"Peter Lawton" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
> The non-MS line on this might of course be that MS would have forced it on
> 32bit Vista as well if it wasn't for the fact that if they had even the
> few people who have bought it so far would have taken it back for a
> refund.
Not practical with the amount of old drivers which do work, but that
wouldn't be updated for Windows Vista. If they were going to do that, they
might as well of scrapped the 32-bit versions and just released 64-bit, the
impact on compatibility would be similar.
> Driver signing enforcement is entirely about DRM enforcement and nothing
> else, otherwise why take away with patches etc the few existing ways to
> disable it if the user wants to.
I don't believe DRM was the primary driving force behind this, but
reliability and security. If you install a malicious driver that claims to
be for your webcam yet isn't. You've effectively given control of your
machine over to somebody else, that driver can disable your firewall, create
a service listening for outside connections, record all your keystrokes you
name it, there's probably a way to do it.
> MS should have learned from Sony that it's customers don't want DRM and
> definitely don't want an OS that's painfully slow because of it
How does a driver being signed (no different than from how a website is
signed if you're using SSL) slow the machine down?
The state of drivers needed to be cleaned up, this is one step in the right
direction.
--
Paul Smith,
Yeovil, UK.
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User.
http://www.dasmirnov.net/blog/
http://www.windowsresource.net/
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