The count starts from the day of installation.įor V1 it was most important to have a solution that works on all supported platforms, not just the ones that can reach Microsoft Update. This way, at least, the update check can (subject to user settings) be done way more often than the typical once-a-day checks of the background resource pigs. Windows Update is not the answer here.Īs for potential security holes on start up, I *vastly* prefer this approach to the incredibly intrusive updaters used by the other plug ins you mentioned (and Windows Update, for that matter). ![]() Seriously, part of the Silverlight story is multi-OS, multi-browser. I'm trying to imagine what Windows Update on MacOS would look like. The question that you don't answer is - do they all update on the same day such as the 15th of the month? Or is it a rolling 30 from the time that they install so there would be a rolling wave that's 30 days long of everyone updating? You see that there's a wide variety of options from automatically, mostly hidden to fully manual. They can fully prevent Silverlight from any checking and prompting, get the updates from WSUS an install as they deem necessary. You work in an enterprise that prefers to retain full control over the software that's running on your computer.Instead of downloading and installing updates in the background, we prompt to ask you if you want to install the upgrade. We do believe it's important that you know about security updates and therefore go ahead and check (once every 24 hours) for available update. We respect your choice and Silverlight will not automatically download and update to new versions. ![]() You don't like updates and chose to opt out of update checks in the Silverlight configuration.Your browser will navigate to the Silverlight download page and ask you to verify and install the new Silverlight version. ![]()
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