Pointsec and windows 7




















About Gabriel Jones. Questions 0. Answers 3. Best Answers 3. Vote Up 0 Vote Down. About Sharath Reddy. Questions 1. Answers Best Answers My email keep sending mails to my contacts Previous. Related Questions. Using a Salt Value with the user password By. Misc Security. Looking for foul language filter softwares By. Folder containing some important. Need information about bot net By. Unable to update MCafee Groupshield to 7. For a blast from the past, check out this blog about the Windows 7 taskbar that was posted almost a year before the operating system's release.

It was authored by Steven Sinofsky, at the time one of the development heads for the OS. Later, Sinofsky became president of the Windows Division, where he became the public face of Windows 8, the heir to 7 that bombed. For a bit more than a decade, Windows 7 remained fixed, steadfast, unvarying, enduring.

According to Microsoft's model, we'll never see Windows like that again, not on personal computers. Windows 7 sported just a single service pack SP , the cumulative roll-ups released at irregular intervals, that was issued in February , about 16 months after the OS's debut.

But although Windows 7 SP1 contained some changes, they were all under the hood; nothing visible to users was altered. Much the same could be said for a subsequent platform update, a February release focused on graphics and imaging components and including Internet Explorer 10 IE Meanwhile, Windows 10 morphs every 12 months if enterprise customers are lucky and the major-minor pattern continues , every six months if they're not.

Microsoft believed commercial customers were so enamored of Windows 7 — and would hold onto the OS in such numbers — that for the first time the company publicly unveiled a program to provide post-retirement security updates. That was a significantly different approach than the company has used before as an OS nears it end times.

Called Extended Support Updates ESU and revealed in September — a year and a half prior to Windows 7's expiration — the program focused on volume-licensing customers, its largest and most important patrons.

Those businesses would be able to purchase support in one-year increments for up to three years, with prices doubling in the second year, doubling again in the third. Customers with subscriptions to Windows 10 would receive a discount. Near the last minute — in October — Microsoft caved to small businesses and said it would also sell ESU to customers who did not have existing volume licensing plans in place.

The firm has sold post-retirement programs before, notably when Windows XP neared its retirement. But those deals were clouded in secrecy, with mysterious — and negotiable — price points. But buying CSA was a completely-behind-the-scenes process done on a company-by-company basis, with virtually no public information about the program nor price lists.

That allowed Microsoft to dramatically raise CSA prices in late and , then turn around and slash them just days before XP's retirement. The world-turned-upside-down shock of Windows 10 — its continual updating most notably — did more than anything else to elevate Windows 7's long-term reputation.

Faced with the jolt of Windows 10, its predecessor came off looking that much more composed. At the risk of being rejoined with an "OK, boomer," and knowing that nostalgia can backlight even incompetence with an artificial glow, Computerworld proposes that Windows 7 was what an OS should be, serviced as an OS ought to be, useful like an OS better be. Much of that stems from the habits that Microsoft force-fed customers. Updates should be discrete so that individual patches can be postponed or rejected outright; feature additions should arrive only after years-long intervals to maximize learning "expense;" the OS should not transmit vast quantities of telemetric and diagnostic data to Redmond's servers.

And so on. But Microsoft upturned all of that in a single swoop, unlike the gradualism of Windows' past. Bitlocker is less expensive and on modern hardware, is plenty fast. I wouldn't use TrueCrypt unless for a very small of machines due to lack of key management. People do forget passwords and without a recovery disk, you'll be wiping the machine and restoring from the last good backup. If you're talking about more than a few laptops, I'd be inclined to use something with central management.

They have to type the password at some point anyway. Without the boot password does that prevent someone from putting in a password reset disc and resetting the local admin password to gain access to files and folders?

We use TrueCrypt, works great and is free. Do you use the boot time passwords? If so how do you centrally manage them incase a password is lost? So are your users keeping track of their boot time password along with an active directory password that changes? Is every boot time password unique?

I have customers who use one slot of a Yubikey for a static password for truecrypt. Even more clever, some of them have a truecrypt password that is only partly stored on the yubikey, but then also requires some memorized portion to be prepended or appended. Have you run into any issues with TrueCrypt when trying to run a Windows 7 system repair? Will it be able to repair the encrypted partitions?

To continue this discussion, please ask a new question. Which of the following retains the information it's storing when the system power is turned off? Submit ». Get answers from your peers along with millions of IT pros who visit Spiceworks. Hey all, I'm interested in rolling out full drive encryption for most if not all of our laptops. Hopefully this thread can assist others looking for more drive encryption information.

Possible drive encryption methods - Upgrade Windows 7 Pro to Ultimate and roll out bitlocker. With those two options, what's the recommended option? DailyLlama This person is a verified professional. Verify your account to enable IT peers to see that you are a professional. Rod Dec 12, at UTC.



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