Daily Archives: March 10, 2025
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A brief history of Windows Settings
ISSUE 22.10 • 2025-03-10 WINDOWS 11
By Simon Bisson
The real story about the Windows Control Panel is a long and winding road that goes all the way back to DOS.
Windows has always had a way of managing its settings. Right from its first version, it had a control panel that let you configure your installation. Today, it’s a collection of tools that have evolved considerably over the years from that first control panel, going from a simple applet with a handful of functions to today’s one-stop Settings shop for configuring everything Windows.
That evolution has taken us through multiple designs and redesigns, from icon-based tools with buttons and sliders, to today’s text-first Web-like interface. It hasn’t been a smooth journey either, with Microsoft’s commitment to backward compatibility leaving you switching across different generations of Windows as you drill further down into settings dialogs.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.10.0, 2025-03-10).
This story also appears in our public Newsletter. -
Thunderbolt is not just for monitors
BEN’S WORKSHOP
By Ben Myers
When will Windows computer makers embrace Thunderbolt?
This is not an idle question, but the answers are quite complicated, involving three different evolving industry standards: Thunderbolt, USB, and DisplayPort. Today’s Thunderbolt 5 offers the possibility of simplified and very fast connections for all manner of devices, not just monitors.
The Thunderbolt 5 aggregate data transfer rate is up to 120 gigabits per second in both directions, providing single data channels faster than USB and in the ballpark of the speeds inside a computer.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.10.0, 2025-03-10).
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Password Generators — Your first line of defense
FREEWARE SPOTLIGHT
By Deanna McElveen
If you create a password that is easy to remember, you create a password that can be cracked.
These are no longer the days of P@ssw0rd123, Fido2002, or 22222. No joke — an entire county government in our area used that last one on both of their servers until we helped them out.
You may think your password is fine because your account gets locked if a wrong password is tried too many times. Well, that used to be the case. If a hacker used a rainbow table that tried 2 million passwords and could try only one possible password every 15 minutes, that would have taken a very long time.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.10.0, 2025-03-10).
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AskWoody at the computer museum
HISTORY
By Will Fastie
In January, I invited AskWoody Plus members from this part of the world to join me at the System Source Computer Museum near Baltimore.
Many Plus members responded, enough that I could set a date, make appropriate arrangements with the museum, and send formal invitations.
It proved to be a delightful event. Our guests were uniformly impressed by the museum, and all seemed to enjoy themselves. It was great to meet our Plus members in person, and I am especially grateful to those who came from farther away than I expected.
I thank all who attended. If you are a Plus member, expect an invitation to our next tour soon. It will probably be scheduled in late April. Those from the previous list who could not be accommodated will be first in line.
Plus members in the IBM room at the museum, with an IBM 360/20 in the background.
Photo courtesy Plus member Dr. David Peisner.See more photos in our Plus Newsletter (22.10.0, 2025-03-10).
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Planning for the unexpected
ON SECURITY
By Susan Bradley
We all have a tendency to take many things for granted.
We take utilities, such as electricity and water, for granted. We assume fuel will be there on demand. We expect our computers and other devices to turn on every time. We assume that our software will run properly the next time we use it. Then comes the day when one or more of these things are impacted. Are you prepared? What can you do without?
I’m going to discuss several items of technology that I rely on that suddenly failed last week. For some, I had ready backups. For others, I was reminded that I need to take better steps to have a Plan B.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (22.10.0, 2025-03-10).