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All software has bugs, so the more software you have installed, the more bugs you have. It’s not just the bugs in any individual application, but it’s also magnified by interactions between some applications. Thankfully, the converse is also true: the less software you have installed, the fewer bugs you have (statistically, anyway). How many apps have you installed because they were free? How many apps came installed with your PC that you never use? How about companion apps for products you no longer own? Or maybe apps you installed years ago that you’ve forgotten about. You need to review all of your apps and get rid of anything you aren’t using. You can always reinstall them later, if necessary. But removing unused apps will also remove any software bugs and vulnerabilities that inevitably come with them. (It’s also one less app to gather and sell personal data.)
In other news: Amazon is looking to buy the maker of Roomba robotic vacuums that know the map of your home; Amazon is also hoping to buy a medical company to start directly providing healthcare; Google once again delays removing support for 3rd party cookies in Chrome; a candidate post-quantum computing encryption algorithm was defeated in an hour with a regular PC; open source software is used everywhere, but is getting very little security support; hackers act on patched bugs within minutes; our cars are collecting and sharing tons of detailed information about us and our driving habits; Samsung has implemented a “repair mode” to protect your data while your phone is in the shop; and a new Android malware is contained in several “cleaner” apps.
Use these timestamps to jump to a particular section of the show.
By Carey Parker4.9
6464 ratings
All software has bugs, so the more software you have installed, the more bugs you have. It’s not just the bugs in any individual application, but it’s also magnified by interactions between some applications. Thankfully, the converse is also true: the less software you have installed, the fewer bugs you have (statistically, anyway). How many apps have you installed because they were free? How many apps came installed with your PC that you never use? How about companion apps for products you no longer own? Or maybe apps you installed years ago that you’ve forgotten about. You need to review all of your apps and get rid of anything you aren’t using. You can always reinstall them later, if necessary. But removing unused apps will also remove any software bugs and vulnerabilities that inevitably come with them. (It’s also one less app to gather and sell personal data.)
In other news: Amazon is looking to buy the maker of Roomba robotic vacuums that know the map of your home; Amazon is also hoping to buy a medical company to start directly providing healthcare; Google once again delays removing support for 3rd party cookies in Chrome; a candidate post-quantum computing encryption algorithm was defeated in an hour with a regular PC; open source software is used everywhere, but is getting very little security support; hackers act on patched bugs within minutes; our cars are collecting and sharing tons of detailed information about us and our driving habits; Samsung has implemented a “repair mode” to protect your data while your phone is in the shop; and a new Android malware is contained in several “cleaner” apps.
Use these timestamps to jump to a particular section of the show.

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