Comments on: Zero-day attack hits Word
Microsoft is working to patch a security flaw in its word-processing software that is being used in targeted cyberattacks.
Microsoft is working to patch a security flaw in its word-processing software that is being used in targeted cyberattacks.
December 4, 2009 10:15 AM PST
December 4, 2009 9:36 AM PST
December 4, 2009 9:23 AM PST
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said. "Every single day, they come out with a total exploit, your
machine can be taken over totally. I dare anybody to do that once a
month on the Windows machine."
Would you care for some salt and pepper for your foot Mr. Gates?
"Office Update is unable to check for updates
The Office Update site is unable to check for updates on this computer. This may be happening because of one of the following reasons:
You do not have administrative privileges for this computer.
There is a network problem and the detection catalog used by the Office Update site failed to download. Go back to the Downloads home page and try running detection again.
Windows Installer patch files (.MSP files) from previously applied Office updates are missing from the \Windows\Installer hidden directory on your computer. MSP files are stored on your computer after update installation completes because they need to be referenced for future update operations. If the files are missing you will not be able to apply Office updates. You may also be unable to uninstall Office products as a result of the same problem."
Maybe you shouldn't have deleted the MSP files, the error tells you as much.
"MSP files are stored on your computer after update installation completes because they need to be referenced for future update operations"
this is why a "registry reference" would not work, it need to access parts of code contained within the previous updates.
Or is this a pirated copy of Office?
I bet you could pick up Word Perfect for just about nothing, and it hasn't been updated in years, so have fun.
Your pain, their profit.
- No, It Is Bad MS Programming
- by Stating February 16, 2007 9:41 AM PST
- Think about how nuts this is. First you install a patch which replaces existing .exe or .dll. Then Windoze keeps a "backup" copy of things in case you want to back out the patch. OK, fine. But there is no capability at some point to say, "clean out the old crud patches". So over time you end up with 100s of megs of patch crud that you are stuck with. That is just nuts. Poor, poor, design.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(6 Comments)The particular problem with MS Office referencing these old MSP files in order to process future patches doesn't occur with patches to the OS. I delete old XP patch files all the time and never have a problem subsequently running new XP updates.