Take the Blue Screen of Death, a Windows mainstay for more than a decade. Yes, it’s still alive and well in Vista, but now it has a cousin: the Green Ribbon of Death. The Green Ribbon of Death capable of bringing Windows Explorer to its knees comes from a combination of poor design and bugs in its code.
And thus the reason for distinguishing where an annoyance becomes clear: you need to know what you’re dealing with in order to fix it.The User Account Control (UAC) feature in Windows Vista is a perfect example of a feature gone awry. Most of the time, UAC does precisely what it was designed to do—prevent programs from doing harm to your PC, occasionally asking your permission when it deems it appropriate to do so—but the result is a system that frequently bothers you with UAC prompts, while intermittently breaking your applications without telling you why.
Because this behavior isn’t caused by a bug per se, fixing the problem is instead just a matter of customizing the system so that it suits your needs. This inevitably leads to an important conclusion: one person’s annoyance is another’s feature. Although Microsoft may be motivated more by profit than excellence, often leading to products designed for the lowest common denominator, you’re not bound to that fate.


4 comments
Write commentsWow! this is something new term for me! But is there any way to avoid or to overcome these problems? why cant you write that?
Replyno solution at all?
ReplySo yeah, where's the fix
Replypenis
Reply