Skip to main content

It's time to tell your laptop to stop installing software you don't want

[ad_1]


When it comes to your laptop, the fewer applications you've got, the better—it means more room for the apps you actually make use of, less of a strain on your computer, and fewer potential security holes to worry about.



With all that in mind, here's how to keep your laptop software lightweight: first get rid of pre-installed programs you don't want, and then ensure your laptop doesn't get cluttered up with unwanted software in the future.




Banish the bloatware


Your shiny new laptop might already be weighed down with unnecessary applications. It's called bloatware, basically programs installed by the laptop manufacturer pushing its own services. Some of these can be useful, but you don't have to keep them around if you don't want to.



In Windows, click the Settings cog icon on the Start menu, then choose Apps and Apps & features. You'll see all the applications on your system listed—select any entry in the list and then Uninstall to remove it. Most programs can be erased this way, though some can't be uninstalled.



Bloatware is less of a problem on macOS devices, but you might not necessarily want to keep all of the programs Apple includes. You've got a few different options when it comes to uninstalling programs from macOS.



Open up the Applications folder in Finder, and you can drag the app icon down to Trash to remove it from your system. Alternatively, open Launchpad from the Dock or the Applications folder, click and hold on an app icon until it starts shaking, then tap the little X cross icon that appears.




Be careful with installers


Plenty of programs will attempt to install extra software while you're working your way through the initial setup process. Not only does this add extra clutter to your system, it can also be risky from a security perspective; you're granting access to apps that you haven't fully vetted.



The only way to really guard against this is to pay attention as you install new software, and don't blindly keep on clicking the Next buttons until you've reached the end. Watch out for tick boxes that are checked by default and effectively give permission for extra software to be installed.


You should also be careful about the software developers you trust to install applications on your laptop. There are many honest and reputable smaller developers out there, but always do due diligence before downloading and installing something new—check the history of the developer, and read reviews of the app from existing users.



To be on the safe side, limit yourself to installing apps from the official Microsoft and Apple stores whenever possible—these programs have been vetted and checked, and shouldn't attempt to install anything extra. On Windows, choose Microsoft Store from the Start menu; on macOS, click the App Store icon on the Dock.




Lock down your browser


Your browser is your laptop's window to the web, so you want to make sure it's shored up against apps and extensions that surreptitiously install themselves. Keeping your browser updated is the first step, but thankfully that's automatically taken care of for you by all modern-day browsers (so long as you close all your tabs and restart the browser every once in a while).



Avoid agreeing to install any add-ons or plug-ins you don't immediately recognize as programs you opted to download. If you're in any doubt, navigate away from the page you're on, or close the tab.



Watch out for extra toolbars appearing in your browser, or browser settings (like the default search engine) changing without warning—you can always head to the extensions settings page in your browser to remove extensions you're not sure about.



When you install a new extension in your browser, you'll get a pop-up explaining the permissions it has—the data it can see, and the changes it can make to your system. Don't install any extras on top of your browser without double-checking the developers behind them and reading reviews left by current users.




Practice good security


To maximize your protection against applications that would install themselves without your permission, we recommend getting an antivirus package installed whether you're on Windows or macOS—you can find a variety of independent reports online to point you towards the best choices. These packages will typically include dedicated tools that watch for unexpected software installations.



If you're on Windows, you can make use of the built-in Windows Defender software that comes with the operating system and specifically checks for the installation of authorized apps. From Windows Settings, click Update & Security, Windows Security, and App & browser control to make sure the feature is enabled.



Be very careful when installing anything you've found on the web. Double-check you're accessing it from a trusted website—so in the case of Office 365, for example, download it straight from Microsoft rather than a third-party website. If you are downloading applications from the internet, make sure the file you've got matches what you thought you were getting.



The same goes for email attachments or links sent over social media—we've written before about some of the warning signs. If you're sent something you weren't expecting, whether it's a document or a download, check the email address (the account may have your brother's name, but if the email address is unfamiliar, step away) before opening anything.




[ad_2]

Written By David Nield

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ic...

Humans flourished through a supervolcano eruption 74,000 years ago (so you can make it through Tuesday)

[ad_1] About 74,000 years ago, a large chunk of a Pacific island exploded. It sent ash and other debris around the world, including to the southern tip of Africa, where it would be found by a team of international scientists and entered as the latest data point in one of the hottest debates in paleoanthropology ( I know ): Did the Toba supervolcano thrust our planet into a 1,000-year volcanic winter, thus bottle-necking animals and plants alike? Or was it just a little blip on our historic radar? That’s the contentious arena into which our intrepid researchers venture, this time with a new study in Nature establishing that humans in modern-day South Africa not only survived, but flourished after the Toba eruption. Where once was (we think, maybe) a mountain, there is now a huge caldera with a lake inside, and an island inside that. Their evidence shows that debris from the explosion landed 9,000 kilometers (5592.3 miles) away, the farthest distance traveled ever recorded for the ...

These 1950s experiments showed us the trauma of parent-child separation. Now experts say they're too unethical to repeat—even on monkeys.

[ad_1] John Gluck’s excitement about studying parent-child separation quickly soured. He’d been thrilled to arrive at the University of Wisconsin at Madison in the late 1960s, his spot in the lab of renowned behavioral psychologist Harry Harlow secure. Harlow had cemented his legacy more than a decade earlier when his experiments showed the devastating effects of broken parent-child bonds in rhesus monkeys. As a graduate student researcher, Gluck would use Harlow’s monkey colony to study the impact of such disruption on intellectual ability. Gluck found academic success, and stayed in touch with Harlow long after graduation. His mentor even sent Gluck monkeys to use in his own laboratory. But in the three years Gluck spent with Harlow—and the subsequent three decades he spent as a leading animal researcher in his own right—his concern for the well-being of his former test subjects overshadowed his enthusiasm for animal research. Separating parent and child,...