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#10
There were rumors that they would provide a UI that is not cmd or powershell.
Windows 10 keeps getting more and more interesting. Not necessarily better in every aspect, but so far so good.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
and
sudo apt-get install
Looks like linux!!
Are they supporting commands like:
sudo apt-get remove [package]
sudo apt-get autoremove [package]
sudo apt-get purge [package]
It would be great!!
No, nothing at all. If a program has a CLI only, a GUI can just invoke those commands under the hood and appropriately format the input/output. It already has been done, in fact (TortoiseSvn wrapping Svn is an example). Having both gives the best of both worlds, usability and being discoverable of a GUI and automation capabilities of a CLI.
Having "auto-updating" built-in into a program or as a separate service is almost equally dangerous. Program may be updated at any time, you like it or not, and it might break something that used to work or just delay usage by forcing an unnecessary update at any time. Services have the added troubles that run as a separate program (ie, more resource consumption) and running often as localsystem (ie, a great security risk). "Normal" programs don't tamper with the user system and don't download anything they don't need to work.
The Linux package managers are just wrappers for the command line utilities apt and pacman. I would guess that if MS didn't create a GUI someone else would.
Thanks for the explanation.
As for the second part of your comment, I was referring to certain programs like iTunes, BitTorrent and the like, that when you start them up, inform you that there is a new version available, and asks if you want to install it. MUCH better than having a background service I have to hunt down in msconfig and turn off. Even a better option for non-techies.
The previous update that I installed for Chrome seems to have fixed my UAC issue. :)
I updated it again yesterday and I only received one UAC prompt.
It still churned for ages though.
It's got to be one of the slowest updating programs I have ever seen.
The only things that are worse are .NET updates.