Serious flaw discovered in Windows Vista's Explorer


Recommended Posts

Instead of admitting that you blew it way out of proportion you choose to call everybody else fanboys? Comon, you could do better than that.

I've edited the original post. As far as the title, I posted this very late last night. Yes, I agree, the title could have been better worded, but the amount of disrespect is uncalled for. This isn't a personal attack on you, or anyone else, this is a general comment to the state of what has transpired. I don't want any more flaming to go on, it's a shame to see this happen on one of Microsoft's featured communities.

At this point, I'd like to ask a moderator to delete this thread.

I've edited the original post. As far as the title, I posted this very late last night. Yes, I agree, the title could have been better worded, but the amount of disrespect is uncalled for. This isn't a personal attack on you, or anyone else, this is a general comment to the state of what has transpired. I don't want any more flaming to go on, it's a shame to see this happen on one of Microsoft's featured communities.

At this point, I'd like to ask a moderator to delete this thread.

Why delete the thread if the information is accurate? Do you just prefer it gone for the flaming you are receiving? I personally don't see the seriousness of the flaw nor understand if using a NOT boolean argument in a search was such a common practice that it wasn't found until now. If explorer.exe terminates unexpectly and immediately reboots it's just like any other explorer.exe crash so where's the big issue? :blink:

Was that a joke? What's the big issue? Kristan is trying to make Windows better. You obviously could not care less for it. "what's the big issue" It is an explorer crash! I mean FFS! Are you going to claim to be part of the Windows Communitiy with a mindset like that? I would think one of the ohhh maybe top 3 resposibilites of a member of the Windows Community/ Windows enthusiast would be trying to make Windows better... It seems with you that you have given up on Windows and say "Hah Windows sucks, it crashes all the time."

As an experienced forum admin I would like to offer the following advice

@iCeFuSiOn....when posting on a forum where the average member age appears to be 14 and the average member iq appears to be 0, be careful how you word your posts.

@email flamers....if you have'nt got the guts to speak out publicly and instead resort to flaming in private, you need to reexamine your values.

It seems that you posted with a sensationalist headline in order to "rouse the community". It sounds like your intention was for Microsoft to receive negative attention - a small price to pay, no doubt, for raising awareness of the issue at hand - and found out the hard way that sensationalism is a double-edged sword.

Its unfortunate that you were the unwitting victim of your own devices here, but I think there was a lesson to learn, and it hasn't been picked up. How could the initial situation have been handled better?

You could very easily have written an objective post detailing the discovery of a bug in the usage of boolean operators which appears to lead to crashes of the shell under certain circumstances. Instead, you chose to flag this as a "serious flaw" and tried to spark off an emotional response in your readers to go yell at Microsoft for being a bunch of lazy *uckups. You've also wiped the original post, and source. Great job with the running away, but not an entirely laudable thing to do.

You could have followed up with more details of Microsoft's alleged irresponsibility in patching bugs commonly experienced by users of pre-SP1, and not addressed in SP1. But you choose not to take time to do that, and instead published with one bug example (which was contradicted by other users of SP1 RC shortly afterwards). Please understand that this weakened your point of how Microsoft will overlook user reported issues (and I agree, they do, and they need to reassess their user experience quality).

Now you've made some mistakes, drew fire on an obviously controversial topic (although you intended Microsoft to receive most of the flak from your article), and still you persist in non-objective responses, trying to arouse sympathy within the community. Well, I can be partially sympathetic, but really, you were the one playing with matches in a field of dry straw, and instead of burning down Neighbor Bill's farm, you burned down your own. But please don't try and erase your mistakes. You've acknowledged that you didn't handle things as well as you could have, and that's a great first step, but don't erase the dialogue that has been generated from all this. You've received childish responses. That's fine. Ignore them. When folks raise valid points, address them, and let them contribute to the dialogue. You're still raising awareness within the community when you're doing this, unlike when you just give up, wipe everything, and run away.

I've edited the original post. As far as the title, I posted this very late last night. Yes, I agree, the title could have been better worded, but the amount of disrespect is uncalled for. This isn't a personal attack on you, or anyone else, this is a general comment to the state of what has transpired. I don't want any more flaming to go on, it's a shame to see this happen on one of Microsoft's featured communities.

At this point, I'd like to ask a moderator to delete this thread.

I didn't see much problems as far as your original post goes, but I have to say I was indeed pretty frustrated that the title led me to believe there's actually a "serious flaw", and by that I (and I presume most people) assumed it was a security flaw.

As far as I could see all the angry posts were directed at your choice of title, not much (if any) were directed at you personally, so I'm not sure what you have to be so sensitive about.

And I'd think that it's not much of an expectation from the general public that these kinds of reports are accurate in both information and magnitude, what's to be surprised about when a gross exaggeration is met with negative attitudes?

It seems that you posted with a sensationalist headline in order to "rouse the community". It sounds like your intention was for Microsoft to receive negative attention - a small price to pay, no doubt, for raising awareness of the issue at hand - and found out the hard way that sensationalism is a double-edged sword.

Its unfortunate that you were the unwitting victim of your own devices here, but I think there was a lesson to learn, and it hasn't been picked up. How could the initial situation have been handled better?

You could very easily have written an objective post detailing the discovery of a bug in the usage of boolean operators which appears to lead to crashes of the shell under certain circumstances. Instead, you chose to flag this as a "serious flaw" and tried to spark off an emotional response in your readers to go yell at Microsoft for being a bunch of lazy *uckups. You've also wiped the original post, and source. Great job with the running away, but not an entirely laudable thing to do.

You could have followed up with more details of Microsoft's alleged irresponsibility in patching bugs commonly experienced by users of pre-SP1, and not addressed in SP1. But you choose not to take time to do that, and instead published with one bug example (which was contradicted by other users of SP1 RC shortly afterwards). Please understand that this weakened your point of how Microsoft will overlook user reported issues (and I agree, they do, and they need to reassess their user experience quality).

Now you've made some mistakes, drew fire on an obviously controversial topic (although you intended Microsoft to receive most of the flak from your article), and still you persist in non-objective responses, trying to arouse sympathy within the community. Well, I can be partially sympathetic, but really, you were the one playing with matches in a field of dry straw, and instead of burning down Neighbor Bill's farm, you burned down your own. But please don't try and erase your mistakes. You've acknowledged that you didn't handle things as well as you could have, and that's a great first step, but don't erase the dialogue that has been generated from all this. You've received childish responses. That's fine. Ignore them. When folks raise valid points, address them, and let them contribute to the dialogue. You're still raising awareness within the community when you're doing this, unlike when you just give up, wipe everything, and run away.

I was going to comment on this affair but this post said everything I wanted to say.

Fanboyism is nothing new, it has been part of the internet for years, and will always continue to be part of the internet. Without making this sound rude, a lot of sceners seem to be falling in on their own egos and believing their own self-hype, and the problem is that if you write sensationalist articles like this, you are bound to draw some criticism from people, that is what the internet is like, and it has to be something you are willing to accept if you are going to blog about these kind of matters. I would also like to point out that including your personal email address in any blog post is also inveterantly stupid, and is really just asking for trouble, because at the end of the day that is what comments are there for.

I value everyone's contributions from the scene, but if people can't take the heat of what they post then I personally have no sympathy for them, it is a simple fact that no matter what your opinion is someone IS gonna flame you for it because the internet is a wide bed of such diverse opinions.

actually serious flaw is $400 off the bank account due to an 'ultimate POS' that is full of flaws/bugs/annoyances and ultimately is obfuscated by its 6 years old predecessor... great pos.... we all should be wow'ed

edit: wow bold

Edited by Jock Horror

This is a fluke on certain people's systems. I've tried it on three different systems, two that don't have SP1 and one that does and it only happened once. I don't see why anyone would be trying to search for everything on their system that isn't a shortcut in the first place.

This thread is going no where and only serves the purpose for those who hate Vista to bash Vista and for those who love Vista to bash those who don't.

thread closed

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • If you have a TV in your living room, chances are you can probably just use the Steam Link app and play your huge PC in big picture mode, effectively giving you the Steam Machine experience to see if you'd actually like it. The good news is the Steam Machine can have it's drives upgraded. It has a USB-C 10Gbs port as well, so the 512GB drive could be quickly moved to an external enclosure and repurposed.
    • This machine could very well be a second gaming PC for their living room as a console experience. So we would have to assume their main PC exists as well; With that said, I have 10gb home network with a 2.5gigabit internet connection here so we tend to have more than enough speed to download games. However, we can't make use of the 10gb LAN using Steam's built in transfer tool because it always compresses transfers and that slows the transfer down to well below a standard gigabit port speeds, sometimes as slow as 200-300Mb/s transfers. While that's probably still faster than most internet connections anyway, if they'd fix the LAN transfer issue it'd be upto x5 faster even on a gigabit LAN, than simply dropping a 2.5gbe port on there with hopes of a few people having fast internet connections. There are solutions, work arounds, like using LANCache if you run a NAS... or simply copying the files over manually using a network share.
    • Samsung announces ultra-fast UFS 5.0 storage to supercharge mobile AI by Paul Hill Local AI models tend to run a lot more slowly than cloud services like Claude and Gemini; however, Samsung has just announced that it has developed its UFS 5.0 solution, which increases data transfer to speeds of 10.8GB/s, enabling faster storage and processing in mobile memory that has the potential to provide more optimal local AI experiences. Commenting on this development, Jangseok Choi, head of Memory Product Planning at Samsung Electronics, said: If you’ve tried local AI, you’ll know it can be quite slow, especially if using the larger parameter models. By developing this new solution, Samsung says that storage is evolving from just storing data to a core piece of infrastructure that supports AI computation, too. The Korean company said that UFS 5.0 integrates the latest embedded memory interface standard from JEDEC and achieves up to 10.8 gigabytes per second (GB/s) transfer speeds. Regarding write speeds, Samsung UFS 5.0 can reach 9.5 GB/s. Both the read and write speeds are twice as fast as those of the previous UFS 4.1 standard. Aside from being ideal for local AI, Samsung’s UFS 5.0 is more power efficient by 40% compared to UFS 4.1. Samsung achieved this by implementing innovations such as clock gating and multi-voltage technologies. UFS 5.0 is also ultra-compact at just 7.5mm x 13mm x 0.9mm; that is 16.7% smaller than UFS 4.1. The company said it will be bringing it to multiple devices in the future, including mobile, wearable, and extended reality.
    • A bit like the steamdeck, this probably isn't for you.
    • Gamers Nexus already did their review, and building your own will be faster and cheaper, so not very convincing.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      496
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      209
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      99
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      86
    5. 5
      neufuse
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!