I wanted to remove an Adobe file because it wouldn’t let me uninstall Adobe through the program management. It said it was being used. By explorer apparently. Checked online, all I had to do was rename the file, then delete it. Worked. But it’s so dumb.
This was how you could prevent Cortana and some other stuff from being automatically reinstalled when Windows forced if. Uninstall the app via appx, or just delete the folder instead if it’s not in use, and then replace it with a file with the same name so it can’t remake the folder.
It was slowly being replaced by vagrant in some courses and I think after I left I’m pretty sure they replaced whatever hardware it was on with something running Linux.
I remember it was mildly annoying because the Java compiler on it was a bit old and different in some way, though I can’t really remember how.
Ours didn’t have fun names., or at least not ones that were exposed to students. I honestly didn’t know too much about about them but I suspect at the time Sparc systems were one of the larger machines compute wise you could get outside of mainframes. So very suitable for a university multiuser setup.
Cortana was released nearly 12 years ago and I’m not sure the Solaris box lasted much longer. It was the only box that connectable remotely at the time and you put your assignments on it to be marked by TAs. The computer labs were all Linux and Windows though.
I suspect it was around because it mostly just worked and probably some greybeard had scripted it all up to connect to the various student systems and automatically provision accounts and things.
I wanted to remove an Adobe file because it wouldn’t let me uninstall Adobe through the program management. It said it was being used. By explorer apparently. Checked online, all I had to do was rename the file, then delete it. Worked. But it’s so dumb.
Btw this also method to prevent file/dir be automatic created: for dir make file with same name, for file other way.
Usually rename only replace other file, not dir. And if path exist but file, cannot open as dir, but also not create.
This was how you could prevent Cortana and some other stuff from being automatically reinstalled when Windows forced if. Uninstall the app via appx, or just delete the folder instead if it’s not in use, and then replace it with a file with the same name so it can’t remake the folder.
Cortana being reinstalled after I “deleted” it was the impetus for me to swap to Linux in the first place.
That and I was a CS student and our assignments had to run on Solaris which is closer to Linux than Windows.
Northern Scandinavia??
No Canada, and even then it was a bit of a relic.
It was slowly being replaced by vagrant in some courses and I think after I left I’m pretty sure they replaced whatever hardware it was on with something running Linux.
I remember it was mildly annoying because the Java compiler on it was a bit old and different in some way, though I can’t really remember how.
Alright. 😄 We also had a couple Solaris servers at my uni. They had the names “itchy” and “scratchy”.
Ours didn’t have fun names., or at least not ones that were exposed to students. I honestly didn’t know too much about about them but I suspect at the time Sparc systems were one of the larger machines compute wise you could get outside of mainframes. So very suitable for a university multiuser setup.
You used Solaris when cortana was already a thing? That’s great! :D
My university ditched Solaris like 20 years ago. Still have fond memories of cde lol
Cortana was released nearly 12 years ago and I’m not sure the Solaris box lasted much longer. It was the only box that connectable remotely at the time and you put your assignments on it to be marked by TAs. The computer labs were all Linux and Windows though.
I suspect it was around because it mostly just worked and probably some greybeard had scripted it all up to connect to the various student systems and automatically provision accounts and things.
I’m sure it’s all Linux now.