Windows update causes headaches
Games, security software and popular
business programs are clashing with Microsoft's long-awaited security update for
Windows XP.
Since SP2 was released to business
users, reports have circulated about programs behaving differently once the
upgrade is in place.
Microsoft has drawn
up a long list of programs that do not sit well with
SP2.
Included in the list are games such
as Unreal Tournament, Photoshop Elements and most file-sharing
programs.
Long
list
Service Pack 2 for Windows XP
is intended to make the operating system much less susceptible to the viruses,
hack attacks and worms that have made the headlines over the last few
years.
As well as giving users a single
place to manage their anti-virus software, firewall and updates to Windows, the
SP2 update also makes changes under the hood in an attempt to stop viruses and
malicious hack attacks taking
hold.
Changes:
Pop-up ads blocked
Revamped firewall on by
default
Outlook Express, Internet Explorer and
Windows Messenger warn about attachments
Origins of downloaded files logged
Web
graphics in e-mail no longer loaded by default
Some spyware blocked
Users regularly reminded
about Windows Updates
Security Centre brings
together information about anti-virus, updates and
firewall
Protection against buffer
over-runs
Windows Messenger Service turned off
by default
Early reports suggested that some
of the changes SP2 introduced caused problems with programs that needed remote
access across networks.
Now, about a
week after SP2 was released to business customers, Microsoft has compiled a long
list of programs that the update is known to cause problems
with.
Microsoft has put together two
articles detailing the problems. One deals with programs that behave differently
after installing SP2 and a second that details the programs that seem to stop
working after the upgrade is in place.
Many games, such as Unreal Tournament 2003 and Sim City 4, will behave
differently because the firewall in XP is automatically turned on when SP2 is
installed.
Paul Randle, head of all
things XP at Microsoft in the UK, said most of the problems were caused by older
programs that expected to have net access that the update shut
off.
"They are also ones that are trying
to communicate across a network between a client and a server," he told BBC News
Online.
Microsoft has produced
guidelines for what to do if programs stop working after SP2 is downloaded and
installed.
Many anti-virus programs from
security firms such as Symantec feature on this
list.
Mr Randle said updating anti-virus
software with the latest versions should iron out the
conflicts.
For some programs the list of
instructions involves finding and opening ports used by programs to make sure
they can communicate via the web.
For
average users, these instructions could prove formidably
complicated.
A version of the SP2 update
for consumer PCs is expected to be released soon.
Posted: Mon - August 16, 2004 at 11:03 PM