- Joined
- May 29, 2012
- Messages
- 537 (0.12/day)
System Name | CUBE_NXT |
---|---|
Processor | i9 12900K @ 5.0Ghz all P-cores with E-cores enabled |
Motherboard | Gigabyte Z690 Aorus Master |
Cooling | EK AIO Elite Cooler w/ 3 Phanteks T30 fans |
Memory | 64GB DDR5 @ 5600Mhz |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 3090Ti Ultra Hybrid Gaming w/ 3 Phanteks T30 fans |
Storage | 1 x SK Hynix P41 Platinum 1TB, 1 x 2TB, 1 x WD_BLACK SN850 2TB, 1 x WD_RED SN700 4TB |
Display(s) | Alienware AW3418DW |
Case | Lian-Li O11 Dynamic Evo w/ 3 Phanteks T30 fans |
Power Supply | Seasonic PRIME 1000W Titanium |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64-bit |
Security is about layers; that's about as simple as it gets. Sandboxing adds yet another layer to that security cake and we shouldn't be bitching about removing it. Also, the JVM is actually incredibly secure. There are very few exploits (and the ones that exist are ingenious as hell) that break out of the actual JVM sandbox.
Where Java's security is a complete fucking joke is the web plugin. Oh good god it's so bad.
UWP adds more layers of security than Win32 could ever hope to, owing the age of it. It's also adding feature parity at a break neck pace. UWP has only existed since Windows 10 launched, and even though it has its roots in WinRT, it's still a very different beast offering far more functionality and far more performance than WinRT - which is now thankfully dead. UWP will continue to evolve, will continue to get features added to it to increase feature parity with Win32, but it'll be done in a far more secured and sandboxed manner. Just this week an update was released to give G-Sync and FreeSync support to UWP applications which they were lacking before. Claiming UWP needs to die because right this moment it isn't 100% feature compliant with Win32 (which has been around for fucking decades) just reeks of shortsightedness.
Where Java's security is a complete fucking joke is the web plugin. Oh good god it's so bad.
UWP adds more layers of security than Win32 could ever hope to, owing the age of it. It's also adding feature parity at a break neck pace. UWP has only existed since Windows 10 launched, and even though it has its roots in WinRT, it's still a very different beast offering far more functionality and far more performance than WinRT - which is now thankfully dead. UWP will continue to evolve, will continue to get features added to it to increase feature parity with Win32, but it'll be done in a far more secured and sandboxed manner. Just this week an update was released to give G-Sync and FreeSync support to UWP applications which they were lacking before. Claiming UWP needs to die because right this moment it isn't 100% feature compliant with Win32 (which has been around for fucking decades) just reeks of shortsightedness.