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I always had assumed the choice was because they needed a key-combo that couldn't be trapped by a (trojan) program to bring up a fake login prompt for capturing passwords.
On topic though, Gates was wrong, a single button would have been a nightmare for support people. While the 3 finger salute could be considered clunky it had a safety factor that before the days of autorecovery of documents and software that didn't need re-installing if the machine crashed was useful.
It wasn't a bad idea to use it to access the task manager tools.
Why would a single button to log in have been a nightmare for support, or needed a safety factor? The worst that could happen is that you accidentally pressed it when you didn't want to log in
To repeat myself, for the benefit of those who didn't RTFA: Gates never said Ctrl-Alt-Del was a bad choice for a reset, he said it was a bad choice for logging in.
When the missus forgets to lock the pcs, I've seen the screen flipped upside down, the pc shutdown or restarted...it's only a matter of time before they hit ctrl-alt-del
Mine leave the computers alone and prefer to sit on books; Testermog Minor has recently sat on two books about space exploration, one book about industrial software and the Economist yeearbook. She's quite learned for a 3 year old. The other one, Testermog Major, tends to sit on cookbooks, which is quite appropriate for her build.
the argument I first heard for this was that it meant a log on and reboot should be concious decision not a random keypress therefore all 3 fingers were needed.
Not sure life would have been the same if we hadn't had the 'three fingered salute'.
They obviously never thought of cats
When the missus forgets to lock the pcs, I've seen the screen flipped upside down, the pc shutdown or restarted...it's only a matter of time before they hit ctrl-alt-del
On topic though, Gates was wrong, a single button would have been a nightmare for support people. While the 3 finger salute could be considered clunky it had a safety factor that before the days of autorecovery of documents and software that didn't need re-installing if the machine crashed was useful.
It wasn't a bad idea to use it to access the task manager tools.
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