsoft changed the rules for the EU.

    might give it a go, on a vps image next week, unless someone else reports
    here first.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Peter Jason@pj@jostle.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 06:56:17 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 26 Oct 2025 07:54:47 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote:
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote:
    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is quite >>>>> wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked out >>>>> that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer your >>>> old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date till >>>> the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    cipher /w:X:\ where "X" is the drive letter.

    Where can I get "EnCase"?
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 08:21:08 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote
    not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) wrote
    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote

    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is >>>>>> quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked >>>>>> out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer >>>>> your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date >>>>> till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    Bullshit

    cipher /w:X:\ where "X" is the drive letter.

    Where can I get "EnCase"?

    Any dumpster
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Peter Jason@pj@jostle.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 08:24:31 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 08:21:08 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote
    not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) wrote
    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote

    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is >>>>>>> quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked >>>>>>> out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer >>>>>> your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date >>>>>> till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them,
    or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$
    would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security >>>> left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    Bullshit
    OK Great Guru, how?

    cipher /w:X:\ where "X" is the drive letter.

    Where can I get "EnCase"?

    Any dumpster
    But the dongles are always missing.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From not@not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 07:55:36 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/
    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Peter Jason@pj@jostle.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 09:52:10 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On 27 Oct 2025 07:55:36 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security >>>> left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    I was concerned about the "Lost Files".
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Petzl@petzlx@gmail.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 10:16:32 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 06:56:17 +1100, Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:


    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    cipher /w:X:\ where "X" is the drive letter.

    Where can I get "EnCase"?

    https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/xpdm97c5ztl802?hl=en-US&gl=US

    Also if your computers working

    Windows built-in method
    Access Recovery options: Go to Settings > Update & Security >
    Recovery.
    Start the reset: Under "Reset this PC," click "Get started".
    Choose to remove everything: Select "Remove everything" and then
    follow the prompts to select a "clean the drive" option for a more
    secure wipe.

    Rod speed a egotistical self appointed know-all who knows nothing
    Rod has been on newgroups since the 80's and still the same
    When he starts short vulgar bursts just stop replying
    --
    Petzl
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 11:27:13 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security >>>> left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/


    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 11:35:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote
    not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) wrote
    Frank Slootweg <this@ddress.is.invalid> wrote
    Ozix <ozix@xizo.am> wrote

    It is verge collection this weekend in my mother's suburb. It is >>>>>>>> quite
    wealthy area too, so I expected to see some PCs or laptops chucked >>>>>>>> out
    that are no longer supported. But didn't find any at all.

    Little over 10 days is a bit short to buy a new system, transfer >>>>>>> your
    old programs, data and settings and dump the old one.

    And, they just got the October updates, so it's still up-to-date >>>>>>> till
    the November cycle. And then there's the ESU (Extended Security
    Updates)
    program for a year. Need I go on!? :-)

    I expect most users won't know about update cycles and extended
    updates. They'll believe whatever pop-up notices M$ flash at them, >>>>>> or if they ignore those then just keep running it until they find
    software they want to install doesn't support it anymore (which M$ >>>>>> would like to happen immediately, but it usually doesn't).

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    Bullshit

    OK Great Guru, how?

    Stupid fuckwit, by checking what is in each sector after wiping it

    cipher /w:X:\ where "X" is the drive letter.

    Where can I get "EnCase"?

    Any dumpster

    But the dongles are always missing.

    Bullshit
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 11:37:01 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 09:52:10 +1100, Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:

    On 27 Oct 2025 07:55:36 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    I was concerned about the "Lost Files".

    There arent any when the sectors are all filled with zeros
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 11:38:59 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:27:13 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/


    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)

    dban works a lot better and leaves the drive useable
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From keithr0@me@bugger.off.com.au to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 12:43:06 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On 27/10/2025 7:55 am, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    I made a lot of money for my employer by writing software to erase data.
    We certified that the data was completely gone, backed up by sending
    test erased drives to OnTrack who tried to recover the original data and certified that it was impossible. The erasure was done to various NSA
    specs, and was a total overkill, but the customers were paranoid about
    data leakage, and were prepared to pay top dollar.

    The customers were mainly big organisations, banks and government
    departments. It's probably obsolete now, These days the data is
    encrypted before being saved to disk and decrypted on read. All you need
    to do is to destroy the keys, and the data is as good as gone (the same
    can be said for Bitlocker on Windows).
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Computer Nerd Kev@not@telling.you.invalid to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 12:55:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
    I made a lot of money for my employer by writing software to erase data.
    We certified that the data was completely gone, backed up by sending
    test erased drives to OnTrack who tried to recover the original data and certified that it was impossible. The erasure was done to various NSA
    specs, and was a total overkill, but the customers were paranoid about
    data leakage, and were prepared to pay top dollar.

    Should've given 'em to me. I could pull out the platters, stick
    them in my furnace, and melt them into a lump of aluminium. Try
    getting data back off that!

    The customers were mainly big organisations, banks and government

    It's probably obsolete now, These days the data is
    encrypted before being saved to disk and decrypted on read. All you need
    to do is to destroy the keys, and the data is as good as gone (the same
    can be said for Bitlocker on Windows).

    Ah, no. It's there waiting to be decrypted whenever the encryption
    method used becomes vulnerable to new attacks or simply when much
    faster (or quantum) computers arrive.
    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From keithr0@me@bugger.off.com.au to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 16:32:10 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On 27/10/2025 12:55 pm, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
    I made a lot of money for my employer by writing software to erase data.
    We certified that the data was completely gone, backed up by sending
    test erased drives to OnTrack who tried to recover the original data and
    certified that it was impossible. The erasure was done to various NSA
    specs, and was a total overkill, but the customers were paranoid about
    data leakage, and were prepared to pay top dollar.

    Should've given 'em to me. I could pull out the platters, stick
    them in my furnace, and melt them into a lump of aluminium. Try
    getting data back off that!

    People who have invested over $1M on a large state of the art storage
    server usually want to recover some of the value when it replaced, be it
    to re-purpose it or to sell it.

    We aren't talking about some trivial little PC system here, we are
    talking about machines with hundreds, if not thousands of drives, and
    not your cheap drives either 10000rpm dual ported fibre channel or SAS
    drives, and they ain't cheap.

    The customers were mainly big organisations, banks and government

    It's probably obsolete now, These days the data is
    encrypted before being saved to disk and decrypted on read. All you need
    to do is to destroy the keys, and the data is as good as gone (the same
    can be said for Bitlocker on Windows).

    Ah, no. It's there waiting to be decrypted whenever the encryption
    method used becomes vulnerable to new attacks or simply when much
    faster (or quantum) computers arrive.

    Elliptical curve encryption with a 4096 bit or greater key is, at the
    moment at least, resistant to attack. Bitlocker keys run to 48 decimal
    digits, not uncrackable, but it would take a pretty determined effort to
    do so. We'll cross the quantum bridge when somebody makes a practical machine. Even then, I don't expect such machines to become common in my lifetime.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Frank Slootweg@this@ddress.is.invalid to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 10:31:29 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:
    On Sat, 25 Oct 2025 11:34:45 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    Nope. I assumed that this was common knowledge in the Windows groups:

    I don't do windows unless desperate, but I have 2 business soft3ares that wont work under wine, so only boot the win10 laptop when I need them, or
    to do updates, so if it sits on w10 for next 5 years wont mater, by time script kiddies find it, it'll likely being switched off already.

    'Consumer ESU Enrollment' <https://github.com/Toysoft/ConsumerESU?tab=readme-ov-file>

    I do not have a Microsoft Acccount, used this script and Windows
    Update says I'm enrolled.

    I have one, but I remove their spyware - aka onedrive, all my backups are held locally on a nfs/samba server, I dont get why tehyd offer free ESU
    if you use one drive, apart from another way they can pervertly spy on
    you, maybe the NSA conned them into that idea, dunno, dont care, I'm not falling into that hole :)

    I also make 'local' backups. But the general method to get free ESU
    does *not* involve OneDrive. Yes, you must backup your settings and your
    list of apps (not the apps) themselves, but that's backed up to your
    Microsoft Account, not to OneDrive.

    There is a rumor (no details) that this might not work anymore,
    because Microsoft alledgedly closed some door on October 8.

    It's the EU that gets the free updates without divesting their souls.
    anyone else must sign their lives over to them, and hell will freeze
    over before that happens here.

    The github script method is worldwide and the script was made before Microsoft changed the rules for the EU.

    might give it a go, on a vps image next week, unless someone else reports here first.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 21:43:30 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Rod Speed wrote:
    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:27:13 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> a problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.




    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)

    dban works a lot better and leaves the drive useable

    not according to their own website https://dban.org/ it doesn't

    a heck of a lot of crosses there, and there's this.. "No guarantee of
    data removal"
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 21:54:09 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
    I made a lot of money for my employer by writing software to erase data.
    We certified that the data was completely gone, backed up by sending
    test erased drives to OnTrack who tried to recover the original data and
    certified that it was impossible. The erasure was done to various NSA
    specs, and was a total overkill, but the customers were paranoid about
    data leakage, and were prepared to pay top dollar.
    Should've given 'em to me. I could pull out the platters, stick
    them in my furnace, and melt them into a lump of aluminium. Try
    getting data back off that!

    Oh I dunno. The Chinese are very clever buggers! :-D

    p.s. are platters aluminum?


    The customers were mainly big organisations, banks and government
    It's probably obsolete now, These days the data is
    encrypted before being saved to disk and decrypted on read. All you need
    to do is to destroy the keys, and the data is as good as gone (the same
    can be said for Bitlocker on Windows).
    Ah, no. It's there waiting to be decrypted whenever the encryption
    method used becomes vulnerable to new attacks or simply when much
    faster (or quantum) computers arrive.

    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From noel@deletethis@invalid.lan to aus.computers on Mon Oct 27 20:56:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 10:31:29 +0000, Frank Slootweg wrote:

    noel <deletethis@invalid.lan> wrote:

    I have one, but I remove their spyware - aka onedrive, all my backups
    are held locally on a nfs/samba server, I dont get why tehyd offer free
    ESU if you use one drive, apart from another way they can pervertly spy
    on you, maybe the NSA conned them into that idea, dunno, dont care, I'm
    not falling into that hole :)

    I also make 'local' backups. But the general method to get free ESU
    does *not* involve OneDrive. Yes, you must backup your settings and your
    list of apps (not the apps) themselves, but that's backed up to your Microsoft Account, not to OneDrive.


    ohhh, OK, that changes everything, since as I mentioned I have a MS a/c,
    using one of my domain emails, not a live/outlook/hotmail thing...

    ...firing up laptop....
    ...running updates...
    ...yes ok enrol me now...
    ... ok that was painless, it says enrolled, and the no updates anymore
    message gone away... cant back up files, as onedrive was disabled ages
    ago, so your right, its to the a/c only...



    The github script method is worldwide and the script was made
    before
    Microsoft changed the rules for the EU.

    might give it a go, on a vps image next week, unless someone else
    reports here first.

    can't test that as person who has licensed copy for vps also has a MS a/c
    and has has told me she's enrolled for ESU already.

    Cheers
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Tue Oct 28 03:35:55 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 21:43:30 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Rod Speed wrote:
    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:27:13 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>>> problem for people selling their used computers to others is >>>>>>> security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.




    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)

    dban works a lot better and leaves the drive useable

    not according to their own website https://dban.org/ it doesn't

    Bullshit

    a heck of a lot of crosses there,

    None of which apply to a hard drive

    and there's this.. "No guarantee of data removal"

    But trivial to check if it has removed the data
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From not@not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) to aus.computers on Tue Oct 28 07:53:20 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
    On 27/10/2025 12:55 pm, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    keithr0 <me@bugger.off.com.au> wrote:
    I made a lot of money for my employer by writing software to erase data. >>> We certified that the data was completely gone, backed up by sending
    test erased drives to OnTrack who tried to recover the original data and >>> certified that it was impossible. The erasure was done to various NSA
    specs, and was a total overkill, but the customers were paranoid about
    data leakage, and were prepared to pay top dollar.

    Should've given 'em to me. I could pull out the platters, stick
    them in my furnace, and melt them into a lump of aluminium. Try
    getting data back off that!

    People who have invested over $1M on a large state of the art storage
    server usually want to recover some of the value when it replaced, be it
    to re-purpose it or to sell it.

    We aren't talking about some trivial little PC system here, we are
    talking about machines with hundreds, if not thousands of drives, and
    not your cheap drives either 10000rpm dual ported fibre channel or SAS drives, and they ain't cheap.

    Until they become outdated and then the second-hand value drops off
    far quicker for those HDDs than for "trivial little PC system" HDDs.
    But if they were upgrading frequently to stay at the cutting edge,
    then OK.

    The customers were mainly big organisations, banks and government

    It's probably obsolete now, These days the data is
    encrypted before being saved to disk and decrypted on read. All you need >>> to do is to destroy the keys, and the data is as good as gone (the same
    can be said for Bitlocker on Windows).

    Ah, no. It's there waiting to be decrypted whenever the encryption
    method used becomes vulnerable to new attacks or simply when much
    faster (or quantum) computers arrive.

    Elliptical curve encryption with a 4096 bit or greater key is, at the
    moment at least, resistant to attack. Bitlocker keys run to 48 decimal digits, not uncrackable, but it would take a pretty determined effort to
    do so. We'll cross the quantum bridge when somebody makes a practical machine. Even then, I don't expect such machines to become common in my lifetime.

    Point missed entirely. It's not about what's resistant to attack
    now. If they're selling the old drives or disposing of them,
    whoever ends up with them could stash them away and decrypt them
    years later when it's possible. It's already a problem now for data
    encrypted 20-30 years ago.

    Of course it's possible the data could be of no value after that
    many years. But accounts or employee data could still be useful for
    fraud, and some intellectial property might still be commercially
    valuable.
    --
    __ __
    #_ < |\| |< _#
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Peter Jason@pj@jostle.com to aus.computers on Wed Oct 29 06:57:17 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:37:01 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 09:52:10 +1100, Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:

    On 27 Oct 2025 07:55:36 +1000, not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd
    Kev) wrote:

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security
    left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    I was concerned about the "Lost Files".

    There arent any when the sectors are all filled with zeros

    Quite, but if the files are "lost" then perhaps the software can't
    find them. eh wot?
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Peter Jason@pj@jostle.com to aus.computers on Wed Oct 29 06:58:36 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:27:13 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote:
    problem for people selling their used computers to others is security >>>>> left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/


    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)

    Aye, and one gets to keep the little magnets, so useful at work for
    metal notice boards.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Rod Speed@rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com to aus.computers on Wed Oct 29 07:16:29 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote
    not@telling.you.invalid (Computer Nerd Kev) wrote
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    Rod Speed <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote
    Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote

    problem for people selling their used computers to others is
    security left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove >>>>>>> drive.

    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive

    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.

    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    I was concerned about the "Lost Files".

    There arent any when the sectors are all filled with zeros

    Quite, but if the files are "lost" then perhaps the software can't
    find them. eh wot?

    The wipe software JUST fills all sectors with zeros, it doesnt try to find anything
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Felix@none@not.here to aus.computers on Wed Oct 29 10:16:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: aus.computers

    Peter Jason wrote:
    On Mon, 27 Oct 2025 11:27:13 +1100, Felix <none@not.here> wrote:

    Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
    Peter Jason <pj@jostle.com> wrote:
    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 12:13:26 +1100, "Rod Speed"
    <rod.speed.aaa@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:58:47 +1100, Petzl <petzlx@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> problem for people selling their used computers to others is security >>>>>> left on drive. I don't sell mine even as junk I remove drive.
    More fool you given its so trivial to completely wipe a drive
    Yet much harder to confirm that this has been successful.
    If you wipe it with zeros (after wiping it with random data for
    maximum security), that can be verified. You could also use a tool
    like "strings" on Linux which will find any printable text left on
    the drive, unless the data on the drive was encrypted or
    compressed.

    Of course if you use the drive's built-in erasure function there's
    the chance it just lies and keeps the data intact while pretending
    to be erased. If you're paranoid about that then just use a
    open-source program like DBAN to write the zero/random data from
    software, which the drive will just see as normal usage.

    https://dban.org/

    an axe works well for erasing a drive :)
    Aye, and one gets to keep the little magnets, so useful at work for
    metal notice boards.

    and they're handy for magnetizing things like screwdrivers (for example)
    to hold or pick up screws
    --
    Linux Mint 22.2
    Q: What's the difference between Linux and Windows?
    A: You rule Linux, Microsoft Windows rules you

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2