Stop Doing This To Your Computer

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июн 2023
  • Today I'm going through 5 things that I see people do on there computer that they should stop. I consider these things snake oil. They make promises but don't keep those promises. Some of these things could actually harm your computer.
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Комментарии • 610

  • @damianosplay9457
    @damianosplay9457 Год назад +84

    haven't watched the vid yet but lemme tell you the people who have a hundred programs run on start up are the worst, bonus points if they got more than one antivirus software

    • @CoMmAnDrX
      @CoMmAnDrX Год назад +26

      I had a client come in running AVG, McAfee and Norton Security. Their complaint was their system ran very slow and was unusable. Well yeah you have 3 AV's fighting over control of your system and all 3 want to look at your files as you open them. LOL!

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +13

      I see that a lot too.

    • @damianosplay9457
      @damianosplay9457 Год назад +5

      @@CoMmAnDrX ah man and its always some old crusty laptop too, from my experience you cant explain that it's not healthy for the computer to those people, but hey I aint complaining they are my main source of income lol

    • @chrisbaker8533
      @chrisbaker8533 Год назад +1

      The epitome of PBKaC.

    • @richardburley1552
      @richardburley1552 Год назад +1

      @@CyberCPU Quick question I have a 14 tb external hard drive and I want to extend my c drive with it is that possible the 14 is brand new nothing on it... also if not is there a way to download everything directly to my external drive without even using space on the c drive it's full!!?

  • @lawrenceallwright7041
    @lawrenceallwright7041 Год назад +14

    Completely agree that defrag is useless and even counter-productive on an SSD.
    But I do miss watching the little blocks reorganising themselves on Windows 98 !

    • @cherylkern3288
      @cherylkern3288 Год назад +1

      "But I do miss watching the little blocks reorganising themselves on Windows 98 !" 😅🤣😂

    • @RandomTorok
      @RandomTorok 3 месяца назад

      hmmm, I think I'll develop a little program called Defrag that moves little blocks around on the screen but does nothing to the SSD.

    • @lawrenceallwright7041
      @lawrenceallwright7041 3 месяца назад

      @@RandomTorok I'm in ! 😂

    • @lawrenceallwright7041
      @lawrenceallwright7041 3 месяца назад

      @@RandomTorok I'm in! 😄

    • @kreont1
      @kreont1 3 месяца назад

      ​@@RandomToroksad do trim

  • @touchdown33
    @touchdown33 Год назад +32

    As a tech enthusiast myself, I appreciate all the tips/fixes and compilation videos you make. None however, am I more appreciative of than this one (not to detract from the usefulness of all your other videos). I'm glad you stressed the importance of each adherence. All too often I see people on the internet trying to take the easy route because it sounds easier. Now you have provided a constructive video explaining the flaws of each problem, I have something to quickly link people to. 👍

    • @billyguthrie3176
      @billyguthrie3176 11 месяцев назад +1

      That take the easy route thing bugs me. I see a plethora of videos that promise to show you how ot do something but all they really show you is how to download a script that'll do it for you. That just drives me crazy!

  • @Zhyntil
    @Zhyntil 11 месяцев назад +3

    I used to tell people that Norton started out good... They were two dudes that didn't like all the crime and such in the local park.
    they put a rowboat in the pond and would hang out with their rifles. A few months later they wanted some more comfort, so got a bigger rowboat with a cooler. Then after a bit a fancier boat with a fridge and a grill on the back. Then they wanted to up their arms and put some heavy guns on it. After a while though it was a battleship and no one wanted to go to the park anymore because you couldn't even see the sun. and the battleship filled the entire pond.

    • @stevenemert837
      @stevenemert837 5 месяцев назад +2

      @Zhyntil - Totally agree. I've had Norton a long time. It was good at first, but I've finally quit installing it since it slows down the system and is always getting in your face, especially when you're trying to get some real work done.

  • @judebrad
    @judebrad Год назад +10

    I worked in Gateway support back in 1999-2006 and we hated the bundled AV programs that came with the systems. This was back in Windows 95/98/2000 days before Microsoft Security Essentials later known as Windows Defender came about.

  • @davinp
    @davinp Год назад +12

    Unfortunately most Windows PC comes with McAfee Antivirus installed. Get rid of it

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      It depends. Different big box stores or manufacturers pre-install different antivirus programs based on who they have a commission deal with.
      Staples use to be Norton, I'm not sure if they still are.

    • @dapsonlonia
      @dapsonlonia 7 месяцев назад

      How about bitdefender?

  • @CareyHolzman
    @CareyHolzman Год назад +4

    Thank you! I thought I was alone warning people about these things. Nice that there are now two of us trying to share real knowledge with our viewers! Registry cleaners have basically paid for my car! As a computer technician over 30 years, the amount of money I've made from people self-inflicting damage from system optimizers like CCLEANER and SYSTEM MECHANIC would easily exceed what I paid for my car.

  • @needsLITHIUM
    @needsLITHIUM 11 месяцев назад +4

    I remember back in college some of my friends in other majors would come to me because they couldn't get the paid version of AVG Internet Security Suite to uninstall properly, and I would have to explain that if it still leaves hooks in the system, that the only fix is to go in and manually delete the folders and registry keys, and some of the folders, somehow even the admin account couldn't delete them because they didn't have permission and there were DLL's in there that would autostart services, so therefor the only way to truly remove it is to boot a live ISO of Linux and delete the folders that way, and with all of this hassle it's easier to just back up everything important like school projects and license info for Microsoft Office and whatever else they needed and just reinstall Vista and all the drivers, because I could do that 3 times over in the time it takes to do all that other song and dance.

  • @davedc6847
    @davedc6847 6 месяцев назад +2

    I've been the local "tech guy" since Win 3.1... I could not agree with you more about ALL the points you made here. You validate my views 100%! Keep up the great work!

  • @james.andrew
    @james.andrew Год назад +12

    Totally agree with you, when I install/repair I keep it clean. No crappy apps that you don't really need. Keep it simple no duplicate apps and download and install drivers from the manufacturer's website.
    You should include Tune-up suites that promises to speedup the performance but instead still precious system resources and even makes your computer more slower.

  • @christopherp.8485
    @christopherp.8485 Год назад +8

    Agree with all your points. When I went to study for IT support, the teachers were telling us to use these driver updaters and had most of the bad practices you often will see.

  • @dougware
    @dougware 11 месяцев назад +8

    Theres a lot of snake oil out there. Your video is well researched and you cover the information well. Security Suites and Registry Defrag/Cleaners are the worst.

  • @gillesgomez3091
    @gillesgomez3091 Год назад +5

    100% agree with the content of your video. I have so many customers who have installed stupid/unnecessary softwares, who complain their computer is running slowly. I am always uninstalling those crappy pieces of softwares as a first step. I am always recommending them to stick to Windows original functions, such as Windows Defender and to NEVER use a registry cleaning software without knowing exactly what they're doing.
    Unfortunately, most people don't trust me... and when they call me one more time some weeks or months later, I see they've reinstalled their crap.

    • @KenjiUmino
      @KenjiUmino Год назад +1

      pretty much my experience ... when people complained about a slow computer, most of the time, they had a "fully loaded" systray ... and they would reinstall all that crap again the moment you left ....

  • @ruthlessadmin
    @ruthlessadmin Год назад +61

    Linux & BSD would tend to disagree that the registry is faster than plain text configuration. There are pros and cons to each approach but all in all, systems are so complex these days, that doing deep customization to any OS is an overwhelming mess. I miss config.sys and autoexec.bat :(

    • @MickeyD2012
      @MickeyD2012 11 месяцев назад +3

      Keep fighting the good fight brother.

    • @donaldmickunas8552
      @donaldmickunas8552 11 месяцев назад +4

      So do I. I loved DOS back in the day.

    • @stansova3138
      @stansova3138 11 месяцев назад +2

      I will never forget the 1st time I had an MS wreck come to my area and try to sell me a SECURITY PACKAGE and said you will never get past this, so I watched as he installed it and then told me to try and get in. Now we are talking MSDOS here 1.1, so I turned the computer on and it asked for a pass word. So I shut off the machine and reached down into my desk drawer and took out a disk with MSDos 1.1 put it in the drive and turned it on, and would you believe it the machine came alive and I could use any program on my hard disk. Now I was Automatic Data Processing Security for this big company, and looked at Mr. Gates and Balmer and so no, it don't work to good, I will continue to have the hard drives removed each nite and turned into our big safe.

    • @kloroformd
      @kloroformd 11 месяцев назад +2

      I have had Arch on my kid's computer for 7 years and I still don't miss config.sys and autoexec.bat. But I look on both of those fondly compared to XF86Config.

    • @donaldmickunas8552
      @donaldmickunas8552 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@stansova3138 LOL…Today, computer security is a moving target. You are never totally secure. Your biggest threat is an internet connection. Today, few of us are left from the days before computers when everything was done manually. Frankly, most people are addicted to their conveniences and would refuse to shut down all the computers. This state of affairs is the social engineers dream.

  • @amurtigress_mobile365
    @amurtigress_mobile365 Год назад +19

    Thank you for making things so clear and understandable, which seriously makes my own life a tad easier. As a PC builder and freelance/hobbyist PC repair person (Been around since C64 times!), I would just like to add that people still rather blame Windows for being UNSTABLE, while I am convinced that it is usually not Windows that's unstable, but the HARDWARE or it's drivers. But people just see a Windows BSOD and blame the messenger. I realize it's hard to draw the line where exactly Windows ends and 'hardware' begins...
    PS: I am very picky about my subscriptions, but this channel really got mine from the first video that I watched. Very much on spot and useful; depite being the basics for myself. Still I want to see where this channel is going!

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +8

      Very true. Most Windows stability issues are not the fault of Windows itself.

    • @NiGHTSnoob
      @NiGHTSnoob Год назад +1

      I did have a major issue once where Windows updated and all of a sudden my system started crashing all the time. Tried to do a system restore and that failed. After a few days Nvidia released a driver update and after updating that my system was fine again. So, I guess you could argue that was Nvidia's fault. HOWEVER, the system was running fine before that Windows update and Nvidia wasn't the one that auto downloaded and applied an update, and then restarted my computer, all without my permission. So I'm gonna go ahead and continue to be miffed at Microsoft for that one. I understand why they want people to update constantly, but the fact that after it broke everything on me trying to disable it from applying automatically was such a pain in the ass and required following a guide is ridiculous.

    • @brolinofvandar
      @brolinofvandar Год назад +3

      On more than one occasion, I've had Windows more or less self-destruct or fail miserably, yet rebooting that very same hardware into linux worked.
      In one case, it was a hardware failure involved, a CD drive. Booting to Windows, I had no idea what the problem was, Windows simply failed to boot (though the drive in question had nothing to do with that process). I discovered the failed item by eventually booting to linux, which worked just fine until I attempted to use that drive. Back to Windows, and it failed again. I replaced the drive. Thing is, linux dealt with it, Windows shit the bed instead.
      In another case, Windows developed a habit of randomly stopping dead in its tracks, completely freezing, forcing a power off to recover. Boot that same machine to linux, it worked just fine. I continued troubleshooting Windows for days, backing out recent changes, etc. Nothing changed. Random lockups guaranteed, within 2 minutes, 2 hours, etc., but it *would* lockup. Booted it to linux, and never looked back.
      So, yes, quite often Windows IS the problem, not the hardware. And, even if it is the hardware, Windows doesn't deal with failures very well.
      As a point of reference from where I speak, I spent 45+ years as an electronics technician. I've had a computer in my house since 88 (DOS 3.2), and after my second computer (around 90) I've built every desktop I've used at home. I also supported a Novell network with Windows workstations for five years. I've used DOS, OS/2, Windows, and now linux. I only say this to clarify that I'm not just a typical home computer user.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  11 месяцев назад +2

      @@brolinofvandar Using a gen 1 Ryzen in Linux will give you tons of issues if you use one of the early ones. I had that setup years ago and I ended up having to upgrade to a gen 3 Ryzen to fix it. Wasn't worth the headache. The CPU is still in use on Windows 10 and runs as stable as a rock.
      I've worked on thousands of systems and have been using Linux for 20 years. Some of the strangest problems I've ever had have been in Linux. It's a great OS but ultimately on the desktop it's an enthusiast OS.

  • @7spann
    @7spann 11 месяцев назад +2

    I appreciate this info, being a mechanical engineer, I'm a computer dummy, I like tech talk that expose the bull that prey on ignorance

  • @PeBoVision
    @PeBoVision Год назад +6

    I'm tech support for all of my friends (have been since the days of 8-bit computing).
    I am going to include a link to this video with any repairs or builds I do moving forward. Nothing is more frustrating than handing a friend their zippy new or cleaned system, only to go back 2 days later to find windows takes 5 minutes to boot up and task manager is filled with dozens of resource heavy TSR's that I did not install (there is no reason for a casual game to boot with windows.)
    Worst offenders for bloatware: GeekSquad and other retail based tech support desks. Had a friend upgrade his laptop memory with them recently (a Dell Inspiron which has no easy access to memory modules without removing the mobo) and his system came back with all kinds of new auto-load software. Can't speak for all locations, but...um no, actually I can.

  • @FlamingRobzilla
    @FlamingRobzilla 11 месяцев назад +2

    I like the little little round Borg light on your computer case. It's a fun little add-on, and looks cool in your backdrop.

  • @jamesyoung151
    @jamesyoung151 Год назад +2

    I used to work in an Air Force lab and the policy was always wait 6 months after updates, especially on servers. That lesson was learned the hard way. A single update has broken several thousand systems at once. Not a fun job restoring all of those systems so that they were working again. Personally, I delay the updates. The hours I work and when the computer wants to update don't exactly agree. When I want to switch to Linux, I usually do the update before rebooting.

  • @badwolfplays9751
    @badwolfplays9751 Год назад +12

    Before I switched to nvmes and ssds, I used to use crap cleaner and o&o defrag. But stopped using both after the switch to ssds and nvmes. Although, dropping crap cleaner took a whole lot longer to do. As for AV, I used to use Kaspersky back in the day and up until 6 months ago, I was using bitdefender, but dropped it. Now all I use on my Windows system is Defender and Ublock Origin. But I rarely use my Windows system these days. I basically keep it around to play with the new versions of Wiindows. Great video as always.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      Glad it helped.

    • @nIghtorius
      @nIghtorius 11 месяцев назад +2

      As a technician. I hate crap cleaner. Because it tends to delete diagnostic logs on startup (default configuration). Things as minidumps in c:\windows\minidump, logs in the c:\windows\logs\ folders, etc.

    • @badwolfplays9751
      @badwolfplays9751 11 месяцев назад

      @@nIghtorius It's not set as default cofig. You have to go in and actually check it to run on startup. Always been like that. Bleachbit and Glary had that turned on by default.

  • @MrPazzerz
    @MrPazzerz Год назад +6

    I believe Defender was part of Sysinternals, which was exceptionally good, at least until Microsoft bought them out and 'tweaked' it. I used Sysinternals quite a bit.

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess6072 11 месяцев назад +1

    I started using computers back in the 80's and this video justifies my decisions over the years. Thank You. I don't keep up with the tech like I used to and understand the core concepts haven't really changed. I never update anything unless forced to and those come straight from the manufacturer. The only problem I face ATM is the SSD used for Windows/Documents/etc. is beginning to get full and I'm having an issue trying to figure out what files/folders which would be recreated if necessary can be removed for space. The real storage drive used for the x86 files I can maintain easily myself, but the User Drive is daunting - because of things like you mention with the registry - I don't want to delete a file I need. I already move save games in and out to save space. I also move pictures, videos or any downloaded file OFF the C: drive onto another for the same reasons. NVM: I was motivated to learn I can move my DOCS folder :)

  • @ashbuddy92
    @ashbuddy92 Год назад +4

    the 1st snake oil i was "tasted" before is tune up utilities program..

    • @NundedieCH
      @NundedieCH Год назад +1

      Yeah, with Windows 98.😁

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      I should have included those. Great example.

  • @kse3
    @kse3 11 месяцев назад +1

    "Every supported version of Windows today should be using an SSD." Key word is "should". People are *still* buying new systems with Windows 11 and a mechanical drive as the boot drive... and then complaining about bad performance.
    Regarding driver updater programs, I 100% agree on "generic" updaters that claim to update everything; however updaters from the actual vendors, for example NVIDIA's updater for their drivers, or Intel's, or for OEMs like Dell their updater that just does the BIOS and the hardware they ship on a system, while some might argue how useful they are (even though updates often include security patches), chances are they aren't going to be malware vectors.

  • @leonjones7120
    @leonjones7120 Год назад +1

    Thanks for your helpful explaining. You come over well, and easy to understand.

  • @mikecrane2093
    @mikecrane2093 11 месяцев назад +1

    There are six computers in my house. The newest came with Windows 11. Five of them run Windows 10, and four of those are "officially" unable to run Windows 11. All run well and do the jobs that are needed of them. Am I going to junk 4 of them just because Microsoft decided that they aren't good enough? Hell no. There is a reason that people still use "unsupported" versions of Windows, and it isn't to "stick it to the man".

  • @paulhansberry8168
    @paulhansberry8168 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very informative, I suspected this, but you confirmed it. Thanks.

  • @davinp
    @davinp Год назад +2

    Even Microsoft does not recommend using registry cleaners. They discontinued their own registry cleaner from Windows 95

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      I wasn't aware that 95 had a registry cleaner. That's interesting.

    • @davinp
      @davinp Год назад

      @@CyberCPU Clarification, it did come with Windows 95, but as separate download called RegClean. But then Microsoft discovered that Regclean was actually deleting the correct keys and discontinued it for Windows XP

  • @theprior46
    @theprior46 11 месяцев назад +1

    Can't argue with any of this highly sensible advice. Thank goodness threre are people with inside knowledge who freely spread advice to keep others safe. This is a real eye-opener and I'm going to take the advice adhering to it closely. So very useful and thank you - got to give this a like.

  • @krisclem8290
    @krisclem8290 10 месяцев назад +2

    Not to mention modern Windows default defrag often does this automatically in the background if I'm not mistaken.

  • @Jakiyyyyy
    @Jakiyyyyy Год назад

    Thank you for the awareness. Me myself uses ASC and Ccleaner long time ago for all the cache cleaning and stuff. It kinda add even more bloats on my system. I don't mind manually remove all the junks myself, I inherited that habit so it's not going to be a problem for me. After I stopped doing that, it makes no difference if I use those tools or not. Windows Update are important, however I would pause the automatic and manual update it myself but not too soon. At least wait for a week or so for the recent bugs to get fixed. Same goes for the driver updates. Sometimes I update them straight away, sometimes wait for few days. A simple driver update sometimes can boost your FPS in Cyberpunk, sometimes it don't. After all, it just fall into margin of errors. But I still do it since I play lot of recent titles. Those are "optimized" for and added support for said games.

  • @Wezleigh
    @Wezleigh 11 месяцев назад +1

    One of my grandmother's old laptops ended up with a nasty piece of adware that hijacked nearly every window that came up. McAffee was totally useless.I finally struggled through installing an ad blocker in chrome, and there was at least a dozen or more ads being blocked every second. After finding the adware process in task manager i tried unsucessfully to delete it because it restarted itself too quickly to actually delete it. Next up i went looking around and installed an auto clicker. I lined up the confirmation boxes to end the process and delete the file, and i activated the auto clicker. That finally worked to delete the adware and she was able to browse facebook in peace.

  • @hubble37
    @hubble37 Год назад

    Snake Oil salesmen, sounds just like our modern day pharma industries of today! Promising all kinds of potions to heal you when they do just the exact opposite!

  • @charleshines2142
    @charleshines2142 Год назад +2

    If I buy a computer already built like a laptop simply because those are impractical to build myself, I often just do a clean install of Windows. That gets rid of any bloatware that the manufacturer installed. I would also prefer to upgrade from the Home edition that comes on most prebuilt PCs up to Professional. I want to be able to edit group policies if ever a need arises. Also the professional edition doesn't come with those terrible bloatware games like Candy Crush. I honestly never play that game at all. I would not play it even if I was 10 years old!!

  • @Zaphod0414
    @Zaphod0414 11 месяцев назад +3

    The problem with Windows Update is not the content that it is delivering. The big problem is the automatic reboots. That makes using it a complete non-starter for me. An operating system should never, ever, be restarting a PC on its own whims. EVER!!! Besides halting on an unrecoverable exception - i.e. the infamous BSOD stop error - the OS does NOT get to decide on its own when a system reboots. No, popping up a little notification saying it's about to happen does not make it any more acceptable. What if the server is headless and never gets logged into interactively? Do you think that notification will be of any use? I have completely eliminated Windows as the OS behind any of my non-interactive systems as a direct answer to Microsoft's decisions around automatic reboots becoming increasingly aggressive and more difficult to suppress. As for my interactive systems, they all have Windows Update set to do nothing unless manually instructed to do so. This is the only way short of disabling it entirely to prevent Windows from automatically rebooting the system, and it is ridiculously convoluted to do so these days. It requires specialist knowledge and either the use of group policy (which only available in Pro and Enterprise versions of Windows) or a straight up registry hack to pull off. In other words, good luck to the average home user. I can forgive/tolerate many things in the design of an OS, but uncommanded reboots that are effectively nearly impossible to prevent is absolutely not one of them. Until Microsoft addresses this issue, which it doesn't look like they have any intention of doing, for me Windows Update will never again remain in automatic mode. If that ever becomes impossible, I will be disabling it entirely.

  • @owaiszakira9609
    @owaiszakira9609 Год назад +2

    very informative, thank you 🙂

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @iskandarzulkarnainsalleh8688
    @iskandarzulkarnainsalleh8688 Год назад +17

    Thank you for the great skills and knowledge you've imparted to me. I greatly appreciate your contribution on the video to my success in my work at my department. I consider I was lucky to have you as a teacher, and then I was even more fortunate to have you as a mentor. Thank you for always sharing your professional knowledge and expertise. It's so inspiring to have a master who helps others. thank you again. 😃😃

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      Glad to help!

    • @xxxlucid
      @xxxlucid Год назад

      @@CyberCPU bot comment

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад

      @@xxxlucid nope, it's really me.

    • @xpmyt341
      @xpmyt341 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@CyberCPUi think it's the other way around...

  • @BigRonRN18
    @BigRonRN18 11 месяцев назад +1

    You were echoing things I’ve been telling friends and family for years. I’m not a computer professional but I’m the resident nerd at work and around friends and family.

  • @Jimmythepin
    @Jimmythepin 11 месяцев назад +2

    Many of us still rely on HDDs. Defragging is a critical maintenance operation.

    • @waffle911
      @waffle911 Месяц назад

      That's why he advised to use the built-in defrag program instead of a third-party one, and that HDDs are still good for use as storage drives where performance isn't a concern.

  • @boomerau
    @boomerau 11 месяцев назад +2

    If you are running a SSD compatible OS - like Windows; you should be using "defrag" as the OS will use the "defrag" cycle to trim sectors of deleted for use thus making writing to the disk quicker as the erase step is complete. If you have non-OEM SSD like Seagate you can allocate part of the disk as a buffer for this work to happen at a hardware level in the background.

  • @donatkinson1647
    @donatkinson1647 11 месяцев назад +1

    Simple, sensible, and straight forward.... it's why I stop by. Thanks!

  • @donaldmickunas8552
    @donaldmickunas8552 Год назад +26

    Wow! This has been a trip down memory Lane. I’ve been a Linux/BSD user for a number of years now.
    I actually learned how to clean the registry myself when it became evident that packages that simply refused to uninstall, were doing so from the registry. The last time I had to do that was back in the Window XP days.
    I agree about the importance of keeping your computer patched. It would be even nicer if a home user could choose to receive security updates only and Microsoft would honor that choice. It would be even better if update were more efficient and reliable. The slowest update utility in Linux is faster than Microsoft update. How do I know? I still have friends who use Windows.
    Out of curiosity, how long does it take to install Windows 11 these days including the updates? Just a basic install.
    Anyway, you sound like a pretty cool dude. Your channel just showed up and I checked it out. I’ll leave a thumbs up but I won’t be subscribing, LOL. Take care and have fun.

    • @kanna2515
      @kanna2515 11 месяцев назад +3

      i've swapped between linux and windows a bit too many times, i can safely say that even the heaviest distros i've used are still faster to install than windows 11

    • @arghyaprotimhalder5592
      @arghyaprotimhalder5592 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@kanna2515booting matters performance matter what does installation time do

    • @donaldmickunas8552
      @donaldmickunas8552 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@arghyaprotimhalder5592 I suppose it comes down to personal taste and preference. I tend to experiment and play with my systems these days. So, I end up reinstalling my OSs more often than someone who uses a computer for work alone. It always irritated me when it would take hours to reinstall and configure my system back to where it was, assuming I could even do so. I can’t count how many times I’ve added something new but never documented how I did it. Then, when I would reinstall, I would either lose that capability or spend time trying to find it again.
      I retired in December of 2019. This gave me the time to build an infrastructure for my systems. This involved a lot of trial and error as well as refactoring but today, I have a backup and restore system along with a documented installation system that permits me to completely install and configure my system in two hours. This is mostly a series of scripts that I execute.
      I recently reinstalled my FreeBSD system with DWM in two hours with only minor tweaks. I took the opportunity to refine the process a bit but I lost none of the functionality. I consider spending half a day on a reinstall a waste of time. My infrastructure allows me to quickly document changes and, easily incorporate them in my install process. This is a huge time saver and greatly diminishes my stress level.
      Having said all that, being retired has afforded me the time to create this infrastructure. I never had the time or energy to do this when I was working. So, I kept my systems as utilitarian as possible when I was working and kept my playing around to a minimum. My priority at that time was reliability and ease of use. So, it boils down to personal taste and preference and those change over time.

    • @Deathwalker666666
      @Deathwalker666666 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@donaldmickunas8552 With my personal experience with windows 10/11 update i decided to switch to Linux. On my dads laptop with windows 11 update that weights in 240 MB in pre download can take up to 3 hours to install while other times the update a major feature patch that weights several times more and it will take only 15 minutes. Other times it is the opposite or all updates will take min. 2 hours to complete. It basically a random number generator these days unlike the windows xp/vista/seven days where you knew bigger updates take longer while smaller took less time and don't get me started if you do a fresh install of windows 10. Which would be bad enough if MS did not went the "we decide everything for you" way of doing updates.
      This is why i switched to Linux Mint because it gives the same experience i had during using windows xp/vista/seven with few quality of life improvements like software manager or driver manager which freaking helps a lot if you have to do fresh install which for me took about 45 minutes to install, update and configure (which all three can be done at the same time and reboot the system just once)fresh linux mint install in comparison to windows average 2 hours and 48 minutes to do the same(both your account and that not so secret administrator).

    • @BenCooke419
      @BenCooke419 11 месяцев назад

      You left Windows the same time I did. My last Windows was XP 64bit. After about a bazillion distros, I settled for Arch. Here I shall stay. It's a heck of an experience to actually have control of your computer.

  • @retr0life
    @retr0life Год назад +2

    Regardless, we still need a little bit more control over Windows Update in 10 and 11, like in Windows 7 at least.

  • @paulm5935
    @paulm5935 11 месяцев назад +1

    I agree with the other viewer's comments on diskkeeper. I'll add that it was good at a time when Windows Defrag wasn't rewritten to what it is today.
    With that said, Windows Defrag is needed, especially when you have a mix of mechanical HDD's and the Nand Technolgy SSD"s. I've usually had this mix more recently, and a nice thing I've found about the latest verion(s) of Windows Defrag, is that it does a great job on mechanical HDDs AND works well for SSDs as too, by avoiding a traditional defrag on these, but instead invokes that TRIM command you mentioned, that is occasionally needed.

  • @Richard-mz7qu
    @Richard-mz7qu 11 месяцев назад +1

    Outstanding!! Thank you sir

  • @Robert08010
    @Robert08010 11 месяцев назад

    I remember adding an "efficinecy suite". One of the things it did was replace the windows trash can with its own trans can. I don't even recall if it was supposed to provide more thorough deletion or make it easier to recover files. All I remember is that when I went to remove the suite, it couldn't remove the modified trashcan. After that deleting files never worked right. Ultimately I got in the habit of doing a fresh install of windows about once a year just simply to accommodate the fact that I used to try out all sorts of odd software.

  • @machdaddy6451
    @machdaddy6451 Год назад +1

    I completely agree with you on the software that comes along for a ride in other software.

  • @Snowdragon.
    @Snowdragon. Год назад +1

    Just wanted to thank you for all your educational videos - you rock !

  • @BadCarbNoDonut
    @BadCarbNoDonut 11 месяцев назад +1

    I will be getting a solid state PC for the first time soon, so it's good to know I should not defrag. I had no idea. Very glad I ran across this video. I've never had an issue with CCleaner, CleanUp!, or Advanced Uninstaller Pro. In fact, the computer repair shop I volunteered at used CCleaner and CleanUp! as part of their repair protocol.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  11 месяцев назад +1

      Lots of shops do. I often see these programs on people's computers. I think sometimes they are installed by techs that don't know a lot.

  • @JacobP81
    @JacobP81 Год назад +3

    20:04 Actually NO people that say that are not completely wrong. Yes not doing updates leaves your system vulnerable, but Microsoft at times have pushed updates with bugs that have destroyed uses files or locked them out of them.

  • @iskandariacordoba
    @iskandariacordoba 9 месяцев назад

    Great advice, thank you.

  • @freakklomp
    @freakklomp 11 месяцев назад +1

    i used to work in an PC shop that also did repairs. when we got pc's in and laptops in from a big seller we would boot them up and remove all anti virus software and bloatware junk. standard practice for us as we knew it would just bog down the system. we wanted the users to have a untainted introduction to the product. we did sell a anti virus software on the side but we wouldnt install it. we didnt sell avast or norton or mcafee (those ones are disgusting bloatware and shouldnt exist in my opinion) we sold eset nod32, a low profile anti virus software that doesnt bog down the system.

  • @antimsm6705
    @antimsm6705 10 месяцев назад +1

    You can disable Windows update for good with the program Windows Update Blocker 1.7, windows update is super dangerous, because windows will restart your pc without you knowing, so if you have important information in an unsafed notepad on an encrypted drive, your data will be lost forever.

  • @MrPazzerz
    @MrPazzerz Год назад +2

    It is the 'Security Suite' that turned me off to purchasing many of the antivirus software. Some were so invasive as to be detrimental to what = I = wanted to do. Norton, I particularly hated and McAfee wasn't much better. At one point many of the vast number of antivirus software publishers started toning them down because of that complaint from consumers. I had one of the first IBM compatible computers (8086) and really didn't need an antivirus until sometime after purchasing my first Pentium. For that reason, I view much of the talk about antiviruses as more hype than anything. Even now, my logs show nothing. The Defender in Windows is pretty much all you need.

  • @CrazyBite2007
    @CrazyBite2007 11 месяцев назад +1

    SSD and NVME drives do NOT need defragmentation. Defragmentation is only usefull on drives with moving parts!

  • @InekoBK
    @InekoBK 10 месяцев назад +2

    0:57 That's not entirely true. The original drink was definitely not snake oil but a mixture of wine and coca extract, designed as a painkiller and a treatment for nervous disorders, developed by John Pemberton, who was an actual doctor/surgeon.
    The recipe totally changed though because first the city where he lived banned alcohol so the wine was replaced by a sugar and kola nut syrup and in 1903 the coca extract was changed to an extract from coca leafs that were treated to take the cocaine out because at that point cola was no longer used as medicine but sold as a 'fruity soda drink with a kick' and addiction risks became a concern. A few additional tweaks to the recipe later and the Coca Cola we still drink today was born.
    I bet poor old Doc Pemberton would turn in his grave if he knew 150 years later his creation is considered as 'the snake oil tonic that became a popular beverage that makes you fat and rots your teeth' 😄

  • @Douglas_Blake_579
    @Douglas_Blake_579 Год назад +5

    For what it's worth ... I've taken a practice of getting a system stable, then disabling *ALL* anti-virus, restore points, swap files, updates and defender tools. I ran win7 this way for over 8 years during which it ran perfectly without a single issue. Now, on windows 10 I will do the same thing and so far... not a single problem.
    A lot of the "security vulnerabilities" that we hear so much about just never become a problem if you run your system with just a little common sense and patching the OS can -- and often does -- tend to destabilize it.
    Just this morning, in another video, I watched a hardware tech fixing a laptop where the BIOS had been erased by windows update ... and that's not a risk I intend to take.
    The truth is that Windows Update started with the best of intentions. But now it's become a bloatware distribution tool that gives Microsoft way too much power over it's users.

    • @legionofanon
      @legionofanon Год назад +1

      Common sense feels like it went out of stock years ago. those who got it are blessed and the rest... Yeah. If windows post 7 had the win 7 updater style where you could pick which updates to download and install, id still use windows updater myself (in a notify, do not auto download setting). But as it is, it remains disabled

    • @KenjiUmino
      @KenjiUmino Год назад

      what business does an OS have messing with the mainboard's (or any other hardware's) firmware in the first place ?
      I mean, yeah, it was common to have some kind of firmware update tool that you needed to run from DOS or windows, but these days, BIOS updates should be allowed only from within the BIOS itself - think about it - if windows can "update" a laptops BIOS automagically, then so can any malware

    • @Douglas_Blake_579
      @Douglas_Blake_579 Год назад

      @@KenjiUmino
      There always has been the chance that malware would overwrite the copy of the BIOS that is used during boot time. But to be able to replace the fallback copy stored in read only space should, as you say, only be possible from within the bios. Access to those addresses should be blocked from the OS and loadable software.

    • @Douglas_Blake_579
      @Douglas_Blake_579 11 месяцев назад

      @@OfficialNull
      Nothing wrong with your approach, other than it's complexity.
      I just never saw the point in constant updates and an ever changing system. I have a pretty standard kit of software, some I've written for myself, most of it I've been using for years, and as long as the OS is stable, everything works as it should. Then, as long as everything is stable, I see no reason to be nervous about things that rarely happen.

  • @charlesroberts9675
    @charlesroberts9675 Год назад +2

    Good Video, Thank You!

  • @lindah6954
    @lindah6954 11 месяцев назад +1

    I agree with you. Getting Malware on a HDD you can re-format the drive and reload windows. With a SSD hard drive it's 50/50 if it can be saved. If the malware gets into the controller portion of the SSD, it's done. Back up your files often.

  • @gotbordercollies
    @gotbordercollies Год назад +2

    Another Great Video - Hey Rich, where did you get the desktop on the computer to your left?

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад

      Are you talking about the desktop background?

    • @gotbordercollies
      @gotbordercollies Год назад

      @@CyberCPU yes sir

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад

      @@gotbordercollies I found it on Google. Don't remember where.

    • @gotbordercollies
      @gotbordercollies Год назад +2

      @@CyberCPU thank you Rich

  • @hegedusuk
    @hegedusuk Год назад +1

    Yes absolutely, if you’re running windows 7 in any business (or home) setting, DON’T!!

  • @bobjohnson5934
    @bobjohnson5934 Год назад

    Great Video, I've learned something here. I'm going to have to do some more research on a couple items. I have IObits Driver Booster and Smart Defrag, been using them for years with no problems. They out perform any other brands I've tried such as Driver Agent.

  • @mdowdy488
    @mdowdy488 10 месяцев назад

    I like your video and have learned a lot from them. I can't find the one on hooking older printers to windows 11. It's a Conon Image class MF 5750. Is there any hope for this? Thanks

  • @JPTech933
    @JPTech933 11 месяцев назад

    I truly enjoyed watching your video on my Windows 7. I don't do anything important on it, but it's perfect for watching videos and streaming music.

  • @coffeegrinder6319
    @coffeegrinder6319 Год назад +2

    Yes, Windows Update is important. Its just as important that Windows does lab tests before releasing them. I remember Windows Update breaking printers, and even deleting or hiding documents on the drive. I mean C',om. That is why i dont trust the Updates, and will wait 2 weeks, then install them, after they have the bugs gone

  • @shawnlowe1392
    @shawnlowe1392 Год назад +1

    This was a great video! You mirrored alot of the opinions of Leo Laporte (whom I watched on TechTV, so I am a little biased). But I feel you are spot on about add on anti-virus! Anyways, loving the channel, thanks for all the useful information! Keep Rocking!

  • @GarysGeeks
    @GarysGeeks Год назад +9

    I've been working on computers since 1985. I have my own IT repair business for 20 years and recently retired. I remember the Norton Commander and writing batch files for system maintenance to run windows defragger and virus scans every morning. Windows update has been a pain in the butt at times when an update BSOD's a system, but for the most part it has been a good thing for security updates and sometimes for driver updates. Windows has been good to me because it provided me a paycheck but at times IE. Windows Me creating 10's of thousand files on it's own sucked. I have used Norton since 1985 when i worked for the Government and I have no regrets, it has saved countless computers from viruses. I have used McAfee and several others and agree for the most part the big guys in anti-virus are about the same. In the old days I had to chase the files and reboot in safe mode or run Norton from a Floppy boot disk. I agree today Windows is much better about it's security and updates which saved me countless hours nowadays on my systems. I enjoy watching your videos and agree on most things but sometimes you get it wrong as we all do at times.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +5

      I have had systems in my shop infected running every antivirus on the market. That's why I recommend the ones that use the lest resources, because they all do a pretty comparable job in stopping viruses.

    • @lokelaufeyson9931
      @lokelaufeyson9931 Год назад

      if the tool works for you you can use it, i have got my computer hijjacked by microsoft a few times too many when they dont like me say "no" to them so i use a good 3rd party tool for specific purposes and to achieve specific goals like adding a little bit security that i require in windows (it only apply in windows 8 and above). Other alternative systems dont require those tools to be used.
      One issue that i still have even after many years is a bug that kill and murder my sound over hdmi, it s a"security update" that microsoft push in peoples faces by default and i have to uninstall it to get my sound back. Told MS about it and the bug is still there and destroy my life even after many years.
      I can allow updates from that point if microsoft can fix their bugged update, i have to uninstall that specific update and stay at that point to be able to watch youtube with sound.

  • @davinp
    @davinp Год назад +4

    The only time you would need to update a driver is if the one you currently have installed isn't working properly or not compatible. As you said "if it ain't broke, don't fix it"

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад

      For the most part, that's true. The only time it isn't is with gaming systems and GPU drivers.

  • @KishinMukito
    @KishinMukito Год назад

    This is one video I basically fully agree with every word said.
    Two things I have to say though:
    1. Yes registry cleaners are very bad software that shouldn't be used. But if you use an uninstalled software such as revo or iobit during their uninstallation process they can search for specific registry paths that the program you uninstalled used and deletes them for you along with other paths that the program leaves behind. And more often than not they show the registry items to you and ask you if you want to delete them or you can untick ones that you think you'd like to keep in
    2. For windows update i usually just use a program from Christ Titus to set windows update to install security updates only and to skip out on the feature updates until I feel like those feature updates are something I would like to use

  • @fookingsog
    @fookingsog 7 месяцев назад

    Before SSD's came on the scene and somewhat fast hard drives were available, I "discovered" that if you maxxed out the RAM you could install and *THEN* put the Windows System Swap (Virtual Memory File) on a Hard Disk Drive secondary to the drive that the Operating System was installed on a Primary/Main Hard Disk Drive, you could *CONSIDERABLY* increase performance and reduce access times!!! All this due to the fact that the I/O of a single Hard Disk Drive wasn't getting hammered by system calls *AND* VM/Swap File calls!!!

  • @spindragonkiller
    @spindragonkiller Год назад

    thank you for your vids. I fixed and update my win 11 iso online steps "before" issuing sfc ccommand. ❤

  • @machdaddy6451
    @machdaddy6451 Год назад +1

    I really like your bench/table. Plenty of space!

  • @machdaddy6451
    @machdaddy6451 Год назад +1

    There's a company called Gen Digital that markets Norton, Avast, LifeLock, Avira, AVG, ReputationDefender and CCleaner. This company is so bad about upsell popups and aggressive marketing.
    Every antivirus program that I have encountered has a cleanup utility, because they do such a poor job of unistallling their own software.

  • @DIYDaveOK
    @DIYDaveOK Год назад +4

    I'm with you 100% on this. People ask me what antivirus I run, and I tell them just the default on Windows, no third parties. They're stunned. Defraggers are holdovers from a bygone generation. Reg cleaners were always oversold. While I want good updates, my gripe with Windows Update is when they *force* an update down and you don't know it's coming until your machine spontaneously reboots with no opportunity to defer it. Gotta be a better way to broker those. For users who need to do a short-term task, just need to fire up their machine for a simple task, but then see that update turn their objective into an hour-long effort, that's when we've lost sight of the trees for the forest. As I said, there's gotta be a better way to broker between the two extremes of *no* updates and *forced now* updates. Need a little Wisdom of Solomon to discern what that is.

    • @philip6502
      @philip6502 Год назад +1

      Simply choose to pause updates for 1 week. You will always get a notice about the update. It will never update on its own.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      I've never liked defraggers. Even back before SSDs. I've always thought they where a waste of resources.

    • @LauraKnotek
      @LauraKnotek Год назад +3

      @@CyberCPU I never used them. Back in the day, I simply used the in-built Windows defragger.

    • @doctorno3912
      @doctorno3912 Год назад +2

      God this resonates. I'm the tech enthusiast in my family with industry experience.
      I get these same questions from family and friends and it blows their minds when I saw I just use windows defender.
      I also use Pihole with a bunch of black lists and haven't had a problem in years.
      If I have a file I'm sus on I just upload it to virus total or run it in a vm.

    • @kevinsteinman8967
      @kevinsteinman8967 Год назад +2

      I'm in the camp of when I update it's on my terms and not Microsoft. I've always found it's always better to wait and see the whine and anguish after a bad windows update and then after that's fixed to update. So yea I have windows update turned off but I can go get the update if I want and that's a point you are missing in this video. My machines are always ready for use and do not shutdown or lock me out when I need them the most.

  • @Max_Mustermann
    @Max_Mustermann 11 месяцев назад +1

    My father likes to install all kinds of free "optimizer" programs on his computer. The result usually being that Windows takes forever to start as all of these programs load on startup.

  • @jhoneviccasana1871
    @jhoneviccasana1871 Год назад +1

    Just wow, I just brought new computer and i'm glad this video recommend me first before I do something like spending for anti-virus. Thanks for making this clear to me. You have my subs bro

  • @gorrumKnight
    @gorrumKnight 11 месяцев назад

    Valid criticism of auto updates would be laptops with Intel 8th-11th Gen hardware (Especially HP). At the shop we run into many that update to either too new of a version of Windows 10 or update to 11 and have serious issues. This is because ELAN, Synaptic, etc don't have a validated driver & without disabling touchpad, touchscreen, or another core component the system BSODs to infinity. Additionally we have seen recent Windows updates force incorrect drivers for GPUs causing serious issues (11 seems to have less issues in this regard).
    Solid general advice for the average end user. I would probably mention during the anti-virus section that an ad/script blocker is valuable probably moreso these days. uBlock Origin is one I highly recommend & for the more tech savvy NoScript or CanvasBlocker. And preferably stop using Windows (I use Arch btw). Overall good video, kudos my dude.

  • @johngeverett
    @johngeverett 11 месяцев назад +1

    I remember the way Norton Utilities brought my PC to its knees. I had to deactivate most of the features for my useful apps to run as tbough they were not knee-deep in swamp muck.

  • @veespike
    @veespike Год назад +2

    19:22 - This bit here I kind of want to take issue with. I agree that disabling Windows Update completely is a mistake. But, Update as installed and configured natively on Win10 and Win11 systems is as much a risk as disabling it altogether. Win10 removed the ability for most users to hold updates and apply them upon approval. Now, for most users, they just get forced on whenever Windows wants to do them. You can put them off, and there's the whole trick of metered connections, but there should be (and used to be) an option for the user to hold updates until they are ready to install them. The reasons are two-fold: One - updates can be researched before being applied. More than once on my system alone, I have run into Windows updates that were broken upon release and had to be clawed back after install. Two - this prevents the user from being surprised by sudden shutdowns and lost work. If the user is in control of the update, this becomes much less of an issue.
    And I also know you can change this with certain versions or by hacking GPEditor onto the system - you should not have to. It used to be an option that was taken away for little good reason.

  • @prayan72
    @prayan72 10 месяцев назад

    You're a very wise and pragmatic person who knows the matter! Thank you!

  • @lisagibson2975
    @lisagibson2975 11 месяцев назад +1

    I hated Norton or any of those software suites. They ran all the time causing ram consumption, even if you paid for the full service, there was still pop ups to buy more or to rate them. If you played any pc games or stream videos, the scanner would scan in the background causing your games or stream to lag for a few. You were almost forbidden to pause any of it for such or they would make it so hard to pause/stop it, you'd just rage fit. The price was insane or all that crap too. I would rather spend $80 a year on a patreon or something to a youtube who teaches me something computer wise. Just learn to use your computer default cleaners, avoid shady sites and dont install anything unless its add on safe, malware safe and paywall safe. Also learn to safely clean your computer externallylike around the fans.

  • @peterdobson3435
    @peterdobson3435 Год назад +1

    You're absolutely right. I find no fault in what you say.

  • @marcopolitical7571
    @marcopolitical7571 11 месяцев назад

    Pffff I could bring on this info in less than vice minutes without leaving out anything useful.
    But you are a perfect metaphor for explaining how much a pain a Windows system can be. It makes you feel you need to go through the hassle to do what you want to do with it.

  • @arrowhead3993
    @arrowhead3993 11 месяцев назад +1

    Spot on!

  • @IndellableHatesHandles
    @IndellableHatesHandles 11 месяцев назад +1

    HDDs still have some utility. Sure, they're slower, but as long as you're not booting or putting your most common software on it, it's fine for videos and even some video games and programs.

  • @nathanjohnson6543
    @nathanjohnson6543 11 месяцев назад +1

    12:20 - Defragger - Agreed....But. I keep my operating system on an SSD and my data on a platter drive. It's about extending the life of my SSD by not using it as my work drive. Thus...I need to defrag the work drive from time to time.

  • @JV-pu8kx
    @JV-pu8kx Год назад +1

    A problem I have with the registry is that more and more programs are instead keeping their settings, etc., in c:\Users\user\AppData, i.e. text files.

  • @ivanmaglica264
    @ivanmaglica264 11 месяцев назад

    Registry cleaners used to make sense in times when users booted off of the HDD. Back in 9x days size of registry actually impacted login process or in some cases the program launch.

  • @---le3ba
    @---le3ba Год назад +2

    Windows updates sometimes install/update your device drivers without asking you and sometimes it give you bad drivers for your devices and thats why I disable this part of it.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      I did a video a while back on how to stop that for specific devices. It happens but it's very rare.

    • @---le3ba
      @---le3ba Год назад

      @@CyberCPU also by defoult updates use your internet band to send to other people updates from you. If you have mobile limited net, than your GBs will be gone or pay more bills.

  • @bluetheta
    @bluetheta 11 месяцев назад

    I leave automatic updates on for security updates; I do set it to prompt me to restart so I can stop my operations. Remember that updates are not complete until the system is restarted (if prompted). Feature updates should ALWAYS be on manual as these might have the bloat that you might not want.

  • @JacobP81
    @JacobP81 Год назад +1

    10:02 You can use defrag for physical hard drives, you DON'T use them for solid state. I'm not sure they are really even that necessary for physical hard drives because of the file systems we use now.

  • @DJaquithFL
    @DJaquithFL 11 месяцев назад

    Trying to be as polite as possible 20 maybe 15 years ago this video made sense to a point. No legit technician uses any of that stuff or does any of those things. What would have been helpful is about a video of best practices and things that do work. Examples: Periodic Windows backups, enabling system restore, using RAID and NAS, best practices especially for DIY PCs to update (drivers, BIOS, software, Windows, etc). Just to mention a few ideas.

  • @Zhixalom
    @Zhixalom Год назад +2

    About 2-3 years back I had one of these driver update programs "kill" my PC's motherboard. it was steadily going through all the drivers and I just had to go to the toilet. I came back only to discover that it was in the process of upgrading the UEFI BIOS firmware 😬- and when it was done, it performed a hardware reset, only to do another, and then another, and another... yeah, really just a constant unbreakable resetting loop.
    This was a GIGABYTE motherboard, which means that it had an extra backup BIOS Flash-ROM. So, I took a peek in the manual for the key-press combination for activating the backup BIOS. But no luck, it was just completely unresponsive and stuck in this resetting gridlock.
    - To make matters worse, this was just 2 days before the Christmas holidays, so I had to find a WebShop which could send me a new motherboard from one day to the next, or I would have to do without my main PC through the holidays and I had been looking forward to doing some "winters day events" in my favorite MMORPG. Anyway I did manage to get hold of an ASRock motherboard and rebuild the PC in time.
    - So, fast forward to the present, or rather around March this year (2023). I wanted to build a new home-server and went and dug the old GIGABYTE motherboard out of storage. I recently added SMD soldering to my skillset and had build up the courage to try and fix it. Or as I figured, I really had nothing to loose, since it was more or less just a very fancy paperweight like that, and best case scenario; if I could get it going, I might be able to spare some money on this home-server project. So, I de-soldered the tiny Flash-ROM chip labeled M_BIOS, used my XGecu T56 programmer with an adaptor (it couldn't detect it while "in circuit") to dump its content to a BINary file, only for later investigations, downloaded the latest BIOS firmware from GIGABYTEs website, used the T56 again to flash it onto the chip, and soldered it back in its place on the motherboard. An operation I have already done a few times on some old vintage computers from the '80s, but never actually attempted on a modern SMD motherboard.
    - It must have been quite a sight; me standing there for 5-10 minutes, after hooking up the motherboard in my test rig, with my jaw on the floor, staring all googly-eyed in disbelief at a message going "CMOS corrupted, data has been cleared. Press a key to enter UEFI BIOS Setup." - I had not expected or even dared to hope that it would work. But I had actually managed to re-flash the BIOS in the most cumbersome and manual way.
    - Just to satisfy my curiosity, I went onto GIGABYTEs website again, and downloaded some BIOS firmwares from some other random motherboard models of the same era... and what do you know, one of them matched my BINary dump-file... So, the driver update had obviously just picked a firmware update for the wrong GIGABYTE motherboard.
    - Yeah, not touching any of those driver update assassins ever again, not even with an 11 foot pole.

  • @rakaorion
    @rakaorion 11 месяцев назад +1

    Windows Defender and Firewall will be more popular if it had a better GUI to work with.

  • @thecuchikiller
    @thecuchikiller Год назад +1

    I like the way yo explain the stuff, It's not commun seeing tech with charisma.

  • @DarwinSmith1950
    @DarwinSmith1950 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this video. You cleared up my hazy thoughts of anti-virus software, ect. What's your advice on recovery software for deleted files. I invested in one (Disk Drill) $$$ and it didn't quite do as I expected.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      I've had good luck with "get data back".

  • @mariojpalomares2514
    @mariojpalomares2514 Год назад +1

    I forgotten what is like in the Windows world after ditching windows for linux many years already. Yup, i ain't missing much apparently lol. Switching to linux has been the best thing i ever did.

  • @Angular777
    @Angular777 Год назад +1

    Thank you, this really is a public service announcement, I wish that all users watched this video...

  • @fusion-music
    @fusion-music 11 месяцев назад

    Many years ago I bought a program that "fixes" the pc and updates drivers. I was left with a broken pc. Not only did it crash, it wouldn't boot. I thought drivers were extremely important, but what is more important is that the driver you have for each service is working. I narrowed the problem down to a graphics driver it said needed updating. Funny, because windows says it doesn't need updating.
    So, avoiding updating the 8GB graphics card allowed me to restore the PC back to order. I had spent nearly £480 on pc repair with a technician and still had problems. I resorted to the internet and fixed it myself and now it is stable. My policy is, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

  • @steveross8364
    @steveross8364 Год назад +2

    Using Norton Utilities on your system is like playing Russian Roulette with an Automatic Pistol.