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Five rules for trouble-free software updates

It often pays to wait before installing new versions of your system software and applications.

If you think you've been spending more time than usual waiting for your software to update, you may be right.

The release of Windows 8.1, OS X Mavericks, and iOS 7.0.3 has given us update fatigue. This weekend it took me a total of 7 hours to install all three upgrades: 2.5 hours for Windows 8.1, 3.5 hours for Mavericks, and 1 hour for iOS 7.0.3.

Even though the updates installed without a hitch, most people have no need to rush applying the upgrades. Taking your time is one of my "update rules." These guidelines will help keep your software updates from causing problems of their own.

Rule No. 1: Don't be in a hurry to install milestone upgrades Aside from security patches, there are few must-have software updates. Early adopters are the ones most likely to encounter glitches, so you can benefit from waiting for a mature update by letting somebody else discover the problems.

Soon after Microsoft released Windows RT 8.1, the company temporarily suspended distribution of the update for ARM-based devices due to a problem that "bricked" some RT systems, according to a story earlier this month by Mary Jo Foley. The patched update was available a couple days later.

Topher Kessler reports on Mavericks causing some external drives to lose data. And Josh Lowensohn describes the fixes in Apple's iOS 7.0.3, which the company made after reports that the iOS 7 interface was causing motion sickness in some users..

Rule No. 2: Set programs to update automatically Problematic updates are the exception these days. Applications and systems software should be set to download and apply updates automatically, which is usually the default setting.

The Windows Support site explains how to open Windows Update in Windows 7: click the Start button, type "update," and select Windows Update. In Windows 8, press the Windows key (if necessary), type "update," and choose "Windows Update settings" from the list.

To change your update settings in Windows 7, click "Change settings." In Windows 8, select "Choose how updates get installed."

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Five rules for trouble-free software updates

We’re not Facebook users, we’re the Facebook used says Richard Stallman

Dont post any pictures of me on Facebook or Instagram, said Richard Stallman, as he began his talk on the ethics of software and web development. Theyre a monstrous surveillance engine.

Were not Facebook users, were the Facebook used, he said, claiming that the social networking giant was morally unacceptable due to the amount of data gathered on users and they way in which it is used.

What on the surface seems anathema to the Web Summit ethos, Stallman in actuality appeared to inject a healthy dose of skepticism into the proceedings by addressing privacy concerns of the modern, digitally connected citizen.

We know now that the internet has been converted into a massive surveillance engine, Stallman said, adding that all digital technologies enable this abuse of surveillance.

He wears a badge declaring: Dont be tracked. Pay cash. This is in reference to the fact that Stallman not only avoids credit cards but also doesnt browse the web on his laptop and aims to withhold as much personally identifiable information as possible.

I dont want a database to know what I bought or where I was.

He doesnt own a mobile phone either. He never has. Once I found out how they can track users and be remotely configured into listening devices through back doors I thought this is Stalins dream. Some things are too important to give up in exchange for convenience.

A few years ago there may have been raised eyebrows at Stallmans words but in a post-Prism world following countless phone tapping incidents and where the NSA is alleged to have accessed Google and Yahoos oversees servers, it doesnt seem so unrealistic.

Stallman is known best for founding the Free Software Foundation and is a pioneer of copyleft, a way of ensuring that software can be distributed freely while preserving those freedoms for all.

If all the software we use if free then we have control over the computing we do on our own computers. You should reject any programme that isnt free because if the user isnt controlling the programme, then the programme is controlling the user, he said.

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We’re not Facebook users, we’re the Facebook used says Richard Stallman

7 Reasons Apple's free Mavericks was the smartest move it ever made

Why is Mavericks free? Its a good question. From where were standing everyone likes free software (and beer), after all not having to pay for a dazzling software update is great news.

Apple has to make money though, or it cant carry on making amazing products. And I think we can all agree that Apple is a pretty smart company, so it must be financially worthwhile for Apple to give Mavericks away for nothing, or it wouldnt do it. And from what we gather Apple has decided that all upgrades in the future will be free.

So why has Apple decided to release Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks for free? We look at some of the reasons:

The main reason we think Apple has decided to make Mavericks free is to entice as many people as possible take part in the upgrade process. Ever since Apple switched to the App Store for its digital download an update program its been pushing Mac OS X updates down in price. Apple regularly boasts of how fast its users are updating compared to other companies.

Apple clearly likes the excitement when people rush to its products all at once. Apple is big on keeping things under the radar, and then announcing things with a flourish; its good at getting as a lot of products into the store on day one. Apple likes crowds! It likes it when everybody is together high-fiving outside its stores. Everyone getting a free update together is very Apple-esque in nature. It makes people feel good; that makes them buy more Apple products.

See

Five reasons to upgrade to Mavericks

Mac OS X Mavericks review

10 hidden features in Mavericks

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7 Reasons Apple's free Mavericks was the smartest move it ever made

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DotComBar Review | Watch DotComBar Demo - Video

Not a word of debate as Queen approves new press regime

It is simply to provide the imprimatur of the Privy Council that the Royal Charter, which has been debated, discussed, argued over for months in public, is adopted.

Protocol dictates privy council meetings are held standing up to keep them brief. The president reads a list of orders to be made, and the Queen replies simply: Approved.

The medieval body is usually used to grant freedoms, such as allowing universities to award degrees. It is believed to be the first time a Royal Charter has been imposed on an unwilling industry.

The newspaper industry had proposed its own regulator, which would have entailed 1m fines for wrongdoing. The plans were rejected by politicians.

Newspapers that do not sign up to the new regulator face being handed exemplary damages by judges in libel actions.

The Daily Telegraph and other newspapers do not plan to subscribe to the new system.

Richard Gordon QC, for the Press Standards Board of Finance, said the politicians plans could give the state a worrying degree of control over the press.

What is envisaged in the Government charter is the possibility of executive control of the press for the first time since 1695, he said.

But Mr Clegg said it is wildly hyperbolic to claim the Royal Charter is a threat to press freedom.

No-one wants politicians to interfere with the cherished freedoms of your wonderfully raucous and vibrant Press, he said.

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Not a word of debate as Queen approves new press regime