№7185
photoshop fr
№7189
>>7180all the propietaty garbage wine lets me run
№7190
kill yourself
№7199
>>7190>>7189linuxtroons mad
№7300
>>7180Source engine and Proton
№7328
Vegas Pro 14
№7361
>>7346>hi everyone. This is Steve Carroll, the dev manager for the Visual C++ team.
>Tl;dr: thanks folks for the feedback. Our team will be removing this from our static libs in Update 3.
>Our intent was benign – our desire was to build a framework that will help investigate performance problems and improve the quality of our optimizer should we get any reports of slowdowns or endemic perf problems in the field.
>We apologize for raising the suspicion levels even further by not including the CRT source, this was just an oversight on our part. Despite that, some of you already investigated how this mechanism works in nice detail. As you have already called out, what the code does is trigger an ETW event which, when it’s turned on, will emit timestamps and module loads events. The event data can only be interpreted if a customer gives us symbol information (i.e. PDBs) so this data is only applicable to customers that are actively seeking help from us and are willing to share these PDBs as part of their investigation. We haven’t actually gone through this full exercise with any customers to date though, and we are so far relying on our established approaches to investigate and address potential problems instead.
>We plan to remove these events in Update 3. In the meantime, to remove this dependency in Update 2, you should add notelemetry.obj to your linker command line. If you’re generally concerned about phone-home scenarios, more information about how to configuring Windows 10 appropriately to your needs can be found here: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/configure-windows-10-devices-to-stop-data-flow-to-microsoft%23bkmk-priv-feedback
>Thanks.Linuxtroons can only bring up 7 year old controversies that lasted for about a month to bash Windows. Sad!
№7363
>>7361GEG I still remember the spergouts /g/ had over this back then