Microsoft Releases SP4 for Windows 2000 673
Snake_Plisken writes "I checked Windows Update today on a lark and found that Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 has been released." You can read a short CNet article discussing the media player patches as well as one more about
the fixes in SP4.
Yes, Yes... (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft's stake in Telewest plunged in value (Score:3, Informative)
SP6a actually, SP6 had some problems.
Microsoft officially stops selling NT4 licenses
and providing support on the 30th of July, which is next monday.
I will still be running it for some time to come.
NT4 includes version 2 of IE. IE2 is so old it dosn't support http1.1 and can't access virtual hosted sites cutting it off from a lot of the web.
With mozilla it is practical to run NT4 without installing a later version of IE. Installing IE4+ and ending up with bits of
Re:Microsoft's stake in Telewest plunged in value (Score:5, Informative)
Oddly enough, you can install Internet Explorer 6.0 SP1 on Windows NT Workstation 4.0. It doesn't appear to slow down anything at all.
"I want a new version of NT4 with updated drivers and USB support "
Yeah, that's called Windows 2000.
"Microsoft plans to maximise revenue direct otherwise."
By your logic, if I can't purchase an Intel 4004 with integrated 802.11a/b and SSE-II, it's because Intel "plans to maximise revenue direct otherwise." That doesn't sound a little silly to you? Come on, this was a product created back in 1995/96. Do you expect them to give you free support and updates in the year 2025? Even Microsoft couldn't afford to do that; they'd have groups of people paid only to support a product that hasn't been produced (read: hasn't made them any money) in more than 20 years. At some point, you must either upgrade to a newer version, or accept that you simply will not have support for things that weren't around when the technology you're using was created.
No thanks (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No thanks (Score:5, Funny)
Obligitory complaint... (Score:2, Funny)
AWWWWW...I just got SP3 installed last night!
CB
Just Curious (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Funny)
In your case, with 100 Win2K boxes, I would suggest installing it on one or two, monitoring the results, and then publishing it incrementally using Software Update Services from a Win2K Server. This at least removes you from the picture and you can go view some porn while it goes off on it's own.
Re:Actually, it's just as easy.. (Score:3, Interesting)
That said, yes, I know very well what is going on when I use group policy. ( I do it on a daily basis) Troubleshooting failed group policy can be maj
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Informative)
I know this is slashdot, but I have been very impressed with Win2k. It's fast, stable, and reliable. I've flirted with XP a couple times, but I always end up reinstalling 2k.
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny, I'm the other way around... (Score:3, Interesting)
Kjella
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Interesting)
2000 is, in my opinion, the peak windows OS. It works, plays well with hardware, and doesn't try and mess with the concept of the UI too much. It adds transparency but doesn't mutilate it, and you can turn off the one dumb feature (menu sliding and fading).
XP...well, XP moves shit around on me. Nothing's where I expect it to be. There are all these words...and real estate on menus is sucked up by these complicated sentences that have nothing to do with what I use my computer for.
In short, XP fights my productivity. Every time I try to do something, it slows me down in a way that I only need the first time I do that thing. It's like a tutorial you can't skip past. Whereas Win2k gets things out of my way and only tells me what I need to know. If I need more, it gives me that option.
Even "classic" mode is a bear, because the control panel is all munged up. Erg!
I like Office 2000 better than XP as well...2000 was a good year for MS, maybe it's because it was the last cycle before Balmer came in as Lord of the Sith.
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Informative)
Unless that hardware is a laptop. XP is much more laptop friendly. Also, if you care about amount of time to boot, XP is a win as well.
"and doesn't try and mess with the concept of the UI too much."
Under XP:
Switch to Classic Theme (Display->Themes)
Turn off Effects (Display->Appearance->Effects)
Get rid of the rest of the visual effects (System->Advanced->Performance Options->Visual Effects.
"Even "classic" mode is a bear, because the control panel is all munged up. Erg!"
As another poster mentioned: switch to the old style control panel.
I like Office 2000 better than XP as well
It's faster, it takes less memory... But it's MDI, and it was worth the upgrade to Office XP for me just to get away from Windows 3.1 style MDI windows.
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Funny)
I used XP for a while, but I spent 90% of that time switching the theme to classic, the windows to classic, the file manager to classic, the control panel to classic, the start menu to classic, the mouse control to classic, the font to classic, the desktop to classic, the sounds to classic, the...
You get the picture right? I suppose it would have made the little girl who created the UI with their crayons cry if they made it easy to turn
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Insightful)
The only restarts for *any* of my systems in the last two years were for moving, installing new hardware, applying some update or another, or the occasional power supply failure- had two of those in the last year. I've had exactly zero crashes related to software in several years. I get a BSOD on my laptop every now and again, but that comes with the territory of running a debugger.
I routinely get 6 months or more uptime out of my desktop, and more than that for my servers. Any operating system can be made stable if you know what you're doing.
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Funny)
Alright, I'll bite - WINDOWS ME!
Christ Almighty couldn't make WinME stable with the help of a dozen M$ software engineers and Gates himself. A stable WinME box? Heh. If such an animal existed, up would be down, black would be white, and I'd be able to get a tan.
Re:Just Curious (Score:4, Funny)
Alright, I'll bite - WINDOWS ME!
The solution for Windows Me is a little less intuitive. It involves a large hammer and a lot of smashing. After that, not only will your computer will never crash again but you'll feel a lot better too.
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Funny)
This is borne out by the sort of vaguely ill look and flinching exhibited by anyone else when you mention its name.
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just Curious (Score:5, Informative)
BTW, the md5sums for the service pack linked to by OSNews (I assume it's the same one that Neowin found.) and the one on the official Microsoft download page are identical.
Re:Just Curious (Score:3, Informative)
The fact that it doesn't seem to apply until you log in is also important - make sure you log into each machine, afterwards, so that you know it's installed.
Also, don't forget to also apply the (additional) media player 9 series patch. It's actually separate from the main SP4. Luckily, you don
EULA changes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:EULA changes (Score:5, Informative)
Re:EULA changes (Score:5, Informative)
Re:EULA changes (Score:3, Informative)
Fortunately, I can.
One tool that does what you describe is called "Process Explorer" and is available from SysInternals [sysinternals.com]. Free.
The trojan that you found sounds like one of the many mIRC replacement programs that are used for botting and DDoS attacks. We found one on our network and were able to trace it's introduction back to a website. It used an exploit in IE that allows the installation of applicatio
Remember Service Packs are cumulative (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Remember Service Packs are cumulative (Score:4, Interesting)
My understanding is that the EULA for a later version takes precedence over earlier versions, so SP4 would be the 'rule'
Re:Remember Service Packs are cumulative (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:EULA changes (Score:4, Funny)
Re:EULA changes (Score:5, Funny)
SP4 EULA summary: dear sir/mam, we own you.
Change Log (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
325038: Calendar Type May Change to Japanese Emperor Era When Outlook Runs
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
313371 Samba becoming too compatible, break it Directory services
</joke>
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
One-Hour Delay Occurs During Startup with a USB Keyboard and PS/2 Mouse
I want to know who figured that out.
-B
Re:Change Log (Score:4, Informative)
This bug affects only those who use Japanese Outlook, which would, naturally, use the two different date formats in Japan. The standard BC/AD year format, and the Japanese Emperor Era format. The latter is just the year of the current Emperor's term (the current emperor, Emperor Akihito, was crowned in 1989, making the Emperor Era Year 15).
I guess a little knowledge kills the humor for me.
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
Correct. You see, jokes are primarily supposed to be funny. Realism isn't a priority.
For example, in reality, all your base are not in fact belong to us. In fact, I suspect you are have no base at all. It's a pity, I know, but that are the way it is.
Not that your post wasn't informative, mind you. It was. But you missed the point.
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Informative)
- DHCP Service Uses a Default TTL Value of 900 Seconds
- Unexpected Delay When You Log Off
- Spooler CPU Usage Remains Above 50 Percent If an LPR Port Has a DNS Name That Is Not Valid for the LPD Server
- First Character of Each Line Is Missing When You Print with the Generic Printer Driver
- Computer Displays a Blank Screen When You Resume from an S1 or S3 Power State After You Remove an IEEE 1394 Storage Device
- Windows Critical Update Notification 3.0 May Cause a "Dirty" Shutdown
- A Laptop Computer Has No IP Address After Hibernating
- The "Look In" and "Save As" Boxes in Common Dialog Boxes Are Slow
- The "Eject PC" Command May Not Work Intermittently
- The Computer Hangs If You Call LockWorkstation() While a Screen Saver Is Running
- Performance of Microsoft Commerce Server-based Programs May Degrade Over Time Gee, what a suprise...
- Paged Pool Memory Decreases as You Add RAM
- Multimedia Device Does Not Work After You Update Its Driver
- File Server Stops Responding (Hangs) When You Rename a File
- No Audio on a Web Camera When You Resume from Hibernation
- Computer with Multiple Processors and an AGP Video Adapter Hangs During Startup
- Disk Performance May Degrade Over Time It does?
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
It was about time they got the "Eject PC" command to work properly! It's an important feature for those of us who use Win2000 on their fighter jet cockpit computers. I once lost my entire address book because the darn PC wouldn't eject before a crash landing...
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Insightful)
Unexpected Delay When You Log Off
They finally fixed that? Wow, that's probably going to be my number 1 reason to install SP4.
Re:Change Log (Score:3, Funny)
They finally fixed that? Wow, that's probably going to be my number 1 reason to install SP4.
Yeah, now its an "Expected" Delay When You Log Off.
Oh well, my code isn't perfect either...
WBGG
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
They fixed it so the Eject PC command does work intermittently?
Re:Change Log (Score:3, Funny)
"Computer Is Unresponsive When Hibernating"
If you click through to the details it means that the computer is freezing when going into hibernation. Not while it is hibernating.
Re:Change Log (Score:5, Funny)
The rain in Spain...Err...nevermind.
Re:Change Log (Score:4, Funny)
Vulnerability in Terminal Services Licensing May Permit a Malicious User to Generate Additional Client Licenses in Terminal Services Licensing
Ooh! That nasty hacker is going to make you a software pirate!
Steven V.
Re:Change Log (Score:3, Funny)
Did you see this one?
325039: Turned off the groaning sound when Internet Explorer visited "Slashdot.org".
Re:Change Log (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know what you're looking at, but I'll give $5 to the first person to track down that web master, etch "tr valign=top" into a baseball bat and hammer him over the head with it.
Re:Change Log (Score:3, Funny)
What are you takling about? It renders fine on IE 6.0 SP1 with all of the hotfixes when run on Windows XP with the latest service pack and all relevant hotfixes and WHQC certified viedo drivers, Assuming you do not have Mozilla/Netscape, Java, Lotus Notes, any Oracle product, or any software licensed under the GNU public license installed on your computer.
What more could you possibly want?
Microsoft is /.'ed (Score:5, Funny)
10101010010010001010111101000001010110100111111
On a lark? (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, right! Come out of the closet. You like Microsoft! This guy can't be trusted ;)
Re:On a lark? (Score:5, Funny)
Security (Score:5, Interesting)
That guy who analysed the buffer overflow also found a funny easteregg in the buggy dll file.
Thursday (Score:5, Funny)
Who else took a double take on that one? (Score:5, Funny)
Did Microsoft buy OSDN?
Re:Who else took a double take on that one? (Score:3, Insightful)
-Lucas
Great (Score:5, Funny)
Helpful Links (Score:4, Informative)
SP4 FAQ [microsoft.com]
Lists of fixed bugs [microsoft.com]
DavaK
The scarry part (Score:5, Interesting)
The Scary part is, I've found Win2000 to be the most stable and reliable Windows ever released. 63,000 defects? I wouldn't doubt it. The part that worries me with how well 2000 works, how many defects do the 9x, XP, and NT versions contain?
It certainly left me scarred (Score:5, Funny)
Actually more than that - they counted as high as 65535, but then their bug-reporting software went titsup.
Re:The scarry part (Score:5, Insightful)
I wouldn't read too deeply into the 63,000 number of defects figure without considering a few things:
- A defect does not always mean "Will cause Windows BSOD". Some defects are an interpretation of a problem. Fictional example: "Defect #24013: There's a post-it note icon on Internet Explorer 6 that is mileading. It looks like the notes icon in Outlook 2000." A lot of them are probably design considerations.
- 63,000 is a huge number, but you have to remember that Windows runs on a very broad range of machines. Not only that, but there are tons and tons of people running it who are supplying defect reports.
- We each only use a small part of Windows. You'll probably never know if there's a bug in the Win32 API unless you're a programmer.
I wouldn't these types of statistics too seriously. There'll be a day when Linux has that many defects, if it doesn't already. All it takes is complexity.
Re:The scarry part (Score:3, Informative)
Please define "broad range". Until than - consider an example listing from the Linux kernel 2.5.73:
[leonid@sn-tower linux-2.5.73]$ ls -1 arch/
alpha
arm
arm26
cris
h8300
i386
ia64
m68k
m68knommu
mips
mips64
parisc
ppc
ppc64
s390
sh
sparc
sparc64
um
v850
x86_64
That I call a "broad range"... Not Windows.
Re:The scarry part (Score:4, Insightful)
Note: I'm not saying Linux won't run on as much stuff as Windows. I'm saying that Windows, because it's the de-facto standard out there, has the most hardware made for it. Sorry to bring it up.
Re:The scarry part (Score:5, Funny)
Some of us smaller than others...
Re:The scarry part (Score:4, Insightful)
Windows 2000 is, after all, equivalent to the linux kernel, glib, x server, window manager, web server, web browser, etc. ad nauseum. I wouldn't doubt that there are more than 63,000 conceptual functions of Win2k -- not even considering the obscure combinations of these, like opening a print dialog in IE vs opening a print dialog in Paint.
There are a countably infinite number of combinations of these as well. If testers, during their "what wierd shit can we make this OS do" phase, discovered 63,000 obscure bugs but 1,000,000 plus functions worked perfectly, I'd still ship the thing.
After all, all software over ten lines has bugs and implementation decisions. Some of those 63,000 may have never been found by consumers, while thousands more were no doubt discovered on the first day of release. That's how this industry works. Nothing is flawless or bulletproof...the benefit that Linux has is daily releases. Of course, that's if somebody cares enough about your bug to fix it...you might get stuck doing it your damn self.
Re:what a troll. (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't sound like ya know, does it? I don't know how you can leap from an "I doubt" comment to a "this is clearly..." statement.
"This is why Windoze 2000 can't run more than a few days in a row."
Funny, I had a home-made Tivo running Windows 2000 that had an average up-time of 3 months. I've got an NT4 Exchange Server that's been up for 80 days here. We used to have an IIS webserver running gon NT4. It was up for well over 6 months. We never needed to restart it, but we did have to physically move it a couple of times. My desktop machine has been running for about 13 days now. It'd have gone longer but my UPS is flaking out on me. Not bad for a machine that I do 3D animation and play games on.
" Trust your observations to tell you that software simply sucks."
Think I'd be defending 2K if I had 'observed' that the software 'simply sucks'?
"Balderdash! Windows2000 runs on intel 386. Wince runs on ARM. That's it. What do you think this is, free software that's compiled to specific x86 processor families, Motorola, ARM, Alpha, "
A machine is not a processor, it's a complete setup. Never heard of the old "Windows is on 90% of desktops" stastic before?
"you will always be at the mercy of the service patch that requires you to give up hope of privacy."
Actually, if you had read the EULA instead of going by the sensationalized Slashdot version of it, you'd know that the purpose isn't for MS to go sniffin around your machine. The reason it's there is to support a number of the features they added to Windows to deal with the virus problems that have been plaguing it. Go read it.
"Pull your head out of your closed source place please."
I would suggest you do a little thinking on your own instead of repeating all the stuff you've heard on Slashdot that gets modded +5 Insightful.
"Free software has fewer bugs and does more than any dinky windoze distro will ever. "
That's a myth. I'll give the Open Source community credit for responding to bugs in a timely manner, but you need to face facts that Open Source Software is rarely both well designed and bug free. Run a few commercial apps in front of an ordinary user and then run a few free apps in front of an ordinary user, most of the time he or she will be able to tell you which is which. "well, the commercial one seems to be friendlier to me while the free one is confusing to use."
" The complextiy you are thinking of is a legacy of all the dirty tricks M$ used over the years to kill of software rivals. That does not exist in free software and never will. "
Yeah, that's scientific. Heh.
"This is why free software PCs don't have to be turned off until the power fails."
Riiiiiiiight. We'll see how stable your Linux machine gets when games start becoming available. You'll find out just how 'rock-solid' it is then. Linux machines are not being used like Windows machines are, so drawing comparisons like that is not very informative.
Nice bit of Linux propoganda tho. Bucking for a +5 Insightful?
Re:The scarry part (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess if you're running your entire infrastructure off of one measly little server then you only have a little more than 5 minutes a year of downtime for your enterprise.
On the other hand, if you're really in a situation that requires 5 nine's of reliability, you probably know about things like clustering and load balancing, redundant backups, and hot-swapping.
In the end, it's not the uptime of one machine that mat
Port... (Score:5, Funny)
Quick! Somebody port Linux to a sparrow so we can stay ahead of the curve!
Today songbirds, tomorrow fur bearing mammals!
Re:Port... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Port... (Score:3, Funny)
Obligitary EULA quote (Score:5, Funny)
And to think that in 1990 that was written as a joke... now it seems like a rather accurate description of reality.
Oh no! Even numbered Service Pack! (Score:3, Funny)
This says a lot (Score:5, Funny)
I checked Windows Update today on a lark...
That just says it all right there, doesn't it? Checking the patch levels on the most widely used operating system in the world is considered a flighty, fickle act one does in a moment of insanity.
It's almost enough to make me wish I didn't relate to the sentiment.
To give them some credit... (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate to say it, but when I read changelogs for many Linux apps (or the kernel), they simply say "Fixed bug in foo.c". That doesn't tell me a whole lot as an end-user.
Re:To give them some credit... (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate to say it, but when I read changelogs for many Linux apps (or the kernel), they simply say "Fixed bug in foo.c". That doesn't tell me a whole lot as an end-user.
It's true. But that's because Linux apps developers don't have to follow a strict template when submitting bug fixes. Some Open Source projects are strict for the code but not the comments.
Re:To give them some credit... (Score:4, Insightful)
You can, on the other hand, diff foo.c against its previous version and get MUCH more information than a MSFT bug report will give you about an issue.
Re:To give them some credit... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course I could diff, but it wouldn't tell me *anything*. I'm a sysadmin, not a programmer. I want to know what's fixed, not a summary of code changes even someone fond of the language used and the project itself might not understand.
This point, of course, is completely useless regarding Windows, because the source isn't available anyways, but even on the *BSD and Linux machines we have on our network, I'd never diff even if I *were* a programmer. I'd check the changelog to find out where the respective patch(es) concerns us, test it on an appropriate machine and deploy it if everything still works fine after patching.
This means thorough testing anyway if you're talking mission critical machines. This takes a lot of time. I don't know about your job, but at the company I work at, this pretty much takes up most of our time as management doesn't get what we do and thinks another sysadmin or two would be overkill. Diffing would be completely out of the question. No time. (And I wouldn't care anyway, there's lot of other stuff I'd prefer fixing instead of looking at hacks in detail.)
Yeah, I got one of those emails too. (Score:5, Interesting)
Fortunately, a few things clued me in:
(1) It said it was from Microsoft. But the URL said from a Verizon ad.
(2) It called me a Microsoft Client. I've never felt so humiliated. I do *NIX or Mac.
(3) It claimed to fix ALL the known security flaws in Windows. This one should have been obvious.
(4) It was advertised to work on Win9x, ME, and 2000. My guess is that Microsoft doesn't do a whole lot for Win95 people who haven't upgraded. I could be wrong.
(5) It included an executable. [??? how did that slip past my ISP??? They normally strip executables.]
Anyhow, for those of you who use Windows, be aware [once again, and again and again] that those trojans are not to be run.
Yeah, right (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, the existence of the bug in the first place never put their customers at risk. What a crock of shite. Reminds me of MS's recent purchase of a virus protection sooftware company.
1. Sell software with security holes
2. Sell protection against those same holes
3. Profit!
The arrogance is astounding.
no french package (Score:3, Funny)
There is no service pack for the "french" version of W2K, like there was for the 2nd service pack. I do hope they end up making one or that it doesn't matter which one you install...
I downloaded the 2nd service pack *twice* last time: one time in english (to realise it wouldn't install) and one time in french.
Fun-fun-fun.
Ve Haff Vays... (Score:3, Funny)
Not to say that Microsoft is authoritarian or anything, but I can just hear Colonel Klink saying it now...
Ve Haff Vays of MAKING YOU UPGRADE!!!
Hibernation fixes (Score:3)
Interestingly enough, XP does an excellent job at hibernating, but my next laptop will be running OSX. I can't see myself paying out for an XP upgrade. Pretty colors, system restore, and it breaks PGP for only 150-200 dollars? No thanks.
The Lark (Score:4, Funny)
I checked Windows Update today on a lark
Are you using an update of the Avian Carrier [faqs.org] standard? Or is there simply a lack of pidgeons in your area?
If its a new standard, can we see some benchmakrs, and comparisons with the Avain system. Also does it support IPv6?
Thanks
Why be an one of the first? (Score:4, Insightful)
This isn't a flame against Microsoft, it makes sense to fully test anything like this, be it OSX, Redhat, Windoze, whatever. Those that are deploying without testing are doing SysAdmin's in general a complete disservice-- it makes us all look bad when something goes wrong.
It just doesn't make any sense to me to even consider deploying before it has been out a while and tested. A service pack is a cumulative rolloup of security fixes and bug fixes and occasionally some enhanced features. Yes, there are additional fixes that haven't been distributed yet, but unless you HAVE to install it, you can wait a couple of weeks and test it in production before deploying it to everyone in your company.
Look at Winnt SP3 and SP3a. They released SP3a shortly after 3 because of some problems with the service pack. Frankly, I wouldn't want to be the sysadmin who installed it on all my clients to discover all the problems! Crazy!
My experience with SP4 so far... (Score:3, Interesting)
Just my experience so far...
Re:Just keep in mind... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just keep in mind... (Score:5, Funny)
I rate pi at 3.14159
Re:Just keep in mind... (Score:3, Informative)
The most well known XP Pro Corporate key (which had shown up on newsgroups months before XP was released) is banned. I've tried to install XP SP1 with it, and it just error's out. There are a few places on the net however, where you can find tutorials on how to change the XP CD key.
I would expect this new service pack does the same thing.
Re:Just keep in mind... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just keep in mind... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sure Microsoft got wind of the key long before anyone actually used it and I would guess whoever may have gotten the key was issued new a new one.
Re:/. Minor Versions? (Score:5, Insightful)
And if you really want to talk about relevance, I'll guarantee you there's far more Win 2000 boxes out there than any of the Free OSes...
Re:The Funniest Fix (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:At least it's not $129 (Score:3, Informative)
Don't believe me? Go look at the version numbers on 2000 and on XP.
Windows 2000 = Windows NT 5.0
Windows XP = Windows NT 5.1
Re:At least it's not $129 (Score:3, Informative)
Same deal - XP (NT 5.1) is only a dot rev past W2K (NT 5.0).
I think 2003 Server is NT 5.2, but don't quote me on that.
Re:Well... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No link for EULA (Score:5, Informative)
MICROSOFT WINDOWS 2000 SERVICE PACK 4
PLEASE READ THIS SUPPLEMENTAL END-USER
LICENSE AGREEMENT ("SUPPLEMENTAL EULA")
CAREFULLY. BY INSTALLING OR USING THE
SOFTWARE THAT ACCOMPANIES THIS SUPPLEMENTAL
EULA, YOU AGREE TO THE TERMS OF THIS
SUPPLEMENTAL EULA. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE, DO
NOT INSTALL OR USE THE SOFTWARE AND, IF
APPLICABLE, RETURN IT TO THE PLACE OF
PURCHASE FOR A FULL REFUND.
THIS SOFTWARE DOES NOT TRANSMIT ANY
PERSONALLY IDENTIFIABLE INFORMATION
FROM YOUR COMPUTER TO MICROSOFT
COMPUTER SYSTEMS WITHOUT YOUR CONSENT.
1. GENERAL
This EULA is a legal agreement between you (either an
individual or a single entity) and Microsoft Corporation
("Microsoft"). The accompanying Microsoft software
includes computer software and may include associated
media, printed materials, online or electronic
documentation, and Internet-based services
(collectively, the "Components"). The Components are
provided to update, supplement, or replace existing
functionality of Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional,
Microsoft Windows 2000 Server, Microsoft Windows
2000 Advanced Server, and Microsoft Windows 2000
Datacenter Server (the "Software"). Your use of the
Components is subject to the terms and conditions of
the end user license agreement (either from Microsoft
or some other entity) under which you have previously
licensed the Software (the "Software EULA")
and this Supplemental EULA.
IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A VALIDLY LICENSED COPY OF
THE SOFTWARE, YOU ARE NOT AUTHORIZED TO
INSTALL, COPY OR OTHERWISE USE THE COMPONENTS
AND YOU HAVE NO RIGHTS UNDER THIS
SUPPLEMENTAL EULA.
2. GENERAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF YOUR USE
OF THE COMPONENTS
a. Installation and Use.
Provided you comply with all applicable license terms and
conditions contained in the Software EULA (which are
hereby incorporated by reference except as set forth
below) and this Supplemental EULA, Microsoft grants
you the right to reproduce, install and use one
copy of the Components on each of your computers
that is running a validly licensed copy of
the Software ("Computers").
b. Reservation of Rights.
The Components are protected by copyright and other
intellectual property laws and treaties. Microsoft
Corporation or its suppliers own the title, copyright,
and other intellectual property rights in the Components.
All rights not expressly granted to you in this Supplemental
EULA are reserved. The Components are licensed, not sold.
c. Capitalized Terms.
Capitalized terms used in this Supplemental EULA and not
otherwise defined herein shall have the meanings assigned
to them in the Software EULA.
3. AUTOMATIC INTERNET-BASED SERVICES.
The Software features described below are enabled by
default to connect via the Internet to Microsoft
computer systems automatically, without separate
notice to you. You consent to the operation
of these features, unless you choose to switch
them off or not use them. Microsoft does not
obtain personally identifiable information
through any of these features. For more
information about these features, please see
your Software documentation or the Microsoft
online support site.
a. Windows Update Features.
Under the Software's default configuration, if you connect
a device to your Computer and the correct device driver is
not available on your Computer, then Windows Update
features on your Computer (including Device Manager
and the Plug & Play CDM Module) automatically attempt
to check Microsoft computer systems via the Internet
for the correct device driver. Having this happen
automatically makes Plug-and-Play