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Home>Windows XP: Looking back, looking forward

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 265 • 2010-11-11 • Circulation: over 400,000


Table of contents 
  • Top Story: Windows XP: Looking back, looking forward
  • Lounge Life: Searching for an easy-to-use e-mail client
  • Wacky Web Week: How to compare a notebook to a dead fish
  • LangaList Plus: Finding a cure may mean looking elsewhere
  • In the Wild: Java brews up a large pot of malware
  • Patch Watch: Security fixes for applications highlighted

 
Top Story

Windows XP: Looking back, looking forward

Fred langa By Fred Langa

On October 22, Microsoft pulled the plug on sales of Windows XP, ending the operating system’s spectacular nine-year run.

With no new copies being sold, support for XP will start to decline. Fortunately, XP’s long run has produced a ton of collected wisdom: everything you need to keep your copy going strong and — when ready — to help you move on.

The end of XP is a watershed moment. It’s truly the most successful operating system in the history of personal computers. Windows 3.x was great in its day; it gave mass-market, affordable PCs the graphical prowess Microsoft needed to compete with the more expensive Macintosh computers. But it lasted only five years, from 1990 to 1995. XP’s reign was twice as long!

The Windows 9x family (95 and 98) were also stellar OSes. Windows 95, released in 1995, introduced Windows Explorer for file management and was the first Windows to exploit the power of 32-bit hardware. And it added TCP/IP networking as an integral (not bolted-on) component of the OS.

Windows 98, delivered in 1998, was the first Windows to integrate Internet Explorer. Because it was essentially free, IE quickly ignited industry controversy and ensuing legal battles for Microsoft. But as part of the Windows package, it helped with the explosive growth of the Web and the dot-com boom of the late ’90s.

In 2000, five years after the launch of Windows 95, Microsoft — late getting its next operating system out the door — released the stopgap kludge Windows ME (short for Millennium Edition; it was soon given less-charitable labels). It landed with a resounding thud. Even Vista was more popular than ME.

So Windows XP’s near-decade reign is impressive. Rolled out in 2001, it blended the familiar interface conventions of Windows 98 with the heavy-duty, business-oriented underpinnings of Windows NT (New Technology). The result was a hybrid operating system that looked good, was easy to use, and — most important — was far more stable than its predecessors.

Microsoft originally planned a five-year life span for XP. But delays and missteps with XP’s successor products (Vista, for example) plus huge upgrade resistance from users forced Microsoft to extend XP’s life again and again. Now, with Windows 7 proving itself a worthy replacement, Microsoft finally has the opportunity to retire its aging, war-horse operating system. The October 22 end for XP occurred almost exactly one year after Win7 rolled out.

XP is going out on top. According to NetMarketShare.com (home page) — which tracks operating systems actually in use online — XP still holds a commanding 60.03% market share, as shown in Figure 1.

XP is still dominant
Figure 1. XP use is declining, but based on a recent NetMarketShare.com. chart, it’s still the dominant OS by far.

XP is losing about 1% to 2% market share per month; Win7, coming on strong, is currently in second place at 17.10% and is growing at 2% to 3% per month. And because many businesses passed on Vista, there’s a huge pent-up market for Win7 upgrades — so its share of Windows users will grow even more rapidly.

XP will get security patches until April 2014

Now that software development on XP has stopped, the most important question for XP users is future support. Microsoft plans no further Service Packs or feature enhancements for the OS. But given the astounding number of people still using XP, Microsoft says it will provide XP security updates through April 2014. (See Figure 2.) That should give large businesses sufficient time to complete their Win7 migration.

In addition, Microsoft’s knowledge base will continue to host XP-related information for at least that long. That’s an astounding 13 years after the OS was first released. To my knowledge, that’s a record — the longest-supported run of any major personal computer operating system by any company, ever!

XP lifecycle dates
Figure 2. A condensed view of Microsoft’s XP lifecycle chart shows support for the OS ending in 2014 (circled in yellow).

Microsoft included many keys to XP’s success

In addition to the ease-of-use and stability enhancements mentioned earlier, XP had other features and innovations that made it a winner.

For example, XP was the first Windows with so-called intelligent taskbar and notification-area behavior. (The taskbar contains the Start button and the icons representing running programs; the notification area, the small block in the lower-right corner of the Windows screen, contains the clock and icons for background tasks and services.) When your taskbar runs out of space, XP intelligently overlays similar icons on top of each other and suppresses inactive notification icons.

That might not seem like a big deal now, but it was a major innovation in its time — one that made using many programs vastly simpler. In fact, XP’s overall user interface may be the most imitated ever. If you don’t believe me, check out almost any desktop Linux and see how familiar the UI seems.

XP was the first Windows to ship with built-in CD-R burning software; first to include user-configurable power management; first to ship with a built-in backup tool; and first to ship with ClearType, a screen-legibility enhancement — all features we take for granted now.

XP was the first Windows with a complete and genuinely useful Help system that replaced the rudimentary Help in Win9x. It was also the first Windows with Remote Assistance and Remote Desktop built in. And it was the first consumer/desktop Windows to support the advanced NTFS (info page) file system, which avoided the fragility and size limitations of the FAT system used in previous desktop Windows versions.

You can probably add your own list of favorite XP features.

XP’s many blemishes are well documented

No one who has used XP for any length of time will call it flawless, however. Many of those flaws — and ways to work around them — have been detailed in Windows Secret’s weekly reports.

When XP first appeared, many PCs of the day had insufficient power for the new OS, causing it to run painfully slow on those systems. And on all hardware, XP could consume ridiculous amounts of disk space for the recycle bin, Internet Explorer cache, and System Restore.

It also buried some truly useful features in places where they were hard to find and access.

Just one small example: Window 7′s Backup applet is easily found in the Control Panel’s top-level menu. XP Professional’s Backup app is located deep inside All Programs, in the System Tools menu. In XP’s Home edition, Backup isn’t even installed by default — users have to dig it out of the ValueaddMsft folder on the setup CD and perform a manual installation!

Fortunately, after almost a decade of use, nearly all of XP’s worst problems and limitations have been addressed in XP’s Service Packs, with third-party add-ons and tools, and through a wealth of published tips, tricks, and workarounds.

In the August 12 Top Story, “Preparing Windows XP for the long haul,” I provided tips on how to keep XP going for as long as you need it. The rest of this article builds on that: it’s a compendium of some of the most useful XP information from the past decade, all in one convenient reference.

You’ll also find links to help you upgrade smoothly to Windows 7 when the time comes. And at the end, you’ll see how to keep your favorite — and possibly essential — XP software alive and running well inside Windows 7, just as it runs now.

Windows Secrets XP setup/maintenance articles

Here are some of the best XP-related stories available in the windowssecrets.com library:
  • “Recover lost disk space by dumping dump files,” Langalist Plus, Feb. 12, 2009
  • “Access more memory, even on a 32-bit system,” Top Story, Dec. 18, 2008
  • “How to maintain XP after Microsoft ends support,” Top Story, Nov. 13, 2008
  • “Slimmed-down Windows XP delivers big benefits,” Woody’s Windows, Oct. 9, 2008
  • “Keep XP fresh until Windows 7 arrives,” Top Story, May 15, 2008
  • “Make a bootable thumb drive that runs XP,” PC Tune-Up, March 27, 2008
  • “More free ways to enhance Windows XP,” Known Issues, July 26, 2007
  • “XP’s powerful ‘Tskill’ and ‘Taskkill’ commands,” LangaList, March 15, 2004
  • “How to move a Windows XP installation to different hardware,” Support Alert, Nov. 4, 2002
  • “Recovery console life saver,” LangaList, April 18, 2002
‘LangaLetter’ XP setup/maintenance articles

Before I joined forces with Windows Secrets, I wrote a column called the “LangaLetter” for InformationWeek.com. Please excuse the vanity, but I believe XP users will find some of the following articles of interest.
  • “Creating a Windows XP recovery console CD image,” Aug. 16, 2006
  • “XP’s no-reformat, nondestructive, total-rebuild option,” June 9, 2006
  • “The OS inside the OS,” May 1, 2006
  • “XP’s little-known ‘Rebuild’ command,” April 17, 2006
  • “A new way to slim down Windows XP,” Nov. 8, 2004
  • “How to save an hour (or more) on XP installs,” Sept. 20, 2004
  • “Ten more ways to make Windows XP run better,” Jan. 26, 2004
  • “Solving automatic maintenance problems,” Nov. 17, 2003
  • “Make Windows XP self-maintaining,” Oct. 27, 2003
  • “System setup secrets for Windows XP,” July 28, 2003
  • “Ten ways to make Windows XP run better,” Dec. 10, 2001
When you’re ready to migrate from XP to Win7

Eventually, the day will come when you’ll move on from XP. Here’s help:
  • “Migrating from Windows XP to Windows 7,” an MS TechNet article
  • “Windows 7 upgrade and migration guide,” a TechNet Library article
  • “Upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7,” an MS tutorial
  • “Migrate XP to Windows 7 with easy transfer over the network,” a How-ToGeek article
  • “Migrate XP to Windows 7 with easy transfer and a USB Drive,” a How-ToGeek article
  • “Transfer files and settings from XP to Windows 7,” a Help Desk Geek article
The ultimate XP knowledge base — the Web!

Here’s an easy way you can use Google, Bing, and most other search engines to find specific XP information from almost any site. Use this formulation:

xp [topic] site:[domain]

Replace [topic] with the keyword(s) you’re looking for and [domain] with the site’s name. For example, the search phrase

xp dual boot site:windowssecrets.com

will show you all the Windows Secrets articles that discuss XP dual booting;

xp pagefile site:microsoft.com

will show you everything about XP’s pagefile from Microsoft.com.

Keep your XP environment inside Windows 7

Windows 7 offers two ways to keep older software running well inside the new OS. The first, its Program Compatibility settings, is explained in the MS article, “What is program compatibility?”

The Program Compatibility settings take care of the majority of compatibility issues. But for programs that need more, you can get the free “Windows XP Mode” software for Windows 7 Professional and Ultimate at its Microsoft download site.

Win 7′s XP Mode sets up a complete, free, already-licensed, self-contained XP virtual PC that runs inside Windows 7. When you install software on the XP virtual machine, the software thinks it’s running on a regular, stand-alone XP box! Everything behaves in the normal XP way, so applications work the way you’re used to.

XP mode gives you the best of both worlds: you can retain and run your older XP-based software but still get all the benefits of using Win7!

Once you try the new Win7 interface, I think you’ll like it. But if you don’t, Woody’s Windows’ April 1 article, “Classic Shell puts XP retro back into Win7,” shows you how to recreate the familiar XP look and feel in Windows 7.

With almost a decade’s worth of XP information at your fingertips, you’ll be able to keep your copy of XP running smoothly for a long, long time to come!

Feedback welcome: Have a question or comment about this story? Post your thoughts, praises, or constructive criticisms in the WS Columns forum.

Fred Langa is a senior editor of the Windows Secrets Newsletter. He was formerly editor of Byte Magazine (1987-91), editorial director of CMP Media (1991-97), and editor of the LangaList e-mail newsletter from its origin in 1997 until its merger with Windows Secrets in November 2006.

 
Lounge Life

Searching for an easy-to-use e-mail client

By Tracey Capen

Sometimes the best application is not the one with the most bells and whistles — it’s the one that does the job with minimal fuss.

Lounge member Dick Moores is helping out a friend who’s migrating to Windows 7 but may find Outlook more than is needed. Dick raises the question of what’s the best, simple e-mail client, and gets a passel of opinions.

The responses cover brands of e-mail clients, local vs. online e-mail management, and techniques for combining mail services. More»

The following links are this week’s most-interesting Lounge threads, including several new questions that you may be able to provide responses to:

Office Applications
General Productivity 
Stopping unwanted MS Office updates

Word Processing 
Remove junk styles in Word 2007
☼
Spreadsheets 
Inserting rows in Excel 2003
☼
Databases 
Form visibility problem in Access 2007
☼
Microsoft Outlook 
Outlook 2010 search not working

Non-Outlook E-mail 
Overwhelmed by Live Mail after a quick look

Windows
General Windows 
Thoughts on pagefiles and partitions
☼
Windows 7
Removing Windows Live Essentials 2011
Win7: Keeping desktop icons in place
☼
☼
Windows XP 
Which is better to use — Win XP or W2K Pro?

Internet/Connectivity
Internet Explorer 
Are tiny URLs like bit.ly safe?

Networking
Wireless sends packets, receives none
☼
Other Technologies
Security & Backups 
Acronis 2011 backup image instructions
☼

☼ starred posts — particularly useful

If you’re not already a Lounge member, use the quick registration form to sign up for free. The ability to post comments and take advantage of other Lounge features is available only to registered members.

If you’re already registered, you can jump right in to today’s discussions in the Lounge.

The Lounge Life column is a digest of the best of the WS Lounge discussion board. Tracey Capen is technical editor of WindowsSecrets.com.

 
Wacky Web Week

How to compare a notebook to a dead fish

Compaq portable commercial By Revia Romberg

Most of us are all too familiar with the funny and somewhat obnoxious PC-vs.-Apple commercials. But back in the 1980s, Compaq took a more indirect but just as humorous swipe at the competition — IBM. Starring the famous and hilarious John Cleese, Compaq’s new portable computer is put up against a … 22-pound fish!

We’re not sure which is funnier, Cleese’s enthusiastic sales pitch or the stats for this 22-pound, state-of-the-art computing suitcase with a whopping 4.1MB of memory — that’s right, megabytes, not gigabytes. Who’s the stinkin’ fish now? Play the video



«« Previous Wacky

 
LangaList Plus

Finding a cure may mean looking elsewhere

Fred langa By Fred Langa

Sometimes, what seems to be a networking problem is actually caused by the actions of a totally different PC subsystem.

By making simple adjustments to that second system, you can often resolve the networking problem.

Network just stops, for no obvious reason

Jim Boyer has some questions regarding my Oct. 14 Top Story, “Simple change in settings pumps up Win7 networks.”
  • “I read with great interest your lead article about network slowdowns. But I have been experiencing a different problem: the network doesn’t slow down but gets lost completely! Let me explain.

    “I have a Win7 machine and so does my wife. I also have two older XP machines on the network. Because of the XPs, I never set up a homegroup in Win7. The problem is that sometimes my [Win7] computer will no longer ‘see’ my wife’s machine or one of the XPs, even though it did earlier.

    “The strange thing is that I can go over to the other computer (be it my wife’s or the XP) and immediately access mine over that network. One minute I was connected, the next not — but only one way. I conclude that the network is OK, it’s just that there is something that’s losing the connection.

    “What’s going on?”
I’ve seen the same sort of thing, Jim. Believe it or not, this is often a power-management issue! When the network cards on the affected machines are in a low-power state, they can’t be accessed from outside. Any user activity on the PCs restores normal power to the network cards, letting them work again.

It’s important to note that the network card’s power state can be different from that of the rest of the PC. It should be easy to fix:

On the Win7 machines, open Control Panel and drill down through Hardware and Sound, Power Options, and Edit Plan Settings. Then select Change advanced power settings.

Make sure that the Wireless, USB, and PCI options (depending on what type of network adapter you’re using) are set to full power and that the general system timeouts are long enough not to power anything down sooner than you want. (See Figure 1.)

Adjust win7 power settings
Figure 1. Adjust your power settings to prevent important subsystems from powering down too soon (Win7 shown).

If you need more help with adjusting Win7 power plans, see the Microsoft Help & How-to article, “Change, create, or delete a power plan (scheme)”, or How-To Geek’s tutorial, “Learning Windows 7: Manage power settings”, or SevenForums’s tutorial, “How to change the Power Plan settings in Windows 7.”

In XP, set the Power Option properties to Presentation, Always On, or Minimal Power Management (see Figure 2). If you need more info, see Microsoft’s tutorial, “Configure Windows XP power management,” or the MS TechNet article, “Configure a Power Options item (Windows XP).”

Adjust xp power settings
Figure 2. XP’s Power Options are more limited than Win7′s and Vista’s but still can be usefully adjusted.

If your network dropouts cease (and I’m betting they will) you can now fine-tune your power settings so that you’re saving power — and your network components don’t snooze sooner than they should!

Transferring programs without reinstallation

Tom Riding is seeking an easier way to move installed programs from PC to PC.
  • “I need a program that will move installed software from one hard drive to another. I know this is a complex problem. I’m running Vista, which probably complicates the issue. Do you have any recommendations?”
I know of only two tools — neither free — that let you selectively move some or all of your apps.

The one I’ve used is Laplink’s PCmover (U.S. $30 and up, info page). It works on all current versions of Windows, from XP to Win7.

I have no experience with SoftRescue ($30 and up; info page), but it’s well-regarded on message boards around the Net. It’s not listed as Win7-compatible but does claim XP and Vista compatibility.

With luck, one of those will be just the ticket!

Separate partitions for system and data?

Reader JimB is setting up a new system and asks some partitioning advice.
  • “I’m finally getting around to upgrading from Vista to Win7. I’m doing a clean install. Do you still suggest using separate partitions for system, programs, and data?”
You certainly still can do that, if you wish. There’s no harm in it. However, the advice to place data on its own, separate partition dates back to Win95 days, and there were two reasons for it.

The first was that Windows could — and often would — get itself seriously hosed from time to time. It wasn’t unusual to have to reinstall Windows 95 and 98 from scratch once or twice a year. In that circumstance, having your data files separate from the operating system was a real time-saver.

The second reason was the backup media in use at that time, which tended to be slow and/or have low capacity. Backing up and restoring large numbers of files with floppies or tapes was tedious at best.

Today, backup and restore operations can be fast and easy. High-speed and high-capacity rewritable DVDs are common, and blank disks are dirt-cheap. Huge, inexpensive external drives are also available for easy offline storage of vast amounts of data.

Windows has also evolved and rarely needs wholesale, start-from-scratch re-installations anymore. So these days, there’s not much reason to segregate the data from the operating system.

Instead, purely as an operational convenience, I’ve taken to segregating my data files by frequency of change and importance.

For example, I keep all my most-important and frequently changing files — work documents, current financial info, current e-mails, and such — on my C: drive, along with Windows. This stuff gets backed up every day.

Files and folders that change infrequently — MP3s, photo collections, software-installation files, various archives, and so on — reside on other partitions. Because these files are relatively static, they don’t need to be backed up as often. Being kept in a separate partition, they don’t clutter and slow down my regular, daily backups.

That works for me. But in truth, whatever method works for you is perfectly fine, as long as you’re doing regular backups!

Questions about flash-drive limitations

Julia Henson is concerned about her flash drives.
  • “After purchasing two 25GB USB external flash drives, I read somewhere that they have read/write limitations. I have spent some time looking everywhere on the Internet for technology reviews that deal with this topic, but with no success.

    “Can you tell me how I would learn what the read/write limitation is for my drives? Also, how to access information from the drive that will tell me when I am reaching the limitation point?

    “I have checked your articles, CNET reviews, Wikipedia, and several places from a Google search, but none of the reviews actually deals with the technology and the process of being alerted when nearing the limitation.”
By “limitation,” I assume you mean the fact that flash-memory cells — the tiny devices that actually hold the ones and zeros that make up your data — have a finite life. After some number of rewrite cycles, the cells can fail.

Unfortunately, there’s no firm rule for how many write-cycles a flash device will withstand before failing. The numbers I’ve seen range from 100,000 to a million cycles. One reason for the discrepancy: there’s no universally accepted practice for measuring their life span.

There’s also no way to test or predict when a specific flash drive’s memory cell will fail. Unlike hard drives, which can give some early warning of an impending failure, flash-memory cells either work fully or don’t — there’s no in-between or marginal condition that will warn of impending failure.

Large flash arrays (such as those used in solid-state hard drives) usually come with special wear-leveling software to deliberately spread data around the drive, helping to avoid having any one part of the drive get used more than others. Inexpensive flash devices such as your thumb drives usually have no such software.

To further complicate matters, flash devices come in a wide range of qualities, prices, and warranties. Drives from one vendor might have a different lifespan than drives from another.

But rest easy. If, like most thumb-drive users, you use the device primarily to move files from one machine to another, even 100,000 cycles is a lot — you’re unlikely to wear out flash cells with that kind of use.

That said, Windows 7 and Vista offer a technology called ReadyBoost (info page) that lets you use a USB flash drive as a kind of extended pagefile/swapfile area. Personally, I think that’s a terrible idea, because pagefiles get used a lot. I think a ReadyBoost drive could rack up 100,000 writes in not much time at all.

My suggestions:
  • For important files and for heavy-duty or constant use, use only name-brand flash devices that come with solid warranties.

  • Cheap, disposable flash drives should be used only for light-duty, casual applications.

  • Never store your only copy of anything on a flash drive; have a backup copy safely stored someplace else.

  • And to maximize the life of your flash devices, avoid ReadyBoost!
Feedback welcome: Have a question or comment about this story? Post your thoughts, praises, or constructive criticisms in the WS Columns forum.


Fred Langa is a senior editor of the Windows Secrets Newsletter. He was formerly editor of Byte Magazine (1987–91), editorial director of CMP Media (1991–97), and editor of the LangaList e-mail newsletter from its origin in 1997 until its merger with Windows Secrets in November 2006.

 
In the Wild

Java brews up a large pot of malware

Robert vamosi By Robert Vamosi

A recent blog by the Microsoft Malware Protection Center reported that attacks on Java code far exceeded Adobe exploits in 2010.

In light of this finding, it’s time to review your PC for any unneeded or out-of-date versions of Oracle’s OS.


A new exploit circumvents Java security

Cyber criminals are no longer attacking operating systems; like predators chasing a herd, they’re scouting out the weakest applications residing on our desktops. Adobe Acrobat, for example, has been such favorite prey that Adobe started a new quarterly update cycle. Now, cyber criminals have their sights on a new target, an app many of us might have forgotten about — Java.

UPDATE 2010-11-17:   A Correction: We incorrectly state that JavaScript is a subset of Java. In fact, the two are almost completely unrelated and have different origins. You can find more on this topic at a Wiki site.

Some readers also took issue with our description of Java as an operating system. It might be more precisely described as a software platform.

We apologize for the error.


Java (Wiki page) is an object-oriented operating system that runs within a sandbox; all Java applets are supposed to run only within their virtual machine. That’s supposed to keep system OSes — such as Linux, Mac, and Windows — inaccessible to Java-based malware. But a new version of the Koobface Trojan (reported in an Oct. 27 PCMag.com story) can infect both Windows and Mac operating systems through Java.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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Patch Watch

Security fixes for applications highlighted

Susan bradley By Susan Bradley

A light month of Windows updates means we can focus on applications that need patching.

After last month’s heavy load of updates, we could use a break! But we also need to worry about what we’re not patching, not just what we are patching.


MS10-087 (2423930)
MS starts patching the DLL threat from Hell

MS Security Bulletin MS10-087 includes a number of fixes for Office, but the most important begins to address the potentially huge .dll vulnerability first described in Security Advisory 2269637. This threat is worrisome because of its scope — essentially, it targets any application with a poorly written .dll file. This is no small number of apps.

Microsoft rates this patch as critical for Office 2007 SP2 and Office 2010 (both 32- and 64-bit editions). If you’re running Office 2011, you’ll want to get the update as much for its stability enhancements as for its security fixes.

As is common with Microsoft software patches, you may be offered updates for applications — such as PowerPoint Viewer — that technically are not vulnerable. But these apps often share code with products that are vulnerable. Don’t be surprised to receive updates for Office 2003 and Office 2007, even if you don’t have either — I received updates for both on my Win7 system.

Users of Office 2004 or 2008 for Mac are still out in the cold, for the moment. Microsoft should release patches for these apps once it completes testing.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Table of contents

Top-scoring articles in the past 12 months
  • Leaving long cookie trails throughout the Web 5.00
  • Windows-like security for Android devices 5.00
  • Win7′s no-reformat, nondestructive reinstall 4.53
  • The sorry tale of the (un)Secure Sockets Layer 4.42
  • RPV: Win7′s least-known data-protection system 4.33
  • Recovery: the last step in total data security 4.30
  • Time for a .NET update we can’t ignore 4.30
  • Getting the most from Windows Search — Part 1 4.25
  • Revising printing habits saves money and trees 4.25
  • Upgrades end in erratic, partial hangs 4.25
  • Pros and cons of a ‘keyfile’ password 4.21
  • Beating back Duku and a plethora of other threats 4.20
  • Office 2007 gets its final service pack 4.19
  • Putting Registry-/system-cleanup apps to the test 4.19
  • One year and 99 security bulletins later 4.18
  • 1.8TB external drive goes down hard 4.17
  • Don’t pay for software you don’t need — Part 3 4.16
  • Internet Explorer gets another round of patches 4.15
  • Is your free AV tool a ‘resource pig?’ 4.15
  • Vacation’s over; it’s a big round of patches 4.15
  • Remote access leads to remote attacks 4.15
  • Keeping you up to date: say no to .NET — again 4.14
  • Take control of Google’s privacy policy settings 4.14
  • Office File Validation patch leads to problems 4.14
  • The advanced system-recover toolkit 4.13
  • New “419″ scam involves PayPal and Western Union 4.12
  • Readers’ best personal-privacy tips 4.11
  • Getting the most from Windows Search — Part 2 4.11
  • Re-examining Dropbox and its alternatives 4.10
  • Easily edit Windows’ right-click context menus 4.09
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