CDOTD
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Hmm. I never made that connection before. (thinks quietly; just ignore the sound of gear teeth breaking off) Nah. I don't think McAfee is competent to pull off any kind of extortion scheme. Besides, my wife and I are big fans of the old Perry Mason TV series[^], so I've learned how to counter every blackmail scheme known to man.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Gary Wheeler wrote:
I don't think McAfee is competent to pull off any kind of extortion scheme.
Hmmm. I'm pretty sure they are an extortion scheme: have you ever tried to remove their software once installed? :laugh:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Gary Wheeler wrote:
I don't think McAfee is competent to pull off any kind of extortion scheme.
Hmmm. I'm pretty sure they are an extortion scheme: have you ever tried to remove their software once installed? :laugh:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
Yes. The uninstall procedure was as follows: 1. Boot from a thumb drive. 2. Security wipe the primary drive. 3. Re-install Windows. 4. Re-install apps. 5. Reload data.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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I was going to write that we don't have any guns here at work. But then I remembered that there is a compressed air powered nail gun somewhere in the work shop.
Jochen Arndt wrote:
a compressed air powered nail gun somewhere in the work shop.
From personal experience, **NEVER** let a drunk plumber in the vicinity of one of these.
veni bibi saltavi
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Jochen Arndt wrote:
a compressed air powered nail gun somewhere in the work shop.
From personal experience, **NEVER** let a drunk plumber in the vicinity of one of these.
veni bibi saltavi
Quote:
NEVER let a drunk plumber in the vicinity of one of these.
From personal experience too, craftsmen playing with tools of dissimilar trades are dangerous to your health.
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Yes. The uninstall procedure was as follows: 1. Boot from a thumb drive. 2. Security wipe the primary drive. 3. Re-install Windows. 4. Re-install apps. 5. Reload data.
Software Zen:
delete this;
The official method is more fun: How To Uninstall McAfee Antivirus - YouTube[^] - probably NSFW, it starts with the "F" word ...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Quote:
NEVER let a drunk plumber in the vicinity of one of these.
From personal experience too, craftsmen playing with tools of dissimilar trades are dangerous to your health.
I think it may be the nail gun that's the problem here. :beer:
veni bibi saltavi
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The official method is more fun: How To Uninstall McAfee Antivirus - YouTube[^] - probably NSFW, it starts with the "F" word ...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
That might get a slightly, teensy weensy bit NSFW. Just saying.
veni bibi saltavi
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We use Inno Setup[^] for all of our installers, and have for years. I estimate we have over a man-year of work in installers for our products, optional features, etc. Yesterday I discovered that the innosetup.com site is now blocked by our IS department, which uses McAfee Web Gateway to manage 'prohibited' sites. Today I received an email from one of the IS yabbos to the effect that Inno Setup was not on the approved list of applications. I was told to apply for approval, and then they would consider beginning the exception process for the web site. What. The. Fuck. My plans are to be the good little corporate drone and fill out whatever numb-nuts crap they ask, and then go right the fuck ahead and continue to use Inno Setup. It works, it's easy to use, it's for crap's sake FREE. To paraphrase JSOP, they'll take my Inno Setup when they claw it from my cold, dead hard drive. (*) Corporate Douche-baggery Of The Day
Software Zen:
delete this;
The correct procedure is of course to ask the IS dweebs to show you the audit of the software on \*their\* machines. Oh and while you're there, their browser history :laugh:
veni bibi saltavi
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That might get a slightly, teensy weensy bit NSFW. Just saying.
veni bibi saltavi
I'd forgotten that it starts with the "F" word ... edited. :thumbsup:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I'd forgotten that it starts with the "F" word ... edited. :thumbsup:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
... and there are quite a lot of girls who obviously didn't take their mam's advice to dress up warm. Or to dress at all for that matter.
veni bibi saltavi
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We use Inno Setup[^] for all of our installers, and have for years. I estimate we have over a man-year of work in installers for our products, optional features, etc. Yesterday I discovered that the innosetup.com site is now blocked by our IS department, which uses McAfee Web Gateway to manage 'prohibited' sites. Today I received an email from one of the IS yabbos to the effect that Inno Setup was not on the approved list of applications. I was told to apply for approval, and then they would consider beginning the exception process for the web site. What. The. Fuck. My plans are to be the good little corporate drone and fill out whatever numb-nuts crap they ask, and then go right the fuck ahead and continue to use Inno Setup. It works, it's easy to use, it's for crap's sake FREE. To paraphrase JSOP, they'll take my Inno Setup when they claw it from my cold, dead hard drive. (*) Corporate Douche-baggery Of The Day
Software Zen:
delete this;
Most people only learn just barely enough to do their jobs, so they simply just do not know better. I'd talk to someone higher up and get it sorted out.
Jeremy Falcon
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We use Inno Setup[^] for all of our installers, and have for years. I estimate we have over a man-year of work in installers for our products, optional features, etc. Yesterday I discovered that the innosetup.com site is now blocked by our IS department, which uses McAfee Web Gateway to manage 'prohibited' sites. Today I received an email from one of the IS yabbos to the effect that Inno Setup was not on the approved list of applications. I was told to apply for approval, and then they would consider beginning the exception process for the web site. What. The. Fuck. My plans are to be the good little corporate drone and fill out whatever numb-nuts crap they ask, and then go right the fuck ahead and continue to use Inno Setup. It works, it's easy to use, it's for crap's sake FREE. To paraphrase JSOP, they'll take my Inno Setup when they claw it from my cold, dead hard drive. (*) Corporate Douche-baggery Of The Day
Software Zen:
delete this;
The project I'm working on gathers data from various other teams. Some provide extracts in Excel (ptui) and they say they can't provide it any other way :rolleyes: . So we use the ACE Engine and SSIS' Excel Source component to read the data into SQL Server. We've been doing this for years. And just recently the wombats in security said, "Oh, no, you have Office installed on your servers, we can't have that". :sigh:
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We use Inno Setup[^] for all of our installers, and have for years. I estimate we have over a man-year of work in installers for our products, optional features, etc. Yesterday I discovered that the innosetup.com site is now blocked by our IS department, which uses McAfee Web Gateway to manage 'prohibited' sites. Today I received an email from one of the IS yabbos to the effect that Inno Setup was not on the approved list of applications. I was told to apply for approval, and then they would consider beginning the exception process for the web site. What. The. Fuck. My plans are to be the good little corporate drone and fill out whatever numb-nuts crap they ask, and then go right the fuck ahead and continue to use Inno Setup. It works, it's easy to use, it's for crap's sake FREE. To paraphrase JSOP, they'll take my Inno Setup when they claw it from my cold, dead hard drive. (*) Corporate Douche-baggery Of The Day
Software Zen:
delete this;
You must work for the US government. :) It's amazing the "logic" they use to block website here on an Air Force base. For example, we have an MSDN subscription, and the MSDN website itself isn't blocked, but the MSDN website uses CSS, images, etc from another site which IS blocked. You should see how MSDN shows up in our web browsers. We can't access the downloads that we pay for. No one in Information Assurance really cares. So we access our work MSDN account from home, download what we need, and bring it in on DVD which has to go thru quite a rigmarole to be approved. It's probably better that way though - our download speed here on our government networks is around 80 to 100K. Seriously.
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You must work for the US government. :) It's amazing the "logic" they use to block website here on an Air Force base. For example, we have an MSDN subscription, and the MSDN website itself isn't blocked, but the MSDN website uses CSS, images, etc from another site which IS blocked. You should see how MSDN shows up in our web browsers. We can't access the downloads that we pay for. No one in Information Assurance really cares. So we access our work MSDN account from home, download what we need, and bring it in on DVD which has to go thru quite a rigmarole to be approved. It's probably better that way though - our download speed here on our government networks is around 80 to 100K. Seriously.
Nope, but I do understand. I worked as a defense contractor back during the 80's, and I remember similar nonsense when I worked at our local AFB.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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McAfee molests Collies[^]. I can't believe some of the crap they convince corporate IT departments to buy. For example, our hard drives are encrypted using a McAfee product. Guess what happens if you have a motherboard fail, and you need to retrieve the data from the hard drive. You can't decrypt it. The data is completely unrecoverable.
Software Zen:
delete this;