Image by xeeliz via Flickr
It’s a familiar warning — a message opens on your screen, citing software advancements and the need to claim them. You frown, uncertain if you can spare the time (or the hard-drive space). Downloading is tedious and seems to offer few rewards. Any attempts to secure supposedly better programs have failed: yielding indecipherable results and unimpressive new features. There’s nothing to gain from progress. You think it’s instead a mere sales tactic.
That sales tactic is essential, however — and you discover this when a virus infects your computer, old software allowing it to slither in. An update would have saved your system. Now you’re left with a blank screen and a battered connection.
Software is ever-changing. Progress defines source codes, allows them to perpetually transform. Such transformations aren’t fickle, though — offered for the sake of simply being different. Instead they’re meant to keep pace with the endless viruses and spamming Trojans. Advancements aren’t just given to computers. They’re instead claimed by hackers.
As of 2011, there are 1,000,000 unique strands of malware (with all of these shifting to new formulas, the algorithms mutating often). Users master these, shoving them into systems and stealing information. It’s necessary therefore to prepare for any possible invasion — and software updates offer such preparation.
Choosing every possible new program is essential. Frequent installations provide protection, helping networks battle any concerns. The advancements offered to software match the dangers that try to infiltrate them. Achieving a balance between these is vital.
You must not ignore updates. Instead you must embrace them.
