This absolutely takes the cake!
I'll be the first to admit that my knowledge of Microsoft Windows is almost nil. I tried using Windows 98 for a month back in, well, '98, and decided I didn't like it much.
Today my one-and-only Windows computer is the laptop that I have connected to the projection equipment. The service techs use and support Windows for that application so that's why it is and what it is. It's the ntp server for the projector and cinema server, it runs their remote access software on the (rare) occasions when they need to log into it to check something, and it runs Firefox to talk to and control the cinema server. That's it, that's all it does.
Occasionally when I shut that laptop down at the end of the night it says "update and shut down" and then does a song-and-dance for ten minutes before it shuts down. It's a bit of a nuisance that way but not a really big deal.
Late tonight I finished my test screening of next week's movie (Mummies, which is actually pretty good by the way) and walked into the projection room to shut everything down.
The laptop was showing its blue updating screen, saying "30% completed, do not shut down."
*boggle*
Now this wasn't a particularly big deal since all I wanted to do was shut everything down; it just made me wait an extra ten minutes before I could do that. After it finished its update the laptop rebooted and returned to exactly the screen that I had expected to see when I walked into the projection room so I could do the shutdown and be done.
But what amazes me is that it apparently decided on its own to do that. Maybe it's done that before and I never noticed if it was in the middle of a show, but this is the first time I've seen that since it was at the end of the show.
I've always been under the impression that Microsoft Windows has a reputation for being unreliable, but I just can't fathom the kind of thinking that goes into forcing an update and reboot in the middle of a job.
I can imagine a situation when I walk into the projection room to start the movie and see an updating screen on that laptop. "Sorry folks, the show is going to be ten minutes late starting." It hasn't happened yet but it appears to be a foreseeable event.
Or this: "I'm sorry Mr. President, we won't be able to launch the anti-missile defences for about ten minutes because Windows just decided to run an update."
My flabber is thoroughly gasted!
My computers run updates when I choose to update them and they get rebooted when I choose to reboot them. I guess when you run Microsoft Windows on your computer it's not really your computer any more.
I'll be the first to admit that my knowledge of Microsoft Windows is almost nil. I tried using Windows 98 for a month back in, well, '98, and decided I didn't like it much.
Today my one-and-only Windows computer is the laptop that I have connected to the projection equipment. The service techs use and support Windows for that application so that's why it is and what it is. It's the ntp server for the projector and cinema server, it runs their remote access software on the (rare) occasions when they need to log into it to check something, and it runs Firefox to talk to and control the cinema server. That's it, that's all it does.
Occasionally when I shut that laptop down at the end of the night it says "update and shut down" and then does a song-and-dance for ten minutes before it shuts down. It's a bit of a nuisance that way but not a really big deal.
Late tonight I finished my test screening of next week's movie (Mummies, which is actually pretty good by the way) and walked into the projection room to shut everything down.
The laptop was showing its blue updating screen, saying "30% completed, do not shut down."
*boggle*
Now this wasn't a particularly big deal since all I wanted to do was shut everything down; it just made me wait an extra ten minutes before I could do that. After it finished its update the laptop rebooted and returned to exactly the screen that I had expected to see when I walked into the projection room so I could do the shutdown and be done.
But what amazes me is that it apparently decided on its own to do that. Maybe it's done that before and I never noticed if it was in the middle of a show, but this is the first time I've seen that since it was at the end of the show.
I've always been under the impression that Microsoft Windows has a reputation for being unreliable, but I just can't fathom the kind of thinking that goes into forcing an update and reboot in the middle of a job.
I can imagine a situation when I walk into the projection room to start the movie and see an updating screen on that laptop. "Sorry folks, the show is going to be ten minutes late starting." It hasn't happened yet but it appears to be a foreseeable event.
Or this: "I'm sorry Mr. President, we won't be able to launch the anti-missile defences for about ten minutes because Windows just decided to run an update."
My flabber is thoroughly gasted!
My computers run updates when I choose to update them and they get rebooted when I choose to reboot them. I guess when you run Microsoft Windows on your computer it's not really your computer any more.
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