Limited Connectivity Mode

When my business laptop connects to the internet, the following events occur:

  • Windows checks for updates and automatically begins downloading any important ones.
  • Firefox checks for updates for itself and any installed extensions.
  • FoxMarks synchronises my bookmarks.
  • Google Talk connects, and checks for any new emails.
  • AVG checks for anti-virus updates.
  • Windows Defender checks for spyware updates.
  • Adobe Updater checks for updates to installed Adobe products.
  • Daemon Tools checks for updates for itself.

There are probably more, but you get the idea. Generally, this is a wonderful thing, but not when I happen to be sitting in my car in Cornwall, connecting to the internet via a GPRS connection, and simply trying to check my bank balance. The traffic from all of the above automated events makes this simple task take ages. I wish there were some kind of system-wide setting so that I could prohibit such events occurring if connection speed was below a certain level. Any ideas?

#1 Jeremy Pearson on 24 Jul 2008 at 23:33

Agreed. Windows urgently needs two things:

1) A centralised update service, where each application's updater lives, and where the whole lot can be time-scheduled, enabled or disabled

2) A centralised notification service, just like the above, so that all notifications appear in the same place, can be globally enabled or disabled, or even sent to a specific event log (or piped to a micro blog etc..)

Whoever can pull this out of the hat successfully will win major kudos.

#2 John Topley on 25 Jul 2008 at 09:08

Firefox only checks for updates if it's running, doesn't it? Holding down Shift whilst logging in will prevent items in your Startup group from loading.

The centralised notification service was one of the features Microsoft chopped from Longhorn.

You could always buy a Mac and then you wouldn't need any anti-virus or anti-spyware gunk! ;-)

#3 John Topley on 25 Jul 2008 at 09:10

D'oh! I get it...presumably you were using Firefox in order to check your bank balance!

#4 ian on 25 Jul 2008 at 09:14

@John - yeah, I should have been more explicit there. You're right that Firefox wouldn't check for updates if I didn't launch it. Thanks for the shift tip.

I just *knew* I would get a comment about Macs from yourself or JC :-)

#5 Jeremy Pearson on 25 Jul 2008 at 10:23

..and one more thing while we're at it: a central setting for "no thanks, I do *not* want to install the Google Toolbar".

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