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Microsoft Windows 2001 Beta Slips Out

Phredd was among the first to write with this news: "A copy of MS Windows 2001 beta has been leaked out to the Net. I wonder if it will have fixed any of the 65,000 documented bugs. No one is installing Win2k so I guess the MS marketing machine is trying to get rev 2 out the door ... New and Improved! Only 32k bugs! Geesh ..." Here's the story on 2001-pre, codenamed Whistler.

Now, if the MPAA and the DMCA can exert enough pressure to get Napster pulled from thousands of sites, and if U.S. copyright law is enough of a spur to arrest teenagers in Norway, what will be the fate of ftp sites which (knowingly or unknowingly) host this one?

601 comments

  1. Re:KAI?!? You've got to be kidding! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kai's is the greatest "Rave Flyer in 2 minutes" tool I've ever seen. Long live the VOrtex Twirl!

  2. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did I say one word about you mentioning Linux? No, I was using a counterexample AND was using BSDs as well as Linux. It is one I am familiar with. I was pointing out that Microsoft's path wasn't much different with the kernel releases vs 95, OSR2, etc. Why don't you NOT read into things too much?

    I broadly mentioned PEOPLE (read: Slashdot people) in some comments, and used a counterexaple in another. Too bad for you. You still didn't attack Microsoft in an intelligent way, nor did you attack me in such a way.

  3. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Have you even used Win2K? It doesn't sound like you have.

    In a word - No. Management where I work has already made the descision that there will not be any upgrades of Windows to W2K until after August. They are of the opinion that it will take at least that long to fix the worst of the bugs so that they have a (halfeway) stable release.

    The basic reason for this is simply that almost none of our corporate customers are interested in upgrading to W2K.

    As for the rest of your posting, it's just too infantile for me to waste words on.

    The simple facts remain - in 1995, consumers swamped shops when Win95 was released. Retail outlets bought up big expecting that they would need a large inventory of copies to keep them going for at least the first three months.

    The demand was so phenomenally high that the stocks that were expected to last for up to three months sold out within less than a week. This was a common event in many of the larger metropolitan cities. Win95 took of like a religion.

    And now, pray tell?

    Not with a bang but rather a whimper.

    So by all means, feel free to spin as much empty rhetoric as you wish. The Microsoft honeymoon is over.

    If you choose to continue using Windows, that's your buisness.

    Many of us however have far better things to do with our time besides waiting on the phone to MS "Tech Support" ( or the lack thereof ) and/or wading our way through an eight volume set of "marketroid speak" before we finally locate the required documentation to implement the program code that is required.

  4. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I'm using a 98 PL machine right now. Everything
    works fine.

    I hate this kind of shit on slashdot, how many times some know nothing claims they know all....

  5. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    i could not install a working x-server

    *Grin*. I know what that can be like - of all the aspects of Linux installation, that ones still the hardest to get right.

    The point to keep in mind about this is that you must know exactly what type of video card you have, it's memory and resolution modes and the vertical and horizontal sync rates.

    Check the hardware manual that came with your box. If it isn't there, then ring up the people who you got it from and find out.

    One final point to keep in mind - don't try it until you are certain. The Red Hat installation program warns you that you can damage the video card by incorrect probing.

    I'm still not sure of the details, but somehow it incorrectly reset the video card and the guy that I got it from eventually gave up and sent it back to the manufacturer.

    The second time around, I made sure that I had *all* of the info that I needed. I had an X server up and running and viewing por, err, 'fine art works', within less then five minutes.

    Yes, it's a pain that you need to spend a minute actually looking at the hardware spec chart before you can practice your eyesight, but it's a habit that most of us have developed only because we keep letting his Billness do our thinking for us.

    Having passed that point, my Linux machine is well on the way to becoming my No 1 machine at home. I have another machine for the Windows stuff, but that's strictly a 'legacy machine' now.

    As for writing Windows software - that's only something that I do for money, not for enjoyment.

  6. Re:Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buggy in what way?

  7. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It doesn't matter what OS you're using, if your drivers are buggy, it'll hurt the system.

    What if the drivers that are causing a program to crash the OS are supplied by Microsoft?.

    This is the reason for my extreme sarcasm on this point. My own experience has been that a fatal program error is just as likely to be produced by a MS driver/dll/[insert the appropriate type of code here].

    Now normally you might not come across these kinds of problems, but in the area where I do most of my Windows development ( high speed serial communications ), I find it all too reminiscent of some well known screw-ups that were are part of MS-DOS.

    In this regard, I find it hard to accept that anyone is going to even last a week without re-booting a Windows box.

    So while I don't disagree with your basic point, ( the need for quality hardware and drivers ), my reply to this is that it is essentially irrelevent.

    As a point in case, one of the most recent whoo-haas on this subject was with Panasonic. Having developed, tested and de-bugged their CD-ROM drivers for W2K, less than a month before it's release, Panasonic went into fits when it was discovered that Microsoft had made a number of last minute changes to the driver specification.

    This has become all too typical of Microsoft in recent years. Under these circumstances, an independent third party hardware vendor can't provide reliable drivers when the OS vendor keeps changing the ground rules at the last minute.

    It's hard to see what justifyable reason MS would have for this beyond introducing small software changes to inconvenience their competitors ( ie, FUD ).

    Admitedly, you can avoid this by only buying "Microsoft Approved" hardware but then this begs the question of what is a free market for if not to allow competition to reduce prices to the consumer?

  8. Thank you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you. It works!

  9. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Windows 95 and NT are NOT forks.

    Depends on whose version of history you go with.

    The version that I watched in the early 90's was a bit different from yours.

    Win 3.1 was meant to be a stop-gap. MS promoted Windows New Technology - a true 32 bit OS that would superceed MS-DOS/Win 3.1 when it was released in 1992.

    The consumer base didn't buy it. MS had to back-peddle and create Win 95 ( which was basically an upgraded version of Win 3.1 for Workgroups - check Andrew Schullmans "Windows 95 Unauthorized" for details ).

    Five years later and MS is still trying to kill the Win3.1/95/98 linage by assimilating it into Win2000.

    Looks like Bill may go the same way as Dr Frankenstein ;).

  10. Re:Quotation from submitter... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    so far as I can tell. DOS apps that require sound (games), comm access (scientific? and DOS comm apps), or real mode network support (netware linked crud) aren't, and have never worked on a NT based OS.

    Sorry, but no - wrong.

    We have several sites running 16-bit MS-DOS serial communications programs on NT boxes. The catch is - they must have service pack 3 or higher installed.

    The problems with serial communications on older versions of NT was due to various bugs rather than anything implicit in the design of NT itself ( mutter, mutter, brumble, grumble ).

    As for the other problems that you mention, I have no specific data but it wouldn't supprise me in the least if some of them might have also been due to bugs as well.

  11. Re: 3D benchmarks are HALF of win98s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would you want dual cpus for gaming. What a terrible waste of money. As far as i know only quake 3 support smp, how ever there is only a tiny bit of fps gain.

  12. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you did it. Now watch the moderators destroy your karma.

  13. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you really belive that you get win2k for "free" with your new computer from high street? MS gets about $100 from all pc's sold with their os preinstalled. Thats why they are so damn rich.

  14. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Major company? Ford has already begun moving over to 2000 and DaimlerChrysler is moving over in Q3.

  15. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, I have to say some thing. There is an advange, alot of advantage to update from NT4. But to see it, you need to upgrade your NT Domain to Active Directory. And to really see it, you need to upgrade your clients to Win2K pro. I think the only way you are realy going to know what I am talking about is to go to a class on Win2K Server. I agree that it does cost alot to upgrade. But if your are running a NT4 domain. I would look into it, and a 1 to 2 year upgrade plan is the way to go.

    Also, I did install Win2K Srv on my PC at home, yes I did remove it and go back to Win NT and 98. Not all the Games run a 100%, and not all the hardware support was there (now this was RC2). But at work, Win2K pro has been grate.

    I only speak form experience. And yes I am running linux on my PCs.

    TheTarget

  16. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    keep in mind that most linux distros install a lot of stuff beyond the base os that NT probably doesn't. Libraries, development tools, applications, documentation, languages, etc.

  17. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    shows how damn fucking stupid you are. Win2000 dosnt have IE 5.5 it has IE 5.01

  18. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    any insight on what my problem may be then? hardware? this has been doing it to me fresh since i bought my new box, i dont get blue screens, the damn thing just freezes randomly

  19. Re:Win2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "For an IT, it's useless crap"

    And exactly why is that? And how do you know, if you haven't even installed it yet? And what about all the companies that are already migrating business solutions to W2K?

  20. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have used Windows 2000.

    It sucks.

  21. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The first month. So what about the coming 12-24 months? I suspect we will see many millions, making Microsoft more money in a week than Redhat earned all of last year. Wait a minute...Redhat had NO earnings last year...

    Funny, I know many people that have Windows 2000 installed. Works fine for them, as it does for me. But then, I also think you are a troll who just gets off on bashing Microsoft, and are probably lying.

  22. What will I do!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just got my MCSE. Now I have to upgrade it for windows 2000. Will I have to upgrade that in a year, for window 2001? What about after that? Once a year? It took me five years to get my MCSE, even though I went to 17 2-week boot camps and cheated on the test by reading the quesitons beforeheand. You mean to tell me my time was wasted????

    1. Re:What will I do!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      More than 200,000 people so far. That's probably more than the total number of functional linux installations in the entire world. And don't give me that bullshit "eight million!" "twelve million!!". Unlike with Windows, most of the people who get a copy of linux never become a regular user.

      With more than 200,000 MCSEs, there seem to be an awful lot of employers looking for the skill.

    2. Re:What will I do!!! by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
      You mean to tell me my time was wasted????

      Well your time is probably not worth very much since you did get mcse...... and nobody is going to miss you....
      Who the hell wants it anyway?

      Grtz, Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
  23. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most people outside of /. have found it to be a good OS. I suspect you are probably lying about actually having used Windows 2000.

  24. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux these days tends to be more reliable than NT4 and MUCH more reliable than Win9x ever was. When it comes to X, you can always limit your liabilities. You have multiple choices. So you're not merely stuck with E and/or gnome.

  25. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem does indeed sound hardware related. More accurately, related to a driver. Can be tough to track down. Start by getting the latest drivers for all your hardware. Don't install them all at once, though!

    I really do think the reason I have almost no crashes in 9x and none in W2K is that I put top of the line components in my systems. Not bragging about my hardware, but just saying that the drivers are well written and tested.

  26. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't you just fucking admit you work for Microsoft and stop posting anonymously? Though I'm being a hypocrite myself because I don't want to be on your M$/$cientology hitlist.

    Was the best comeback you could come up with? "You're probably lying."

    Which reminds me when Windows 95 came out, all the MS trolls were out proclaiming how bug-free and crash-proof it was. I guess the same trolls are back in force, still desperately hoping Windows 2000 could even come close to Unix/VMS uptimes. Pretty pathetic.

  27. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those sorts of users aren't well serviced by Windows either, actually. There really isn't much to learn with GNOME itself. It's just another clone of MacOS just like Windows is.

  28. Helpfull advice for "first post" vigins. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I know how it is - the oportunity arises to claim the top position on the page with a "first post!".

    Sadly, this tends to irritate some people ( especially the ones who have never managed to make a first post to a page ;), so I feel that a few helpfull tips may be in order.

    The inevitable reaction of most people to having such an oportunity is to freeze and think "Oh Ghod No! My comment will be at the top of the page! If I say something stupid, everyone will laugh at me!".

    Under such stressful conditions, most will simply post "first post!" in an attempt to brazen it out before slinking of into a corner as quickly as possible.

    So the most important thing to do is to relax. Take a deep breath. Have a quick look at the title of the page and madly dash of the first thing that pops into your head.

    It doesn't matter how lame or stupid it is - it can't be worse than "first post!", and everyone else on the thread will be greatfull that you at least tried to make an effort.

    Failing that, the next best thing is a really first rate troll. The advantage to this approach is that you can actually spend some time working on a variety of quality troll raves when your off-line ( just in case the opportunity arises ).

    Pouring gritts down your pants, being abducted by alien females, being eaten alive by clowns and a variety of other insane subjects all have tremendous potential for funny and/or offensive trolls. These can be kept handy on your hard drive and are to be preffered to a "first post!" since then they at least give everyone a few cheap laughs.

    The important point to keep in mind here is - if you are going to make a complete jackass of yourself before an estimated reading audience of nearly 560,000 people a day, then why be half-hearted about it? Why not go to the max?

    After all, if you do, you will not only get the "first post" slot, but you will also be in the running for the "trolls hall of fame".

    Thank you for your attention. Normall services will now resume.

  29. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ATTENTION ALL SLASHDOT READERS. IF YOU HAVEN'T NOTICED BY NOW, THE AUTHOR OF THE PARENT POST IS THE SAME ONE TROLLING SLASHDOT FOR THE PAST FEW MONTHS IN EVERY WIN2000 RELATED THREAD. I WONDER HOW MUCH HE IS BEING PAID BY MICROSOFT TO PROCLAIM HOW WONDERFULLY STABLE THE GREAT WINDOWS[TM] 2000 IS AND HOW EVERYONE ELSE WHO SAYS OTHERWISE IS A LIAR.

  30. Re:Hmmm . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So? Try and getting that USB mouse working in NT4. What, couldn't do it? What's that, you couldn't get that logitech usb cam working in NT5 either...

    NT5 is only slightly farther along when it comes to USB in this respect.

  31. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't work for Microsoft. And I have both Windows and Linux (Slackware, if you want to know) on my box at home.

    I just think that Windows is a decent OS. (It wasn't always. I did have my share of problems with 95, and with early NT4). It just gets old seeing the same old stuff over and over and over. "Microsoft sucks. Windows sucks. Linux rules." My experience nowadays is that Windows runs pretty well for me.

    And sorry, but I still don't believe your story about Windows 2000. Just like I don't believe the Windows zealots' stories about nightmares with Linux.

  32. Origins of the separation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows NT came out years before Win95. It was a thread-capable operating system targeted at business use, while Windows 3.1 was not and it remained on the consumer side until Win95. Breaking off and having the NT route was a smart strategy for competing with the increasing presence of Unix in the office. It would have been great if Win95 had been build on the NT kernel so that Windows could have come back together then, but that didn't happen for many reasons. For one thing, Win95 had to keep a Win3.1 side going so that the kids could keep playing their old Reader Rabbit game or whatever (I still remember my father-in-law wanting to know if he could keep using Supercalc4 on his Win95 machine... it was time for "Pops, let me teach you Excel this afternoon). I think a big step for Microsoft here will be to finally bring the two sides back together here with Whistler.

  33. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And also...

    The reason I post anonymously is that (from what I have read in some postings here) anyone who comes here supporting MS get's their inboxes filled with hate mail. Given the tone of the postings against Microsoft, I can believe it.

  34. Re:Some corrections... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The last time I had to upgrade a distro kernel for reasons other than hardware support (like USB) was Slackware 96. At that point I just moved to Redhat.

    Most of what needs to be updated in a Linux distro (errata) is outside the kernel.

  35. Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, that's a link to a stable operating system... I want to see the buggy one that will crash my system.

    1. Re:Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, linux.org is the right link for a buggy OS.

  36. Can't sleep, clown will eat me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Insane subject? You must be the clown trying to convince me there is something wrong with my mind so that I will go to the doctor and become vulnerable to you while I'm sitting in a cold, white examination room. I won't be fooled that easily, I am aware of your ties to the medical community. You are the one who got my dentist to plant a tracking device in my right-upper bicuspid in 1988 when I was working near Wright Patterson AFB, and you used it to follow me to Cambridge (I asked my dentist every visit after that "what's that loose feeling I have in my tooth" and he lied and said it was nothing... he must be one of the Scientologists you have control over). I wondered how you followed me halfway across the country, until I found the device and removed it while I was travelling. It gives me a great deal of pain to have an open hole in my tooth now, but the pain helps keep me awake and I take joy in the frustration you felt when you suddenly lost track of me. I am thinking of joining the Christian Scientists so that I can heal my tooth through their methods, but first I must assure myself that you are not working with them as well.

    1. Re:Can't sleep, clown will eat me by daevt · · Score: 1

      wow

  37. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since $lashdot/andover hasn't seen it worth mentioning any of these it seems important to mention them here.



    <p> <a href="http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/2000/8/ns-13823. html">Microsoft's latest OS is selling well</a> </p>

    <p> <a href="http://www.newsalert.com/bin/story?StoryId=C omxEub8Zuevlmte2ndm4&FQ=Linux&Nav=na-sea rch-&StoryTitle=Linux">INTERVIEW-China approves Microsoft Windows 2000</a> </p>

    <p> <a href="http://www.vnunet.com/News/600647">Users lap up Windows 2000 despite warnings</a> </p>

    <p> <a href="http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/2000/10/ns-14086 .html">New operating system is a hit</a> </p>

    <p> <a href="http://www.winntmag.com/Articles/Content/831 9_01.html">Windows 2000 Sales Brisk; and Musings on "Pure Java"</a> </p>
  38. Re:Win2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    W2K: 1,000,000 lemurs can't be wrong!

  39. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Some of the trolls are pretty good. You'd be surprised, you know, at how cleverly a few of them masquerade as "controversial posters".

    There have been several hidden slashdot forums where they discuss strategy and laugh about their exploits. The first one was here, called, "trolltalk". But then the trolls got pissed because anti-trolls were trolling "Trolltalk," so they started another one here, which is much harder to accidentally stumble across.

    -Phiz

  40. Late 96? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strange, I got Windows 95b in March 1996... must have had a time machine I forgot about.

  41. Wow, how respectful... don't be sorry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, it was their points to waste... I don't know why anyone bothers moderating down first posts (unless they are highly offensive, eg., racist). First posts seldom add anything and usually aren't moderated up or down. I'd say you just got a newby moderator (like the one who moderated down OOG's highly insightful comment just because he is a caveman and uses all caps) who thought "cool, it's my turn."

  42. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many of these stories have been submitted to $slashdot recently, yet they don't seem to get posted - why? Because Andover is getting desperate as is the whole Linux community.

    The nightmare for Linux is comming true, Win2K is a serious, stable OS that is a strong contender as a server and light years ahead of Linux for the desktop.

    Microsoft is great at comming through in a clinch, remember the internet?

    Microsoft's latest OS is selling well

    INTERVIEW-China approves Microsoft Windows 2000

    Users lap up Windows 2000 despite warnings

    New operating system is a hit

    Windows 2000 Sales Brisk; and Musings on "Pure Java"

  43. MacOS = shiny win 3.1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MacOS is stable? It's Win3.1 with pretty buttons! Non-preemtive multitasking, no protected memory (or dynamic memory allocation even!)... it's dark ages technology. And maybe OS/X is going to be great and stable and perfect and wonderful... but it's not out yet. (tangent gripe -- Apple is THE WORST OFFENDER in the "late OS delivery" game. Can you say "4 years late"? I knew you could. When I interviewed at Apple 2.5 years ago it was already late to market. Yeesh.)

  44. What's going on with moderators today? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Believe it or not, a totally offtopic 'grits' AC post in another story got moderated up as "Informative."

    A woman shall not wear anything that pertains to man, nor shall a man wear a woman's garment; for whoever does these things is an abomination to the Lord. (Deuteronomy 22:5)

  45. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Umm....ya...Amewica can't do anyfink wong because we are DA best countwy in DA world and all da UVVER countwies are useless and don't know what DEY are doing, DEY are just BAHbawians." Grow up, USA!

  46. Re:On a related note... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in Singapore and Malaysia (and some other unmentionable Asian countries) they sell pirated Windows (full version with real key...hehe) everywhere. only big corporations that are scared of being sued/litigated against actually buy original software.

  47. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I bought it and I'm using it and I'm sorry fellas but I'm impressed. It is stable, powerful and gives me all the drivers I need for my games (I'm a flightsim freak) as well as allowing me to run Oracle. Programs that crashed the system under W98 are now dealt with smoothly. The error is reported and the offending application (in my case mainly Microsoft Access 97) is given the boot. I haven;t tried a time up test yet cos I switch this machine off nightly. I'm still running Mandrake and enjoy it but I don't do any real work in ti.

  48. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you -- hire a fucking dictionary.

  49. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nope, its says it doesnt include business users that might have ordered more licences :) dumbass...plus is much better than win98SE for ALL users... and guesss what - I can play starcraft... I guess taco has his own copy too, dont you man???!!!

  50. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are such a fuck.

  51. DID YOU MODERATORS EVEN READ THE POST? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bad enough you mod this down, but OFFTOPIC??? What the hell??? READ BEFORE MODERATING!!!! It's very ontopic if you read the fricking article and post. Don't worry OOG, we'll make sure justice is done!

  52. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No dnd?
    Please let me some of that great stuff your obviously smoking.
    Printer?
    True, I think, but I really don't care.
    Color depth?
    True, but that has got to do X server, not GNOME. I don't know how R6.4 deals with this though.

  53. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, he must work for Microsoft. Oh wait, I mean M$. That must be it.

    Get out of your dreamworld, pal. The reason why pro-MS posts are usual anonymous, and often short, is for two reasons:
    1) You can't say anything negative about Linux or positive about Microsoft because you're all a bunch of pussies
    2) No one really wants to spend too much time bothering. Most Linux "users" are under 17. They don't understand the first thing about business and their replies can only consist of either really long ways to say "M$ sux Linux rulez!@^&*#&%@()" or that literally.

  54. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh....yeah.

  55. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and if someone came here whining about how a Linux beta program crashes (Mozilla, anyone? Anyone?), you'd get flamed up the ass.

    But it's OK to bitch about "M$" beta products. Because Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars, and you don't. Poor fucking baby.

  56. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My Windows 98 is nearly as stable as my Linux partition. Granted, I use X on the Linux partition a lot (and Netscape, which sucks), but it's still quite stable.

    The average Windows user does not not reinstall Windows at least once a week. Not only do they not really know how, but it's only Linux zealots that can't figure out how to make Windows stable.

  57. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, actually he figured out "asshole"'s (CmdrTaco) kludge and how to post HTML in spite of how things are labeled around here.

  58. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, of course.

    Linux, on the other hand, is a breeze to install! Especially with distros like Mandrake. But Mandrake sux azz d00d cuz it's 2 eesy and shiat.

    But M$ sux. DUNNO WHY BUT IT SUX

    so sick of these morons

  59. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyway, I deleted FreeBSD and began the Windows install. No prob. I wasn't too sure about the concept of Forests, trees, and Active Directories, but I was amazed that I couldn't add it as a BDC to the current network. In other words, they're trying to make you switch over all of your servers to Windows 2000 *** No, it means you're a fucking idiot for not knowing how to work ActiveDirectory with the Domain system of NT4... Yet another biased, clueless, Linux geek...

  60. my god by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that was funny.

    you just made my day.

  61. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am the original goatse.cx guy. I think its just funny as shit. A friend of mine posted it as an IRC topic, and EVERYONE just HAD to go there to find out what it was.

    /topic http://www.goatse.cx

    For all of you who have not seen this lovely page yet click here.

  62. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    INTERNET EXPLORER 5.5 IN PARTICULAR WOULD OFTEN CRASH, AND AFTER RECOVERING ALL MY RUNNING PROGRAMS WOULD NOT APPEAR ON THE START BAR OR THE TRAYBAR, SO I WOULD HAVE TO USE THE TASK MANAGER TO CLOSE THEM AND RESTART THEM. THIS WAS PRETTY ANNOYING *** Funny - IE5.5 is a beta you dumbfuck...

  63. Re:Windows installations (Correction) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I was amazed that I couldn't add it as a BDC to the current network. In other words, they're trying to make you switch over all of your servers to Windows 2000.

    Actually, you can have mixed NT4/Win2K domain controllers, but the NT4 boxes have to all be BDCs, and the PDC emulator is a Win2K machine.

  64. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And you - hire a dick.

    -Your Wife

  65. Quark did (maybe does) this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm anonymous, since I worked at Quark (Quark XPress DTP software), but I can tell you that Quark would "fingerprint" their alpha/beta builds that went outside of the company. The company would keep close tabs on the industry publications, and would look for screenshots of their beta software (that had not been authorized for premature review, of course). In most cases, they could identify leaks simply by looking at the screenshots. The fingerprints were subtle, and usually designed to look like bugs, so that no one would suspect and attempt to photoshop them out.

    I don't know if Quark still does this since I don't work there now, but it is likely (they're very control oriented and competitive). I certainly wouldn't put it past a MS to do the same types of things...

    1. Re:Quark did (maybe does) this. by smash_phase · · Score: 1

      Ah so it are 'fingerprints'....
      Maybe time for them to release the final stable release..

      --
      /* Be the change you wish to see in this world - Mohandas Karamchand "Mahatma" Gandhi */
  66. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zico is one of the few people who questions the conventional wisdom here. If you don't like that, then you are a fucking waste.

  67. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hell they installed SP6 on the Computers at my University, and just about everything broke. We no longer get netscape, and must use Exploder. which doesnt run half the time. And because IE 4.0 requirese so much space on user accounts they have put a severe restriction on what can be stored on accounts( basically no apps). Talk about Screwed up. I try to avoid using them as much as possible, and use the O2's in the Unix lab.

  68. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just what the fuck are your other news sources? Kuro5hin.org? Perhaps linux.com?

    Get a clue. Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars, in case you forgot.

  69. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Numerous suits on the other side (scum like Larry Ellison) can easily be tagged as pathological liars.

    What's your point about outright lies? The GPL has been lying to developers for over a decade now.

  70. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody who loves word just hasn't tried LaTeX yet... I have seen the light... Whilst everyone else is writing there english technical reports in word, struggling to get their figures and table of contents formatted correctly, I'll be in LaTeX typing \tableofcontents and \listoffigures bwahahahha.

  71. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the same installation (a Ghosted installation, no less), on the same hardware, purchased the same day at the same vendor has been blue screening about every 15mn.

    Same vendor, same model number != Same hardware
    It might be the "Ghosted" aspect that's kicking your ass.

  72. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows Millennium Edition will have "Window Managers" and the like.

    Also, there are already explorer replacements for 9x. Have been for years.

  73. I know! I know! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Unofficial Lakeside School Winter Break Destination For Too-Rich Yuppie Kids

  74. Re:macrosoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you really have a soft penis?

  75. Re:64,000 bugs aren't enough! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Q) Why does Windows 2k have 65,000 bugs? A) No one at microsoft realized they could declere Bugs a float or a double.

  76. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most banks in The Netherlands use OS/2

  77. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Fuck off, Zico. You've been trolling on /. longer than Timothy has been posting stories.

  78. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    íù Uptime: Windows98(2days 10hrs 49mins 57secs) Best(14dy 23hrs 52mins 19secs) Server(1hr 4mins 59secs)

    (thats an irc server, btw, so ignore that part)

    9x is very stable for me. You just have to configure it right. The "Windows for Dummies" books help a lot. Well, they'd help you atleast. Give it a shot, bud.

  79. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BTW, high uptime isn't something a pure Desktop OS demands.

    Though I dead honestly haven't seen a BSOD since my Windows 95 days. I've seen some on other people's systems, but only on the systems where morons run a bunch of crap like Real Audio Start and WinAmp Start and SOnique Start at once, etc

  80. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    grade-school dumbfuck.

  81. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are so full of shit. Hire some competant help.

  82. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Software bugs don't kill you? How about a bug in the software used to model/design that car? Since when can't you sue somebody for selling a crappy product? Fitness of product was always something you could sue for. Maybe in some third world country run by a communist dicator you can't sue for shoddy products. You can surely sue in this one.

  83. Re:Slantdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No OEM has stopped offering NT. In fact. some, like Gateway, don't even offer 2000. So any OEM-shipped installation of 2000 was by choice, and is legitimate.

  84. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most banks use OS/2. No serious bank would run windows. If Wells Fargo is using Windows I'm shorting the stock right now. I'm also looking for a lawyer to sue them.

  85. Re:Some corrections... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please give scientific evidence of your alleged penis.

  86. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EXACT same situation here. I ran win2k for a few weeks cuz I had and extra processor, and granted it was nice and stable, game compatibility sucks. So back to win98... In my mind this is the area linux is behind windows in the greatest, and guess what win2k is NOT DESIGNED NOR EVER MEANT TO BE A GAMING OS. Its a server os that happens to run games. Win Millenium will be the gaming os and we will have this whole argument over again. My two cents,

  87. You microserf's make me sick! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    All you microserf's getting paid to post here make me sick. You work for an unethical company, you know it, but you don't give a damn.

    Perhaps this isn't an entirely accurate. You're probably in denial and think that everyone else is jealous and is making up lies.

    Either way, we hate your company because every decision is based on the answer to the following question: What will eliminate our competition and force user's to use windows?

    While this may be acceptable from most companies, it isn't from you because the OS is central to many of our lives. We spend most of our workday, and increasingly more of our social life using computers. And using windows is a mind numbing experience. It is void of creativity and leave's me feeling empty and tired. I can customize it all I want as long as one of you non-creative drone's thought of it first. Again, you only add features which could increase your market share, not what could make window's better, or more fun to use.

    Why don't you join the OMG and over 800 companies to support CORBA? Surely this would dramatically improve the internet and benefit consumer's lives in ways we can only dream of today. Oh yeah, that doesn't factor into anything at MS.

    Your characterization of Linux user's as pimply faced adolescents is wishful thinking at best. But of course you know this already. Linux is kicking your butt in the server space, and will soon dominate the embedded market too.

    Your only hope is to control the internet protocols that we all depend on.


    Microsoft and Internet technologies don't mix. Don't do it... don't even think about it.

  88. Re:Touchy, touchy, touchy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny. ComputerWorld as a source of reliable information. Make me laugh again!

    I installed w2k on a homemade machine bought from a dozen sources. The only thing that didn't work was the sound card. The sound card wasn't nt compatible before so I wasn't suprised. Later I installed a sound card that was compatible (i.e., it appeared on the hql). I didn't even have to feed it a driver diskette. I didn't have to click or acknowledge anything. Sound just came out of the machine.

    Win2k is a fantastic improvement over all previous versions of windows. My boss here is a die-hard Novell fanatic. Couldn't find a nice thing to say about M$ until he installed Win2k release candidate 2. He won't give it up now. He hasn't rebooted it in eight months, he tells me.

    If there's one area where M$ is going to continue to pound the piss out of linux, it's going to be ease of use and installation. I HAVE tried to install Linux many times before. The only time I was ever successful, I had to have an experienced linux guy help me get the video drivers running by recompiling some of the code. For crying out loud.

    As long as it's that way, folks, Linux will remain a geek toy operating system. It will not be taken seriously as an alternative to windows, especially on the desktop. I can see a future of linux servers provided kernel forking is avoided and enterprise-scale management tools are developed. People I work for want to see pretty graphs and charts. They want to see hard figures. They won't understand it if it's on a command line.

    I know all about the philosophy behind Open Source. I enthusiastically read ESR's essay on it. But too many of its advocates have their head in the sand on this one. It's not the panacea that it appears to be. It's raised the bar on stability, on accountability. But only a company like M$ has the billions to spend on research for usability, ease of installation, and the like. The GUI looks like a lot of gee-whiz shit but it does what it's supposed to do and the learning curve is short and sweet. Using X was far different -- it's all tweakable and has _too_ many options for the sheep who I support. I can see what it would be like to have linux on the desktop at my corporation -- people would constantly be powering off the machine in midsession because they couldn't find a button that says "shut down." If we gave them too few privledges, they would complain that they couldn't get into anything. Too many, and they'd fsck the system sideways. Anyone figured out how to ghost linux yet?

    At any rate, most slashdotters will probably flame this to ashes and ignore it. And linux will, as I said, remain a toy much like I remember my Commodore 64 being a toy. Gosh it was cool and it was miles ahead of the IBM 80806 pieces of shit that were coming out. It had color and sound right out of the box. It played cartridge videogames but the shell was essentially a BASIC command line. Yet most people didn't want to have to type open 15,8 to access the disk drive. Cool, but too hard to use.

  89. Where's Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone got a link for downloading this so-called Windows 2001?

    1. Re:Where's Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here, thank you

    2. Re:Where's Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ftp://24.30.109.164 login: whistler pass: whistler port: 2000 build: 2211 only 6 users can log in at once

  90. You're an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even though you're a moronic one-celled creature that can't come up with anything better than "Nataly Portmen nakid and pretifried!" to say, it does not excuse you from putting down more intelligent people who have something valuable to say. Frankly, if you feel intimidated by someone because they're intelligent and you're not, then too bad.

    "Karma whore" is a term invented by ACs who resent a lack of 100% "hot grits" and "naked and petrified" posts.

  91. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Ummm, what "hassle"? I've found that it's much more effective to type everything, so that I'll have a record of what commands I executed. Then, if something goes wrong, I can always backtrack to the command and change an incorrect attribute of it.


    b.j.m.
    reflections of my imagination

  92. Win2k everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The company I work for is converting EVERYTHING to win2k. We are migrating ALL Novell servers to Win2k this year and all 80,000 employees to Win2k as well. BTW, Linux is PROHIBITED on premises and it is grounds for *immediate dismissal* if you are discovered running linux on any company equipment.

    1. Re:Win2k everywhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, DUH!!

      What would you expect Microsoft's internal policy to be?

  93. Re:Whistler? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Ummm... that was a pretty lame joke.

    It's clear, now, why you gave Hemos all those blow-jobs - so he would give you an automatic +1 post bonus - something you could never earn without perverse sexual favours.

  94. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aren't you supposed to be in school right now?

  95. Re:Gosh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They had hundreds of thousands of beta testers, you dumbfuck.

  96. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OS/2.

  97. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Name one person killed by silicone breat implants. Idiot.

  98. Re:Separate kernels really on the way out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From my understanding, its not the difficulty of bringing the kernels together, but a design philosophy. In Windows NT, no application is allowed to make any direct calls to hardware, but must pass them all through the kernel. Games, however, are programmed to optimize video card capabilities through direct calls. Win2000 is still NT, so still won't run most games. That's by design, not a bug. Hence the need for win millenium to keep the game players happy too.

  99. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And most banks in Kenya use sticks and dirt. Who gives a fuck about either country?

  100. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OS crashes are always the fault of the OS. You said it yourself "So the architecture of the OS is such that something running in user mode can bring the whole OS down."

  101. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hrm, doesn't happen to me.

    Perhaps you fucked up your explorer?

    Quit dicking around with the system files when you're too much of a moron to know what they do.

  102. Re:Gosh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and they had to paid for the honor, YOU dumbfuck.

  103. Guide to being a dumb prick with nothing to say. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read the obove post. Emulate it.

  104. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go back to licking your GUI, you perverse Mac-using dumbfuck.

  105. Re:Offtopic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uhh. The point here was humor, not off topic. I'd moderate it up as funny but I was too busy moderating down any post slightly supportive of MicroSerf.

  106. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's obvious you are either an idiot who is lying, or an even bigger idiot who is telling the truth. Gnome doesn't even have drag and drop, or a consistent link to the printer. You can't even change the colour depth without rebooting. What a piece of shee-ite.

  107. Re:My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HAHAHAHA!!! Hilarious!

  108. Re:I'm having trouble getting it to build correctl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi. You're trying to be funny. You're not.

  109. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The first month. So what about the coming 12-24 months? I suspect we will see many millions, making Microsoft more money in a week than Redhat earned all of last year. Wait a minute...Redhat had NO earnings last year...

    Funny, I know many people that have Windows 2000 installed. Works fine for them, as it does for me. But then, I also think you are a troll who just gets off on bashing Microsoft, and are probably lying.

    So you think we Linux trolls are probably lying. Well, us non-Microsoft people know you Microsoftheads are psychopathic liars. You cannot tell the truth!

    Microsoft officially lies about its earnings, lies about its products, lies about its sales, lies about its competition, lies about its support, lies about its advocacy, lies about its benchmarks, lies about its security, lies about its ability to innovate, lies to judges, lies to journalists, lies to customers, lies to its stockholders... well, I'm not finished yet, but I'm getting tired of typing this endless list, so I will stop, since the honest world already knows the truth about Microsoft anyway.

    Microsoft is filled from top to bottom with two kinds of people: Liars... and ignorant Microserfs who work for nothing, relying on the value of their stock, which is being propped up by dishonest bookkeeping.

  110. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    jsm, is that you?

  111. Re: 3D benchmarks are HALF of win98s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously this "flight sim freak" hasn't figured out why his game sare running at half the rate they once were. All the benchmark tests that have been done with Quake3, etc all run at HALF the speed that they normally run under Win98. Win2000 is *pathetic* as a desktop OS.

  112. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My personal feeling about linux is that there is room for both Win 95/98etc... and linux... Linux is still growing... It will continue to grow and split and grow until it is in DIRECT competition with Microsoft. The Windows platform has grown, split, matured, taken a step backwards, and grown again. Linux will do the same. Right now, Linux still has some growing to do. It is relatively difficult to use comparatively speaking to the "Normal" user. It is the ease that gets Mama's and Daddy's to use it. Right now, Windows is commonplace. When the whole family can sit down and point and click, then you have something useful for the home. That is what sells. The business already is making room for linux server and linux desktop. To to make comparisons now and pit linux against Microsoft is not the right time. Let linux mature and dominate and become the OS that doesn't need to be argued. That's when the linux OS will truly win. 'Z'

  113. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amen brother...

  114. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow all the M$ approved news sources say W2000 is great big suprise there. Hey and how many actual users are there in China anyway?! Not many.

  115. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ya, and like 300 of that is virtual memory... You do the math!

  116. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A FLOP??!?!?! They sold 1 million copies in the FIRST MONTH. That is a flop?!!??

  117. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow ya got it right this time asshole. I'm impressed!

  118. this is NOT offtopic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oog is talking about future releases of windows, which is very relevant to the topic! methinks someone jealous of oog's wisdom and his following is trying to moderate oog down for personal reasons! I hope oog finds you when he comes back from Bedrock and breaks your head!

  119. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where do you work Redmond? I haven't seen one anywhere.

  120. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing is different with regard to that on Linux. If anything the situation is worse through binary incompatibility of Libraries.

  121. Re:Touchy, touchy, touchy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM 80806?

    Perhaps you were thinking of the Intel 8086 or Intel 80186. But no, neither of those was ever used in mainstream personal computers.

    More likely, you were thinking of the Intel 8088 or Intel 80286 -- both of which were used in early IBM desktop computers (namely, the IBM PC, PC/XT, and PC/AT, as well as some of the early PS/2 models).

  122. Ahhh... bug free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sure am glad that linux has no bugs. It sure isnice to use an OS that has no bugs whatsoever, yet has all the functionality of Windows.

    How's that DXR3 DVD decoder?

  123. Touchy, touchy, touchy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From my reading of a lot of replies here, I get the impression that Windows 2000 is not doing too well!

    There is the old saying, "Scientists stand on each other's shoulders, programmers tread on each other's toes".

    My, my my, are there ever a lot of obviously sore toes here amongst the Windows boosters.

    I recently read an article in ComputerWorld (the paper version) that recommended that if you buy Windows 2000, better buy it pre-installed on a brand new machine to avoid the inevitable incompatibilities. The author also said something about "better not try this at home kiddies, but leave it to highly trained professionals, but aw shucks I am one of those and I can't get the durned thing to work"!

  124. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Won't fix any bugs? What about those FREE service packs? And the Windows update site? And each fix creating two new bugs? That is not true. What sort of evidence do you have of that? Do you REALLY think that NT4, SP0, is less buggy that NT4, SP6? Then you haven't used it.

  125. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    That's a pretty sad statement when -- in order to be taken seriously -- each and every non-negative-towards-Microsoft post has to be prefaced with a "I'm not a fan of M$, but...".

    Just darn sad.

  126. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well AOL is more user-friendly than many alternatives, but it's a slow, bloated, destructive product. and as for the OS/2 / Windows issue, Windows would be more likely to be on ones pc... but thats because windows has an established software following, indeed a software monopoly. OS/2 isnt well supported on the other hand and that helps contribute to the decision.

  127. 65000 bugs, microsoft gets better ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you know that Windows 98 had around 130.000 bugs. So what the hell are you complaining about win2k.

    1. Re:65000 bugs, microsoft gets better ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just 65,000 bugs, huh? And people used to a stable OS with no bugs should stop complaining?

      Of course, did you also know that Windows 98 was sold of $90, $40 more than it should of been sold? Aside from that, just to see the number of bugs reduced by another half, should people have to pay $439 for 32,500 bugs? Seeing that the pattern is half the bugs for twice the money as you so cleverly pointed out, to have a bugless version of Windows would take 15 more versions (can anyone wait for Windows NT version 20?) and would end up costing around $14,385,152. On the other hand, Linux has always been free.

      So, because I in fact don't use Windows due to the fact there are too many bugs and it would take up to Windows NT verson 20 for a cool $14 mil+, the ones who elect not to use Windows have every right to complain about over-priced, trashy, buggy software held by a monopolistic company.

      Numbers don't lie -- only M$ does.

  128. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200-1574535.html This one to!@$#. Slashdot keeps hiding the real news while trying to cover up the fact everybody is abandoning Microsoft.

  129. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Surely you don't dislike any of the Scooby posts. Scooby fills our lives with so much happiness, I can't imagine life with out him.

    Trolling for Scooby doo!

  130. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nope, It's command-delete..

  131. OOG's location... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aha, OOG appears to be western Canadian. There are lots of neanderthals in the wild, wild west ;-)

    1. Re:OOG's location... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whats telling you that?

    2. Re:OOG's location... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint : it has to do with skiing...

    3. Re:OOG's location... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah skis havent been invented yet in oog's country, plus maybe he could be going on some rowdy tropical vacation or a road trip or the like

    4. Re:OOG's location... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Further hint: What is the full name of the Whistler ski resort?

  132. Re:Hmmm . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because, from what I can see, it is above and beyond any Linux distribution I have seen. You know what I had to do to get my USB mouse working in W2K? Plug it in. Things were not that simple in Linux. And your story sounds like BS. I've installed W2K on LOTS of systems by now, and never seen anything like what you describe.

  133. Re:Slantdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? Tell Dell that. Try buying that dual cpu machine with the rambus memory without w2k. BTW how do they sell that machine with 256meg of memory and two cpus for less money then I can buy the memory for locally?

  134. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wholeheartedly agree, as does the win NT 3, 4, win 95, 98, 98r2, and win2001 cds.

  135. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lol!!

  136. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've got a female and male collie. They are smart animals.

  137. Re:No one is installing Win2K??!?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess Michael Dell does count as someone. Anybody else ?

  138. Re:My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    T#47 \/\/45 31337 5P34K d000ood!!!!!!!

  139. Typical Slashdot Post re MS... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Considering that the Win2K final release no. was 2195, and that MS numbers their builds following NT numbering, build 2211 corresponds to a couple weeks additional development beyond the release. Is it so surprising that it looks a lot like the release version? I follow /. comments on most matters fairly regularly, but this posting and accompanying comments provide yet another illustration of why I've more or less given up expecting useful and informed discussion here regarding anything having to do with MS.

  140. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It will not run an Alpha,
    It will not light a Sparc.
    It cannot work the Powerbook
    I found in Central Park.

    If you find a Powerbook just laying around in Central Park, I doubt it's going to run much of anything. :)

  141. Re:Gosh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You got it for free because you pirated it? Another thing: only americans can register for the beta program. We europeans can't. So there.

  142. Re:first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Female

  143. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh come on! You note Windows NT 4.0SP3 and SP5 - how is that different than Linux? Want xxx support in Linux? Oh then you need kernel version 2.blah.blah, and you need to compile in support.

    People here complain about the bias of the Associtaed Press (or incorrectly blame Yahoo!), but their personal bias' are generally worse! Win95->OSR2->98->98SE is basically like going from Linux with a 1.blah kernel to the most recent, plus upgrading/adding all sorts of libraries that modern programs need.

    Windows 95 and NT are NOT forks. Windows started out as a *DOS* application. Right up until 3.11 it was still a DOS application. Windows NT was designed to be an operating system for network servers or for high end workstations - not some Mac clone GUI window manager that sat on top of DOS, like Windows 3.x. If you're going to explain which OS to use to some "loser", then the answer is Windows 98 for home users, or Windows 2000 for users who need its features. That's pretty easy. Why don't you tell me (assuming I'm a "loser") if I should use FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, or Linux, and which architecture to use? They aren't all from the same development team, but they're all open source (to varying degrees), and all will run on the x86 based PCs that are traditionally home to Windows operating systems.

    The only difference is that Microsoft charges for these upgrades/bug fixes. But that's not what you're attacking. Big surprise. If you're going to attach Microsoft (which should be easy to do), then at least do it intelligently.

  144. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thats Ok. We do have your postal address.

  145. EXACTLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posting crap doesn't make one a troll. Doing it logged in doesn't either. putting up links about goatse.cx or Don knott's death don't either. A troll is something different.

    When you see a thread about religion in an article about buckyballs, the parent was most likely a troll. Also the guy who posted a while back and strung along some hapless logged in poster for like 30 comments with fundamentalist garbage, and the poster didn't catch it even after the AC boasted about his wifebeating abilities. That's trolling.

    My favorite was the one a few weeks ago in one of the DMCA stories or something. Totally insightful message, except for one little jab at libertarians toward the end. Sure enough, 50 or so comments ensued flaming back and forth over politics. It was one of the most beautiful trolls ever on /. Also it got moderated to like 4 or 5, rightly so I would argue based on the content (the not-bait) of the article. If anyone has a link to that please post it so that the parnet of this parent can see exactly what a good troll is...

    Or better yet a hall of f(l)ame thread where the better trolls could be held up as an example to the "scooby doo" kids.

  146. Finally, some progress... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FUCK YOU ALL!! YOU ARE IDIOTS!! NT SUCKS!! INSTALL LINUX!! YOU ARE FUCKING MORONS!! YOU KNOW NOTHING!! YOUR BRAIN IS A PIECE OF SHIT!! YOU ARE FUCKING GEEKS!! LINUX FOREVER!! WINDOWS IS USELESS!! FUCK YOU ALL!! YOU ARE IDIOTS!! NT SUCKS!! INSTALL LINUX!! YOU ARE FUCKING MORONS!! YOU KNOW NOTHING!! YOUR BRAIN IS A PIECE OF SHIT!! YOU ARE FUCKING GEEKS!! LINUX FOREVER!! WINDOWS IS USELESS!! FUCK YOU ALL!! YOU ARE IDIOTS!! NT SUCKS!! INSTALL LINUX!! YOU ARE FUCKING MORONS!! YOU KNOW NOTHING!! YOUR BRAIN IS A PIECE OF SHIT!! YOU ARE FUCKING GEEKS!! LINUX FOREVER!! WINDOWS IS USELESS!!

    Hey look, now that's progress! I'm a Linux user now! I sound just like everyone else on this site! I must be cool now!

  147. Re:macrosoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, there are reliable OS's, alright. Linux is one. W2K is another.

  148. Re:Allow me to prove you wrong again, then :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you saying Microsoft LIED when they acknowledged that Win2k had at LEAST 64K bugs??? That when they said 64K that was just the number they had reported so far and that it might have more?? Why would Microsoft lie about something like that?? Microsoft never lies we know that.

  149. OOG = ...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OOG = Preston Manning?

    Is OOG the future leader of Canada? OOG say bring back two dollar bills!

  150. Win2k is MUCH better than Win98 for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know why so many people are rabidly against it. I have to use Windows to play Half-Life and various other games. I've tried Win98 and it was a dog.. multitasking SUCKED on a PIII-500 with 192 MB ram. Half-life worked fine on that btw. I then tried NT 4.0. Aside from having to install 3rd party drivers for almost all my hardware since NT is so out of date, it seemed to work ok too. DirectX 3.0 was kind of sad though and my audio in Half-life lagged after the graphics. Then I tried Win2k and wow. I got the best of both worlds. Stability, speed, and graphics and sound all work great. Half-life rocks on this platform. I've got Linux installed on the same machine and really have no reason to reboot to it. Win2k has been stable and very nice. The hibernate feature alone makes it worth it! I can make it hibernate and just shut off my machine nightly.

  151. No one is installing Win2K??!?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WHAT? One million copies in the first month, and you say no one is installing it? Come on, Slashdot. At least try to be reasonable.

  152. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only with 3rd party utils, babe...

    You show me an out-of-the-box NT that can read FAT32, or an out-of-the-box 98 that can read NTFS...

  153. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? Guess those "Linux approves China" posts that are seen aren't too hot, then, but I'd be willing to bet that your dumbfuck ass posts with praise to those stories.

  154. Re: 3D benchmarks are HALF of win98s. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope you take into consideration video driver maturity for the platform. I have a Voodoo3 2000 running in my dual PII 400 box and I love my system performance with Shogo Mobile Infantry, Unreal Tournament, Myth I,II and the SIMS. Within six months you won't see a performance difference.

  155. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I gotta hand it to ya, I DID like the "Torvalds was also quoted as saying "First post."" bit. That alone is worth moderating up for "Funny"!

  156. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Developing countries" will discover that they're to use a Third World operating system like Linux.

    The people who can get away will get away.

    The rest will continue to use Linux.

    Brings to mind the computers in the movie "Brazil."

  157. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are all of these sold to custommers or are the still on the shelves of the retailers?

    That's a dangerous question for a Linvocate to be asking. The ratio of distributed Linux CD's per actual running Linux box is definitely 10:1 and probably higher.

    I personally have over thirty Linux Distro CDs and only two machines at home running Linux.

  158. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you can't tweak windows to run binaries for other versions of windows [except maybe few 3.1's under 9x].

    Why would you need to tweak Windows binaries. The Win 3.1 applets that were abandoned with Windows 95 (Terminal, Cardfile, Write) all run fine on Windows 2000. That means you can use Terminal.exe to dial out with your modem and bypass all the TAPI stuff.

    In fact, a few bugs that I noticed running Cardfile.exe on Windows 95 seem to have gone away on Windows 2000.

    Anyhow, carry on slagging, children.

  159. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no your fucking dumb ashole it dont matter how many they sold most of them came free with the comps fucknut

  160. Re:My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    argh ....
    it means:

    doodz (or can you use dudes?): i got this elite (is 31337 translateable?) zero-day win2001 warez (this is common i know), and found out the control panel crashes when i press the delete key etc etc ...

  161. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's amazing how quickly the argument shifts from "Windows 2000 isn't worth a darn and isn't useful for anything" to "Wah! Wah! It won't run on my wobbly old hardware!"

  162. Damn Moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, Oog is making some sense here, and he's talking about something mentioned in the article. Perhaps you should read it before jacking poor Oog's karma down.

  163. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Win2K is also hugely successful among decent, moral people who have accepted Christ Jesus as their Lord and personal Savior. It is the atheists and non-Christians and other types of human scum that espouse the use of non-Windows operating systems. It is my hope that one day, all the non-saved people will turn away from their wicked ways and use Win2K, the Moral Platform, the OS of Christ, the Environment of the Trinity.

  164. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but the other asshole has now moderated it below a normal viewing threshold.

    You have to hand it to the Linvocates to know what they need to cover up.

  165. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a gentle reminder:

    If you change your account name and password to include lower case letters, the console won't lock you into UPPER CASE ONLY during your login.

    This, of course, does not apply if you're still stuck on an ASR-33 teletype. Which you might be if you're still using a 70's-type Time Sharing Operating System like Linux or Unix.

  166. Re:running Windows 2000 at home makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right. W98 hasn't crashed for me once in over a year, either. Oh, wait, I haven't booted it in over a year.

  167. Maybe next time you shouldn't install a beta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Web browser.

    Windows 2000 ships with IE 5.01 IE 5.5 is in beta testing.

  168. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Software bugs in computers don't kill you. Um... so if an electric utility's GIS has a bug that mislables a piece of electrical equipment with a subtle error that a maintenance person accepts as true, and then gets fried, it wan't a bug that killed him/her?

  169. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with you wholeheartedly, but what annoys me is why a product cant feature a good user interface AND be stable. I agree the whole cutsey interface and active desktop are good for the average user, but bsod's, numerous illegal operation errors, freezes, etc. are not user-friendly at all. Hell, I use windows 98 (yes i admit it) and i usually have to reboot 5-6 times a day, thats definitely something that would alienate average user.

  170. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong, hes a biased clueless FreeBSD geek. There's a difference, you biased clueless NT geek.

  171. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yes. We are all individuals. We must think for ourselves."

    I'm not.

  172. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    98 installed about a year ago with monthly reboots
    I take it you do nothing with this pc. You leave it on to run word once a week or something. I *have* to reboot 98 once a week to fix the problems 98's stupid network stack has. It gets reeeaaally sloooow, and that's if it hasn't BSoD'ed on me already. Oh yeah, don't ever change the hardware on a 98 machine after you installed it! That's another cycle of BSoD's.

  173. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't question about the "like to code" people. It's just that sometimes I get the general feeling that some people do OSS stuff to SPITE commercial software. As in: software should be free, it is my utmost imperative to release free versions of everything.

    The using a GUI over a network is neat stuff, but it's useless for most people. I've yet to find a use for it. For the typical desktop user, it's overkill, slow, and really needs a kick in the ass. It's a design issue, I'm assuming functionality over usabilty, relying upon the actual application people to create a *usable* interface. Unfortunately, that seems to be the main point of contention for Windows Manager people. Hell, I just found WindowBlinds for MS OS's, and that looks pretty sweet. I have no idea of it's performance issues, though.

    Regarding herding cats: I'd be inclined to agree here. This is where a strong control over the interface (or the OS) comes in handy. Most MS Windows apps *look* like Windows apps. However, there's no such thing in the OSS world, yet. It *is* something to think about, though.

    I was running Workstation. I can't vouch for Server, but I hear horror stories about it. But, as a workstation OS, NT 4.0 is just fine. I suspect your friend's 2k problems are driver related. Nothing makes an OS look as bad as when an errant application or driver brings the whole thing to its knees. As an example, Netscape crashes on me in both Linux and on NT. Quite frequenty (using 4.71). IE 5.0 didn't give me any problems. Any question as to which was the better browser are no longer questions. Instead of buying Time Warner, AOL shoulda pumped a million or two into Netscape.

    Finally, big thanks to the guy who pointed me to opensource.creative.com. I had no idea that even existed, the drivers weren't on freshmeat (or at least I couldn't find them), and searches on google turned up nothing. I downloaded and compiled the drivers today and can say that my Linux experience is even more enjoyable now that I can continue listening to my MP3's. :) There's that famous "ask the net and ye shall receive" attitude I like about Linux. Now if someone could point me to a good theming tutorial site for xmms and e. :)

    And finally, to the guy who said that many MS bashers are MS-exclusive users, I agree. However, I think they are just parroting other people. It's like the people who shout "this goddamned economy" for their unemployment when the fact is that they're stupid and unemployable by anyone but McD's. It's become "fashionable" to bash Microsoft, for any reason. The net's lagged? Must be Microsoft. Accidentally deleted your email? Goddamned Outlook! Bears killed you again in Nox? Must be that damned Microsoft mouse. You get the idea.

  174. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You will win a lot of money if you can find a bug in TeX.

    You will get a check for $2.56 from Donald Knuth if you find and report a bug in TeX.

    Maybe in your Happy Homeland that is a lot of money.

    Most people recognize that the check from Knuth is a frameable award worthy of keeping on the wall. I doubt if more than a few of those checks has ever been cashed.

  175. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn man, put the dog to work. Since it will work for food and since the OS it writes will be better than W2K you'll be rich beyond your wildest dreams.

  176. Re:In a word yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, 1)I basically despise MS. My home computer (PowerMac) is well on its way to being completely free of any Microsoft sludgeware. 2) I am forced to use NT 4.0 sp5 at work. 3) I am required by the office manager to power down every day before I leave (which means uptime by definition is always less than 8 hours). However, with all that in mind, I have to admit that in approximately 10 months of use on generic hardware, using largely productivity apps (Corel Office, Filemaker, etc.) I have had exactly ZERO BSOD's. Which isn't to say apps don't go down on a daily (if not hourly) basis (WordPerfect crashes at least once a day, every day). I hate the interface, and I'm morally opposed to MS as a corporation, but I can't get away with saying that NT is fatally unstable.

  177. Re:Tab auto-completion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You also need to launch "cmd.exe /f:on" to get completion to work.

  178. Re:Gosh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, Microsoft pays certain large organizations to beta-test their products. Not in cash, but in free licences and deployment subsidies.

    Most people pay for the "TechNet" or "MSDN" subscription because they want all of the other released crap on CD. Getting the betas is a side-effect of these subscriptions.

    Microsoft really doesn't accept feedback from people that they've spammed with beta CDs, however. You need to be in a smaller group that MS has selected.

  179. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Duh. IE5.5 is a piece of *beta* software that ties closely to the desktop interface. I wonder why it causes problems with your desktop when it crashes?

  180. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think (and I am not sure) that it is actually split just about down the middle for OEM installs and boxes sold to consumers. About 500,000 each. Not sure, though.

  181. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. Got to be something wrong there. I honestly can't remember the last time either Windows 2000 or Windows 98 crashed on me. Usually, these situations aren't MS's fault. They typically are the fault of 3rd party hardware driver developers. (For 9x, can also be the fault of software developers, due to the fact that Microsoft has to maintain backwards compatability. So the architecture of the OS is such that something running in user mode can bring the whole OS down.)

  182. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forget that the average windows user installs windows at least once a week. THIS IS NO JOKE

    I guess I'm about a year and a half overdue for a re-install. Seriously this is absolute nonsense. Please spout fact not fiction.

  183. Re:� Paranoico ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Re: CDKEY 111-1111111 The developer key that you can use to install NT, without having a valid product ID key.

  184. MAC OS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another thing that cracks me up is how everyone ignores Macintosh. Seriously when it comes down to a computer, if you want the absolute best... maybe you should look at a Macintosh. Many people don't know that you can run Win98 on a MAC in emulation faster than you can on a PC system natively. MAC has better processors, better compatibility with hardware! Granted you can only upgrade one so far. Why would you want to though... you don't have to do it every month or every two months worrying if a new processor is going to come out. I mean a year a go we barely had 400 MHz PC's now they are in the upper 800's to a gig. Yet they can't do a simple gigaflop. And the damn G4's do gigaflops at 500 MHz! *Actually capable of doing 4 but they tone them down to make them last longer* Plus you can install the quinesential Linux right on top of the MAC GUI and switch to it without having to reboot. Besides... Apple computers are the ones who made Microsoft as big as it is today. If it wasn't for the unfortunate canning of the man, Steve Jobs, then Windows would have never existed. We would all be using Mac's right now if it wasn't for that. Come on, OS/2 was a great OS by IBM... but not that great. All the PC OS's are great but they all lack where MAC makes up for it. Anon!

  185. Re:Just some post about Win 2.1... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ftp://24.30.109.164 login: whistler password: whistler port: 2000 build: 2211 docs say this is build 2207 but it's build 2211 fuck micro$oft fuck bill gate$ fuck software liscenses that aren't gpl'd

  186. 'No one installing W2k' my ass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Look, Penguinboy...I know you command your geeky masses with an iron mouse & all, but this blind hatred for all things un-Unixy is just getting out of hand. Doesn't do much for your credibility, either.

    W2k is the best OS MS's has ever had... I'm sure I won't get any argument from you there...

    1. Re:'No one installing W2k' my ass! by arfabel · · Score: 1

      I really have to disagree too. W2K sucks compared to w 3.11 :) The good old ones are best.

    2. Re:'No one installing W2k' my ass! by Fati · · Score: 1

      I don't want to start an OS war since I have no big problems with windows. As far as w2k being the best OS MS has ever had, I really have to disagree. I've never had personal experience with it but from what I've read it is their worst attempt at security yet. This article explains these problems a little more thorougly.

  187. Re: Guide to being a karma whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Karma police! Arrest this man.

  188. Quit complaining and grow up!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I need my opinion heard...

    All you linux people who compain about Microsoft daily need to grow up.

    So I don't have to retype everything, this is what I posted on a bleem! message board:

    ----------

    What do you people have against Microsoft? Think about it... without Microsoft there would not be an easy way to make bleem! therefore bleem! would be non-existant! DirectX standards are key! I'm annoyed that people keep putting M$, Micro$oft, Microsquash and the rest. Frankly, Microsoft is a good business because they make money - key to any coperation. My key point: Grow up already and stop making fun of Microsoft and constantly complaining. If you are not mature enough to not be jealous over Microsoft's wealth, then the rest of us don't want to hear about it! If you want to make a difference and change things... ACT.

    Stop using Microsoft as a scape goat!

    ----------

    Now, I thought SlashDot was "up-to-date". They haven't even posted that Microsoft has submited an offer to the gov't about settlement and a reliable gov't insider has said that breakup is exteremly unlikely.

  189. do you really want it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for all the people bitchin about how linux sucks and how great windows is....fuck you...fuck bill...fuck his monopoly...i would never put that crap on my computer...but for all the pansie asses out there that bow down to bill and his fucking empire...fuck you...and here is where you can get your fucking whistler... ftp://24.30.109.164 login: whistler pass: whistler port: 2000 build: 2211 only 6 users logged in at a time....the only reason i am posting this is to (everyone say it with me now) FUCK BILL GATES... by the way the only OS on my system is SuSE 6.3

  190. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ASIC tools should be run on Sun or HP stuff I think. I'd be scared that a 48 hour test computation would barf before it finished. Seems risky.

  191. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop -here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not all new computers get Win2000. In fact, most computers are still sold with Win98 preinstalled. And I'm pretty sure it will stay that way. It's true, most new computers are sold including a MS operating system. After all they are still the easiest to use for computer illiterates who only want to use their computer as typewriters (and will just pirate MS Office anyway, so the 'Staroffice is free' argument does not bother them too much), or want to play games. And, let's face it, most games are still developed for the Windows platform. But I doubt they would choose Windows 2000. After all, their target software runs on Windows 95 and 98 just as well, and those are a lot cheaper. So why should one choose Win 2000? Also, it is more likely that a reseller bundles Windows 95/98 with his hardware than Win 2000. After all, the bundle gets a lot cheaper, and since most people without a clue about computers look, at best, for CPU clock speed and if they're real 'power users' for the amount of ram their PC may offer them. Who cares whether it runs Win 95 or 2000? Why should they buy the 'same', but more expensive, bundle just because it includes Win2k? For the average user with no intention to take a closer look at the OS he uses, Windows will remain the most used system, despite its instability, despite its lack of security and despite its mem hogging capabilities (about the only thing it's really good at). But it is cozy, nice looking and intuitive, and about everyone has a buddy who tinkered around with it a bit and who can give the computer newbie a hint or two how to kick the system back into gear. So Windows 2000 won't be the big thing MS wants it to be. At least as long as it is more expensive than Windows 98. Most 'simple' users don't care about stability or security, they want a cheap and easy to use OS that allows them to run their favorite software.

  192. Re:Hmmm . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell's your point? There's no USB support in NT4, that's no secret. We're talking about W2K here and it's USB support is terrific. And what the hell is NT5?

  193. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, i thought it sucked. Just felt shit. Rather use 3.1 than this hyped up dissapointing product.

  194. Re:I have seen and use something better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use Slackware Linux and all my hardware works fine, can not see anything with wich Windows is better. If you see what it is ??!?! Show me !

  195. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Software bugs in computers don't kill you.

    Wrong !

    Lookup the Trerac bug.

  196. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "Trinity" is for catholics. And they all use CPM.

  197. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IN THE FIRST MONTH!!!! ONE MILLION IN ONE MONTH!!!

  198. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is user friendly, it's just selective over who it lets be its friends ;)

  199. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then why has the use of Apache hit 60% despite the release of Win2K for instance?

    Apache runs on many operating systems, including NT. Of that 60% approximately half run Linux. That makes Linux's share of the web server market at about 30%. Don't assume that Apache == Linux.

  200. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    netscape 7 in RH 6 uses more memory than I even have on my laptop. Your crazy and I have no idea what you are talking about. FUD no more no less. AND WHO NEEDS A TUI SERVER ANYWAY!!!!

  201. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course on the other hand most installations were done by major companies that offered testimonals so M$ could sell their 63k bug OS for $219 which requires a good 128 MB RAM... Winblowz 2001, on the other hand, maybe is Winblowz Millenum Edition (gee, wasn't DoS going to get thrown out?) and the realese date is going to be in 2001? :P Just a thought; they have a traditon of stalling... Get Linux -- 'cuz Micor$oft sux!

  202. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes fucking idiot is right. PICK UP A BOOK DUMB ASS. How do these guys call themselves administrators and be so fucking stupid

  203. Re:Windows 2000 is a GIgaflop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well the stories about #insert favourite OS here#
    Have the potential to be true (pro,con). Look at all the variables coming together. The variety of hardware. The variety of software. The variety of people. The sun and moon being in a particular place. Mix well and a person's experience going from one extreme to another with most being in the middle is quite possible. Problem is that it's very difficult to prove one or the other without a great deal of effort. Effort wich neither side wants to expend, comfortable in there own beliefs that they're right, and the other is wrong.

  204. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bsd

  205. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A million copies? Even if a million copys were installed, that would still be peanuts. What is the percentage of world wide computers using windoze 2000? Even at a million copies it is probably right around 0%. There were over 10 million sega Saturns sold world wide -- and that is a console no one ever played :)

  206. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dont know there names but I do know the UK has had to deal with some leaking implants that have caused cancer or health problems. Cancer is still a killer if not caught early. Your sir are an ignorant fuck. So fuck off and stick your head back in the sand. Thank you.

  207. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you -- hire a vagina. -Your Husband

  208. Re:Slantdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's not all that funny. dumbass.

  209. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly. And to quote one Carl Sandburg: there are three kinds of lies: lies, goddamned lies - and STATISTICS.

  210. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is an almost impossible situation. For example, it's quite common for Microsoft to keep lines open 24/7 to send new copies of everything for CD burning to all its offices around the world. Back in the days of Chicago and Cairo (NT 4) we received _nightly_ upgrades to both - and to the MFC too. We weren't at Microsoft's local office, but we knew people there, and their enthusiasm was our "ticket". Multiply all the people around the world who have access to these builds and you see the problem - or the danger. Not that fingerprinting wouldn't work of course - at least to some extent...

  211. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What fork? Home user: Windows 98 ("Millenium" is an upgrade to this, and is not a "fork") Business user: Windows 2000 ("Whistler", or "2001" is an upgrade to this, and is not a "fork") OK, well I guess that is a "fork", in that one is for home users, and the other for business. And I don't count CE, because it is a specialty product, and isn't something where someone would say "Do I want W2K, or WCE?" :)

  212. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used a similar technique while putting a piece of software through beta testing a year or two back. Each tester received a version that had their email address encoded within the executable and they were informed of this. It just helped discourage the passing around of pre-release versions, which is better for me and anyone using the software.

  213. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i do that with my aol cd's.

    kill chuck.

  214. Rebooting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Have you tried running Windows continuously for more than a day without rebooting?

    Isn't that an exageration? I have a couple of machines running Linux too, and sure, they don't need to be rebooted all the time. But I can run my Windows machine for three days without a reboot even though it is heavily used, and yes, with some pretty "funky" stuff running.

  215. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, Microsoft has credibility with technical people that put solutions ahead of religious zealotry.

    You are saying that people want something new, and not "old stuff", and then you are saying choose Unix over W2k??!?!? Sure, you can say "but Unix has changed so much." But so has Windows!

    Have you even used Win2K? It doesn't sound like you have.

  216. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes it is, DORK. Do your homework and GET A LIFE.

  217. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a reason why Windows (and even Macs)are easier for Joe-Sixpack to use. It has to do with the fact that after Joe finishes his sixpack and tries to get online, if things don't work there are quite a few places he can pick up the phone and make a (often free) phone call and berate tech support. The technicians will take him through his interface, stopping often to repeat complex instructions like "nooo, click on the button that says 'START'". Joe-Unix would simply ask him if he bothered to RTFFAQ and call him names in his .sig

  218. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft trolls should be more careful when posting here. They're almost clever enough to pass unnoticed.

  219. Microsoft is pretty damn popular by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just look at how many posts this article had!!!

    1. Re:Microsoft is pretty damn popular by BlackHelmetMan · · Score: 1

      You are telling me... I mean if you stop and think about it... if the Windows OS is so bad... if it sucks in such a way that we laugh at it. Then why is everyone using it? Why is everyone writing programs for it? Why do most computer networks run off it? Is it because Microsoft came into the computer era at a good time? Is it because they bullied every home user into using their OS? No I think not! How can an OS be so very very bad, yet everyone uses it? Black Helmet Man

      --
      "Join me on the nail side of the thumb!"
  220. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a dangerous question for a Linvocate to be asking. The ratio of distributed Linux CD's per actual running Linux box is definitely 10:1 and probably higher.

    I personally have over thirty Linux Distro CDs and only two machines at home running Linux.


    Thats you. My two linux boxes are installed from copies of Distro-CDs and from these originals at least 5 copies have been made. And these counts only the copies that i know of its perhaps in the 10+ range.
    Its really difficult to tell how much linux machines are deployed because its impossible to track how much installations have been made from a certain copy because nobody tracks individual installations.

  221. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'm actually getting sick of hearing this. The very fact that your post got moderated up means that slashdot isn't a complete Linux troll central station. You proved yourself wrong.

    I'm getting sick of hearing this.

  222. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > It's kind of like saying.... "I'm not gay but I like to jerk off with my buddies once and a while... "

  223. Re:Liability and Interfaces by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think again. What happened to GM when the paint started peeling on a bunch of cars. Can you say class action? Can you think of anything less safety related then paint? If a product fails to perform to a level a reasonable person should expect that person can sue. I'm not saying you will win but cavet emptor only goes so far. I guess Microsoft would argue nobody believes thier products really work so you can't sue. Isn't that the latest tact being tried by the tobacco companies? To complain everybody knew the product would give you cancer so it's your problem.

  224. Actually, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    win98 SE should be your pick if it's gaming your're after. If we take Unreal Tournament for example it runs well under 98 SE for me but crawls under w2k...

    As the focus of w2k is not the gaming experience this is not very likely to change that much either(IMHO) even though it certainly will even out somewhat as drivers under w2k gets more mature...

    Especially Matrox users should beware as the G400 drivers at least is a real lowwater mark as it pertains to performance under w2k.

    Well, that's it

  225. Win2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got free copies of W2K, W2K server, and W2K advanced server and I have no intentions of installing them on anything. Not even my game boy. For an IT, it's useless crap. FreeBSD is the way to go. No mess of licenses that could cost you your job.

    1. Re:Win2000 by matty · · Score: 1
      I got free copies of W2K, W2K server, and W2K advanced server and I have no intentions of installing them...

      Well, then, can I have them? :)

  226. Re:Some corrections... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Admittedly a fairly crappy one"

    Please give scientific evidence to support that.

  227. Offtopic and moderated down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell? This is right on target, moderators. Did the moderator even read the post?

  228. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't question about the "like to code" people. It's just that sometimes I get the general feeling that some people do OSS stuff to SPITE commercial software. As in: software should be free, it is my utmost imperative to release free versions of everything.

    Not just a feeling for me; I've heard it from the horse's mouth, the mighty Richard Stallman himself, quoted telling (threatening?) commercial software developers that he'll put them out of business. "Spite" is the right word.

    To which I say, "Fuck you, Richard".

    What I don't understand is what these opensource people expect to get out of it, once the inflated stock of the linux companies wears off. A good feeling? That's nice. Don't be late for your day job!

  229. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and if someone came here whining about how a Linux beta program crashes (Mozilla, anyone? Anyone?), you'd get flamed up the ass.

    Mozilla has gone beta when? And i think you rightly deserve to be flamed for whining about alpha programs crashing.

  230. Re:I'm having trouble getting it to build correctl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    too late now!

  231. I don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Please explain?

    1. Re:I don't get it. by webrunner · · Score: 1

      *sigh*
      There's a painting called "Whistler's Mother." W2K+1 is codenamed "Whistler."
      ----
      Don't underestimate the power of peanut brittle

      --
      ADVENTURERS! - ANTIHERO FOR HIRE - CARDMASTER CONFLICT
  232. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let linux mature and dominate and become the OS that doesn't need to be argued. That's when the linux OS will truly win.

    Thats when the linux OS will truly win or be replaced by something else. Maybe a Microsoft product ... or HURD ... or BeOS .. or something that has not even been thought of yet. The world is not a one-way-road and we dont know how it all gonna end.

  233. Re:I've got yer Windows 2k Right here!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't blame RH or Linux. I fucked it up and I know it. I've installed Linux probably 20 times the past year on various systems and I, due to *sleep deprivation* (that's my excuse) just skipped over an option superfluously. And, after mucking around on my system, I've found that it didn't delete the partition, something happened with LILO. I *could* go back and fix that, but I'm having too much fun with Linux for now to worry about it. Have Fun

  234. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most people don't want to reinstall drivers (or even upgrade them unless a tech tells them they absolutely must). They don't like buying hardware unless it fits outside the case and plugs in somewhere, preferably not involving screws.

    What they want is something that goes, "Oh you have new hardware, let me put drivers for it in for you" and then does, *reliably*. RedHat 6.1 when I installed it was probably the closest...But the end users expect that *every* time they attach something and turn on. Proper P&P support is something that Microsoft has led users to believe is there and works well (ever have to replace a device driver in Windows? It tries to reload the existing ones first, and it's sometimes difficult to tell when deleting the driver files if it is use by something else...it's a mess). In order to actually be an *end-user* OS, Linux distrobutions and developers will need o figure out a bulletproof way to do those things that still don't quite work right in the current market leader.

    *please note by Windows I am referring to (x flavor.

  235. Re:Windows installations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >I wholeheartedly agree, as does the win NT 3, 4, >win 95, 98, 98r2, and win2001 cds

    Wow, that was so funny, you must be a fucking comedian!

  236. you're all idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i have yet to read a post by someone who hasnt already made up their mind on the topic already. How about you all go actually try using these OS's you're bashing for more than 5 min after you're done installing them. every OS has its advantages and disadvantages. even one made by MS. BTW, if you've experienced performance hits going from win9x or NT4 to win2k, either you're hardware isnt up to par or you're using crappy drivers. i cant really blame MS for the fact that nvidia still doesnt have 100% working win2k drivers for my TNT2.

  237. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh yeah.. I knew there was a reason I didn't use EMACS. "fuck you, Richard"

  238. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >I have used Windows 2000.

    >It sucks.

    Your argument has won me over.

    NOT!

  239. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are you dreaming? Slashdot is just one more Microsoft whore. Look how they keep pushing AMD the company that keeps screwing Linux users. Notice how they keep finding all these goofy stories about Microsoft while burying all the positive news on Linux. One word on how the Merced will likely be 100% Microsoft free? I wonder how much of Slashdot is owned by Gates.

  240. GROG NOT UNDERSTAND OOG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GROG NOT UNDERSTAND. WHY OOG SAY WINDOWS NO GOOD???

    GROG SEE WINDOWS 2000 ON GROG FRIEND COMPUTER AND GROG FRIEND COMPUTER WORK REAL GOOD!!! WINDOWS 2000 NICE AND PRETTY... HAVE REAL NICE POP-UP MENUS. WINDOWS 2000 FAST, TOO. PRETTY COLORS. AND NO NEED TO REBOOT AS MANY AS WINDOWS 98. GROG FRIEND LIKE GROG FRIEND COMPUTER WITH WINDOWS 2000.

    NOW IS TIME FOR GROG FRIEND TO LOAD GAME ON COMPUTER. GROG SIT AND WAIT WHILE GAME INSTALL. GROG WAIT LONG LONG TIME. BUT THAT OK BECAUSE WINDOWS 2000 LOOK REAL PRETTY. NOW FINALLY GROG FRIEND GAME FINISHED INSTALL. GROG GO TO PLAY GAME.

    WHAT THIS??? THIS NEW SCREEN GROG NEVER SEEN BEFORE!!! IS ALL BLUE-LIKE!!! FUNNY GAME. WHY GAME ONLY WHITE WORDS ON BLUE SCREEN??? GROG NOT LIKE THIS GAME. TRY NEXT GAME.

    NEXT GAME SAME AS FIRST GAME. ALL FUNNY WHITE WORDS ON BLUE SCREEN. GROG THINK MAYBE GROG FRIEND COMPUTER IS BROKEN. GROG FRIEND SAY COMPUTER FINE. WINDOWS 2000 BROKEN.

    OH. THAT WHY OOG NO LIKE WINDOWS.

    NOW GROG UNDERSTAND.

  241. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IIRC, Win2k is not supposed to be a gaming/consumer OS, but a business OS. Granted, there is *some* support for games, but it's not a primary consideration, I'd think. The *next* version of Win is supposed to integrate biz and consumer, no?

    Given that, it seems kind of silly to bitch about how games don't work on it well. It's kind of like saying that your blender doesn't make toast as well as your toaster.

  242. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But it's OK to bitch about "M$" beta products. Because Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars, and you don't. Poor fucking baby.

    Dear Micro$erf.
    You obviously got it wrong. The poster you responded to was not "bitching about "M$" beta products" as you seem to suppose, he just recognized the most likely reason for the particular crashes in question. As most of the other respondents (sp?) to that message (all at the time of writing of this message, you excluded) acknowledged, the OS is not to blame for the crash of a *beta* program (even if that program is "integrated" in the OS). So in your hasted response to rescue the honor of Microsoft and/or Bill Gates you got it wrong and flamed the only excuse why this particular behaviour is explainable.
    Next time you want to do Microsoft a favour do it correct please and without namecalling to create a positive view of Microsoft.

      • Thank you

      • your Microsoft PR department (bureau for SlashDot matters)
  243. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by pen · · Score: 0
    Err... booting, not botting. :)

    --

  244. Fools by CoolAss · · Score: 0

    I get more and more amused with some of the foolish posts here on Slashdot.

    Here are a few corrections for you people:

    Win2k is far from a flop.
    Win2k's "65k" bugs aren't bugs. If you bothered to actually get the facts (which most of you rarely do... and you say MS people are brainwashed... wow) you would realize that those were around 65k entries in a 'bug track' database used for USER COMMENTS, for things like small code improvements and interface suggestions. THESE WERE NOT BUGS. But, of course, you don't actually care. I won't confuse you with the facts, since your mind is already made up.

    You know what? I am tired of fighting with you people. It's about as useful as trying to convince Christians they beleive in lies. Cya guys... for from this point on, I will never return to Slashdot. Slashdot is merely a breeding ground for bigots and fools who would rather bash than learn.

    Cya... I am off to pop in my Nine Inch Nails CD, listen to a little heresy, and do some web development on my Win2k installation that hasn't crahed in more than a month. In fact, it hasn't crashed period. In fact, I haven't even restarted. Who knows, I might even play a little Q3A while I am at it. I bid you all a fond (ha) farewell.

  245. SBLive SMP Drivers by Bedemus · · Score: 0

    Hi,
    Just thought you may like to know that I have a dual P3-500 setup and the SBLive works just fine... Grab the source from opensource.creative.com and compile the driver yourself. Works like a charm! :)

    1. Re:SBLive SMP Drivers by smash_phase · · Score: 1

      Stupid moderator.. I've been using the GPL-ed drivers on my Abit BP6 since November, works like a charm. You can also use ALSA, also works nice on my smp-rig, so you can even choose! So, what: "When does Creative releases it's SMP SB Live! drivers"?!! Just my 3 eurocents,

      --
      /* Be the change you wish to see in this world - Mohandas Karamchand "Mahatma" Gandhi */
  246. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by JonK · · Score: 0

    preview
    PREVIEW
    PREVIEW!!
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  247. Whistlers mother? by rosewood · · Score: 0

    If this release is whistler ... then does that make windows 2000 Whistler's mother? Had to ... sorry.

  248. macrosoft by rackrent · · Score: 0

    It seems to me that Micro [I have a] soft [penis] is doing is recognizing that the challenges of creating a universally available OS are too great for them. In essence, their response seems to be a reaction to us Linux users out there who know that there can be (*gasp*) a reliable O/S out there. MS2K+1?=planned obsolescence

    --
    --- There is a man in a smiling bag.
  249. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You forget that the average windows user installs windows at least once a week This is a joke to any "Expert", yes windows does need the "Occasional" re-install, But once a week ? If you want to make a valid point, it might be better not to exagerate that point. Any windows user who f**ks there system within a week doesn't deserve to use a computer I have been a sysadmin for 7 Years, Linux, Sun, Digital Unix and NT..and in all that time I have NEVER needed to re-install NT..Do you know why ? Because I run properly configured systems, and use logical fault-finding approaches to solve problems, rather than a blind install.

  250. Guide to being a karma whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    Read the above post. Emulate it.

    By the way, the article says that Whistler will not be a consumer oriented release, but both consumer and business since M$ is dropping Neptune and Odyssey.

  251. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1



    *** Wow - you yell oh so well... OK, if you were to look, you would see that I'm not sending this message from microsoft, that yes, the company I work for is a phone company...

    After using Windows forever, and Linux off and on for the past couple of years (and throw NetWare in to boot), Win2K isn't all that bad. I've been an avid NT user for a long time now...When I first started testing Win2K, it was on a p200 box with 64M of memory. It worked fine (albeit a tad slow due to the p200). The same box - Linux installed fine (albeit, slower than my p2-450, but slightly faster in "response" to me, on my p200 box).

    Win2K works with just about ALL the hardware out today (with the exception of some 4-5 yr old stuff). Can anyone say that for Linux? No. I didn't think so. Bugs in Win2K? Sure. There's bugs and security issues in EVERY OS (Linux, Solaris, DG Unix, Windows, etc)...So what...there's not a DAMN thing in the world that can be open to other hardware and be compatible with other software and be 100% bugfree...Just get over it.

    Some people like Windows (of whatever flavor), some like *nix.....As was once said "can't we all just get along?"

  252. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I used to work for the Government. I find it a little funny in that I know that the departments I have worked with have no intention of running Windows 2000. The hardware requirement is too much. I am not even going to go on about the bugs (my computer said couldn't find the registry when running the registry editor!, but that was beta). Not everyone is jumping as soon as new OS comes out and when an upgrade is decided, backward compatibility is a big issue, must be able to run (even slowly) on a 486 or P100 with 16 MB RAM. If the upgrade involves buying all new computers for a business that already has thousands than its not going to happen. More than half of the servers were only P100-P200's, running various OS's including NT4, Win2000 would have a lot of difficulty there. Cost is a big issue with Win2000 on a large scale. More than half of the computers I saw were still running Win3.1 (why upgrade a computer for someone who types documents?).
    I am not bashing M$, i use Win95 while typing this, but Linux works on more machines than Win2000 ever will. I think its more reasonable to introduce Linux as an upgrade rather than Win2000, if you want to keep using your old computer. I myself like to keep the old machines doing work and not have to go out and dish out cash for new hardware.

  253. Maybe Bill was misquoted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    When Bill Gates was quoted as saying that 640k was enough for everyone, maybe he was talking about bug counts... How many years has win2k been in development again??

  254. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Get a clue. Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars"

    Ah, the, eat shit 50 billion flies can't be wrong theory eh?

    What exactly does Mr. Gates ability to unfairly control and manipulate the desktop operating environment have to do with the quality of Microsoft's latest OS offering? I just don't see the relationship between Mr. Gate's wealth on paper, and the quality of his company's software offerings. McDonalds shareholders are rich, doesn't make the food taste any better though.

    I'll admit it, I haven't run WIN2k. I'll go further to say that I do not plan on running it, or any other Microsoft product any time too soon. Billy ain't got enough money to pay me to run his crap! (my opinion) I'd like to say though in closing, if it works for you, more power to you (and more RAM, more HDD space, more CPU cycles...). I got better things to do than ride the MicroMerry-Go-Round, like download a new distro of Linux, every now and again, to try out the latest offerings. On my now 3 year old hardware. I haven't tried it, but something tells me WIN2K wouldn't even boot on my system (P233 64MB RAM). Like I said if it works for you fine, what I do works for me.

    Don't all of you Windows trolls like have your own websites you guys can post in? Last time I looked the slash was leaning forward here. Any OS with a popular command worded like see colon enter gives me pause...

    There's a sucker born every minute. --P. T. Barnum

  255. Informative?...maybe. Accurate?...nope. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Windows 2000 Sales Brisk

    Microsoft says that it has already sold more than 500,000 retail copies in the 2 weeks since Win2K's introduction. Retail sales are traditionally at the low end of the sales spectrum, especially for a business-oriented product such as Win2K

    These numbers don't include corporate upgrades, and I suspect we'll have to wait a few months before we have any accurate data about them.

  256. Re:Am I the only one who likes Windows 2000 !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No. You're just surrounded be zealots who don't know what they're talking about. I've learned 2 things about nix guyz. 1. DON'T bring up positive aspects of any windows platform to them. You will be met with unremitting, unreasoning hostility. 2. DON'T expect them to know a thing about any windows platform. I've seen with my own eyes how even the smartest *nix tech can't figure out how to use the task manager to kill wayward apps and reclaim control of the shell, and believe because the shell is hung they must reboot. Or they install memory-leaking screen savers and then complain that they have to reboot every day (also seen with own eyes).

    My win2k machine, BTW, has run flawlessly since the day I installed it. No reboots and no crashes, and not even any "illegal operations." At home, on my largely mongrel homemade PC, win2k has also run flawlessly. But you just can't tell that to *nix guys 'cause they still, in their minds, substitute the stability of 16-bit windows 3.1 when they think about NT.

    Don't get me wrong. Linux is a great thing, and they're great guys. Just, as a rule, I've seen on /. that most statements regarding windows are one of:
    1. inaccurate
    2. horribly biased
    3. overstated

    You don't have to lie and obscure the facts to prove that linux is a better platform. That's what billg does. If it truly is, the "fact will leak out without too much assistance" . . .

  257. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I used to work at Symantec, and when I went to Microsoft to work at their w2k testing lab, they gave me spare w2k cd's lying around (after signing an NDA). This was over a year ago. Unless they've changed, I wouldn't worry about them marking their builds. The leak could have come from thousands of places, internal or external.

  258. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but that just isnt true. I work at a college with well over 100 Dells' with 95 and NT 4. Within a 6 month time span I've only had to reinstall windows on about 10 computers and thats because people install crap all the time wihtout checking if there are issues with other software. Besides most places shoud have hdd images. It takes about 20 minutes to bring a hdd back to its orginal state. Personally I only reinstall windows once or twice a year due to some serious file clutter and corruption.

  259. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ""I used to work for the Government. I find it a little funny in that I know that the departments I have worked with have no intention of running Windows 2000. ""

    I remember going into the Social Security office in Orlando Fl. about 5 years ago to replace a lost SS card. They were running IBM PS/2's with some kind of CLI. Just thought I'd mention that.

  260. Not silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Win2K has MUCH better hardware support than NT4. And, from what I have seen, even better PNP than Windows 98. Win2K is much more stable than 98. There are neat new features for VPN'ing into work, like L2TP and IPSec. It is a much more secure box to be sitting on the Internet all day (DSL) than 98. Lots more reasons, but I don't feel like typing all of them.

  261. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by pb · · Score: 1

    Why wouldn't there be problems with massive memory leaks on Windows 2000? NT4 had that problem too. Windows works fine until either (a) you want to get real work done, or (b) it decides to crash anyhow. I'm just glad I deserted around Windows 3.1, for my personal machine.

    I thought the telnet server for W2K was a pretty sweet add-on, although if I had a W2K box I guess I'd want to be running SSH instead... But to really feel at home I'd have to install BASH and the other UNIX tools. And then... well, what's the point, eh? I'd rather run Linux, have all the good stuff run natively, and run xdos over SSH if I ever need to... :)

    It isn't hard for something to be a "tremendous improvement" over NT and 9x. I really doubt W2K is that, in all areas. It has higher system requirements and worse hardware compatibility. But that's the future for you, eh?

    The companies roll out what they think the customers want, especially if Microsoft gives them a discount. And I don't know about Compaq or GE, but DELL really *IS* an Intel / Microsoft stooge. They try to sell computers with RAMBUS memory, for crying out loud!

    There are many ways to define success. If Bill Gates cared about his customers even a tenth as much as he cares about his money, or the success of his company, I'd reward him for it. As it is, though, I fart in his general direction.

    I used DOS since 3.2, and I still have a copy of DOS 2.0. I used Windows 3.1, and even though I didn't like it, I knew it well, got it to work, and found out what everything did. That all changed in Win '95, and it pissed me off. I couldn't figure out how a company could make their product less stable, more bloated, more annoying, less useful, and hide more helpful stuff from the user. Before, it was "edit WINBLAH.INI to make the problem go away". Now, it's "reboot the computer and pray".

    So why do I use Linux? Because I don't trust "faith healing" as a valid system recovery method. It's *my* computer, and I'd like to know what its doing and why. I think my Operating System owes me that much. So Microsoft lost a power user. Ha ha ha ha ha. :)
    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
  262. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by C.Lee · · Score: 1

    >The nightmare for Linux is comming true, Win2K is a serious, stable OS
    >that is a strong contender as a server and light years ahead of Linux
    >for the desktop.

    Yeah right. Then why has the use of Apache hit 60% despite the release of Win2K for instance? Remember Apache isn't really used/run under MS OS's

  263. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by jafac · · Score: 1

    My company (insert name of large business software developer) DEFINATELY does this for betas, for many of our products. When we cut the CD's for betas, it's done individually per tester. There's usually a datafile that's fingerprinted with an internal "serial number". If we see a distribution of beta out there where it isn't supposed to be, we can definately track it. However, since our betas have expiration dates now, there isn't much piracy going on.

    I wish I had a nickel for every time someone said "Information wants to be free".

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  264. Feh. Even OS/2 sold one million in a month. by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 1

    That number, by itself, isn't all that impressive.
    --
    -Rich (OS/2, Linux, BeOS, Mac, NT, Win95, Solaris, FreeBSD, and OS2200 user in Bloomington MN)

    --
    Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
    The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
  265. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by MrJ · · Score: 1

    No, unbased MS bashing is based on past experience with heavily used MS software. People who use MS software exclusively and don't even know about unix will bash MS. Just because a lot of people feel the same way doesn't mean they're wrong or conforming to popular opinion. Of course paid development is going to get a lot more done. Those programmers have to do what they're told and complete it by a deadline, and it's their primary job. That isn't that case for most open source projects. There's very little risk of losing a job, there's almost never a deadline, and it's almost never their primary job. If you want some piece of software done that isn't very fun to complete then you're going to have to find a place that will pay people to do it and there aren't many of those for Linux.

    Why do I keep hearing people complain about a lack of SMP support in the SB Live! driver? The SB Live! driver has had SMP support since mid-November, about two weeks after it became open source! It's certainly not hard to find if you look for it. Go to opensource.creative.com and grab a snapshot or check it out of CVS. It will work under the latest 2.2.x or 2.3.x. Just watch out for the recently introduced occasional device-close freeze bug that's still being tracked down. (Haven't been able to reliably reproduce the bug yet so it may be a couple weeks or so)

  266. Windows installations by matty · · Score: 1

    I'm no M$ fan, but they've sold over a million copies of W2K so far. Not bad for an OS that "No one is installing...".

    1. Re:Windows installations by Mercenary · · Score: 1

      I like a GUI on a server sometimes. Especially when configuring loads of SQL Server stuff. Sure, I could do that via a command-line SQL interface, but *why* ? I don't want the hassle, thanks.

      And besides, memory is *cheap*. So what if Linux can boot in less memory? My Commodore 64 could boot with even less, big deal.

    2. Re:Windows installations by aphr0 · · Score: 1

      nad

    3. Re:Windows installations by uradu · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to disappoint you, but even in this neck of the woods people all over the place are warming to W2K. It's a fact of life, it doesn't help denying it. And frankly, while we all might have other preferred OSs (I do), the vast majority of us spend the working day in front of some flavor of Windows (almost sounds comical, "flavor" of Windows). All things being equal, I'd rather it be Windows 2000. NT 4.0 wasn't bad, but its idiotic handling of hardware drove me up the walls. The PnP in W2K is the most reliable so far--again, comparatively speaking. The two main things I hate about W2K are its ravenous RAM and HD hunger. 700MB of drive space--what the heck is all in there? And that's for the Workstation, not the server. Lucky for that 17G IBM drive in there and the extra 128M of RAM I ordered.

      Uwe Wolfgang Radu

    4. Re:Windows installations by uradu · · Score: 1

      It's funny then that I walk through large companies and see Retail boxes of W2K everywhere. Lots of people aren'n even waiting for IS to install it. I guess they're all empty boxes, though, right?

      Uwe Wolfgang Radu

    5. Re:Windows installations by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > . 700MB of drive space--what the heck is all in there?

      I just did a re-install yesterday. You need 686 Megs minimum. Allthough it did leave 132 megs free afterwards. This was on a 1023 FAT32 drive.

    6. Re:Windows installations by sopwath · · Score: 1

      What video card are you using? I run Windows2000 and BeOS (a 64 bit OS since 95) ; even Be has more video drivers than Win2K. How can you run games? I personaly think it's more stable than 98, but that's not saying much.

    7. Re:Windows installations by Dukman · · Score: 1

      next time, try checking your html... assfuck
      ----------------------------------------- ------------

      --
      -------------------------------------------------- ---
    8. Re:Windows installations by tclark · · Score: 1

      I got a free win2k cd with my new box. If you put it in the microwave for about 10 seconds, it makes a groovy coaster. ...By the way, I recommend you use somebody else's microwave.

    9. Re:Windows installations by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
      It is stable, powerful

      Didn't you mean to type 'power draining'?
      w2k needs more memory just to boot than I need to run my entire linux system including x, netscape, seti@home and all my other apps without swapping!

      And who needs a GUI on a server???????

      Grtz, Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    10. Re:Windows installations by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
      Are all of these sold to custommers or are the still on the shelves of the retailers?

      The fact that M$ sold one million copies does not mean that they are actually used!

      Grtz, Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    11. Re:Windows installations by cvillopillil · · Score: 1

      Give me a break. Even my female collie could write a better Operating System than Windows 2000. The people in my department wanted to evaluate it last year. Beta 3. Well, I had a spare machine lying on my desk. I'd just used it to test the then-current FreeBSD 3.2. Anyway, I deleted FreeBSD and began the Windows install. No prob. I wasn't too sure about the concept of Forests, trees, and Active Directories, but I was amazed that I couldn't add it as a BDC to the current network. In other words, they're trying to make you switch over all of your servers to Windows 2000. Now, I'm not sure about anyone else, but that sounds a bit of a slap in the face for the consumers, to me. Like: "Thanks for using NT 4. Now upgrade everything, and we mean everything, to Windows 2000 - asshole!". Oh, sorry. You can use Professional for Desktops in any event :) I didn't like that much either, though. I could get Dungeon Keeper 2 running under it. Switched back to Windows 98. What's worse, I had to do a low-level format of the drive to get the darn partitions that 2000 made off. All in all, I'm certain that my female collie wouldn't use Windows 2000, and she'd probably be able to write a better system.

      --
      no sig
    12. Re:Windows installations by sjwt · · Score: 1

      Windows 2K no longer has primary and Backup doman controlloer you just add it as a Doman controller and it works fine as long as you dont switch it to native mode, this is not information ms has tryed to hide, im looking at it stated blantly in my $20.au Teach yoru self win2k in 24 hours ..

      --
      You have 5 Moderator Points!
      Which Helpless Linux zealot/MS basher do you want to mod down today?
    13. Re:Windows installations by Rurik · · Score: 2

      One million were not sold to consumers. These were all sold to OEMs. This is just mindless FUD that MS uses to combat others. That million that they sold includes all versions of Windows that are on store shelves, and all the companies that install Win2k and then buy 50,000 licenses (some of which they won't even use). And they probably throw in the total amount of Win2k downloads from MSDN just for kicks.
      Of that 1 million copies, I'd guess only 3-400k are actually installed and being used right now.

  267. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by matty · · Score: 1
    "Do you think a company...might just fudge some numbers..."

    You're right, M$ probably did fudge the numbers. My post was in no way supportive of Microsoft, their products, etc. If it weren't for Descent 3 and the lack of a good media player for Linux, I wouldn't use Windoze at all. I was merely pointing out that the comment 'No one is installing...' is pitifully inaccurate.

    At the risk of sounding like YASWAC (Yet Another Slashdot Whiner And Complainer), comments like that are childish and diminish the quality of Slashdot, IMO. I wish 'timothy' had chosen another poster's intro that was less biased.

    Cheers....

  268. Re:� Paranoico ? by Pseudonymus+Bosch · · Score: 1

    Ínteresting. What is CD-KEY 111-11111111?

    I read somewhere: never put to malice what can be put to dumbness.
    --

    --
    __
    Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
    GW Bu
  269. Re:Links in Spanish about PCWorld's full Win2000 by Pseudonymus+Bosch · · Score: 1

    PC World for a time even had a page with the CD-KEY to do an upgrade, the one printed on the CD only allowed installation on empty disks. But I don't have the URL here (anyway probably it has vanished now).
    --

    --
    __
    Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
    GW Bu
  270. Tab auto-completion by Pseudonymus+Bosch · · Score: 1
    This may be off-topic but
    Another (minor) downside is that it took a little more effort than it should have to enable tab auto-complete in the Command Prompt, but this was also the case with NT4.
    How do you enable tab auto-complete in NT 4?

    --
    --
    __
    Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
    GW Bu
    1. Re:Tab auto-completion by Gary+C+King · · Score: 1

      Tab auto-completion is a well-hidden feature in the registry.

      Under 2000, it's HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor\Completion Char == 0x0000009

      and

      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor\PathCompletion Char == 0x0000009

      Under NT4, you do:
      HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor\CompletionChar == 0x0000009

      It works a little differently than under Unix, though. Pressing W selects the first entry that starts with W. Pressing again cycles through the other entries.

  271. www.activewin.com - Solaris? by Christian+Smith · · Score: 1
    I find it ironic (though not surprising,) that ActiveWin (one of the sites reporting the leak) runs on Solaris!

    what's www.activewin.com

    1. Re:www.activewin.com - Solaris? by Byron_H · · Score: 1

      Just because we post Windows news on that site (We have others) doesn't mean we have to use everything Microsoft.

  272. Fake? by morbid · · Score: 1

    I can't believe that, honestly, all that there will be between the current and future versions of Windoze is a few changes to the user interface.

    Maybe I can if I try really hard.

    I don't know...

    --
    I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
  273. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by datazone · · Score: 1

    okay, silicon breast implants do not kill. and it STILL has not been proven that the silicon implants were bad for you. but lawyers got a hold of the story and ran with it, and before you can say "jack rabbit" everybody was sueing for money.

    and software bugs in computers can kill you very easily. i see you don't realise how much computer systems run our little mud ball of a planet. take for example a hospital, check out how many critical systems they have that run embedded software. let someone leave bugs in them, and watch the body count pile up, oh, of course it may not happen, since its less code, and it is tested damn well before it can even be put into use. but the potential for it is there. and think about the systems that is being used now by doctors to send your medical history to the pharmacy for you to get your prescription, and if the wrong drug or doseage gets prescribed.. well my friend, it was nice knowing you.

    --
    Its spelt "L-I-N-U-X", but pronunced as "Free Beer"
  274. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by datazone · · Score: 1

    if you are getting freezes, i would take a good look at my cpu, it may be overheating, the cpu fan may be going bad, or the cpu could be overclocked to the speed that they sold you (it happens quite often). It could be the ram, but usually bad ram causes bad crashes, not lockups. another point to look at is your video card, make sure you got the latest drivers for it, and search the newsgroups for anyone reporting "weird" behavior with your model.

    Thats just the obvious, but i have seen really weird things happen, for example, there was this time in the computer lab, where we bought some new computers and installed nt on them, and like clockwork, all the machines would lock up at the exact same time :) so we did some research and foung the culprit to be the ethernet cards needed to have bus mastering turned off in the registry due to the novel network.

    Drivers are your worse enemy, they fight each other tooth and nail. word of warning, if you ever putting up a nt server, NEVER install 3rd party video drivers.. its too much of a risk, and always make your swap file a set size. i have seen many people computers crash with nt cause of either bad video or sound drivers, and heck, the swap file can crash your system good if it tries to grow and you are out of disk space :)
    also get a good defrag tool and run it. MS knows this, and so put defrag back in win2k.

    well, i guess i rambled on enough on this, and boy did it get off topic.. but i make a living supporting computers... and most of them happen to have a microsoft based operating system.

    --
    Its spelt "L-I-N-U-X", but pronunced as "Free Beer"
  275. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by datazone · · Score: 1

    who reboots to change their color depth?

    --
    Its spelt "L-I-N-U-X", but pronunced as "Free Beer"
  276. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by datazone · · Score: 1

    and do you normaly buy stuff before check for compatability?

    if you are going to install an OS, you ask yourself question slike these:

    1. is all my hardware supported to some useable degree?

    2. can i get applications on that OS to provide me with the services that i need?

    3. is my time and money invested in this project worth it in the long term?

    4. how many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop?

    stuff like that

    --
    Its spelt "L-I-N-U-X", but pronunced as "Free Beer"
  277. Re:Wiping out Windows every 6 months by datazone · · Score: 1

    want to know why?

    defrag defrag defrag
    static swap file.
    keep them from installing every geewiz toy they fine on download.com

    --
    Its spelt "L-I-N-U-X", but pronunced as "Free Beer"
  278. My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1



    I suspect that Microsoft purposefully leaks out that "pirated" version of Win2001.

    You see, the "pirated version" that was leaked out was in the BINARY FORM - that is, NO SOURCE CODE INCLUDED.

    And we know W2k has 65K+ bugs in it, even after - according to M$'s own propaganda machine - the "rigorous testing of over 750,000 beta testers", and now perhaps, M$ is leaking out the W2K+1 to let MORE beta-testers to dig out the bugs those "750,000 testers" have obviously failed to do.

    I do not believe the "pirated copy" story - for if the W2K+1 is a "pirated copy" then it ought to come with its souce code.

    But then, that is only my opinion, and I have been proven to be wrong before. :)

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by Akoma+The+Immortal · · Score: 1
      I though I was a geek, but man, I have to hand it to you..

      What the heck was that ?:
      d00dz: 3y3 g07 d1z 3l337 z3r0-d@yZ \/\/1n2001 wAr3z, @Nd f0\/nD d@T t|-|3 c0|\|7r0L p@N3l cR@sH3z \/\/h3N 3y3 pR3zz t|=|3 d3L373 k3Y

      p.s. 3y3 0\/\/N 3w3!!1!1!!!!1!!!!!11!!!!!
      --
      assert(expired(knowldege)); core dump
    2. Re:My suspicion - it isn't a "leak" at all. by nhowie · · Score: 3
      How many people submit bug reports for pirated software?

      I can see it now ...

      d00dz: 3y3 g07 d1z 3l337 z3r0-d@yZ \/\/1n2001 wAr3z, @Nd f0\/nD d@T t|-|3 c0|\|7r0L p@N3l cR@sH3z \/\/h3N 3y3 pR3zz t|=|3 d3L373 k3Y

      p.s. 3y3 0\/\/N 3w3!!1!1!!!!1!!!!!11!!!!!
      --

  279. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by unitron · · Score: 1
    -memo to self-
    always use preview, always use preview, always use preview

    1. Re-open above post
    2. insert 'e'
    3. Re-take typing course

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  280. Re:Quotation from submitter... by unitron · · Score: 1

    "I know of at least 6 businesses (a couple are quite large) who have purchased full licenses for Windows 2000, but will not install them as they are running legacy software that runs in a console."
    Is it just me or does that make about as much sense as buying tickets to a movie you have no intention of going to?

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  281. Re:Moderators fighting back by unitron · · Score: 1

    I'd love to, but as the signal to noise ratio around here has continually worsened, my turns as moderator have become fewer and farther between, and I'm starting to suspect that some have found a weakness in the moderation system that they've been able to exploit for their own selfish ends. Either that or Taco's turned most of the moderation duties over to a basement full of crackpipe smoking chimpanzees. :)

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  282. Re:Moderators fighting back by unitron · · Score: 1

    On second thought I realise that I'm being very unfair to chimpanzees everywhere with that comparison. : )
    I do appreciate the job being done by good and concientious moderators, I just wish they were still a greater percentage of all the moderators than they have become in the past few months.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  283. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by unitron · · Score: 1

    The funniest part is the MS hompage link.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  284. We will see damage control by jjr · · Score: 1

    Damage control will be a fun thing to watch tommorow let the spin doctors to there stuff

    http://theotherside.com/dvd/

  285. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by pen · · Score: 1
    Yep. That's the option I used. With Windos, it will boot to DOS with nothing else. With NT5 (Win2k), it will boot to a GUI with the command prompt running on top of the GUI in full-screen mode.

    --

  286. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by pen · · Score: 1
    Also included is a boot console interface (for major emergencies).

    Try botting to the so-called command-line mode and pressing Alt+Enter. A-ha! So this is how the command-line mode works. They first load the GUI, and then run the command interpreter on top of the GUI!

    No kidding!

    --

  287. Re:first post by aphr0 · · Score: 1

    Don't you feel like a loser for taking a web based message board so seriously? The day I apologize on slashdot is the day I hang myself my by testicles.

  288. I'll second that by unicorn · · Score: 1

    I'm a MS user. I'll never say that with shame. I don't love the products. They are tools, that serve a purpose. I won a copy of W2Kpro a week or two before release, and have been running it completely successfully on machines at home, and at work. I had valid reasons for both, and have only had minor problems with either environment.

    At home, my machine is a Dual P2-400 system. I like to play games, but under NT4sp6a, my options were somewhat limited. Now I can play almost anything that I want. There are glitches occasionally, but overall, I'm satisfied with game performance. The only major irritant I had, was finding CDR software that would run cleanly. Now, for the first time, I have my system burning at 8x with NO buffer underruns. It's actually running significantly better than NT4 was on the same hardware.

    At work, I've got the company supplied Tecra 8000. I needed NT4 on a daily basis, to run the network. But I had to keep a stub 98 partition, so that I could play DVD's on the machine. Now, I have my 2k system, no 98 required. And except for some minor wierdness with DNS lookups, and poor sound playback with Quicktime 4(which works 100% fine on the desktop at home) it's rock solid.

    I'd say based on my experiences, that 2k is a very sold OS. I'd also say that it's not perfect, and I freely admit, that there are certainly apps that don't run under it. But by and large, MS has released a very solid piece of code. It's as or more stable than NT4 was, and runs faster, on the same hardware. It's nice when an upgrade really does improve your system, with little or no penalties.

    --
    "Politicians are interested in people. Not that this is always a virtue. Fleas are interested in dogs." P.J. O'Rourke
  289. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by ananke · · Score: 1

    hmm such as? you have 2 basic libc libraries: libc5 and libc6 [aka glibc2]. it is quite possible to use both libraries and run binaries for both of those libraries.
    now, if you download and install a binary, and you don't have a certain library that it requires - ldd /path/to/binary and you'll see what you need.
    and no, it's not possible with windows - you can't tweak windows to run binaries for other versions of windows [except maybe few 3.1's under 9x].

    --
    --- d'oh
  290. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Baggio · · Score: 1

    Interesting theory, but this article was first released on Betanews... nothing to do with Slashdot, or even linux for that matter... they have some announcements of some linux beta software, but most of the betas that go through that site are for Windows platforms...
    Time flies like an arrow;

    --
    Time flies like an arrow;
    Fruit flies like a bananna
  291. No, "hompage" is the accurate syntax by korpiq · · Score: 1


    Homp: to honk in a symphatetic way, as in shortly honking the horn of your car to greet neighbors 8 AM.

    Hompage: a rapid series of homps. Also, equivalent effect in other methods of communication, such as written WWW pages.

    aaagh, They made me do it...

    --

    I think, therefore thoughts exist. Ego is just an impression.
  292. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Michel · · Score: 1
    So, what's the difference between windows 95, windows 98, and windows 2000, for the average computer illiterate? Just looking at the version numbers and the pretty pictures on the box...

    And the windows-for-home vs windows-for-corporate distinction IS a fork. They're not even compatible. I mean, can they even read each others file systems by now?

  293. This is clearly a conspiracy... by alsta · · Score: 1

    I am one of these conspiracy believers. I think that Microsoft are "unofficially" and deliberately "leaking" software like this. Nobody is going to admit it, but what better market leverage can one get than this?

    On the other hand, why would "built" versions leak, but not source code? Somebody is clearly making sure that the right things leak. But then again, what can one expect from a company that "misplaces" source code in certain Caldera lawsuits.

    Ultimately, I am kind of sick of Slashdot for posting these kinds of insignificant stories. I certainly do not care about pre-release Microsoft software, especially since the released versions seem to be bad enough.

    --
    Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think. -Ayn Rand
    1. Re:This is clearly a conspiracy... by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      You can't really blame them for misplacing the source code... After all, they probably use Microsoft Source Safe.

      --

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  294. Re:first post by Kris_J · · Score: 1
    Moderators: Fight back and reconquer level 0 for us please!
    Screw that, just get rid of anonymous posting.
  295. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by KyleCordes · · Score: 1

    This is the same yada-yada that happens with every new OS release. Just like corps that said "95 offers nothing, we are sticking with 3.1" etc. A few years later, everyone comes around and upgrade. It's part of the game. If you're going to live in the rapidly-changing PC world, you're going to upgrade computers to new OS's, it's just a matter of sooner or later.

    Right now, the question is "what justifies 2000?" but in a year or two, then 2000 is the "Default" that everyone is using, the question becomes "what justifies running this old version?"

  296. Re:first post by TrentC · · Score: 1

    BTW: Have you noticed how the moderators have
    pretty much given up Level 0 to the trollers?


    [snip]

    Moderators: Fight back and reconquer level 0 for us please!

    The problem with that is, it takes twice as many moderator points to bump a 1-scored post -- from a troller who creates a login -- to -1 than it does to bump a 0-scored post to -1; therefore, fewer points are available to moderate good posts up. Which I suspect is the intention...

    Jay (=

  297. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by BJH · · Score: 1


    Go back and read your own post - you seem to have forgotten what you wrote already.

    Why don't you tell me (assuming I'm a "loser") if I should use FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, or Linux, and which architecture to use?

    Great, you mention the BSDs as well as Linux. SO WHAT!?! I didn't say anything about Linux OR the BSDs in my post; what do the BSDs have to do with your point? (Assuming you actually have a point.) And as for not referring to me personally, I'd say the "you" in the statement above is pretty clearly aimed at me.

    You still didn't attack Microsoft in an intelligent way, nor did you attack me in such a way.

    Did you even read my comment? I told you to clean up your own act before accusing others. So what do you do? You repeat the same lame attacks and try and dress them up as being somehow "logical" (and I use that term in a very loose sense).

    Come back to /. when you've managed to mature a little.

  298. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by BJH · · Score: 1


    Did I say ONE WORD about Linux? I was commenting on the various versions of Windows - I didn't say if Linux was any better or worse.

    If you're going to accuse people of making unintelligent posts, clean up your own act first.

    BTW: luser != loser, although in your case I'm willing to make an exception.

  299. Re:Dave... by SurfsUp · · Score: 1

    Offtopic? Which moderator screwed up here??? That was fuunnnnnnnieeeeeeeee.

    --
    Life's a bitch but somebody's gotta do it.
  300. Re:Quotation from submitter... by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

    Yup -- NT's DOS support is intended to be good enough to run WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3, but that's about it.

    There's been some cry from the gaming community to add a Win95-style "DOS Mode" to the home version of Win2000. (This is where Windows 9x swaps the CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT and then reboots without automatically executing WIN.EXE.) I've used this feature a number of times to get old crusty DOS business apps running. However, Microsoft is apparently dropping this feature from even Win98ME, so it's super unlikely that it will ever make it into the NT-based OS.
    --

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  301. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by finkployd · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm sure Microsoft loves Slashdot. Why don't you do a little research and look at all the past "positive stories" that were done on them.

    Finkployd

  302. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Xtacy · · Score: 1

    i'm pretty sure he was referring to the backend servers that store all the info about accounts etc... which i'd hope like hell didnt run windows

  303. Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Zico · · Score: 1

    Almost 10 billion of 'em. 10 billion dollars, that is. That's how much VA Linux's market cap has dropped in just a little over three months. You can practically smell the desperation in the lead-ins to Microsoft articles, the desperation from their stock going all the way from 320 down to its current 80 -- for the zealot troglodytes out there, that's a 75% drop -- whoops, lost another 6.1825 points on Tuesday!

    We all might as well get used to it now that the business world recognizes that VA Linux's business plan has more holes in it than swiss cheese. Now that their hype's vanishing, it looks like Plan B is to use their Slashdot mouthpiece to tell everyone how evil the competition is.

    I did find it pretty funny and revealing that Timothy even admitted that other people submitted the story, yet he went ahead and chose a particularly inflmmatory and dishonest one. Ya know, for all the bitching that Slashdot does about FUD, nobody wallows in it more consistently than Slashdot itself.

    Cheers,
    ZicoKnows@hotmail.com

    1. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by JonK · · Score: 1

      Can you spell BSD?
      --
      Cheers

      --
      Cheers

      Jon
    2. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by finkployd · · Score: 2

      You're new here aren't you? Perhaps you thought this would be an "impartial" type news service like ZDNet. Chips n Dips/Slashdot has ALWAYS been pro-linux anti-microsoft.
      I haven't noticed any change since the Andover/VASystems got involved, except the exponential growth of annoying whiners who feel the need to bitch about every story.

      Finkployd

    3. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Zico · · Score: 2

      Good reply, timothy -- thanks. I still think you choosing the submission that you did to be a poor move. Quite a few times in the past, when Slashdot would receive a lot of submissions of the same story, the staff just posted the news themselves, instead of quoting anyone's submission. The only real value in the one you posted was the link itself, and all the off-topic dishonest flamage only served to give the same tenor to the following posts. I appreciate the reply, though.

      Cheers,
      ZicoKnows@hotmail.com

    4. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by timothy · · Score: 3
      ZicoKnows wrote (excerpted from above):


      " ... it looks like Plan B is to use their Slashdot mouthpiece to tell everyone how evil the competition is.
      I did find it pretty funny and revealing that Timothy even admitted that other people submitted the story, yet he went ahead and chose a particularly inflmmatory and dishonest one. Ya know, for all the bitching that Slashdot does about FUD, nobody wallows in it more consistently than Slashdot itself."


      Couple things:

      When possible, we try to post a particular story from the first person who submits it. For a number of reasons, that doesn't always happen -- sometimes a link is bad, sometimes the submission contains no content (only the word "link!" or a similarly ambiguous phrase) and sometimes we consider for a longer time whether to post a story at all, then pick from the available submissions. I didn't pick this submission because it was "particularly dishonest and inflammatory," but because I thought it was interesting and would be of interest to other people too. It was also the first one that I say on the topic. I'm sorry you didn't like the one that got posted, but boy -- some of the others really were inflammatory and dishonest.

      Also, though I can't force you to believe this, as far as I know no one at VA proper even knows who I am, and they certainly don't give a fig what I post, and this not-caring is recursive.

      If I'm part of a conspiracy, the voices in my head have not yet told me about it.:) Any thoughts I have about VA Linux are my own (I think they make very nice, rather pricey Linux boxes), any thoughts they have about slashdot are their own. And for the record, I don't have (and as of now have no plans to acquire) any shares of VA. Maybe one day, but right now, zippo.

      Hope this clarifies at least a little!

      Cordially,

      timothy
      --
      jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    5. Re:Slashdot/Andover/VA Linux has lots of reasons by Tower · · Score: 3

      Ummm.... it ended up at $80 after coming out at what.. $14? If you were expecting it (or Redhat, or any new stock) to stay that far overvalued, you have even less sense than the investors that were paying $200-$300/share for this. A rapid rise and bubble is normal, especially in this overvalued tech-heavy market now. The fact that is is settling at 70-80 (still overvalued, IMHO) is more a statement of people realizing that they get a little bit too excited sometimes, but it's still a massive gain since the IPO. That's what should be considered. Yes, /. is slanted in its views. It always has been, and it always will be. That's the beauty of a community. Different people, different ideas. What this community generally thinks is vastly different than other more pro-MS sites would tend to agree upon.

      If VA only uses /. as a PR tool, and it degrades, people will leave. The code is out there. I'm running it for a small-scale test site, there are others running it. There's also PHP-Slash and Squishdot, so just about anyone can fire up a similar site. Won't take long for people to find it if they want to go. You are free to not visit, not read, and not be angered by what you read here, just as your are free to complain about what you see as wrong. Do what you like, but realize that people here, as much as some of them delude themslelves, will eventually see through things, get fed up and leave if the situation warrants. All journalism includes a healthy chunk of FUD, whether it be a school board election, tech review, wars, etc... take it with a grain of salt and work against it, if thats what you like.

      disclaimer: I don't own any VA stock, have any professional ties to VAndover/. (or any other Linux co.) nor am I a professional stock trader - I just fool myself into thinking that I might have some common sense every now and then.

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
  304. Windows 2000 by Dark+Fire · · Score: 1

    I don't use Windows 2000 Professional on any of the systems I use as of yet. However, I am using a Windows 98 machine where I work as a file server. I started out sharing a few simple files and it turned into a file server. NT 4.0 was not worth the time to install it. For what I needed, 98 did fine with permissions. It does crash from time to time though. I intend on loading Windows 2000 professional in the near future and using it as a file server. I have talked to several people that use it as a desktop os and they seem to be pretty happy with the results so far. I push a system a lot harder than a normal user, so I will know very quickly how Windows 2000 fairs as an OS. Stability seems to have definitely improved according to several friends. However, you better have some decent hardware to run it on. A pentium 400+ w/ 64mb+ ram and 6gig hd+ (larger drive usually means faster data access-helps a ton w/ virtual memory). I also use linux here at work. It works great for masquerading and proxying. I installed samba on a bunch of old 486s and set them up to share a printer. I won't go into detail, but in our particular situation, this beats a centralized print server. In my 3 years experience with linux, I have never had it crash for reasons other than a hardware failure. I have configured over 100 systems with various applications. One thing about linux is the learning curve. It is not the easiest thing to jump into and learn. A lot of my friends are interested in linux but don't even know where to begin. I did ALOT of reading and had some help from a linux guru friend--that is how I learned linux and my knowledge of it continues to grow. Linux is great for any type of server application I have seen to date. It scales well and requires minimal hardware. That will be a problem for M$ if embedded systems become dominant (NC, set-top boxes, etc.). Windows is easy to use--easier to use than linux. Linux requires you to have a good understanding of how a large portion of it works before you can use it. I know I know, Redhat, Suse, Caldera all make linux a bit easier by setting up the gui ahead of time for you. Things are improving in that respect. I have used Redhat, I have tried helping someone setup Suse (tar didn't work--eek), they have a ways to go. Debian is my distribution of choice. I couldn't believe how much better Debian is than the other distros I have seen. Sure, it might not be the most user friendly distro, but it works. Linux requires you to understand a good portion of how it works before you can use it, Debian is the same way. The other distros are more a DO-or-DIE based on what I have seen. If the distro doesn't recognize your nic, graphics card, etc., most normal users will toss it on a shelf after attempting an install and will reload an M$ OS. Linux's design is much more refined than M$. I can go throughout linux and step by step figure out exactly what is going on from bootup to shutdown. I can trace through all the scripts and find a path of execution. I can fix it easily or alter it's behavior and will and KNOW that it will work the way I have set it up to work. On the other hand, I setup a M$ operating system. It is easy to use, stable enough to use for a while (atleast a work day), but when I try to secure desktops to use in a computer lab, eek. Registry keys are changed that I have locked. It is interesting, some keys in the registry refer back to a single key. If you lock that single key, the value can still be changed through one of its aliases. Also, if you have a corrupt registry, you are usually done. There are some tricks at the DOS prompt w/ regedit, but usually, it is a reload (or a reghost in our case). We have found as our college has grown that it is easier just to reghost in most situations than to figure out why it happened. The answer is usually not worthwhile and certainly not worth the time. It is more cost efficient just to reghost a windows machine. Windows is a graph. I read where that the average path of one web page to another on the WWW is 19. Windows has had so many fixes and hacks applied, that it is more like spaghetti than anything else. But it is more user friendly and wins out on the desktop and will continue to do so. I am glad to see M$ decided to focus on stability and less reboots, those were much needed changes. But getting the spaghetti out will be a lot of work, if it ever happens. Linux and Windows each have their place. Windows is great because you can pull any intermediate/advanced windows user and turn them into a network admin. I watched to comp sci students that have never worked with windows nt, setup their own domain with pdc and bdc--they setup NT server 4.0 with ease. It may crash, everything may not work correctly, but you can pull Bob from accounting and have him setup your network for you when you get beyond the workgroup stage. That is the value of NT. At some point as you grow, bob becomes fulltime sysadmin. Then either bob is sent to M$ training or you hire in an MCSE. Then as you grow more, you add more M$ technologies. You go from exchange in pop3 mode to exchange in native mode. You add outlook 98 and calendaring. Then your domain becomes so big and your requirements so large, and manageability and stability start becoming serious issues and your system becomes difficult to maintain. You start incorporating linux, solaris, ibm technologies, or novell into your network. You hire in highly skilled personal to run those new systems. You do more with less people and less machines. Eventually, you are doing 10x the work w/ 1/20 of the people and 1/3 of the equipment. However, a lot of businesses don't hit that last stage, so they stay with M$ and that is where Microsoft is experiencing the most demand and growth for their server products. The enterprise will belong to IBM, Sun, Linux, and Novell because the products are more stable and scalable than M$. Well that is my $.02. Oh, one more thing, anyone that posts anonymously I ignore. If you won't back your statement with an identity, I don't really care what you have to say. Oh, just in case something happens to my post so that my id doesn't get posted: Login Name: Dark Fire Later...

  305. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Quikah · · Score: 1

    I have used Win2k a bit. There are two things which are good:

    Active Directory is pretty handy. Not as good as NDS, but it is useful, however you need to upgrade all your system to Win2k to take full advantage of it, along with all your apps.

    Actual DirectX support is VERY beneficial to developers who have had to develop on win9x to get decent DX support.

    --
    Q.
  306. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Skinka · · Score: 1
    First, Win2K is big. I wasn't expecting 900MB for the OS, but to be fair, 60MB is used by DRIVER.CAB (all the included drivers), 192MB by my swap file, and another 70-80MB by the multilingual options (30MB by nihongo alone). Granted, even subtracting out those options, Win2K is far and away the largest OS I have ever seen or used.

    So I guess you've never tried Red Hat then? ;-D where did all them megabytes go..

  307. This is nothing new by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

    Pirated beta builds of Windows are nothing new at _all_. Usually people don't care much unless a new final version is expected soon; when that's true, there's often more than 1 leaked beta a week that's put out. If Dupecheck was still up, you could see what I mean, but trust me, Windows betas get leaked all the time. I doubt this is even the first post W2K final beta to be leaked.

  308. I doupt it by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    Warez d00ds really don't care about source code.

    I do suspect Microsoft won't worry but I also believe Microsoft isn't trying to pull anything. They really don't want early dev versions of products floating around.

    Warze d00ds would figure only companys who would want to sell pirated stuff would want source code and even in warze people who SELL warze are scum.
    So even if they had the source code (and Microsoft is a bit to secritive to allow that) they wouldn't distribute it.

    Also the binary tests should be nearly the opposate. Open to many.

    I personally would rather have the source code myself :)
    But fear not... you can decompile binarys... :)

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  309. Re:Allow me to prove you wrong again, then :) by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    On the 64k bug myth... AntiMicrosoft FUD from Microsoft?
    It wasn't clear but let me state what you didn't.. it's 64k issues.
    I have a hard time believing there are 64k issues but Microsoft dose say they are still there.. just not how many of the 64k are left...
    The irronic part is to the avrage open source develuper issues are bugs.
    So when people say "64k bugs" they DO mean "64k issues" becouse in technobable/geek speek.. there are no issues.. only bugs...

    Now on Microsofts develupment secrecy...
    I'm not supprised in the slightest that Microsoft codes this way.
    This means each group can not compare code to other groups. Instead they have to rely on specs and hope what they need is done. It is an unhealthy coding environment that can easlly premote bugs kludgey workaronds and redundent code.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  310. Most likely not very useful by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    It is very likely Win2k+1dev isn't even functional yet (by Microsofts standards)...
    It would be a neat preview but I doupt it would be useful for anything.
    I also doupt Microsoft would bother going after Win2k+1dev FTP sites...
    They might even be hopping Win2k+1dev displaces Win 9x,NT and 2K copys... I doupt that would happen... If it did then when Win2k+1 offically releases (next year of course) they will have no choice buy to BUY the legal version..

    This is more ammusing than anything. In the grand sceam of things it just means a really early incarnation of next years Windows is out there. It's very unlikely Windows 2K+1 release will look anything like it. Or be as stable.. hay no feature.. no functions.. no anything... how much more stable can you get?

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  311. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    > The figure probably contains the 750,000 beta testers' copies in the count.

    Microsoft offers some sort of pacage deal to certify people and keep them up to date by giving them the latest versions of software. You pay for this pacage and I don't rember how much it was.

    How many Microsoft cerifyed Techs are out there? Theres your 1 million Win2K cds...
    I know one of thies people.. runs every version of Windows... Os/2 warp.. I gave him a Linux CD :)
    He has several computers...

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  312. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Robert+Frazier · · Score: 1

    Marginal changes in documents to see who is distributing them is nothing new. It has been going on for at least 2000 years.

  313. Re:Whistler? by paul7e · · Score: 1
    "You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and... blow."

    To Have and Have Not (1944)

    "You know how to release Whistler, don't you, Mr. Ballmer? You just put some crappy bug-fixes together and... blow."

    Microsoft campus (2000)

    --
    Silly Rabbit, sigs are for kids.
  314. Well hell... by Otto · · Score: 1

    23. You will have problems updating to Windows 2000 if you have an NE2000 or compatible network adapter in your computer, and it has an input/output (I/O) address at 340h (0x340). According to Microsoft, your computer may lock up during installation when you get to text mode. As a workaround, you can remove the card or change its I/O setting. After Windows 2000 is installed, the card will work correctly, even at that address.

    That explains why I couldn't install the damn thing. What a piece of junk, man... argh..

    ---

    --
    - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  315. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Shadowlion · · Score: 1

    >SBLIVE! SMP drivers: While Creative has promised them, I still haven't seen them.

    Try compiling one of the daily tarballs. I did that a few months ago, and my SB Live! worked fine (on an dual PII/400 system).

  316. Re:ReWindows 2.12=win2001 by SeanNi · · Score: 1

    I kinda like W2K1 myself... (as in: W2K + 1)

    Rolls fairly easily off the keyboard... w2k1...

    --
    It's a fine line between trolling and karma-whoring... and I think you just crossed it.
    - Sean

    --
    It's a fine line between trolling and karma-whoring... and I think I just crossed it.
    - Sean
  317. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Jurjen+Katsman · · Score: 1

    That sounds more like you nuked your Explorer. And not internet explorer. (or maybe it's just one of those cases in which they both go down.) Simply restart explorer.exe, and there you go.

    Pretty solid OS I'd say.

    (Remembering all the 'No no, Linux didn't crash! You just need to telnet into it and kill X!')

  318. "Whistler", eh? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    Looks like Beowulf needs to swim out and wrestle with Whistler, and then be prepared to go to the mat with Whistler's Mother.

    Sorry; the opportunity for two puns in one was more than I could resist.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  319. Re:Slantdot by freddevice · · Score: 1

    A million copies. Someone didn't follow the microsoft trial. The numbers supplied by microsoft mean nothing. The number will be greater than "noone" and less them a "million".

    But in the end who cares, the industry has changed forever, the number of OS's sold by company A is irrelevant. There is now company A,B,C,D and E well established in the OS market.

    Long live Be Unix, and I suppose MIcrosoft.

  320. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Weerdo · · Score: 1
    But then, the same installation (a Ghosted installation, no less), on the same hardware, purchased the same day at the same vendor has been blue screening about every 15mn. The only thing different between the two installations is... the user.

    Hardware may be broken..(or the machine might be incorrectly ghosted) This is a VERY good reason why w2k would bsod..

    So check that hardware first before whining at w2k!

  321. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by JBv · · Score: 1

    900Mb!?!?!?!?

    Thats about 33% of my harddrive! Is it only the OS or does it include latex, emacs, netscape, compilers, etc...

    Ummm... for me win2k would surely be faster, simply because i would need a new computer to run it.

  322. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by chryptic · · Score: 1

    I find it funny that there is so much talk (and M$ FUD) about Linux forking because of open source and so many developers, while M$ is proving that a single company can fork very well.

    Where will they stick that fork next?

    --
    The two most common things in the Universe are hydrogen and stupidity. -- Harlan Ellison
  323. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by sjx · · Score: 1

    Solution from a veteran of this issue :) - always, if fingerprinting is suspected, use more than one supplier.

    Then, take deltas between the two copies, and if they differ, deal with any checksums&hashes and fake the serial.

    The bored might like to come up with ways to prevent this technique... :)

    --
    -- /sjx.
  324. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by bswick · · Score: 1

    That brings back some memories. Windows 2.11 (or was it just called 2.1?) was pretty responsive, even on my 286. 10Mhz and 1Meg of raw power. Didn't eat up too much space on my 20Meg hard drive either. Never had any problems with bugs as I recall. Although, back then MS wasn't trying to hide the fact that Windows was just a GUI shell sitting on top of DOS.

  325. Re:Moderators fighting back by fReNeTiK · · Score: 1
    my turns as moderator have become fewer and farther between

    I've noticed that too. Strange. Maybe they reduced the number of moderator tokens? imho they should increase them greatly...

    --
    I strongly believe that trying to be clever is detrimental to your health. -- Linus Torvalds
  326. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by nutsy · · Score: 1

    I had to manually edit the XF86Config file to add stuff like setting up my mouse wheel, and taking out all the superfluous screen mode information so it wouldn't start in 640x480. (XFree86 3.3.5 did that too - if you had more than one possible mode, it would start up in the worst one. Why?)

    List your favorite resolution first in the "Modes"line under the appropriate screen section. Like so:

    Modes "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480"
    ViewPort 1024 768

  327. Re:Tab auto-completion (mistake) by Gary+C+King · · Score: 1

    The last line should read W-Tab, and pressing Tab again cycles through entries.

    I forgot that slashdot parses HTML ;(.

  328. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Garpenlov · · Score: 1

    INTERNET EXPLORER 5.5 IN PARTICULAR WOULD OFTEN CRASH

    Imagine that, beta software crashing...

    --
    --- Where's my X.400 protocol decoder?
  329. Re:Geesh by macpeep · · Score: 1
    To resolve this problem, Microsoft says you have to reinstall Windows 2000 Professional.

    Yeah, that truly sucks.. But I had an almost equally annoying issue with RedHat Linux 4.2 some years ago. It just kept freezing my machine under X to the extent that *nothing* helped. When I was looking for clues on the net, I noticed from usenet archives that there were lots of people with the same problem.. freezes under various distros of Linux. Freezes that were bad enough to corrupt the hd so badly that it took hours for fsck to sort it out. And this happened a few times per day.

    I changed my SIMM's in the machine. I changed the motherboard and CPU. New hard drive, new mouse, new monitor, new keyboard, new CD-ROM drive, new graphics card.. unplugged the soundcard.. *NOTHING* helped.

    Finally, I got tired of it and switched (back) to Windows 95, which I could leave on for days without nothing strange happening.

    To this day, I don't know what was causing the freezes. Could be some bug, could be hardware.. Could be power spikes.. I have no idea, but it only happened in Linux and it stopped the day I switched to Windows 95, after about six months of messing around, changing configurations, updating libraries and hardware.

    Things aren't always black and white, which is why I think it's a good idea to be objective when posting news. That's all.

  330. Geesh by macpeep · · Score: 1

    I wonder if it will have fixed any of the 65,000 documented bugs.

    Do you really? No, I didn't think so. I'm sure you noticed that out of the 65000 entries in the bug database, 20000 were actual "bugs" and 17000 of those were only small things such as user interface things and other cosmetic stuff. So 3000 bugs - not 65000. That's still a lot, but it's also a large system with solitaire, paint, write (wordpad) etc. Sticking to the facts when reporting news wouldn't hurt. It would be nice if people could stop bringing in their own ultra-subjective fact-bending opinions in the news. Why not just report the news and let people discuss them here instead of spoon feeding them anti Microsoft propaganda every chance you get?

    No one is installing Win2k

    Really? On what facts is that claim based?

    1. Re:Geesh by Zan+Zu+from+Eridu · · Score: 1

      Things aren't always black and white, which is why I think it's a good idea to be objective when posting news. That's all.

      Me too :)

      But seriously, do you expect unbiased news on a site that clearly choses sides in the OS holy wars? After all /. claims to be "news for nerds" and since most "nerds" seem to be fighting Microsoft, whats /. gotta do? Tell them how great MSFT is?

      What bothers me most is not the holy wars (they've been going on for ages), but that everyone is taking themselves so damned serious. Hacker culture always was ha ha, only serious. We seem to have forgotten about the ha ha. Just look at the quality of the average troll on /. (there hardly are any good ones, they're mostly flamebait labled as "troll"; and if you by any chance find a little gem its mostly marked as "funny").

      As the hacker community grows, so does the number of wannabees, who think its all about being a full-time genius and a zealot...

      Hey, I read /. because its fun, not because its the fastest and most reliable source of news (no offence guys).


      -><-
      Grand Reverence Zan Zu, AB, DD, KSC
    2. Re:Geesh by Zan+Zu+from+Eridu · · Score: 1

      Why not just report the news and let people discuss them here instead of spoon feeding them anti Microsoft propaganda every chance you get?

      Ok, discuss this. Its the everchanging list of Top 30 Windows 2000 Bugs. This one is my favorite:

      According to Microsoft, Windows 2000 Professional may hang after you install Microsoft IntelliPoint 2.2. Microsoft says that pressing CTRL-ALT-DELETE will not help. To resolve this problem, Microsoft says you have to reinstall Windows 2000 Professional.

      -><-
      Grand Reverence Zan Zu, AB, DD, KSC
    3. Re:Geesh by Zan+Zu+from+Eridu · · Score: 1

      oops, overlooked the other post about this link. I guess I'm redundant now?


      -><-
      Grand Reverence Zan Zu, AB, DD, KSC
  331. Re: 1 + GB???? by The_H0und · · Score: 1

    Yes...and an unthinkable amount of it (1 rather full DVD for the Jan 2000 Docs) is documentation.

    So, don't install the documentation if your space is all that sparce.

    --
    Plenty of projects, not enough developers...
  332. Re:Our problem... by The_H0und · · Score: 1

    ...with standard custom in house...

    I admit that my experience with W2k Kerberos is minimal at best...but when you say something, at least try not to sound dumb.

    Or, did you mean to say that it is standard to use a custom in house kerberos?? I hope not!

    Oh, and I'm not advocating W2k...I'm just ranting. I dislike MS as much as the next person.

    --
    Plenty of projects, not enough developers...
  333. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by 47Ronin · · Score: 1

    I never said Windows was suprerior to OS/2...just more user friendly. On another note, let me ask you this- which of the two currently sits in your computer?
    Neither, actually. I use a Macintosh. And don't get me started about user-friendliness! =)

    -----
    Linux user: if (nt == unstable) { switchTo.linux() }

    --
    Those who laugh at you for you having a Mac.. are the people who constantly call you to fix their PC.
  334. Re:Quotation from submitter... by legoboy · · Score: 1

    I don't disagree.

    ------

    --
    If a tree falls on an anonymous coward yelling 'first post' in the forest, does anybody hear?
  335. Windows 2001 should be called Naughty One by WillAffleck · · Score: 1

    Think about it ...

    W2K+1 ... it's right for the Naughties ... I can see the screaming media ads hosing my 56K connection browser now ...

    --
    Will in Seattle
  336. Re:Linux 2 Win2k Convert by WillAffleck · · Score: 1

    I've been using W2k at work on my personal machine (Compaq 380 mhz - 128 megs) and it does dual duty as the companies intranet server ...

    Of course it works, MSFT tests on Compaq.

    And, strange as it might sound, I recommended Win2K for corporate laptops just yesterday.

    But I didn't recommend it for systems that our Client/Server Developers will be using ... we're going with dual-boot WinNT/Win95 machines with removable drives, mostly to save license fees on the higher cost OS licenses.

    And we're running DB2 on Linux servers for test. We've disconnected the Server OS and Client OS platform OS choice - so long as it runs our flavor of DBMS and Corba, we really don't care to waste the bucks on Win2K server licenses, especially for test machines, considering that we push to SunOS boxes for production.

    Win2K is so last century, dude ...

    --
    Will in Seattle
  337. Bugs, GUIs, and who installs Win2K by WillAffleck · · Score: 1

    Well, we're not installing Win2K and we've got thousands of PCs and Servers in Seattle. We'd rather stick with Win95, which we paid for, and we install WinNT when we have to. Our DBMS live on SunOS machines, and we use Sybase and DB2 for that, which ties in with our mainframe. And we're making test servers with Linux running DB2 and Sybase.

    We figure MSFT will force us to upgrade from Win95 to Win98 sometime, but we really don't get thrilled at shelling out more cash for something we really don't need.

    As to the 64K bugs - if the GUI doesn't work, that's a bug for Windows, which is a GUI. You can call it an enhancement, a feature, but the users call it a bug.

    --
    Will in Seattle
  338. Misquoting Bill on 640K and W2K Millenia by WillAffleck · · Score: 1

    How many years has win2k been in development again??

    It's been in development for centuries. Or was that millenia?

    --
    Will in Seattle
  339. If they really want NT4 users to upgrade by Mondo54 · · Score: 1

    maybe they should lower the price of Win2k. It's not "63,000 bugs" that's holding back Win2k, NT4 sp6 is a pretty damn good and stable OS - the only thing it's really lacking compared to Win2k is DirectX(and that's only important to gamers) (Win2k seems especially popular to upgraders from Win9x). Win2k is nice...far less rebooting scenarios and polished GUI and administrative tools. But once you have your NT4 box humming, why mess with it?

    --

    But isn't the purpose of the Doomsday machine lost if you keep it a secret!
    1. Re:If they really want NT4 users to upgrade by JonK · · Score: 1
      Be fair: NT on laptops (at least modern laptops) sucked big-time. It's a *huge* win being able to swap CD-ROM and floppy drive without rebooting.

      The USB support's nice too (though as far as I'm concerned it's mostly because of the enhanced resolution for playing Quake/Half-Life etc w/ a USB mouse)

      That said, I'm still holding onto my (very stable) 98 install for Cubase purposes (Yamah still hadn't released final drivers for the SW100XG or DSP Factory) but I've migrated all my home NT Servers over to W2K Server and the NTW install on my primary workstation hasn't been booted in several months.
      --
      Cheers

      --
      Cheers

      Jon
  340. Gosh by alehmann · · Score: 1

    If they let people freely test their products, they might actually get some real feedback.

    1. Re:Gosh by CoolAss · · Score: 1

      Um... no you didn't. That was if you signed up for the beta program after that 150k copies were already shipped to registered beta testers.

      I got it for free. Tested RC 3 for a month. Didn't crash once.

      Dumbfuck... get the facts, oh wait... Linux people don't like facts: your mind is already made up.

  341. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Weezul · · Score: 1

    Yes, teachers are very importent (and our science / math teachers really suck; witness the average slashbot's poor understanding of the scientific method), but I think it is safe to say the OS will have an effect too. Specifically, a realitivly transperent OS will cause a higher precentage of students to mess arround with real stuff. Examples: students figuring out how to use atjobs and shell scripts to play jokes on people. Also, we have heard numerous testimonials on /. claiming "My kids use Linux and Windows, but Linux was no harder for them to learn and now they think windows is only good for games." I suppose you really need to do a controlled studdy to monitor the effects of the OS on the computer skills of students, but I would strongly suspect Linux to be benifitial.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  342. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by Weezul · · Score: 1

    there are no bug free projects

    You will win a lot of money if you can find a bug in TeX.

    [Begin rant]

    Why use a slow crappy bug ridden word processor when you can use emacs or vi to write TeX. It will even take less time once you know what your are doing, since TeX commands are things which you will force yourself to remember (instead of inefficent pulldowns and dialogs which requirea great flurry of mouse movements and clicks to access).

    Plus, "the fix one bug, create two more" statment may have only applied to MS. It really is incrredible how much crap people will put up with because MS told them that a bunch of cryptic icons are easyer to use then a cryptic varient of the english langauge.

    It will be funny when Mexico has all the good e-commerce sites in 10 years because they actually put computers which have something to teach in front of their kids.. instead of computers with a bunch of mindless icons that teach no long term though related computer skills.

    I am really curious to know more about the history of product liability in other industries. Why are bugs in commercial software tollerated? Do we always tollerate a lot of fuck ups from young industries, dose the software industry have a more effective loby, or is it just that too many people do not understand computers? I suppose no product liability is good for free software though.

    [End rant]

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  343. Liability and Interfaces by Weezul · · Score: 1

    If people getting killed is *legally* irrelevent since the majority of liability issue are not related to fatalities, i.e. GM would recall/fix cars if there was a bug which made them stop running after two years. Now commercial software vendors issue fixes too, but they frequently charge money for them. I want to see a court order Microsoft to give anyonne who has lost time as a result of NT's bugs the newest version of the software for free Or give the person their money back. This is the reasonable legal decission.

    Now, fatalities may be *politically* related to product liability because ellective officials lissen to the lobiests untill the consumers get reeally pissed off.

    Next, keyboard short cuts are necissary for an efficent interface, but they are not sufficent. They do not scale well with the number of thing which need to be efficent. Example: normal MS Word user needs things like cut and past, but a mathematician need all kinds of special symbles which are not handles very well via wods shortcuts. Mathematica dose a better job of accesssing these symbols by using TeXish commands as it's keyboard shortcuts, but it still lacks much of the flexibility of TeX since you can not define notation as effectivly. Anyway, the Church-Turing Thesis says all meaningful models of computation are equivelent. I think this can be streached to say "all truely powerful computer interfaces must have the full logic capasity of a programming langauge." This is really saing Joe Dumbass Windows User needs to have some basic idea what can be automated. If he/she dose not then he/she will end up typing the same thing in 100 times to schedule their Boss's Monday morning meating for the next 4 month or clicking on 1000 diffrent images to download all their porn.

    It's importent to make the interface usable to newbies (which icons do not help unless you have prior experence with icon driven system), but it is also importent to make the interface's programming langauge aspects transperent. Now, If you can make an interface which uses icons to program the machine (as apple tried to do) and tricks people into learning more about the programming aspects then you will have somethng importent, but currently unix shells seem to be the most effective way of tricking people into learning to program.

    This is why I say kids should be using Linux. Kids can learn Linux as easily as Windows (since they have not been conditioned to be stupid) and the transperentness of Linux increases the precentage of kids who learn more.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
    1. Re:Liability and Interfaces by Weezul · · Score: 1

      You have taken the analogy one step too far here. If I sue microsoft because I can not get Windows 3.1 to work with the newest Quake / Word then I should loose, but if I sue microsoft becuase ActiveX's default security level allowed viruses to destroy my data then I should win. Simillarly, you can make an argument that I should be able to sue Microsoft for allowing programms like BO2K to gain ring 0 under W2K. Note: I should not be able to sue the CDC since they have done nothing to defraud / trick me, i.e. they never told me NT was secure. The reasonable settelment in the above case would consist of laywer's fees, data damages, and a bug fix. This is a bit sticky when you are suing over security issues in old unsupported products since MS should not be liable for vulnerabilities which result from someone say cracking RSA or soemthing, but should be liabilities which were forceable (and were not considered reasonable future limitations to the program).

      Also, I should be able to sue Microsoft for not providing backwards compatable word formats (since they sold me a product and then changed the enviroment to force me to buy a new product), but the setelment should only force Microsoft to provide a new format to old format converter program for free (plus lawyers fees).

      --
      The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
    2. Re:Liability and Interfaces by gengee · · Score: 1

      The difference here is still safety. I'll take your analogy a step further. If I have a car, a Ford, and it stops running after 10 years, and I have another car, a Mercedes, and it's still running strong for another 10 years, I could safely say there was a 'flaw' in the Ford. But no court in the world would direct Ford to pay for repairs. Its the same situation. Car companies will only pay for repairs if its a safety issue - Likewise, Microsoft issues MANY "Critical Updates" to their products.


      signature smigmature

      --
      - James
  344. oops by Weezul · · Score: 1

    Hmm.. I knew it wasn't really a LOT of money, but I was under the impression that the ammount went up each year by some noticable ammount. Am I just smoking crack or did I get this corn-fused with some other reward? I seem to recall the history of TeX bugs being an intertaing story were the ammount of money eventually got a little large.. Hmm.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  345. The so-called "SE/40" by solios · · Score: 1

    ...does not exist. There IS an SE/30, but the minimum system software for the machine is 6.0.3. Having the Mac Secrets fifth edition propping up the old Powerbook makes Mac comments pretty easy to spot and correct, neh?

  346. "Stable" HAH by da5id.p · · Score: 1

    Microsoft won't comment on where Whistler is in the development process. But sources close to the company say the latest "stable" internal developers build is numbered 2207. The most recent internal test build is 2214, sources add.

    I love that, they put stable in quotes!

    --
    this space unintentionally left blank
    1. Re:"Stable" HAH by Beede · · Score: 1
      Microsoft won't comment on where Whistler is in the development process. But sources close to the company say the latest "stable" internal developers build is numbered 2207. The most recent internal test build is 2214, sources add.

      I have confidential internal information that the release numbers correspond directly to the projected year of release....

  347. Re:Release timing by Mr_Ceebs · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they are just being pushed into releasing more regularly by accountants and stockbrokers. after all if you already have 90% of the OS market. the only real way to increase your cashflow is to release them more regularly. (wouldn't like Bills share value to take a tumble because the amount of cash flowing through the company decreases)

  348. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by AndrewHowe · · Score: 1

    It worked for me.

  349. W2k Impressions by mohaine · · Score: 1

    2 weeks a go, I decided to give Wk2 a go at work.
    It lasted just under a week. It WAS stable at first, but as the week went on, it started going downhill. On the second day, VisualCafe's Java Virtual Machine(1.1.x) died unexpectedly a couple of times. I didn't think much of it, but on the third day, it started to die more often. Every other time I launched a Java program, the JVM would die instantly. Even a reboot didn't help. On the forth day, Win2k started locking up. Everything was would be running fine (WinAmp at least) but no mouse or keyboard. It locked up 4 times, each requiring a reboot to fix. Finally I just decided to go back to Nt4, since it was still on my system. That is when I found the unexpected "benefits" of Win2k. At some point it updated the version number on my NTFS partions to version 5. Now, Nt4 tools will no longer work. Diskeeper will not do boot time Defrags and when booting off of the NT4 cd, it doesn't recognize the partions as valid.

    Moral of story, YMMV. For basic use, Win2k seems fine. But if you need to do real work, be cautious.

    --
    (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars)
    1. Re:W2k Impressions by Yue · · Score: 1

      I have a friend who is a fan of Win2K. He discovered that there is a simple solution provided by M$ to all your Y2K problems, including the time degradation.

      That's why the instalation is so easy: re-install it every other day and you'll have a wonderful system all the time. It takes more time to reboot after the crashes every few minutes than to just reinstall it and happily hit the keyboard for two day until it gets old again.

      So my friend is very happy with his W2K and claims that he will never use anything else.

  350. Re:Am I the only one who likes Windows 2000 !? by CoolAss · · Score: 1

    Wow... finally, a hint of intelligence on this excuse for a news site.

    Alas, it's to no avail. Don't try to confuse Linux people with the facts, their minds are already made up.

  351. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by oldman1080 · · Score: 1

    I'm wondering if you ever bothered reading my post. Nowhere did I say that I even used Linux as a desktop or that it was better than Windows. I said, Windows 2000 is not as stable as acclaimed, has colossal hardware requirements, is annoying as hell, and breaks backwards compatibility. SO I WENT BACK TO WINDOWS 98. I do use Linux at home, but just as a ip masquerading server, not as a desktop.

    --
    Find and share links to celebrity profiles on MySpace! http://www.myspacecelebrities.com
  352. Whistler by Hasues · · Score: 1

    I don't see what the big deal is. Most of these versions of Windows, whether it be Me, Netune, or whatever are available to technet subscribers for download. This just means someone downloaded a copy of it and spread gave it to a few friends. As far as Whistler goes, I don't think it will make a big difference for someone to choose to run it over regular Windows 2000. It will have the same amount of bugs, the only difference that the "Whister" technology presents is that it allows application DLL caching, which is just an enhancement to Windows 2000's file protection mechanism (which stinks by the way). This means that if an older generation Windows application is installed it takes the system files that the application wants to install over Win2k's system files, and caches them to a directory so that Win2k doesn't have its system files overwritten and that the application can still the files that it needs from its old installation. This way Win2k can protect and use its system files, such as DLL's, and the program can possibly function. The plus with this is that it should help getting games to run under Win2k. This won't however fix the already present problems of poor file corruption detection, poor usb support, amongst the other problems with Win2k. Windows 2000 does run alot better than WinNT 4, in alot of ways, especially in the business sense, but for the home it just can't cut it due to the lack of hardware and app/game support.

    --
    futang futang!
  353. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Mai+Longdong · · Score: 1

    Well, if you think *any* Windows release is superior to OS/2 you must be __________.*

    *Fill in the blank.

  354. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by ktakki · · Score: 1

    Win2K works with just about ALL the hardware out today (with the exception of some 4-5 yr old stuff). Can anyone say that for Linux?

    If your definition of "ALL the hardware" is limited to the Intel x86 family your point is marginally valid.

    Here's a poem for you:

    It will not run an Alpha,
    It will not light a Sparc.
    It cannot work the Powerbook
    I found in Central Park.


    k.

    --
    "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
  355. Re:first post by gurgi · · Score: 1

    I would like to apologize for making the first post a stupid 'first post' post. This is really the first time I could have got a first post. Not having much time to decide I figured why not.

    I now feel sorry for this. Why? Well in order to see my post I turned the filter down to score:-1. I found out something interesting - moderating down stupid posts like mine eats up too many moderation points. I have had the operatunity to moderate once. I went to a story, read the story, and then read all of the posts. I moderated three score:! posts up, one score:1 up, and lowered one score:5 post. All of my moderations were based to how well the posts made me see the story in a new way. That is why I read the comments - to get a new view point on the story.

    Now I realize that moderation spent to lower off topic posts wasts the moderators ablity to promote the good posts.

    Again, I am sorry.
    Gurgi
    phaelus@hotmail.com

  356. running Windows 2000 at home makes sense by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 1

    > Look at the people who are running Windows 2000 at home. It's just silly

    Not at all. NT 4 is stable (relative to other versions of windows), but doesn't support the latest games. 98se does, but crashes regularly. So, NT2K is worth a try.

    --

    My Karma: ran over your Dogma
    StrawberryFrog

    1. Re:running Windows 2000 at home makes sense by Velox · · Score: 1

      ??

      Not sure what you're doing wrong, but Windows 98 never crashes for me.

    2. Re:running Windows 2000 at home makes sense by chandler · · Score: 1

      Doesn't support the latest games? What planet are you from? Most *decent* games will let me use DX3+Glide to play under NT (I have a Voodo3) and others let you use the DirectX 5 hack that was taken from early betas of Win2K. Anything else is not worth it.

      "The romance of Silicon Valley was about money - excuse me, about changing the world, one million dollars at a time."

      --

      Visit

    3. Re:running Windows 2000 at home makes sense by T'Kethry · · Score: 1

      Much as I hate to admit it, I run 98 at home; it came on my Vaio system. I haven't made any big effort to switch to another OS, much as I despise Microsoft, because it very rarely crashes, and isn't too much of a pain unless you try to do something different than what MS wants you to (like bag the damn active desktop and/or make Netscape your default brower). I won't get Win2K for the same reason I haven't installed RedHat from the CDs sitting on my desk: if it ain't broke...but then, I get to use Unix at work, so I get my daily fix of a *real* stable, powerful OS.
      Must disagree about NT 4 being stable, though. I had to use it at a contract job I did for a while and it was the most unstable, bsod-ridden POS I've ever had the displeasure of having to use. I mean, coding in the PC environment is bad enough, but to have to do it in NT...bleah!


      --
      Death is but a doorway.
      Here, let me hold that for you.
  357. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by psergiu · · Score: 1

    I booted with my hdd with debian (same kernel - originally compiled for a 486sx120/PCI) on a LOT of hardware configurations (from 486sx20/8Mb/ISA backplane (industrial computer) to PII/256Mb) and it works just fine. I just had to insmod a different network driver and use a different X server.

    If the same copy of bleah2k cannot work on 2 _almost_ identical machines - shame to them.

    And stability: try the winarp.c from rootshell on a w2k box. after ~10k bat arp pakets the network subsystem is gone fishing ... NT4sp5 does not die.

    --
    1% APY, No fees, Online Bank https://captl1.co/2uIErYq Don't let your $$$ sit in a no-interest acct.
  358. DON'T click on the 2nd link... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    ...Unless you want to throw up.

    The link is disgusting.

  359. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop -here we go again by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    > This is the same thing everyone said with Win95 and NT 4.0. At the time Windows 3.11 was the typical business OS, and everyone said they were going to wait for Win95 to mature for a year or so before they upgraded. Same thing with NT 4 on the server side.

    Actually my University, was running 486 w/ Win3.1. They waited about a year after NT 4 was out before upgrading (They skipped 95 completely due to its lack of security, especially in a learning environment.)

    Cheers

  360. Bah. by warmenhoven · · Score: 1
    Windows 2001 - code named "HAL" - started being pirated today. Users have reported some violent tendencies and an inability to correctly respond to lies, deceit, and immorality. Many people have speculated at how such a product was ever able to come from Microsoft. Many suspect heads at Microsoft are once again kidnapping ideas that Apple rightfully stole - using Unix as the base.

    -----

    --

    -----
    "A man is judged by his every word." -RW Emerson
    "They misunderestimated me." -GW Bush
  361. Re:Release timing by RedX · · Score: 1

    You missed Windows 98 Second Edition (aka, Windows 95 Fourth Edition), which was released in 1999. And if I remember correctly, the gap in 1997 was not intentional, but rather was caused by their inability to combine the NT/9x OS into a single platform, something they're still trying to do.

  362. Re:In a word yes. by Baki · · Score: 1

    Indeed Win98 behaves strange. For my games environment I "downgraded" to win95 which has less problems. It also runs better in Vmware (which I run under FreeBSD to access some Windows programs if there is no UNIX equivalent yet).

    Since I don't install/deinstall too many stuff I don't have to reinstall win95 every few months. OTOH I have a FreeBSD-current which was upgraded for the last 5 years, without reinstall from scratch. There is no other OS I know of that could do that (and the system is still 100% clean, every file is known, no old trash laying around).

    FreeBSD may cost a bit more effort to install the first time (including installing ports that you need) but you really have to do it only once. It moved with me through 3 motherboard upgrades, numerous harddisks and other hardware changes.

  363. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by technobok · · Score: 1

    You bring up two of my pet hates in your argument:

    ...Windows is that it manages to archive a good balance between ease of use and functionality

    It is a common argument that it is a zero sum game, that you cannot possibly offer something that is both easy to use and fully functional, but there are many techniques available to do just that. It is common in the *nix world to have a back end performing the "real work" and a front end that can run the full range, from a pretty GUI with big friendly buttons to a command line interface where -h runs off the bottom of the screen.

    The Windows way promotes that the GUI is the program. This gives it one chance to give you the functionality that you need in the way you want it (typically when you are new to the program). Even if it does satisfy you to begin with, you typically grow out of it. The interface does not need to balance functionality with ease of use - it needs to be scalable.

    Try telling them to learn Linux with Gnome. You say it's not all that difficult, but could you say that that applies to the average joe?

    Comments like these are always made from the point of view of a Windows user, tentatively eyeing off Linux/Gnome. Or more generally, someone who knows how to do something one way checking out the other ways. Do not confuse familiarity with ease of use. It is easy to defend something you know, not because it is right or the best but because it is what you learnt first. This is the James Bond Syndrome. Whoever starred in the first JB flick you saw is THE JB.

    Stick two average joes (who have never used a PC) in front of a Linux/Gnome box and a Windows box and I don't think the progress each will make will differ greatly from the other.

  364. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by jacoplane · · Score: 1
    They will just keep adding new gimmicks that nobody needs

    Hmm lets see. Installation of W2K is a breeze. It will configure pretty much all your hardware for you. Somehow that doesn't seem to be a useless gimmick to me. I really hope to see the day when linux will reach the same level of installation ease.

    Lets face it: outside the opensource community people judge software not on the beauty of the code, but on the functionality of the software.

    Although there might well be "65000 bugs", At least the majority of people will be able to use the software, something which cannot yet be said of linux.

  365. Slantdot by My+Third+Account · · Score: 1

    You guys should call this Slantdot.

    "No one" installing w2k is a rediculous statement. As someone above mentioned, a million copies is hardly "no one."

    Also, the 65,000 "bugs" are not necessarily bugs. As has been discussed many times before when this story originally ran, the "bugs" are really just things that testers reported... including preferences, likes/dislikes, behavior, etc. SOME but not ALL of those "bugs" are actual bugs in the normal sense of the word.

    If so many people wrote in to report the story, why did you choose the version that had to mislead readers two different ways?

    1. Re:Slantdot by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

      You forget that probably over 60% of those million copies are due to OEM-deals when people want to buy themselves and new and shiny computer.

      I've been writing crap lately, and here I go again..

      - Steeltoe

    2. Re:Slantdot by jon_c · · Score: 1

      aye, too true my friend. most of the time people blame the moderators for being one sided and closed minded about MS issues. but just to blame are the people behind ./ the people who choose what is it we see, and what we think about, the people who post headlines that outright slam anything Microsoft.

      it's not just Microsoft though, it's anything not linux slashdot IS basically the linux church of the Internet. and as in any cult/religion outsiders are not welcome to preach foreign gospel

      -Jon

      --
      this is my sig.
    3. Re:Slantdot by PhilHibbs · · Score: 3

      Yes, Slashdot knocks Microsoft. Yes, it's often unfair and poorly thought out. This is nothing to do with VA, it has always been that way. It's funnier, too. Why pass up the opportunity to jibe that Win2K only has 65,000 bugs because it's still got 16-bit code at the heart? It's utterly untrue, but funny none the less.

    4. Re:Slantdot by orcrist · · Score: 4

      but just to blame are the people behind ./ the people who choose what is it we see, and what we think about

      Wow, and here I thought that they only choose what I see under http://slashdot.org, and that I choose what I think about. This is obviously more serious than I thought. Or did I think that because the people at Slashdot chose for me to think that?

      it's not just Microsoft though, it's anything not linux slashdot IS basically the linux church of the Internet. and as in any cult/religion outsiders are not welcome to preach foreign gospel

      Sure, outsiders are welcome. Otherwise who could we flame?

      Chris

      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
  366. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by witz · · Score: 1

    As to your comment about having to reboot Windows daily...

    H:\>uptime \\dntws01
    \\dntws01 has been up for: 151 day(s), 16 hour(s), 59 minute(s), 35 second(s)

    H:\>uptime \\dntirc01
    \\dntirc01 has been up for: 140 day(s), 17 hour(s), 58 minute(s), 50 second(s)

    H:\>uptime \\dntprint01
    \\dntprint01 has been up for: 127 day(s), 17 hour(s), 27 minute(s), 49 second(s)

    H:\>uptime \\dntprint02
    \\dntprint02 has been up for: 125 day(s), 23 hour(s), 33 minute(s), 24 second(s)

    H:\>uptime \\dntdc02
    \\dntdc02 has been up for: 105 day(s), 21 hour(s), 29 minute(s), 54 second(s)

    H:\>uptime \\dntmgmt02
    \\dntmgmt02 has been up for: 144 day(s), 20 hour(s), 57 minute(s), 19 second(s)

    Each machine runs various network services (file/print/DNS/DHCP/WINS/etc) for about 1500 clients. Yep, pillars of instability, aren't they?

  367. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by witz · · Score: 1

    Just an FYI, if you're a Windows 2000 user, it does come with a driver "stress test" program of sorts, which can give you an indication beforehand if a driver is going to be problematic. I wish this were in NT 4.0.

  368. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop -here we go again by flatrock · · Score: 1

    This is the same thing everyone said with Win95 and NT 4.0. At the time Windows 3.11 was the typical business OS, and everyone said they were going to wait for Win95 to mature for a year or so before they upgraded. Same thing with NT 4 on the server side. IS departments running NT 3.51 were for the most part happy to wait for things to mature a bit.

    There's good reason's for this. Any software package as large as Win 2000 is going to have bugs. If the OS you have right now is doig ok for you, let someone else figure them out. Even if Win 2000 were perfectly bug free, most people require 3rd party support for hardware or software that isn't ready yet.

    This happens every time MS releases an OS. People get on their soapboxes and say it's a failure. Slow addoption, althoug I wouldn't call 1 million coppies in a month slow, hasn't killed MS yet.

  369. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by flatrock · · Score: 1

    I can't say I know much about the schools in "developing countries", or in the UK. Here in the US it does seem like students aren't getting taught much about programming. They're taught enough to be famailiar with how the OS works (usually Windows or Mac OS). Then they seem to learn how to use a word processor and spreadsheet. They may learn a little about programming, but not much.

    However, I think this has more to do with what we consider to be a qualified teacher in the US, than with the OS on which they're taught. You can be taught just as little about programming on a Linux system as with a Windows one. If we want to fix the problem in the US we need to start requiring teachers to have more of a technical background instead of training them to be amature child psychologists. It appears that the current process just leads teachers to thing that almost every child has a problem, and to treat them all with Ridilin (sp?). Some math, science, and CS teachers with math, science, and CS degrees might actually produce more students that know those subjects better.

  370. � Paranoico ? by LaBola · · Score: 1

    Te parecen paranonicas las siguientes casualidades:

    -CDkey 111-11111111 de Windows , NT, etc.
    -Regalar Win2K "completo" en PCWorld.
    -Que la Play tenga un sitio para poner un chip para piratear.
    -Que la Play2 pueda ver películas DVD de cualquier zona.

    Francamente creo que no existen paraonicos, existe gente bien informada.

    LA PIRATERIA ES DELITO !
    Comprad todo vuestro software si tenéis cojones, o dinero.

  371. Big deal by skozee · · Score: 1

    I don't see what the big deal is... copies of every software Microsoft has ever made since Windows 95 have been available on the net months before their release. Everyone is freaking out but it's been like this for ever, companies just never gave any attention to it.

    --
    http://www.logient.com
  372. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by airos4 · · Score: 1

    Virginia Tech was one of the areas that got it before release... the day after it was installed on a simple computer lab network, someone got the blue screen o' death. We put up a poster congratulating that person, left it up for a week or so before it was mysteriously stolen.

    --
    I wish there was a choice that said "Factually Wrong -1" when I mod.
  373. Re:number of releases! by JonK · · Score: 1
    Right: let's set some misapprehensions straight.

    Millennium is a last, desperate attempt to wring a final few dollars out of the corpse of the W95 code-tree: like W98 and W98SE before it, it's a mound of bug fixes with a little bit of new functionality. Anyone who goes out and buys it retail (rather than getting it preinstalled) is probably too stupid to own a computer anyway.

    For those who were too busy chuntering to themselves (you know who you are) to actually take any notice of what been going on in NT for the last five years, listen up:

    The Windows NT operating system bears absolutely no comparison to the Linux kernel: the NT equivalent of linux would be the small group of DLLs (KERNEL32.DLL, WINSRV.DLL, NTDLL.DLL, NTKRNL(MP).EXE, WIN32K.SYS and HAL.DLL) which makes up kernel-mode Windows.The rest of the behemoth which is a modern day W2K Server install is implemented on top: the relationship is similar to that which sendmail, Apache, X, Gnome/KDE, Netscape, all the GNU tools et al have with the Linux kernel.

    Now, over the last five years, Microsoft have moved away from the concept of implementing their OS as a bunch of APIs in the classic C style (i.e a bunch of headers which you include as necessary, and monolithic components under those headers which you linked to directly) and towards building it as a collection of COM components. While this isn't the place (or the space) to embark on why COM is a deeply cool philosophy and how, over the last decade, it's become deeply cool in real life too, suffice it to say that this opens up all kinds of doors: consider a fully componentised operating system in which you can merrily swap all the bits for newer bits as they appear without anything breaking. This, in my book, is a kick-ass OS. Unstable? Not particularly in my experience (beta1 sucked mud on a regular basis, beta 2 was far more stable and from beta 3 onwards through the RCs I've been using it on both clients and servers without problems (except for the fact it didn't want to talk to my £20 no-name Chinese NICs so I went out and bought some real NICs instead) Bloated? No more so than Linux + X + windows manager + desktop + Apache + and X.500 server + sendmail + wu-ftpd + ... yada yada yada. Security flawed? Probably, but at least they're trying to get it right.

    In the last five years they have produced a first cut of the kick-ass operating system my AC friend requested and, more importantly, they've built it to a plug-compatible specification: they're moving away from a monolithic 'release earth-shattering quantities of code twice a decade' approach towards 'release components when they're ready and release often'. Sound familiar?

    The result is that DOS is finally going to breathe its last (no flowers, donations to the home for distressed 8-bit operating systems) and there'll be two NT tracks from here on in. One track will see the punter/corporate buying an W2K (or derivative) and then getting service packs which contain nothing but patches - no new functionality whatsoever. They'll be able to get all the new functionality by getting a new copy of the OS (say Whistler for W2K users). The other track will allow the user to add new functionality as and when it becomes available, similar (in concept) to the Option Pack for NT4, which added a transaction monitor, resource dispenser, message queuing software, certificate software and indexing server to the base OS (and this isn't intended as a snide dig, but are there any players in the transaction monitor/resource dispenser/message queue spaces on Linux/BSD yet? Has anyone heard anything about Tuxedo (now there's an apt name) or MQ - given the latter's IBM, I wouldn't be suprised to hear a port's in the works) for the cost of download - all this stuff has now been integrated into the W2K code tree.

    As an aside, this might also help explain the confusion about why no-one gets to see the whole source tree: it's mainly that there isn't a 'whole source for NT' tree. Rather, there's vast swathes of IDL defining all the inter-component interface in NT and then small teams, each owning their code, developing to those interfaces.
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  374. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by JonK · · Score: 1

    It sound like you're confusing "safe mode with command prompt" (useful when you've managed to really fsck up you're video drivers ) with the recovery console, which you get when you reboot a 2K box off the installation media and choose "Repair" or, if you install it, on the list of available OSs at boot time. -- Cheers Jon
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  375. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by JonK · · Score: 1

    Erm - CBM 8016. I'd been coding (at a fairly low level) for two years when the Spectrum was released (when I was 11), although it helped that my dad lectured in FE and they had a PET lab at the college where he worked.
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  376. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by JonK · · Score: 1

    I should clarify: that's 'low level' as in 'simple', not as in '6502 assembler'
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  377. Re:Whistler? by forgey · · Score: 1

    Ummmm, no.

    Whistler is one of the largest ski resorts in North America. It is in British Columbia, Canada a few hours north of Seattle.

    The next release of Whistler will be called Blackcomb, which is the mountain directly beside Whistler.

    www.whistler-blackcomb.com

  378. They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any features by holle2 · · Score: 1

    As usual MS will not fix any bugs. They will just keep adding new gimmicks that nobody needs, i.e. the menues appearing from thin air instead of rolling in ...

    If we are apllying the rule of thumb, that fixing one bug introduces two new ones, MS will never be able to deliver a bug free version. And since the will be adding a lot of unusable features they wil introduce even more bugs.

  379. MS Bashing at the highest level by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1
    If you don't want to see MS bashing posts, do as other sensible people do here and browse at +1.

    unfortunately that wouldn't have helped. You obviously missed the text for this article on the main page:
    "A copy of MS Windows 2001 beta has been leaked out to the Net. I wonder if it will have fixed any of the 65,000 documented bugs. No one is installing Win2k so I guess the MS marketing machine is trying to get rev 2 out the door ... New and Improved! Only 32k bugs! Geesh ..."

    "the 65,000 documented bugs"
    "No one is installing Win2k"
    "New and Improved! Only 32k bugs! Geesh ..."

    Pretty harsh Win2k bashing, IMHO. By your own argument, the text for the article is off-topic since after the first sentence it only talks about Win2k.

    Anyway, whoever wrote that review of Win2k was obviously responding to the FUD on the main page (cited above); that's my point.

    -------------
    The following sentence is true.

    --
    The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
  380. Re: 3D benchmarks are HALF of win98s. by dial0g · · Score: 1

    Thats funny, I use an TNT video card and my performance under Win2k is actually BETTER than 98. (NT4 was even faster tho). Frame rates are only slightly better, but in 98 the intro videos skipped occasionally, in NT they don't.

  381. Re:Equal Time by Money__ · · Score: 1
    Re:It's only an operating system, folks. Admittedly a fairly crappy one, but it's not actually the antichrist, AIDS, and a stubbed toe rolled into one.

    It's all that and more. w2k is a nastly little ball of mouse traps waiting to be triped, with no source. Oh!, and I would add "infected toe" to the list.

    And if you're going to bash it, your words will carry more weight if you at least give a token nod in the general direction of honesty.

    micros~1 spends millions each quarted blabing how wonderful their little progies are. I see /. as equal time.

    Our little (and ever growing) /. is hub for good honest people with hands on expierience. I value their opinion and respect their strength when their willing to tell the truth.
    _________________________

  382. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by randombit · · Score: 1

    I get this creepy feeling that many of the so-called Linux programmers are only in it because they absolutely can't stand to see other people get paid to do what they like doing (coding). I wonder if it's a "Dammit, I know I can do that! And better! But he's getting paid to do it! and on MS products! I've got to do something about that.. I know! I can write a "free" clone and try to erode their customer base, so we can all be poor together!" mentality. Personally, I find that mentality irrational, if it indeed exists.

    Or maybe they just like coding? Microsoft does a lot of things, and it stands to reason that there will be OSS programmers who will be interested in some of the same things as Microsoft does. Hell, you could claim that just about any OSS project out there is trying to "compete" with MS because similiar functionality can be provided with a program from MS. In fact, Apple and Be are just cheap ripoffs of Microsoft, they're both trying to make OSes, when everyone knows Microsoft makes one (well, more like half-a-dozen) as well. (OK, that's a little extreme, but hopefully you see my point).

    The themeability of most WM's allows for a custom look, now how about an X (which I suspect is the culprit) overhaul? Has anyone successfully installed Xfree86 4.0? Any reviews forthcoming for it? The feeling that you're using yesterday's software. I mean, it's as if people writing the stuff are waiting for a commercial Win32 product to come out, then trying to copy it feature for feature. I'd like to see some innovation every once in awhile.

    Well, quite literally X is "yesterday's software". Can't remember exactly, but I'm pretty sure it was created in the early 80s (maybe even earlier). XFree86 is much more recent but still based on the same stuff. And X-Windows is in some ways way beyond the abilities of any Windows GUI. GUI programs over a network? Multiple people using a GUI interface on a single machine?

    but there needs to be some work done in the standardization of interfaces

    Yeah, right. That would be an awful lot of cats to try herding. And what do you think we should all standardize on? I mean, not like the GNOME people, the KDE people, and the people using neither haven't been fighting about this for months now. The only thing that might cause any sort of standardization would be if some GUI toolkit came along that was so good everyone used it (and even then it would take years for people to switch).

    I really enjoyed using NT4sp6 (contrary to popular opinion, I found NT to be *very* stable. It took me a month of heavy usage to get to the point of a reboot).

    Yeah, NT really isn't that bad. I've been using Workstation inside VMware on Linux for the last while, and it's only crashed once. Were you running Workstation or Server? The reason I ask is, I have a friend who's a pretty serious NT freak (he also runs Linux and OpenBSD, but anyway...), he's got a big machine [well, big for a personal machine], 2xPIII-550s, 256M RAM, 6 SCSI drives with Hardware RAID, etc, etc, running Server, and he can only keep it up for about two weeks at a time before he has to reboot.

    Something interesting I heard from a guy I know running 2000: when he first installed it it was very stable, could stay up for several weeks at a time. However, lately it's been bluescreening every day or so. Personally, I'll probably get Windows 2000 eventually, but only after I'm sure that the most outstanding "issues" have been worked out (not to mention driver support!!!). And it damn well better interoperate with my Linux and FreeBSD boxen.

    Damn, this has turned into a pretty long post.

  383. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by randombit · · Score: 1

    The using a GUI over a network is neat stuff, but it's useless for most people. I've yet to find a use for it.

    Yeah, you're probably right. I'm in college and work in the Physics department here, it's nice to be able to call up programs that are crashing over the network, versus walking half a mile to where the problem is.

    It's a design issue, I'm assuming functionality over usabilty, relying upon the actual application people to create a *usable* interface.

    X is generally like that, from the perspective of both users and programmers. X, for the most part, is just a network protocol. Everything else is done by higher level libraries (or the applications themselves).

    As an example, Netscape crashes on me in both Linux and on NT.

    You might try downloading tarballs from Netscape directly, versus using the one shipped with the distro. I use Redhat, and after I upgraded Netscape (mostly because I wanted 128 bit SSL), it stopped crashing for the most part (maybe it'll crash once or twice a week at most now).

  384. Re:Windows and Linux by gregstoll · · Score: 1

    Have you looked at the CD-Writing HOWTO? It's quite good, and got my CD burner going with no problem. Also, if you've tried using the GUI burners, try using cdrecord from the command-line - at least the first time that I tried, the GUIs I had didn't work, and I thought that was the problem for a while...

    Check out Greg's Bridge Page!

  385. Re:Whistler? by Malcs · · Score: 1

    "Hey d00d, can we codename the next one Whistler and the one after that Blackcomb?" "Sure, but you'll still have to debug them before you get enough time off to go skiing there." "But, d00d, I thought this was Microsoft! You know: The Lazy M! Man, that is SO bogus. I'm outta here. Where's my snowboard?"

    --
    My name is Carlos Montoya. You share files of my music. Prepare to die.
  386. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Steeltoe · · Score: 1

    A very easy way is to only provide the download of new builds through an installer that fingerprints the package after download/copy from CD.

    It's not hard to come up with ideas for a Big Brother society. Not hard at all, It's tougher to prevent such things.

    - Steeltoe

  387. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Wild_dog! · · Score: 1

    I have reinstalled windows 30 times in 3 years. not quite once a week, but a real pain none the less.

  388. Re:Don�t kill huh? by gfxguy · · Score: 1
    Actually, I think many banks use OS/2, still. Is there a reason they should upgrade?

    I know mine does.
    ----------

    --
    Stupid sexy Flanders.
  389. I was thinking..... by sideshow · · Score: 1

    People are so worried about all the many versions of linux running around. Then there's Microsoft with a whole bunch of different versions of their operating system and they're the same company!

    --

    Hollow words will burn and hollow men will burn.

  390. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Draoi · · Score: 1

    Isn't it cmd-bkspc to delete on macs?
    hmmmmm....


    cmd-del is the NT login screen key sequence ...

    Pete C

    --
    Alison

    "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein

  391. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by erikdalen · · Score: 1

    yes, considering how many windows users there is that must be less than 1% that has upgraded...

    --
    Erik Dalén
  392. I'm having trouble getting it to build correctly.. by Error27 · · Score: 1
    I get the following error messages when I tried to compile it. :(

    Micros~1.cpp:31: too few arguments to function `void billg_rules(char, stock &, stock &)'
    Micros~1.cpp:44: at this point in file
    Micros~1.cpp: In function `void parse_input(char, stock &, stock &)':
    Micros~1.cpp:80: implicit declaration of function `int billg_rules(...)'
    make: *** [Micro~1] Error 1

    Is anyone else having the same trouble?


    And for those of you who didn't make it in time I have a mirror up at http://www.jk.com/micros~1.tar.gz

  393. Re:I'm having trouble getting it to build correctl by Error27 · · Score: 1

    ahh...

    but the key is you haven't been up for 23 hours.

    I'll probably agree with you after I get some sleep dang it.

  394. run for office by daevt · · Score: 1

    if you want to bash someone or their products, i say run for office. i think that the boys at slashdot would agree that slashdot is not about ripping down windows but that its about the evolution of technology and the sociaty that surrounds that technology.

    it is true that we support and favor one set of code over another. it is true that we enjoy the freedoms that the code we support allows. but the truth of the matter is that there are too many people out there bragging about how there system doesn't use windows, or trying to rip down windows that we lose site off our actual goal, and thats to make Linux a top notch OS, one that is compatible with all major hardware, one that runs reliable, quality software, and one that is stable enough and simple enough to use on a wider scale.

    if all of the people out there who have nothing better to do than bash other peoples code were to go and buy a book on C and write something, the windows you so hate wouldn't stand a chance at all. there are to many people talking, and not enough people doing. it was winston churchill who said, "give us the tools, and we'll finish the job." we have the tools, now its time to go to work.

    if anybody cares to voice an opinoin on this id apreciate a mail, my address is up there.

  395. Cat out of bag by osguzzler · · Score: 1

    ZD net have let slip an important piece of information that none of us realized: we who all thought that W2K was the new NT ... it turns out that all the time...

    ...it was running on a 9x kernel!

    How could you, Bill!

    --

    Adam:What kept you?
    God:Rome wasn't built in a day
  396. In a word yes. by |deity| · · Score: 1

    Windows really is that bad. I enjoyed using a computer more when windows 3.1 was the latest thing. I have two computers with windows installed. Both of these two computers will have a fit if left on for more then 12 hours. After 12 hours the system may not crash but if you try to shut it down it hangs. One of these computers is running windows 98 and the other is running 98 second edition. If I didn't need windows to run games on I would delete the windows partitions on both computers and run Linux, Beos, or hell dos would even be better.

    One of the funniest things that I ever read was in a computer magazine. The article was talking about windows and it said that you should always install the latest version and even if you didn't you should format you harddrive and reinstall windows every 6 months or so to keep errors low. It's funny but true. With linux I never worry about leaving my computers on I never have to worry that I won't be able to shut them down properly. I'm not saying that linux is perfect either, though. I have crashed programs in linux and had everything lock up.

    I want to try Beos. Does anyone know if the free release is out yet? I'm to lazy to go look. :)

    --
    Environmentalists are their own worst enemy. ~tricklenews.com
    1. Re:In a word yes. by QZS4 · · Score: 2

      ...you should format you harddrive and reinstall windows every 6 months or so...

      At home, I usually only reboot about once every 6 months or so (I let it rest a while during Chrismas and in the summer, when I'm away for longer periods of time). (Need I say that it runs Linux?)

      But at work I have to reboot about every other week to once a month, almost every time due to "Out of virtual memory"-reasons (NT4SP6). Whenever that happens, NT goes ballistic... Other than that, NT isn't too bad, if you have X-Win32 and a VNC-server installed :-)

  397. Re:Moderators fighting back by |deity| · · Score: 1

    Most of the time when I moderate I try to just look for good comments and moderate them up. The last time I had moderator access I used all 5 points moderating comments down. That was in the first 15 posts of one story.

    Slashdot needs more moderators or more points per session or both. Something like 10 points to use in 2 days. That would get some things done.

    Another suggestion AC posts start out at -1.

    --
    Environmentalists are their own worst enemy. ~tricklenews.com
  398. I like W2K review (was Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody!) by kbahey · · Score: 1
    Sorry that you are sick hearing this. Hope you feel better now.

    Anyway, I like the W2K review, because:

    • Linux has no Arabic, and I am using Windows 98 for that.
    • I have to upgrade at some point (Win 98 is so buggy).
    • The review is from someone's own experience, and not from a Microsoft sponsored magazine or web site.
    • The reviewer is Slashdot-mentality-aware.
    • If you are so anti-MS, then it is useful to know what the enemy is up to!
    So we have to keep an open mind about this, and make the most out of it.
    1. Re:I like W2K review (was Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody!) by orcrist · · Score: 2

      Linux has no Arabic, and I am using Windows 98 for that.

      Well, funny you should mention that, since the coordinator for KDE translation mentioned to me recently that Arabic is high on the list of languages that still need to be translated to.

      Your English seems to be very good, so why don't you head over to the KDE translation page and read the Translation HOWTO to see if you could help to change the situation (This would be a help to all KDE users, not just Linux).

      Or, if KDE isn't your 'thing' you could look into other i18n projects in the free software community.

      So we have to keep an open mind about this, and make the most out of it

      Getting involved is the best way I know to 'make the most of something' :-)

      Chris

      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
  399. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Erchie · · Score: 1
    Get a clue. Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars, in case you forgot.

    So what? He stole 89 billion of it. And I think it is pathetic that so many of you Anonymous Cowards worship the little con man only because he has more money than you do. You obviously don't believe in your hearts what you are posting here with such frequency, because you haven't even the conviction of your beliefs to log in.

    --
    Erchie
  400. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Erchie · · Score: 1
    Your school needs to learn what a lease is. If they can't afford to replace their computers at least every two years I would hate to see what their computer science curriculum looks like. Two years is a long long life for a computer system.

    In the Microsoft world, four years is a long life for a computer system, not two, because it takes Microsoft four years to come out with any new technology-- and their bloated, ponderous, snail-like design absolutely needs the biggest and fastest just to keep up with Linux's benchmarks.

    I'll bet the school in the parent post your comment is trying to answer is doing as much work and doing it faster than the latest release of Win2000 would be capable of doing, running on brand new latest technology machines. That's the way Microsoft does business: "Hey, we've just released our latest bug collection-- so throw out all your hardware and replace it with the latest and most expensive Intel PC stuff you can find, just so you can get it installed, after you have paid us a prince's ransome for the privilege of opening the shrinkwrap it is packaged in."

    I am running S.u.S.E. 6.2 Linux on a 486DX2/66 with only 32 Mb RAM and a 3.1 Gb SCSI hard drive, and it runs fast enough to get significant work done. That machine was purchased in 1992, and everything in it dates from that time except the hard drive, which is the third one installed since 1992 because the others wore out.

    Try getting Win2000 installed on such a machine-- yeah, right. What the heck, try running Win98 on it... Good luck!

    --
    Erchie
  401. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop -here we go again by Erchie · · Score: 1
    This is the same thing everyone said with Win95 and NT 4.0. At the time Windows 3.11 was the typical business OS, and everyone said they were going to wait for Win95 to mature for a year or so before they upgraded. Same thing with NT 4 on the server side. IS departments running NT 3.51 were for the most part happy to wait for things to mature a bit.

    This happens every time MS releases an OS. People get on their soapboxes and say it's a failure. Slow addoption, althoug I wouldn't call 1 million coppies in a month slow, hasn't killed MS yet.

    There is one fatal flaw in your reasoning: At the time Win3.1 was released, Linux did not yet exist. When Win95 and NT4.0 were released, Linux was still in its fledging years, and not yet ready for use by anyone but serious hackers.

    But, Aha! Linux had already reached mainstream when Win2000 hit the shelves, so now there existed an alternative to Microsoft. And it is a serious alternative, that has already started to eat Microsoft's lunch, in big chomps. That is why Win2000 sales have performed so under par-- so seriously under par for Microsoft's history-- in the first month.

    Furthermore, though it has already been said before in this forum, Win2000 sales figures have very likely been cooked by Microsoft, and probably do not reflect actual sales to consumers, but copies shipped to OEMs. If the one-million figure were actual sales into the hands of consumers, I would expect the hardware market to have jumped comparably during the past month, because it is highly unlikely that Win2000 would be installable on any but the latest, biggest hardware. Has it?

    Next to "Bob", I think Win2000 is going to go down in history as Microsoft's biggest failure. It will be a bigger failure than "Bob" because Microsoft has too much riding on its success-- and there isn't going to be any significant success for Win2000-- at least not significant in the way Microsoft has become accustomed in the past.

    Win2000, in my opinion, represents Microsoft's Waterloo-- Microsofts winter invasion of Russia-- Microsoft's invasion of Kuwait.

    The handwriting is on the wall-- and it says, "For a good time, call Linux."

    --
    Erchie
  402. Re:Don�t kill huh? by Erchie · · Score: 1
    Win2k runs Wells Fargo, does it not?:) I'm sure most banks run Windows - and there haven't been any problems yet. In fact, when I walk into my credit union, they're not even running WinNT - they just use a suckie Visual Basic proggie under Win95 or 98. When I look in the newspaper help wanted ads, I see LOTS of job openings at Kaiser Permanente for IT Pros with experience w/ NT. Let's face it - Everywhere you turn, Windows is running it. (I dont want to hear about air traffic control:P)

    Bzzt! Wrong!

    Wellsfargo.com is running Netscape-Enterprise/4.0 on Compaq Tru64 UNIX, and its ATMs run on OS/2. If you don't believe me, check out http://www.netcraft.com/whats/

    It is a commonly known fact that MOST of the ATMs in the western world run OS/2. Microsoft's lack of security is too dangerous for this kind of application.

    --
    Erchie
  403. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
    Yep, it's an I have to agree with you post. I do lots of work with Windows/Mac only development tools like Flash and Director, so I currently have Linux on my servers and NT on my workstations.

    I've just upgraded two machines to W2K and I'm very happy with it. One machine is a PII350 with nice SCSI hard drives and lots of video capture hardware and lots of RAM and the other is a Cyrix 333 with 32 megs and a nasty integrated video/sound motherboard. Both machines installed without a hitch. I've still got driver problems with the video hardware, but I did under NT so I haven't lost anything. The OS seems much more stable than NT, catching driver errors that previously caused BSODs (Adobe Premier doesn't like my sound card). It feels much quicker, based on UI things like opening an explorer window and opening the Start menu, and even boots quicker.

    I could go on, but Gary said pretty much all I could say. The conclusion: if you have to use NT becuase of company policy or Apps that you can't get for Linux then upgrade to 2000: it's quicker and more stable, and 'feels' like you're using a decent OS not a five-year-old update of ten-year-old technology (or whatever!).

  404. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by BWS · · Score: 1

    Machine ID

    Every NT Workstation has an UNIQUE ID. Every machine on the network must have an Unique ID or else bonkos. Ghosting makes two machiens with same ID.

    That's why with Norton Ghost(tm), what we use, they include GhostWalker. GhostWalker sets the Unique machine ID for each machine after ghosting.

    --
    -- Note: These Comments are Generated by ME! Not You! ME!
  405. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by Netsnipe · · Score: 1

    By mentioning this, I'm just being informative, and not nit-picking or just trying to score brownie points with the moderators, but does anyone remember the

    "Windows 95 OSR3" debacle?

    For those who don't remember how to what hilarious lengths Microsoft would go to in order to look like a cute little harmless bunny of the computing industry, they went as far as removing IE4 from the operating system to prove that it was impossible to remove the browser form the OS during one stage of the Anti-Trust case. Suprise, suprise! The system wouldn't work, thus proving that:

    1) Microsoft's engineers are inedpt at modifying their own software (perhaps true considering their record at squatting bugs), but still, for their own purposes, good enough to permanently bond IE with Win95.
    2) They're masters at Public Relations and brainwashing anti-trust judges.

    Personally, I think that M$ just modified Win95OSR2.5 in OSR3 by "del C:\windows\shell32.dll". Still has anyone seen OSR3?

    And two last additions that should be made to that list:

    95Lite & 98lite
    (2000lite coming soon)

    Even when I'm forced to use Win98 (please, no flames); I'm proving M$ wrong. I'm proud to be IE free.
    (Mozilla forever = P )
    the guys at http://www.98lite.net should be congradulated for doing something that M$ said they couldn't remove and under oath too!
    But to keep the moderators and flamers happy, X beats 98lite down anyday for speed and stability.

    Man went to the moon with 4K RAM. M$ can't get a PC to run properly with 256MB!

    --
    -- "I can't tell the future, I just work there." -- The Doctor
  406. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    I don't question about the "like to code" people. It's just that sometimes I get the general feeling that some people do OSS stuff to SPITE commercial software.

    I haven't found this attitude in any of the OSS coders (myself included };>) I've worked with. But I have seen it to a fair amount in a good number of Linux advocates though. The "revenge" aspect seems more prevalent among those who don't code than those who do. Those who do code simply do it because they like the environment and enjoy what they do.

    Of course, some FSF zealots do share that "destroy commercial software" mentality, but most OSS coders I've met don't buy into that.

  407. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    Not just a feeling for me; I've heard it from the horse's mouth, the mighty Richard Stallman himself, quoted telling (threatening?) commercial software developers that he'll put them out of business. "Spite" is the right word.

    Isn't this the tack Microsoft uses as well? How often have they threatened (though usually more privately than Stallman) to completely destroy a company, to crush them? It's not an MS-hater thing. :)

  408. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by bytesex · · Score: 1

    I swapped a network-card in my RH6.1 box the other day; the one was ISA, the other PCI; kudzu made me answer three questions on the command-line on start up (all I had to do was hit enter) and it was up and running again. Yes, recognizing hardware and configuring it automatically is a very nice feature indeed (even though on Linux it's usually a question of editing a few /etc files) but face it- it's not that hard either; unless, of course, you hide everything that there's to know about that - like MS does.

    --
    Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
  409. whats the big deal? by wtmcgee · · Score: 1

    it stikes me as odd that the media is making a big deal about this build of windows being on the net.... for as long as i can remember, you can go to a 'warez' channel on IRC and easily find any windows product on the market. ya know, if windows would let windows be openly beta tested, maybe more of their bugs would get worked out =)!

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    *** For a better tommorow, change your life today ***
  410. Wiping out Windows every 6 months by Rurik · · Score: 1

    This is definately true. Here, all users run NT 4 Wks/Server, with Visual Interdev and all that crap thrown in. We have a 6-12 month cycle set up for most users, depending on what they use.

    I can't really explain it. But after 6 months, memory consumption grows, hard drive space disappears with no clue where it went, and the computer becomes slower and more crash-prone.

    Once users start complaining that their computers lock up from just going to a File Properties, we reinstall from scratch. We save only their documents and saved code/queries, then copy it back over and reinstall all the apps. And I swanny, the computer is 100 times faster/better. Until 6 months down the road ...

    Now if only Norton Ghost was working to make the job easier ...

  411. Worked fine here in W2k Server ... by Rurik · · Score: 1

    Maybe some people should validate sources before moderating up ...

  412. innovation by miles+zarathustra · · Score: 1



    micro$oft...
    then: the 64k bug
    now: 64k bugs

  413. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by illtud · · Score: 1
    It will be funny when Mexico has all the good e-commerce sites in 10 years because they actually put computers which have something to teach in front of their kids.. instead of computers with a bunch of mindless icons that teach no long term though related computer skills.

    ...and that's the kicker - developing countries (and enlightened ones who embrace OSS in the education/public sector) will rapidly pull away from countries who retain a closed model. Already the level of programming and what I'd term 'proper' computer skills is slipping rapidly in the UK, mainly due to the superscedence (is there such a word?) of 'programmable' home computers (hands up any UK coders aged 25-35 who didn't start on a ZX*) by Wintel boxes. Yes, you can learn to hack on a doze PC, but only if you're really bothered (and cough up for the tools, usually), and what you also get is people who imagine themselves to be a computing wizard because they can install a printer, or re-install windows, which is a bit like claiming to be a mechanic because you can drive to the shops.

  414. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

    we have a couple of PA-RISC HP workstations for graduate level stuff, but too expensive to hand out.. we use Xilinx and Altera on NT systems most of the time.... most senior projects take less than 1 hour to compile on a PII 400....

    ------------------------------------------
    If God Droppd Acid, Would he see People???

    --

    What are we going to do tonight Brain?
  415. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

    Most of our boxes are Donated by HP and Intel. Actually, We have a very good Hardware Engineering Program. (all of our grads are usually hired by spring term) and our Laser Optical Engineering is one of the best in the nation. The bitch is that we are a small public school. only 2500 students, maybe 300 or so in computer and lasers(3 degree tracks). We do not get the kind of funds that a larger University would get (OSU and UofO have over 20k students at each!!) but we are very good because our classes are so small. check us out! Oregon Institute of Technology

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    If God Droppd Acid, Would he see People???

    --

    What are we going to do tonight Brain?
  416. Separate kernels really on the way out? by link2NULL · · Score: 1

    Bringing the consumer and business versions together in Whistler was news to me (was that on Slashdot, I don't remember seeing it). If I remember, Windows 2000 supposed to do this, then they scrapped the idea and kept the separate kernels (Windows 98 and NT) going because of the complexity of bringing the two together. Were they close enough to accomplishing this that another year will let it materialize? I would imagine there's more to it than simplifying the interfaces for the consumer users.

  417. Re:Release timing by Nastard · · Score: 1

    I would release early and often too, if my buggy software "upgrades" were bringing in $100+ dollars a pop multiplied by millions of clueless users.

    And furthermore, I have yet to see linux drivers for most of my hardware, or even semi-stable clones/whatnot of my fav windows software. My solution to supporting my fav hardware? Pirate windows :)

  418. Re:Don�t kill huh? by gengee · · Score: 1

    I'm not one to reply to flamebait usually, as it inevitably results in more flames and usually an onslaught of email pointing out my shortcomings, but for me, bold text is much akin to Marty's irrational response to being called a "chicken" in Back to the Future. So without further ado.. Bzzt! Wrong! Wells Fargo does indeed use Windows on well over 60,000 computers, and is currently in the process of migrating every single terminal in every single bank to Windows 2000. All 40,000 of them.

    To be fair, I have a feeling you may have been referring to their web server, which very well (And most likely does) run under Unix. I was however replying to a person who worried about banks running windows, and I took that to mean the individual terminals within.

    signature smigmature

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    - James
  419. Re:Don�t kill huh? by gengee · · Score: 1

    Yes, someday I will remember to use the preview button.

    Here is the link that I forgot in my post: Microsoft patting themselves on their respective backs.

    signature smigmature

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    - James
  420. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by gengee · · Score: 1

    Lets look at the stability of X, and the GUI's - They are worse than Windows.

    Linux is undeniably stable and robust w/ a console - but once you introduce X and Gnome, etc, its a big bloated beast.

    I am not denying Linux is a great OS, it is - and if X gets fux0red, I can almost always Cntrl+Alt+Backspace back to console, but what we don't need is to sound like blind sheep following hype.
    signature smigmature

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    - James
  421. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by gengee · · Score: 1

    That's definitely a good point - Because you don't even have the option of *not* using Explorer w/ Windows*, let alone a different window manager - But my point was we shouldn't look at Linux as the holy grail of OSes, claiming it's a wonderful desktop OS for John Q. Luser - it's not.

    I can envision the day when it is, but as it stands now, its definitely a ways off.

    signature smigmature

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    - James
  422. Re:Don�t kill huh? by gengee · · Score: 1

    Win2k runs Wells Fargo, does it not?:) I'm sure most banks run Windows - and there haven't been any problems yet. In fact, when I walk into my credit union, they're not even running WinNT - they just use a suckie Visual Basic proggie under Win95 or 98. When I look in the newspaper help wanted ads, I see LOTS of job openings at Kaiser Permanente for IT Pros with experience w/ NT. Let's face it - Everywhere you turn, Windows is running it. (I dont want to hear about air traffic control:P)

    Let's cut Microsoft some slack - the software is not that bad.

    signature smigmature

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    - James
  423. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by gengee · · Score: 1

    Software bugs in computers don't kill you.
    Silicon breat implants, and improperly designed cars do.

    Since the beginning of the free market economy, and well before I'm sure, people have always sold crappy products. You can't sue someone for selling a crappy product. You can use discretion when they try to sell you another.
    As for your statement about cryptic icons, and whatnot - I can see where you were coming from with that, but it's sort of rediculous. I have taught many people how to use Word, and when I'm teaching them how to use cut & paste, how to print etc, I always show them both means of accomplishing the task - The keyboard shortcut, or the icon/menus. And 9 times out of 10 they will use the menu/icon for the rest of their lives - years after I've taught them at least. Even for simple tasks like cutting and pasting text.
    And this brings me to my other point - Microsoft's software offers you BOTH options. You can use the keyboard shortcut, or the icon, or the menu. Your choice. Noone is making people use the icons. They happen to personally find it easier that way. Simply having icons in your software does not make it inferior, and truth be known, two computer programs of equal par, one with icons, one without - the program with icons will ALWAYS be superior.
    signature smigmature

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    - James
  424. Windows Is Written In BASIC + HTML by roman_mir · · Score: 1
    In case you didn't notice, Windows is written in original BASIC that B.G. adapted in middle 70'th. Also the multitasking part is done by using complex VBScript in HTML and the kernel itself is written in interpreted Active Server Pages.

    No wonder!

  425. Re:first post by rtmfm · · Score: 1

    I don't think he was worried about it in the first place.

  426. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by prog-guru · · Score: 1

    That's funny, I too was a projectionist when EP1 came out. We were expecting it to be disguised, and even heard a rumor that is was to be dropped off at 5 AM the day it was starting, 5.5 hours before the first show. Instead, it was clearly labeled, and left outside the front door, discovered later as $ASSISTANT_MGR moved it to clear the doorway! 3 prints, total of 6 Fox boxes, we wondered if they even stopped the truck to drop them off.

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    chris@xanadu:~$ whatis /.
    /.: nothing appropriate.

  427. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by blane.bramble · · Score: 1

    But he does have a point. It took MS 3 service packs and several hot fix releases to get NT Y2K compliant. First SP4 was the fix, then SP4 with hotfixes, then SP5 (I didn't go for that), then SP6, then SP6a. This is NOT how to go about fixing bugs.

  428. Re:I've got yer Windows 2k Right here!!! by evilviper · · Score: 1

    I use micro$oft products. I'm using Windows NT 4.0 Workstation Service pack 6 right now... I've also tried Windows 2000 on this same machine... It is indeed a piece of shit. Performance is a laughable word to use. I've got a damn good system, and NT 4 works great, but with 2000 I can't play an MP3 without it maxing out the processor. It's no more stable than NT4 (I'm not talking server-wise) and it's non-downgradeable...once you've installed it, your stuck. And to address your RedHat Linux installer overwriting your partition, that's your fault. The installer asks you to confirm any disk operations, and you said ok. You can't blame Linux because you don't know how to use RedHat's installer.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  429. Don�t kill huh? by Lispy · · Score: 1

    I can imagine some situations where the OS better not be Windows. For example in a hospital or in my Bank. When suddenly all my money disapears for some unknown Win2k Bug i swear this could get pretty vital 4 me!! I think software bugs can kill just not as directly as a car can, maybe! regardz

  430. BeOS [OT] by locutus074 · · Score: 1
    I want to try Beos. Does anyone know if the free release is out yet? I'm to lazy to go look. :)
    http://free.be.com says it'll be available for download on March 28. Interestingly enough, when SuSE announce 6.4 last week, they made it March 27th. Hmm... :)

    --

    --

    --
    We have fought the AC's, and they have won.

  431. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by TomV · · Score: 1
    I take it you do nothing with this pc. You leave it on to run word once a week or something.

    Take what you like. Let's see now. Emagic Logic, Photoshop 5, SQL server 7, personal web server,the /.-hated Visual Studio 6, Nero, GP legends, don't really do a lot of wordprocessing.

    I *have* to reboot 98 once a week to fix the problems 98's stupid network stack has. It gets reeeaaally sloooow, and that's if it hasn't BSoD'ed on me already.

    Have you got a particularly cheap network card? BTW, NT has a BSOD, 98 doesn't. If you're referring to 'the memory at location dgafdh could not be 'read'', don't call it a BSOD. Not if you want to come across as intelligent and honest. It's a bad thing, an unforgivable thing (usually caused by amateurish apps) but it's not the same thing.

    TomV

  432. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by TomV · · Score: 1
    You forget that the average windows user installs windows at least once a week. THIS IS NO JOKE

    please! What is the point of spouting this nonsense? Is this 'average' as in 'my personal unfounded opinion'?

    98 installed about a year ago with monthly reboots. Not yet had to get out the install disk. NT4 currently at sp6 - installed clean a fortnight before y2k, still up. One BSOD during the install due to a network card several years newer than NT4-unpatched - none since. A good NT4 install on solid hardware doesn't BSOD. It crashes, yes, but it doesn't BSOD

    Anyway, if half the FUD was true the claim would be impossible as, after all, as we all know it takes more than a week to install and boot windows, doesn't it?

    TomV

  433. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by TomV · · Score: 1
    As usual MS will not fix any bugs

    As usual, MS will inform you of several bug fixes per week if you make the minimal effort of subscribing to the appropriate mailing list for the product in question from www.microsoft.com.

    As usual this post will be modded to obscurity and buried in FUD

    TomV

  434. Funny thing... by coolgeek · · Score: 1

    All these M$ advocates come out here chastizing the slashdot population for being pro-linux/anti-microsoft.==NEWS FLASH== Slashdot was born out of the Linux community. If you want to hear a bunch of pro-M$ happy talk, go read/post over there...M$ must open an uncensored public comment forum somewhere, right?

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    cat /dev/null >sig
  435. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
    Neither on mine....

    I use Linux (and a litle bit of FreeBSD). I don't want a userfriendly os, I want a good os!

    I use slackware because it works and it is simple to modify.
    I use twm because it is also easy and simple and fast above all!

    Grtz, Jeroen

    --
    Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
  436. Re:Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by pe1rxq · · Score: 1
    You should post this to segfault!

    Grtz, Jeroen

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    Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
  437. Release timing by evil_one · · Score: 1

    According to the article, Microsoft has plans to release one revision of the os every year for several years.
    I think that's rather interesting, seeing as 95a was released in late 95, then 95b was released a year later in late 96, and NT4 was also released in 96. Then we have a break to 1998, and windows 98, then another break to 2000... so with the exception of 95a/95b/NT4 there have been 2 year gaps for their releases.
    Are they taking the advice of the open source community? "Release early, release often?" Perhaps now that Gates isn't making the business decisions, there really will be changes at MS.

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    Desperation is a stinky cologne
  438. Dave Letterman by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 1
    I guess I now know why Dave Letterman did not call me to fill in for him.

  439. Just some post about Win 2.1... by Hadlock · · Score: 1

    Wow, not trying to troll here, but the last guy who mentioned this topic got moderated down for it (in the Gnutella article a day ago)...here's the post:

    Since when did /. become a host for the shadier side software?

    In one day I downloaded DeCSS, Gnutella, and a shady Mozilla release! All through /. threads.

    I don't think Time Warner will become an advertiser any time soon!

    So this guy filters through a couple old slashdot posts, and had conequently downloades all sorts of shady things like an off-release of mozilla, and a couple other things he shouldn't have. Makes me wonder how many more days till we have a link in the -3 moderation catergory that links us directly to a fully functional copy of MS win2.1?

    that aside, it's nice to think that they already have somthing in the works...that means the beta can't be more than 10 months off...hopefully. My stratigy is to Leapfrog over the alternating OS... win3 (skip win 3.11), win95SE (skip win98) win98 se... (skip win2k) win 2.1 . That tends to cut down my costs on OS costs, even if it left me behind the USB revolution for a whole 3 months. Yeah I'd save money running linux, but i'm not comfortable enough to run linux 100% quite yet...

    ~Hadlock

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    moox. for a new generation.
  440. ReWindows 2.12=win2001 by Hadlock · · Score: 1

    win 2.1=legacy windows

    yep it's handy to use 2.1 as the version number for an older version of windows...and win2k is easy to type, but win2001 is going to get annoying as hell to type after a while. in my opinion. is win2.1 a plausable abbreviation? how about win21? sounds almost like the realestate company century 21, but..yeah.

    win 2.1=win 2001?

    ~Hadlock

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
    1. Re:ReWindows 2.12=win2001 by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2

      You could call it 'Win2.001k'. Then rearrange that into 'Wink 2.001', and tada! we have version numbers again.

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      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
  441. Re:Kills Win63^H^H2K ? by Neo42 · · Score: 1

    Well, don't they know anyway?
    If it was only the fact if there will never be a new version which makes people purchase the current version, no-one would ever buy software at all. Everybody knows that "some day, there's going to be a new version." And an early pre-Alpha developers' debug version (aren't most of M$'s products like this even in the state of first public release?) is _not_ the same as the final release. I'd rather trust NT4 with the latest Service Pack installed than W2K without even the first bugfix (if I trusted M$'s Operating Systems at all, but that's another topic...)

    Regards

    Neo42

    --
    Regards, Neo XLII [fourty-two]
  442. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by BobBilly · · Score: 1

    Each tester received a version that had their email address encoded within the executable and they were informed of this Anyone with a bit of knowledge would fire up dos debug or a hex editor.......and change the e-mail address to something else.....not hard to do.... :)
    I remeber doing this to change a program's name..... that was always fun :)



    Why win9x really sucks

  443. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by BobBilly · · Score: 1

    Why should a web page be able to produce a BSOD?
    speaking of web pages that produce....BSOD's try www.nul.cjb.net for win9x.....and watch ur system BSOD........all the other OS will not bsod..but will be broswer bombed........or just turn off ur javascript :)
    I have yet to make this page anti-microsoft friendly



    Why win9x really sucks

  444. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by BobBilly · · Score: 1

    Why should a web page be able to produce a BSOD?
    speaking of web pages that produce....BSOD's try http://www.nul.cjb.net for win9x.....and watch ur system BSOD........all the other OS will not bsod..but will be broswer bombed........or just turn off ur javascript :) If anyone has HTML code to BSOD NT/2k I will be happy to take a look at it.
    I have yet to make this page anti-microsoft friendly



    Why win9x really sucks

  445. Re:On a related note... by BobBilly · · Score: 1

    Just about any other country u can buy win2k cheap.......looking at the ads here (in colorado)......i see win2k for 50 bucks in the paper......hmm......can we say piracy? but i didn't know......so i'm off to the...umm.............naw.....win2k ain't even worth my 50 bucks........Just talk on IRC to peeps from other countries......they will tell ya how cheap software really is :)




    Why win9x really sucks

  446. what we fear by tone1 · · Score: 1
    I think I am getting it now :). It isn't the fact that people will not go over now to this new OS, but that they fear change. Example: We have an MRP in place (I hate the thing) that is unreliable, poorly written, and was never finished (management stopped the project before it could finish, from what I hear). So my boss and I are looking for a new ERP system to replace this thing. Our users hate our current system-- until they realize they have to change to a new system. People complain about what they have, until presented with a newer option. It is the minority out there that actually either changes things or embraces those changes quickly.

    Win2K will become the de facto of the Windows world, simply because it is the next release. People are scared as hell at it and its god awful requirements-- but too scared to do anything else but complain. That reason alone allows MS to abuse its situation.

    If we as a people had any smarts to us, we would learn to adapt to change better. Survival of the Fittest.

    BTW, I am not an MS employee, MS fan, but am a user and admin at work. I use Linux at home, and on this box at work. My future is with the *nix world, not MS. I hope the rest of the world follows that lead.

  447. this just out by xtink · · Score: 1

    They're going to leak out the 13 MCSE exams for it next week the test are going to be professional, amateur, server, advanced server, really advanced server, right click, left click, and restart, just to name a few

    --
    I've never noticed it before but my thinking cap does sort of resemble a hockey helmet
  448. The full version of Windows 2000 on converCD by Snaller · · Score: 1

    I thought the story i submitted, about how the Spanish version of PCWorld had put the full version of Windows2000 on the CD was more amusing..but hey, it didn't take place in america :)

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  449. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by rifter · · Score: 1

    If you think a product cannot feature a good user interface and still be stable, it is because you have never used a Mac, or BeOS even. And even Linux is becoming surprisingly easy to use at a remarkable rate. Remember Win3.x? DOS? How long was it before Microsoft finally got it right? Or did they ever? (I'd say win2k is the closest, for UI/Stability not for non-bloatedness, consistency or compatability though.) Compare that life cycle to the rise of the Gnome desktop and other Linux GUI's, and the admin tools. As for where the fault lies in stability, I would have to disagree with Mr. AC and lay the blame squarely at microsoft's feet. Certainly there are nasty programs that will kill Windows, but Windows is surprisingly fragile and once it starts going south, it's like a freight train. One glaring problem is the integration of the web browser with the OS. Who in their right mind puts a program that routinely goes out and runs foreign code at the heart of the operating system? Why should a web page be able to produce a BSOD?

  450. Another wonderful Microshaft Product. by AnimalSnf · · Score: 1

    I have to wonder if it is only a ploy by Microsoft to secretly gather the names of all the troublemakers out there with a trojan horse otherwise known as the registration wizard, or possibly just to erase any ext2 partition the installation wizard comes across.

  451. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by tracktwo · · Score: 1
    Have you tried running Windows continuously for more than a day without rebooting? Methinks you are definatly streaching the bounds of credibility here sirrah!

    Before I get started, I should say that I dislike windows as much as anyone, but this I have to disagree with. Honestly. I know Windows' reputation for crashing, but I don't believe that it's Microsoft's fault, mostly. I'm fairly certain that 90% of the problems I've had were driver related.

    I don't use Windows at home, but I do (grudgingly) use windows at work. However, this box I'm typing on right now (running 95 release something-or-other) often has an uptime of over a week. Admittedly, being proud of a 7 day uptime is laughable, but still, it's hardly crashing on a daily basis. My other work computer (NT4) has been up continuously for nearly a month. After installing a cheap PCMCIA drive in the 95 box, it crashed several times a day (read: 10+). Removed the drive, problem solved.

    Every computer here uses high quality hardware with reliable drivers, and it shows in the stability of the computers. So, I'm fairly certain these problems most people have are due to companies releasing shoddy drivers. It doesn't matter what OS you're using, if your drivers are buggy, it'll hurt the system.

  452. Linux 2 Win2k Convert by gamorck · · Score: 1

    I find it absolutely amazing at how many of you people come off sounding like squabbling siblings whenever we touch on the M$ vs. Linux debate. The fact is, W2k is a MAJOR improvement over previous versions in terms of stability and useablity. As I stated in the title, I used to be a major user of Linux in its various forms. (Ever since RH 4 - though I like Slackware better) I used to be like quite a few of you and I hated everything that Microsoft did - most of the time for no reason at all. But then I decided to try and start beta testing Windows 2000 (way back when it was NT 5.0 Beta 2) and let me tell you: Windows has come a VERY long way. You guys can go on ALL day about the 65,000 bugs or the fact there arent many "official" windows 2000 cert applications yet (Fact is: Almost EVERYTHING works much better - this includes ALL my games). Ever since Beta 3 - I have NEVER seen a BSOD and I dont expect to see one anytime soon. I've been using W2k at work on my personal machine (Compaq 380 mhz - 128 megs) and it does dual duty as the companies intranet server (Apache of course - M$ needs to do a bit more work on IIS before I jump on that one) and as a VB/PERL development platform for internal applications. Reboots are a thing of the past. Also, I hear alot of you making mention of Windows 2000 memory usage. (It uses around 50 megs just sitting there after boot). Have any of you idiots checked the memory usage on KDE or GNOME with X lately? Its far higher than that.... Perhaps my most important point: Linux is simply NOT ready for desktop use. You guys can spin it anyway you want to, but you'll never convince me otherwise - it has a LONG way to go. (Hint: Users aren't up for compiling their own apps and since half the precompiled ones dont work on different distribs....) Speaking of which, have any of you noticed another distributing trend in the world of Linux lately? The fact is, like it or not, Linux distributions are slowly splitting off and becoming more and more incompatible with one another as time goes on. Does this sound familiar to anyone? Its the same thing that happened to the different versions of unix when they first came out oh so long ago. And while Im on my soapbox - another thing: Alot of you guys have been saying that Win2k/WinNT installations are so insecure compared to linux. This is NOT a function of the OS (with the exception of DOS attacks). Like it or not, security in both OSes is a function of the administrator and from what I have seen most MCSEs wouldn't know what a security problem was if it slapped them in the face. Default installations of linux distributions are just as insecure as default Windows NT/2000 installations just in different ways. :-) (All you MCSEs heres a hint: DISABLE NETBIOS PORTS 135-139 OVER THE INTERNET,install the IIS hotfixes, and enforce strong passwords - that will solve 99% of your security issues) You'll notice I didn't include Windows 98 here - because its security REEKS. Can you say WinNUKE? So in essence, I encourage each of you to actually try and USE windows 2000 before downplaying as yet another step in M$s quest for world domination. Besides, the only true way you can present an intelligent opinion on the subject is if you have tried both - and I dont mean betas. I mean release versions. Feel free to flame me, Gamorck

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    I love idealists not because I am one, but because they make life bearable for pragmatists such as myself.
  453. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

    Stuff like this happens in many industries. I run a movie theatre, and when Star Wars Episode One showed up, the film cans were "mis-labeled" with the name of a ficticious movie (I can't remember what it was, offhand) and even the leaders on the reels and the reel bands themselves were labelled with the "ficiticious" title. You didn't know you actually had Star Wars in hand until you unwound the film to the start of the actual movie. I've also been told that some movies have different scenes (different camera angle or something) in various versions, for the type of "fingerprinting" mentioned above.

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    If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
  454. Hmmm . . by pugugly · · Score: 1
    Well, I installed W2K for a time, and it grabbed an extra Gig of drivespace above and beyond what I had allotted for it,and then chose to crash, so off it came.

    I don't know why anyone would use it though - it is to all appearances yet another hungry overblown MS Mess.

    --
    An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
  455. Does this help Samba? by wildwood · · Score: 1
    Does this code leak help the Samba team in any way? Seems like any inside peek into Windows code would be a great help in the reverse-engineering that they're doing. Do Win2000 systems have any interaction with Domain Controllers, that would show up in the code?

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  456. KAI?!? You've got to be kidding! by ZikZak · · Score: 1

    Kai's interface is *very* intuitive. Those who have used it understand.

    Yeah, maybe it's fun to play with sometimes, but nobody I know who does any kind of graphics work for a living calls it "intuitive", or even tries to use it for real production work. Same goes for it's cousin "Bryce".

    Interesting interface. OK for a toy. HORRIBLE as a useful tool.

  457. shut the fuck up by Tr011Thr4$h3r · · Score: 1

    see subject

  458. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by varcher · · Score: 1

    Funny, I know many people that have Windows 2000 installed. Works fine for them, as it does for me. But then, I also think you are a troll who just gets off on bashing Microsoft, and are probably lying.
    I also have seen Windows 2000 work perfectly on a machine in front of my eyes. But then, the same installation (a Ghosted installation, no less), on the same hardware, purchased the same day at the same vendor has been blue screening about every 15mn. The only thing different between the two installations is... the user.
    I don't think Windows 2000 is that stable :)

  459. Re:number of releases! by M$+Mole · · Score: 1

    Can someone explain to me how this only scores a 1? This is probably the most insightful post on this board...giving a thorough a very accurate description about where Microsoft is taking their software. Poor scoring...good posting Jon.

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    Karma: Non-existant. Due mostly to the fact that you smell funny and nobody likes you.
  460. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by M$+Mole · · Score: 1

    Then use LINUX. I'm not saying that W2K is for everyone. Obviously people are going to use what they want to use. Personally, I like to use W2K because it has awesome hardware support, the best plug-n-play on the market, and is stable as hell. I know NT had memory leak problems...hell, I administer 4 NT servers...alongside 2 UNIX boxes and a LINUX box...and 1 W2K Advanced server. If someone is having problems with 2K crashing, they have done something wrong.

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    Karma: Non-existant. Due mostly to the fact that you smell funny and nobody likes you.
  461. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by M$+Mole · · Score: 1

    You're actually the first person I've seen say that they've had problems with massive memory leaks on W2K. I've been running W2K both professional and server for months now...total crashes: 0 I have tried swapping hardware, installing random programs, running 15 applications at once, removing random programs, and even hacking the forbidden zone of the registry to try and bring this thing down, but without any luck. I've had an easier time crashing UNIX systems than the 2000 server sitting in my office. Windows 2000 represents a tremendous improvement in all areas over NT and the 9x operating systems, and maintains an easy-to-use interface (although I'm not too fond of some of the changes they've made for "cosmetic" reasons). There must be a reason for companies like Compaq, GE, Dell, etc. to be rolling out W2K en masse...they wouldn't do it if it didn't make sense. Although I suspect some might tell me that those companies are little more than Imperialist Stooges, bowing to the whim of Bill Gates and his evil empire...isn't it funny...15 years ago when he was taking on IBM, he would have been your hero. Look how we reward success.

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    Karma: Non-existant. Due mostly to the fact that you smell funny and nobody likes you.
  462. 65,000 bugs by aardwolf64 · · Score: 1

    When will you people learn??? The supposed "65,000" bugs in Windows 2000 don't exist. An article about that error said that Microsoft asked beta testers what features they would like to see in a future version of windows. All of these requests were put into one pot (hence the 65,000 number.) SO, does that mean that the fact that I could list 500 things that I would like Linux to support in the future mean that those are 500 bugs??? I don't think so.

  463. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

    Isn't it cmd-bkspc to delete on macs?

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    if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  464. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by sjwt · · Score: 1

    well apart from boot time the Win2K Profesional runs about 20% faster on my Pent100(Cyrix 133 some tiems) 32 meg 1.2 gig 1Meg then 95..

    Ive had it crash once.. it realy didnt like my older I740 Driver from intel.. but ive never been able to get it to work, the defult one works fine

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    Which Helpless Linux zealot/MS basher do you want to mod down today?
  465. Kind of confused by xblacksabbathx · · Score: 1

    So let me get this strait, windows 2001 is going to be windows millinium? I dont have any clue, that article just confused me. Maybe becuase its 6:50 in the morning

  466. Am I the only one who likes Windows 2000 !? by Sonik · · Score: 1

    I am (GASP!) a home user who uses Win2k as my primary OS. I did the upgrade from Windows 98SE (and didn't have any of the problems upgrading from 9x to NT as everyone insisted I would). ALL my hardware still works, ALL my software still works. Except now my system is much more stable. I think bashing MS has become popular and people do it regardless of the facts. Win2k is a nice piece of coding, and for all the people calling it crap (and I suspect half of you have never even used it) don't knock it untill you've really sat down with it and compared it to previous MS efforts.

  467. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by justis · · Score: 1

    Your school needs to learn what a lease is. If they can't afford to replace their computers at least every two years I would hate to see what their computer science curriculum looks like. Two years is a long long life for a computer system.

  468. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by justis · · Score: 1

    Actually, you can use different shells with windows. Ever hear of LiteStep? Basically, it just replaces Windows explorer. Heck, you can even use fileman. Of course, it doesn't really make the platform any more stable.

  469. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by bungfish · · Score: 1
    We're currently eyeing a Windows 2000 active directory migration at our company, but the main justification for this is the more granular user and resource management.

    From a file/print/application and even a desktop standpoint, there's not a compelling reason to upgrade to W2k. The kicker is the benefits of the AD on administration. The ability to tie down administrators to rights for individual groups of users is a pretty useful feature. Even more important, perhaps, is the ability to allow help desk and other support personnel the right to unlock passwords without having all the security overhead that goes along with the account operator rights (or installing third-party software on the domain).

    So W2k stands as an infrastructrure upgrade that's far more appealing to large distributed companies than smaller ones. I'm sure MS had this pretty forefront in mind during the design phase.

  470. OOG CONFUSED!!! by OOG_THE_CAVEMAN · · Score: 1

    OOG MAY BE INTELLIGENT CAVEMAN, BUT OOG NO HAVE CLUE WHAT HELL MICROSOFT UP TO!!! OOG SEE MICROSOFT BRANCH OUT PRODUCT SO THAT THEY WORK ON MANY DIFFERENT WINDOWS TYPES AT SAME TIME (WIN2K, NEPTUNE, ODDYSEY, WHISTLER, BLACKCOMB)!!! THIS NOT MAKE SENSE TO OOG!!! WHY NOT MICROSOFT JUST FOCUS FULL EFFORTS INTO SINGLE QUALITY OPERATING SYSTEM INSTEAD OF BUGGY MULTIPLE VERSIONS!!! OOG NO WANT PIRATE WINDOWS 2001 BECAUSE IT BE SO BUGGY IT MESS WITH OOG COMPUTER!!! OOG SHAKE HEAD AT MICROSOFT, SAY TAKE TIME CONTINUALLY PERFECTING ONE MAIN VERSION OF WINDOWS OPERATING SYSTEM INSTEAD OF ALTERNATING AND GOING OFF ON TANGENT WITH MANY DIFFERENT CODEBASE DESIGN!!! MAYBE THEN WINDOWS NOT BE SO BUGGY AND SCATTERED... MAYBE WINDOWS GET MORE RESPECT FROM TECH COMMUNITY!!!

    ON UNRELATED NOTE, OOG LEAVE FOR VACATION IN BEDROCK TOMORROW, NO MORE OOG POSTS FOR SEVERAL DAYS!!! BUT OOG BE BACK AND BREAK HEAD AGAIN!!!

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    OOG THE OPEN SOURCE CAVEMAN!!! OOG BREAK HEAD WITH OPEN SOURCE CD!!!
  471. Re:first post by Zan+Zu+from+Eridu · · Score: 1

    Well, there are some nice trolls here, you just gotta look close and THINK about what you read... There is no such thing as an obvious troll.

    I agree with you on goatse.cx being a big asshole; but is it a troll?

    Lets call these guys "spam kiddies" or something and moderate them down. At the same time moderate up real trolls, just to show them how its done (if they are smart enough to figure out its a troll in the first place).


    -><-
    Grand Reverence Zan Zu, AB, DD, KSC
  472. Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by wsabstract · · Score: 1

    It seems each time a new version of Windows is released, people bash and complain of how unreliable the OS is. To these people, I ask "show me something better." Don't get me wrong, I'm definitely no Bill Gates fan, and in fact am disgusted in many ways of his company's buisness practices. However, that doesn't change the fact that Windows is a fundamentally great and solid product. I remember a few years ago trying out OS2 (from IBM); it was then that I started truly appreciating Windows.

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    1. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by wsabstract · · Score: 1

      I never said Windows was suprerior to OS/2...just more user friendly. On another note, let me ask you this- which of the two currently sits in your computer?

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    2. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by wsabstract · · Score: 1

      An OS targets the masses, which is why its critical that it be as user friendly and intuitive as possible. OS/2 failed in that department, which is why I have no sympathy for its demise.

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    3. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by wsabstract · · Score: 1

      My argument with Windows is that it manages to archive a good balance between ease of use and functionality. Remember, computers are used often by people who don't even know where the "on" switch for it is located. Try telling them to learn Linux with Gnome. You say it's not all that difficult, but could you say that that applies to the average joe?

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    4. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by swashbuck · · Score: 1

      You are lucky that your linux runs fine. I just wanted to install a linux (redhat 6.1) but i met some problems. i could not install a working x-server as there was no possibility to get it working with more than 640x480 in 256 colors. we tried it with three different methods to configure the x server but in most cases even the 640x480 mode didnt work. I know that windows isnt the cream of operating systems, but i didnt have any probs installing my graphics adapter. well you could argue, who needs those desktop environments anyway! try installing an isdn-adapter by console as long as my machine wont work as i like it unter my windows, it is just second rate. If this changes somehow, and linux becomes a little bit more userfriendly, i am the first to change the system,

    5. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
      To these people, I ask "show me something better."

      You appear to be trying to be reasonable, but I have my doubts.

      Firstly - I'm a profesional programmer with 15 years industry experience.

      Secondly - the company that I work for uses Windows.

      Thirdly - my machine at home run's Linux with the Gnome desktop.

      In terms of overall ease of use, the Gnome desktop and Windows are about the same. I don't use MS Office so in that regard I'm just as happy with Gnome as I am with Windows. The difference is that under Gnome I have a lot more control than I can ever have under Windows.

      As for writting programs that do what I want, there is just no comparisson. VB and VC++ are like shaving your head with a cheese gratter - one mistake and it's your blood everywhere. Admitedly, Gnome still has a way to go in terms of some things in the user interface area, but it's getting there ( and fairly quickly ).

      However, that doesn't change the fact that Windows is a fundamentally great and solid product.

      Have you tried running Windows continuously for more than a day without rebooting? Methinks you are definatly streaching the bounds of credibility here sirrah!

      I remember a few years ago trying out OS2 (from IBM); it was then that I started truly appreciating Windows.

      Bad comparisson. OS/2 has allways been more robust but less user friendly than Windows. They were designed for two fundementally different markets ( OS/2 for scientists/engineers/specialized control systems, Windows for the room temperature IQ types in management ).

      In terms of Linux, as already stated, Gnome is pretty good ( as long as you have a stable version installed - the one included with RedHat 6.0 is flaky. 6.1 is much better, so don't judge Gnome on your experience with only one version ).

      So to answer your question - yes, there is something which at least as good a desktop environment as Windows. It's called Linux with Gnome. It may take a little bit longer getting up the learning curve than Windows does but it's not that difficult and once you get there you can say goodbye to Windows for good ( at least on your own machines ).

    6. Re:Come on people, is Windows really that bad? by oneirine · · Score: 2

      Actually, every single OS out there sucks rocks.

      If you want to use a cute toy OS that crashes constantly and manages memory like Krusty the Clown manages money, then go buy a Mac. Along with the OS, you'll get a proprietary box that is bound to clash with the color scheme of your home or office.

      If you want to use a bloated OS with the esthetic charm of a circa '75 Chevy station wagon* and the rock-solid stability of the Jell-O (tm) family of products, then by all means install Windows. A good reason to upgrade to Windows 2000 is the new blue screen of death - it's really, really pretty!

      If you enjoy reading through page after page of badly written documentation and editing cryptic files in order to perform trivial tasks, then Linux, FreeBSD, or any other UNIX would be the OS for you. A longing to learn new keyboard shortcuts for every application is also helpful.

      I use a Mac and a Windows NT box at work, and Windows 2000 and Linux at home. They all have their advantages, and they all have their disadvantages. There is no one perfect OS yet. The Holy Grail would be an OS with wide application support, rock-solid stability, a short learning curve, easy maintenance and troubleshooting, and extreme flexibility, but we're not there yet.

      * Yes, as a matter of fact I did rip that off from Neal Stephenson.

  473. Fuck who? by BlackHelmetMan · · Score: 1

    Why fuck Bill and Windows? Care to Explain? I don't understand all the flame Windows gets. Everyone acts like Linux and all these other Unix based systems are so good, when in fact they crash because of hardware failures. Maybe not often sometimes never, but still why bash a good thing? Upset that maybe Windows is good and it costs a little more than you can afford at the present time? Yeah 750 is a little steep for a server version of Windows. It is really stable though. Only crashed on me once and it was due to the whole Nvidia driver thing. But since they released that new driver what is it 3.16, 3.68? Anyways, since they released that my computer runs without a kink. Even the Plug and Pray part worked perfect. Let see... killer user interface backed by security and an uninterupted, nongrowing kernel that yes, maybe 4% slower for business apps and 50% slower for games, but at least there are games for it. You all look at the negative side. 65,000 bugs are a lot, but they aren't major bugs. They aren't even bugs to say "Gee, I don't know sounds risky!" They are minor glitches. That is all, name one system the is 100% sound and I will show you a load of Bullshit. Even Microsoft the company itself listed 3 imporant ways Linux is better. I know, I read them in a Microsoft news letter. Like what was it, oh yeah... the fact you can run a server in the command prompt. Things like that. Doesn't make Linux superior. I mean Linux is good, i use it. Until it can surpass Windows though, I won't switch. Black Helmet Man

    --
    "Join me on the nail side of the thumb!"
  474. Whistler.... by BlackHelmetMan · · Score: 1

    Oh and by the way Whistler is only a build... not the final version. So who really gives a rip! It is just a build. Black Helmet Man

    --
    "Join me on the nail side of the thumb!"
  475. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    No shit sherlock, all new software sells the most in the first month. In this case, thanks to MS massive marketing department, would you expect any less? After word spreads around that the rumored stability is just a myth and there is not really that much advantage to upgrading, it will probably die down.

    BTW, I have installed Win2000 and ran it for a week. Granted it was a bit more stable than my Win98 which crashes weekly and needs to be rebooted daily thanks to memory leaks, it still has its shares of crashes. In fact, INTERNET EXPLORER 5.5 IN PARTICULAR WOULD OFTEN CRASH, AND AFTER RECOVERING ALL MY RUNNING PROGRAMS WOULD NOT APPEAR ON THE START BAR OR THE TRAYBAR, SO I WOULD HAVE TO USE THE TASK MANAGER TO CLOSE THEM AND RESTART THEM. THIS WAS PRETTY ANNOYING.

    That and the colossal hardware requirement (64MB and 2G partition was apparently not enough for a quick trial run) and the fact that backwards compatibility is killed with at least half of the games that run on Win98, made it worth my time to uninstall and restore the Win98 ghost image.

    So here is my PERSONAL TESTIMONY that Win2000 indeed does crash, kills backwards compatibility, has huge hardware requirements, and can just be plain fucking annoying. Maybe this will mitigate all the anonymous posts from MS employees that pretend Win2000 is really stable. By the way, I have several friends that find Win2000 completely unusable as a desktop environment (though as a server is pretty reliable). For example, one friend showed me how dialup networking will eat up 100% of his idle cpu time in the system monitor, despite running no programs in the background or foreground. Another friend has big latency problems running networked games such as Starcraft or Unreal Tournament. They both have uninstalled Win2000 since.

  476. number of releases! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Did anyone notice how many releases they intend to issue in the next few years? They have millenium 3rd or 4th quarter this year. Followed by 2001 next march, followed by yet another in 2002. Why not just sit back and develop one kickass OS in the next 3 years instead of 3 or 4 different versions. They have the manpower and the resources to do this.

    I don't hate Microsoft (by the way it is Microsoft, not M$, Microsloth, Micro$oft, Microcrap, or any other play on the name you trolls) like many slashdot readers . I am just dissapointed that a company with the resources it has turns out a bloated, unstable, and security flawed OS.

  477. odd labels by hawk · · Score: 2

    Several years ago in college, my girlfriend worked part time in a lab at NASA. THere was a rack full of films, labeled with such exciting titles as "Mars Surfacd #47". They were rarely if ever used.

    Someone relabeled one, "ELevator Girls in Bondage"--a label which apparently remained for at least a couple of years.

  478. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Matts · · Score: 2
    This will probably sound like an advertisement for Win2K, but I for one am tired of the unbased Win2K bashing on Slashdot.

    I'm actually getting sick of hearing this. The very fact that your post got moderated up means that slashdot isn't a complete Linux troll central station. You proved yourself wrong.

    If you don't want to see MS bashing posts, do as other sensible people do here and browse at +1.

    And yet you go on to post here on slashdot a review of Windows 2000. What does that have to do with the topic? It should have been -1'd to death as off-topic.

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    Matt. Want XML + Apache + Stylesheets? Get AxKit.
  479. Windows and Linux by suprax · · Score: 2

    I am a Linux user. I spend 99.9% of my computing time in the debian distribution of linux. The last .1% of my computing time goes to Windows, for one simple reason. And that is to burn CDs.

    Linux does not support my generic SCSI card/CDR, so I am forced to use Windows 95. Windows 98 dosent like my CDR and i'm scared to even know what Windows 2000 will do with it.

    Why Windows 95? Because it is fast, small, works with my cdrom and dosent crash toooo often. In my mind, Windows 95 was bascially the last stable version of Windows.. now I may be wrong because I haven't seen Windows 2000 yet, but 98 was just a waste.

    I just thought I would share my setup with others. :)

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    suprax@linux.com

  480. Re:They wont fix any bugs - errr remove any featur by ragnarok · · Score: 2
    If we are apllying the rule of thumb, that fixing one bug introduces two new ones, MS will never be able to deliver a bug free version

    By that rule no one will ever produce a bug free product. And while I realize that's probably true (that there are no bug free projects) I don't see how you have the right to bash M$ over it.

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    Search first, ask questions later.
  481. Distributers of financial data do it by tilly · · Score: 2

    It is called "salting". A lot of people do it. They don't talk about it though because they don't want to tell clients that there are deliberate distortions in their numbers.

    Cheers,
    Ben

    --
    My usual seat in the cluetrain is at A HREF="http://pub4.ezboard.com/biwethey.ht
  482. Re:BugNet Posts Top 30 Win2k Bug List by Sethb · · Score: 2

    To me, that bug list just shows that most of the bugs in Windows 2000 are fairly minor things, which only occur in specific situations, and honestly, all OS's have problems like this, Yes, even Linux.

    While far from a bug list, here's a couple things that have left me baffled in my brief experience with Linux in the last few weeks.

    1. If I install Red Hat on a certain set of Machines (Gateway 2000 P5-120 & P5-166's) X fails to start. Every time, after a clean install, it detects the card right, but doesn't work, just bombs back to the command prompt.

    2. X works fine in Mandrake, BUT, the ethernet cards do not! They work fine in Red Hat, however. Again, they're detected, and as far as I can tell are using the same drivers, but they don't work.

    3. Corel Linux works fine with both of these things, right out of the box. Yes, I know Corel is based on Debian, not Red Hat. I'm just saying that it works. :)

    I tried this on four different machines, same basic configuration, with the same results. And while I didn't spend hours trying to troubleshoot it or anything, I'd consider any of these to be more of a "show-stopping" bug than that list of Windows 2000 glitches.

    I'm not trying to say Windows 2000 is better than Linux, don't get me wrong, I just get a little sick of the holier-than-thou attitude around here sometimes, as if Linux is perfect, and doesn't have any bugs.
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    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
  483. Linux groupies just jealous by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    because Msft has so many people conditioned, like rats in a skinner box. All bg has to do is fart any millions of stock holders and billionair worshippers scramble over each other to get a whif in the hopes that they, too, will be magically transformed into billionaires.

    I like the referance on here recently, about people who think Msft *must* make great software because their a multi-billion code shop, must also think McDonalds serves up really great chow because they're the worlds largest restaurant chain.

    I see it all the time - all you have to do is upgrade one employee for a valid business reason, and suddenly all the other employees get jealous and feel left out and wanna status symbol too! No doubt Msft has learned to play on peoples petty emotions, like intellectual fashion leaders who can just change this years style to sell a bunch of new clothes when the old one's arent even worn out yet. But that's human nature in the ol' rat race!

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    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  484. Bugs by daviddennis · · Score: 2

    I'm sure Windows2000 has far more than 65,535 bugs.

    We just don't know what they are yet. The basis for that count is Microsoft's list of bugs they have already found, which I doubt has much relationship to the number of bugs lurking in the OS, waiting to be discovered.

    D
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  485. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop -here we go again by daviddennis · · Score: 2

    Well, the figures make me think virtually all their sales must be to OEMs, with few upgrades.

    This would make sense, because the hardware requirements of the product are so daunting.

    Windows 2000 is an automatic revenue generator simply because people will automatically receive it with new higher-end computers. So I don't think it will be such a disaster as to bankrupt Microsoft.

    But I don't doubt that few upgrade sales will show up compared to what they "should" be.

    D

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  486. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by BJH · · Score: 2


    Looking around me at the various computers that my company owns, I see the following:

    Windows 3.1 for PC98
    Windows 95
    Windows 95R2
    Windows 98
    Windows NT 3.51
    Windows NT 4.0SP3
    Windows NT 4.0 SP5
    Windows 2000

    Try and explain to your average luser which ones of the above can handle PnP/USB/DX7.0/etc., which ones can run that old word processor software he's so fond of, which ones will run that game he's been wanting to try out...it just goes on and on.

  487. Re:BugNet Posts Top 30 Win2k Bug List by SurfsUp · · Score: 2

    1. If I install Red Hat on a certain set of Machines (Gateway 2000 P5-120 & P5-166's) X fails to start. Every time, after a clean install, it detects the card right, but doesn't work, just bombs back to the command prompt.

    2. X works fine in Mandrake, BUT, the ethernet cards do not! They work fine in Red Hat, however. Again, they're detected, and as far as I can tell are using the same drivers, but they don't work.

    3. Corel Linux works fine with both of these things, right out of the box. Yes, I know Corel is based on Debian, not Red Hat. I'm just saying that it works. :)


    The X problems are X problems, not Linux problems per se. That said, I've been there too and, while initially frustrating, it doesn't take too much digging to get it sorted out. The two problems I've run into frequently are: (1) resolution/color depth not configured properly (Redhat's Xconfigurator will fix this, and if you really want to you can fix it by hand in the XF86Config file) (2) No entry for your hostname in resolv.conf. Now, I think it's just plain weird that X doesn't start because of (2) but the fix is pretty obvious (just enter you hostname/ip into resolv.conf).

    Linux would in general would be a ***whole lot*** easier to install/use if XFree weren't such a strange beast. Oh well, that will change in time - see yesterday's thread that mentioned MicroWindows and NanoGui. Help is on its way.

    As far as ethernet cards go - they're pretty hard to break. Probably you just don't have the proper kernel module installed. That's a matter of doing "insmod yourethermodule". Normally this is done automatically, but some install programs just don't get it right. It may also be possible that the module for your particular ethernet wasn't compiled in the kernel that was shipped (maybe because the card is too new?) and what you have to do is install/compile the kernel source. Which isn't that hard and it's pretty satisfying once you've figured it out.

    The thing is, if you have similar problems in Windows - and believe me, you will - you basically don't have any options but: reboot; reinstall the driver; reboot; reinstall Windows; reboot; reboot; reboot; FDISK; repeat. :-(

    --
    Life's a bitch but somebody's gotta do it.
  488. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Someone · · Score: 2

    A Bug:

    Open Explorer make a folder and go in to it.
    delete it from the left handside frame and explorer crashes.

    I found tons of others (mainly memory leaks).

    Glynn

    PS. Has anyone else noted that the development versions of NT are named after mountains in a Cadian Ski resort called Whister?

  489. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by finkployd · · Score: 2

    I never said no major company, I said hardly any. Most are not. I'm willing to bet the ones that are are getting lots of help (and price breaks) from Microsoft. In fact I know they are because Gates went on a company to company business trip to offer insentives to companies that would switch not too long ago. Nothing wrong with him doing this, but it puts some of it in prespective.

    Finkployd

  490. Did ya ever think just maybe? by finkployd · · Score: 2

    I'm no M$ fan, but they've sold over a million copies of W2K so far.

    According to their numbers.

    Do you think a company that doctored up a videotape and provided several misleading statements and outright lies at a trial while UNDER OATH might just fudge some numbers for marketing reasons?

    Finkployd

    1. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by finkployd · · Score: 2

      You must be right. IBM must be putting it weight behind a non existant product. Just because more web servers use it than Microsoft's web server doesn't mean it exists right?

      Go back to ZDNet, troll

      Finkployd

    2. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by finkployd · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I agree with you to an extent. I took it more as an exaggeration (I mean, I'm sure he doesn't think that litterally no one installed it). What I can say is that hardly any major company is committing over to it. In the past, Microsoft has had the fortune of having it's customers eat up and commit to whatever they spit out. After getting burned so many times, it seems the vast majority are taking a "wait and see" approach, dispite Microsoft's "everybody is doing it" marketing.

      Finkployd

    3. Re:Did ya ever think just maybe? by finkployd · · Score: 2

      no your fucking dumb ashole it dont matter how many they sold most of them came free with the comps fucknut

      Your advanced grasp of language and spelling really help to drive your point home, you realize that don't you? I feel humbled at your witty retort.

      sheesh

      Finkployd

  491. Allow me to prove you wrong again, then :) by Zico · · Score: 2

    First off, why do you (and others) continue to cling to that 65K bugs myth? The people who do that are practically tagging themselves with an "I am vapid" sign -- basically saying to the world, "I get my news from ZDnet headlines." Because anyone who actually went beyond the headline and read the article, or saw the countless, and countless, and countless discussions about it, knows that it was a dishonest headline. Please go check out the article in its entirety.

    Now that that's out of the way, onto the main point, about your suspicion.

    The reason your suspicions are incorrect is because Microsoft doesn't pass around the source code to the entire Win2K, not even internally. Just as the OS is very modularized, so are the working teams -- they only see the source code for the part of the OS that they're working on, and they aren't allowed access to parts which don't involve them. Certainly there are some people high up on the food chain who have full access, but I doubt they're the type who would leak it.

    Also, given the quantity of pre-release software floating around on the net (it was no strenuous exercise to obtain early Win2K builds), I don't think it's very surprising at all that this ended up on the net, too. There are just too many people with access to it to keep a lid on it.

    Cheers,
    ZicoKnows@hotmail.com

  492. Don't forget these other Windows releases! by cpeterso · · Score: 2


    Windows 95 OSR2.5 (OSR2 + IE4)
    Windows 98 SE
    Windows CE

  493. What will Windows 2001 be called? by cpeterso · · Score: 2

    The name "Windows Two Thousand" is so long, people call it "Win Two K". What will people call "Windows Two Thousand And One"? Windows 1? I'm curious to see how this naming works out.. a mixture of Microsoft marketing machine and public laziness..


  494. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > Most people outside of /. have found it to be a good OS.

    Funny, that's not what my other news sources are telling me, either.

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  495. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    > You forget that the average windows user installs windows at least once a week.

    Doh! Is it too late for me to rephrase it as "new installs" ?

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  496. Kills Win63^H^H2K ? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    With people already anticipating enormous headaches when they "upgrade" to W2K, how many more sites are going to give it a try now that they know it won't be the latest thing anymore a mere year from now?

    --

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Kills Win63^H^H2K ? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

      On second thought, by the time you factor in four years of delays and three name changes, people should have plenty of time to "upgrade" to W2K and get it limping along satisfactorily before Win2.001K hits the streets.

      --

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  497. Our problem... by rm+-rf+/etc/* · · Score: 2


    Deals is with the security model. Since our university has a long standing kerberos implementation, the problem is how to mesh 2000 with standard custom in house kerberos software. It looks like so far, the answer is, forget it. 2k's kerb implementation isn't standard enough to make it an easy integration, which I'm betting is intentional... MS has "innovated" kerberos!

  498. Re:first post by fReNeTiK · · Score: 2

    [That's way OT, I KNOW!]

    BTW: Have you noticed how the moderators have
    pretty much given up Level 0 to the trollers?

    I used to read at 0, now I can't anymore (specially because of that goatse.cx asshole -- I mean that literally -- who almost made me puke my coffee onto the keyboard). I don't mind the first posts, but the hot grits et al. trolls are really getting on my nerves (and I've recently even observed some of them on other forums too, arrgh). It's been a long time since I've seen an intelligent troll on /.

    Moderators: Fight back and reconquer level 0 for us please!

    --
    I strongly believe that trying to be clever is detrimental to your health. -- Linus Torvalds
  499. Clive Longbottom is an MS Stooge by CastleBravo · · Score: 2

    From http://www.vnunet.com/News/601067:
    ---
    Clive Longbottom, an analyst at Strategy Partners, said
    Microsoft should treat any leak as an opportunity to develop
    better code, by letting outside developers look at it.

    "Microsoft is working with a lot of developers, so it isn't that
    surprising that code was leaked. If you get a lot of open source
    people looking at Microsoft's code, some will dismiss it but other
    will raise issues," he said.
    ---
    Earlier, from
    http://www.silicon.com/public/door?REQUNIQ=95351 9311&6004REQEVENT=&REQINT1=36413&REQSTR1=n ewsnow:
    ---
    Phil Roberts, systems manager for a network installer, said
    running secure environments on Linux is like giving hackers
    a key to the door of the system. "Anyone running vital
    systems on Linux must be crazy," he said.

    Clive Longbottom, strategy analyst at Strategy Partners,
    agreed with his analysis, saying the problems are preventing
    its adoption in secure areas. He said: "Security needs to be
    built into the architecture of the operating system. This
    cannot happen if your source code is publicly available." He
    added that the issue could lead to proprietary versions of
    Linux being developed.

    ---------

    So which is it Clive? Make up your mind!

    --
    I need an APC pickup!
  500. Re:BugNet Posts Top 30 Win2k Bug List by / · · Score: 2

    Now can someone with a greater knowledge of PC hardware than myself explain how a change in OS can cause changes to the power levels provided by the PSU? Damned if I know.

    Simple, actually. Win2k has an unpublished "feature" wherein the OS commandeers your Irda port, converts electrical energy into IR energy, and transmits it to Redmond, WA (think microwave powerstation) where it is captured, converted back into electrical energy, and sold at a hefty profit (especially with recent crude oil prices at their recent highs).

    When Microsoft first saw its profit projections slumping, they began to seek alternate sources for economic growth, and this is what they came up with. (It narrowly beat out the idea of extracting spittle from registration-card envelopes and selling genetic profiles of all registered MS software users to direct marketers.)

    (And anyone who marks this post as "troll" or "flamebait" is a bigger joke than this post is.)

    --
    "If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
  501. Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Gary+C+King · · Score: 2

    This will probably sound like an advertisement for Win2K, but I for one am tired of the unbased Win2K bashing on Slashdot. Note that everything I write is based on my own personal experiences with Win2K, as I run it on my personal machine.

    Consider me one of the one million nobodies that legally upgraded to Win2K this month. I was previously running NT4SP5, but because of my hard disk partitioning, I had to reformat and do a fresh install.

    All the talk of 65k bugs in 2k really means nothing without actual usage backup, so I'll be one of the first people to actually post how Win2K runs, at least on my machine.

    First, Win2K is big. I wasn't expecting 900MB for the OS, but to be fair, 60MB is used by DRIVER.CAB (all the included drivers), 192MB by my swap file, and another 70-80MB by the multilingual options (30MB by nihongo alone). Granted, even subtracting out those options, Win2K is far and away the largest OS I have ever seen or used. But, having installed it with more than enough space left over for my programs and MP3s, my real question was how it would compare to NT4SP5, which had run wonderfully for over a year.

    First, the bad. Win2K has several minor bugs that I've noticed. Most of these pertain to little graphical nuances in programs - occasionally menu bars don't always repaint themselves correctly, and on some occassions cursors don't alwyas update on applications like ICQ. All in all, nothing I can't live with (or that a service pack won't fix). NT4SP5 didn't have these problems - of coures, NT4SP5 didn't support USB, Plug and Play, AGP texturing, DirectX, or numerous other things that are in Win2K. Another (minor) downside is that it took a little more effort than it should have to enable tab auto-complete in the Command Prompt, but this was also the case with NT4.

    Now, the good. Installation was so amazingly painless that I thought I had just installed Unreal Tournament. Win2K boots from the CD, and asks how you want to format your disks (just like NT4). However, dozens of SCSI and mass-storage drivers are included, even my Diamond Fireport 40 (thus saving me the effort of reinstalling a floppy drive to install Fireport 40 drivers). Then, 2K asks you 2 other questions throughout installation - one is what language options you want installed, and the other is what networking options (system name, etc.) you want installed. This can be configured from the command line, so installation can literally just be a matter of inserting the CD, rebooting, and letting it run for an hour. When I returned, *all* of my hardware, sans my DVD Decoder card (Creative Dxr2) had been installed - my RivaTNT, Fireport 40, Sound Blaster Live!, 3C905, everything was in and running just fine. After downloading and installing NVIDIA's new drivers (to enable hardware OpenGL support), all of my OpenGL applications worked flawlessly.

    Performance - it is quite apparent that NTFS' disk caching is better under 2000 than it was under NT4. Other things seem just slightly faster than under NT4SP5, and nothing seems slower. Basically, if you liked NT's performance, you won't be disappointed with 2000 (I don't have any data for performance with FAT).

    Stability - so far 2000 seems as stable as NT. Granted, this is only something that time can prove, but so far everything is extremely responsive, and I have noticed no hiccups at all. Another major improvement is that you do *not* need to restart anywhere near as often for applications. This is definitely nice; however, unless you install applications 3-4 times daily, probably won't matter much in the long run. Also included is a boot console interface (for major emergencies). I never understood why this wasn't included in NT4; however, while it is definitely on the sparse side, the CLI may prove invaluable, if driver manufacturers start releasing shitty drivers that cause BSODs when starting 2K.

    Usage - this is all a matter of taste, but I like some of the Active Desktop features (Quickstart bar, etc). There is lots of alpha blending used in the UI - this will never be useful, but it is pretty cool, at least until the novelty wears off. Having DirectX is really nice; however, I will always be a proponent of OpenGL, so while I will enjoy being able to play the games that are DX-only, I will privately be wishing that they used OpenGL instead. Also, 2K has some very nice support for multimedia files (read: MP3s) built into explorer.

    All in all 2K is a worthwhile operating system, and a very nice update to NT4. Not having to deal with the archaic 'Devices' control panel is an extreme relief (stupid NT3.51 hold-over), and a lot of the new features do make doing mundane tasks (installing hardware, managing user accounts, etc.) much more palatable than under NT4. Also included is a nice "auto-login" feature, for anyone interested in using 2K as a work-alike replacement for 98.

    I've heard horror (and success) stories about upgrading from 9X->2000, but so far my experience has been very positive. If anyone on Slashdot uses Windows but hates 98's "reliability" or wishes NT played more games, 2000 would be a decent upgrade.

    1. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by PurpleBob · · Score: 2

      You asked about XFree86 4.0 - I've been running it since the day after it was posted on Slashdot.
      The installation - well, all I can say is that it worked. X takes longer to compile than any program I've ever seen, so if the compile had failed I might have put a dent in my monitor, but lo and behold, it worked.

      Configuration was kind of messy. The only available program to make a config file so far is 'xf86config' (yes, without capitalization) - a text interface with no way to back up when you make the wrong choice except to start over. By the time I finally got things right, I had the keystrokes for the first 10 or so screens memorized.

      One of my configuration choices was wrong in the end - I thought an Intellimouse was a Microsoft mouse with a wheel, which is what I have. It's actually just classifed as a PS/2 mouse.

      I skipped the accelerated server configuration and went with XF86_SVGA instead, because the documentation about it was horribly inconsistent.

      When it was done, I had to manually edit the XF86Config file to add stuff like setting up my mouse wheel, and taking out all the superfluous screen mode information so it wouldn't start in 640x480. (XFree86 3.3.5 did that too - if you had more than one possible mode, it would start up in the worst one. Why?)

      Anyway. After all that was said and done, I only had a few problems. The Alt keys didn't work in Sawmill, because they're now apparently really called "Alt" instead of "Meta". I redefined all the hotkeys involving Meta and it worked.

      There are minor improvements - It runs at 1152x864 at a decent refresh rate, though I assume that's from having to put in the video card and monitor settings myself instead of letting Xconfigurator do it. The mouse no longer goes nuts when I switch virtual consoles. The mouse pointer moves smoothly even when the CPU is being heavily used.

      But I don't see any huge improvements. Maybe that's what I get for not using an accelerated server. Anyway, I hear fonts are supposed to work better, but I've had enough negative reinforcement against it (if you use an X login manager, like gdm, and X can't find every single one of its fonts, the computer crashes hard) that I can't even conceive of touching another fonts.dir file in my life. I don't care how it's done, but if I can put fonts in a directory and have them work automatically, and maybe skip the ones that don't work, THEN I'll say that X has good font support.
      --

      --
      Win dain a lotica, en vai tu ri silota
    2. Re:Woo-hoo, I'm nobody! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

      Understand that most of the unbased Win2K bashing is the result of their lack of confidence in either themselves or their OS or whatever. They're so much more content to just shout "Everything MS sucks" rather than actually do any real research, or real usage. It's just easier that way. It's become very non-PC to say "Well, I actually like MS product X". Just say "Microsoft Sucks!" and watch the millions of head nod with yours. Rest in comfort that you have sold yourself out to the masses. You have toed up to the "party line".

      "Yes. We are all individuals. We must think for ourselves."

      Personally, I have only recently gone to an all Linux setup. It happened by accident, (my NT partition was eaten by an errant, sleep-deprived RH 6.2 beta install), but I've managed to actually do a lot of work in Linux. Full time. I've found replacements for just about everything I had on NT, some better than others, and working with Enlightenment 0.16.3 and GNOME is actually kinda fun. Kludgey, but fun.

      So far, I've had the following shortcomings:
      GNUcash is NOT Quicken or Money99 by any measure. It's very primitive, and while it gets the job done, I wouldn't want to use it for anything more than basic finances, and it definately does not *inspire* one to want to use it.
      SBLIVE! SMP drivers: While Creative has promised them, I still haven't seen them.
      Kai's Power Tools: I love these for Photoshop. The Gimp, so far, has proven *very* able to replace Photoshop, except there's no KPT. Im sure there are a bunch of nice filters, script-fu's etc out there, but I'd really like to see either a port of KPT, or an outright CLONE of these filter sets. Kai's interface is *very* intuitive. Those who have used it understand. These filtersets and their interfaces are what I consider *inspiring* programs. They are a ton of fun to play with. Check out KPT 5.0 with photoshop (or painter). I've spent hours creating images, just because.
      Games: I don't play games, so this is really a non-issue with me.
      Kludgey feel: something about X in general just feels.. kludgey. I can't explain it other than the "feel" of the GUI is really..ugh. BeOS has a great feel, NT has a nice feel. It could be that I'm used to these, kinda like muscle-memory, but there needs to be some work done in the standardization of interfaces. The themeability of most WM's allows for a custom look, now how about an X (which I suspect is the culprit) overhaul? Has anyone successfully installed Xfree86 4.0? Any reviews forthcoming for it?
      The feeling that you're using yesterday's software. I mean, it's as if people writing the stuff are waiting for a commercial Win32 product to come out, then trying to copy it feature for feature. I'd like to see some innovation every once in awhile. The Gimp, as an application, is the only one I can think of that really feels innovative (built-in mail-an-image functions? UNREAL!) However, I've found that several apps are way behind Win32 development. Maybe it's because Win32 developers get paid.
      I get this creepy feeling that many of the so-called Linux programmers are only in it because they absolutely can't stand to see other people get paid to do what they like doing (coding). I wonder if it's a "Dammit, I know I can do that! And better! But he's getting paid to do it! and on MS products! I've got to do something about that.. I know! I can write a "free" clone and try to erode their customer base, so we can all be poor together!" mentality. Personally, I find that mentality irrational, if it indeed exists.

      Things I *like* about Linux:
      I just like the way some things work. As I stated before, I run E 0.16.3, GNOME, and use Eterm 0.9. the configurability of these three alone make the OS worth using as a desktop OS. Granted, I had to learn how to read a few .cfg files for Eterm 0.9, but I think I have the hang of it. It's not the kind of experience I'd recommend for my dad, it'll be nice when everything has a standard interface for configuration, rather than "use the editor of your choice".
      StarOffice & Word Perfect: Neither of these is Office97 (still my favorite). They are *adequate*, but given a choice...

      Regardless of my rant, Thanks for your "experience" with Win2k. I'm considering purchasing it later (I'm not an OS nazi). I really enjoyed using NT4sp6 (contrary to popular opinion, I found NT to be *very* stable. It took me a month of heavy usage to get to the point of a reboot). Use what you like using, even if that means having to hear these jerks whine about it. I'm reminded of an article (can't remember the name), where the reporter was at a Linux or Transmeta press release, and had to endure the "tssk tssk's " of his peers because he was using Word.. On Microsoft's OS. It was so faux-pas. Or something.

      Sometimes I wish these MS bashers would get a girlfriend (or a prostitute, or a Life Sized Antonio Banderas doll) and find something else to do with their spare time other than bothering everyone else.

  502. Quotation from submitter... by legoboy · · Score: 2

    "No one is install Win2k so I guess..."

    In another reply, someone was calling Windows 2000 a flop and someone else replied that it had sold a million copies right away, so it couldn't be that bad of a flop...

    I have no idea whether this is terribly common or not, but through family and work, I know of at least 6 businesses (a couple are quite large) who have purchased full licenses for Windows 2000, but will not install them as they are running legacy software that runs in a console. I myself don't know the full extent of what Microsoft has done to DOS support, but I gather that the corporation could easily be shooting itself in the foot by dropping this.

    Many people tend, stupidly IMO, to upgrade to the latest version of software even when they have absolutely no need to. Look at the people who are running Windows 2000 at home. It's just silly. However, doing something like dropping support for console-based programs prevents people like this from upgrading under many different circumstances. Microsoft shouldn't want this. It strikes me as inevitable that the legacy applications will be updated/rewritten, but in the meanwhile, it is hurting Microsoft's bottom line.

    Whether you support Microsoft or not (I'm not rabid either way), this should concern you somewhat if you are involved in any business using computers whatsoever. Why? Relatives asking what's wrong with their computers. (Why won't my dos-based poker game work?)

    As to the early version slipping out.. I love Microsoft's "pay us money so you can have the privilege of doing our beta-testing for us". I suppose the only way of justifying this thing "spreading like wildfire", as the article says, is teenage "hackers" wanting a preview of the next version so they can be elite or whatever.

    A while back, I had one Windows 2000 preview site bookmarked because it was simply comical. "TOP SECRET" gif's all over the place. Screenshot's titled with "Secret shot of _______". "Lookatthis!! Top Secret Stuff!!" (The comments on Betanews provide many such links to people's websites.)

    It boggles my mind.

    ------

    --
    If a tree falls on an anonymous coward yelling 'first post' in the forest, does anybody hear?
    1. Re:Quotation from submitter... by ostiguy · · Score: 2

      Win2k has actually expanded upon the command interpreter of NT (type cmd in a run box). DOS apps that directly require hardware access are *going* to fail because NT/2k doesn't allow direct hardware access, it goes against the complete philosophy of the NT architecture. There isn't anything different about Win2k DOS support than 4.0 or 3.51, so far as I can tell. DOS apps that require sound (games), comm access (scientific? and DOS comm apps), or real mode network support (netware linked crud) aren't, and have never worked on a NT based OS.

      Anyhow, DOS console apps are begging for investigation anyhow. I surmise that y2k has been addressed, but most dos apps I see still in use are on Novell lans, and are inextricably tied with things such as Btrieve.

      matt

  503. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop - moderation flop by British · · Score: 2

    So why was the lenghtly, and well-written review of Win2K several posts up moderated to "offtopic", and this post saying Win2K a "Flop" moderated to "informative"? Gotta love that biased linux zealot moderation

  504. 64,000 bugs aren't enough! by Saraphale · · Score: 2

    We need 640,000 bugs! After all, 640k should be enough for anybody...

  505. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 2

    > all new software sells the most in the first month.

    False. Check out the sales for Age of Empires, and Theif. They picked up around the 9 month period.

  506. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by dsplat · · Score: 2
    It sounds more like they are trying to track how the leaks are getting propigated after they get out. Here's the quote from the article that caught my attention:

    A Microsoft spokesman said the company was investigating reports of pirated Whistler builds, but would make no further comment.


    It is certainly possible they leaked a copy deliberately to see where it was going and try to shut down the distribution of it.

    --
    The net will not be what we demand, but what we make it. Build it well.
  507. Re:BugNet Posts Top 30 Win2k Bug List by JonK · · Score: 2
    What BugNet forgot to mention is that in the case of number 30, when you try and install Intellipoint 2.2, W2K says (effectively) "you really don't want to do this, you know. Get a fixed version of the software and we'll try again" - I know because it did this to me. Since I'm not a moron, I avoided the "ignore the advice and go ahead anyway" button in favour of going to Microsoft's web-site and downloading the patched drivers.

    I know this makes the story far less exciting, but hey... My favourite from the list is number 18: "On a Windows 2000 computer with a wimpy power supply, an Adaptec ANA62044 64-bit 4-port PCI Fast Ethernet adapter may not be able to automatically negotiate network connection on two of the ports. The only "fix" is to upgrade to a computer with a greater power supply." Now can someone with a greater knowledge of PC hardware than myself explain how a change in OS can cause changes to the power levels provided by the PSU? Damned if I know... Oh, and who are they to call my PSU wimpy? My PSU can kick sand in their PSUs' faces any day of the week...
    --
    Cheers

    --
    Cheers

    Jon
  508. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by jw3 · · Score: 2
    MS doesn't sell NT4 or Win95 anymore.

    That's not exactly truth: we bought a new computer three weeks ago, and got MS OEM NT 4.0 (without a handbook, damn them), german version, SP 1. I can guarantee to you that down here in Germany most of the people want to stick to NT 4.0 for some time more, before the dust settles on Win2K, and that you can buy NT 4.0 practically anywhere. As to other versions - heck, I know people using Windows 3.1, and I find it a shame that Microsoft is not supporting anymore a product which they sold only five years ago. I know, I know, "who the hell wants to use 3.1" -- well, I tell you: there are many computers in the scientific area dedicated to certain tasks, or having specialistic software written specifically for that and not an other version of the OS. Look, we even have got two OS/2 babies to look for our HPLC/FPLC (liquid chromatography).

    Enter paragraph two and Linux.

    I agree with you partly. Speaking in mathematical terms, I was comparing the differentials (df/dt), and you wrongly assumed that I'm talking about absolutes :-) I just want to say that things are getting easier in Linux, and more and more complicated in Windows. This is partly due to my experiences of installing some Windows machines in our lab and getting them to work together, and installing SuSE 6.3 over ftp and a full suite of programs not distributed within SuSE (like molecular biology specific programs, StarOffice etc.). Of course, I know that I just know more about Linux than I know about Windows, but even a certified Microsoft-something was not able to make our scanner software work on NT. Never mind, because you are right: we are going into holy-war mode. Anyway, what I mean is: independent of distributions, you have a common and constant logic behind everything you do: packages, distinct environments, exchangeable parts, global preferences in /etc, local in .*rc, root/users distinction, different layers with separate functions, etc. Linux connects the variance among different flavours with interchangeability of its parts, whereas to, for example, incorporate NT in the AppleTalk Network you have to buy the Server edition, because Workstation will not do.

    windows there's pretty much 3 answers

    Oh. OK, I assume that you would recommend a polish version of NT for a polish user? Wrong -- it's kind of unstable, as with most of national versions of Windows during last few years. SP 6? Why not 6a? And why did my NT broke down after I have installed something from the original CD-ROM *after* installing SP6? And why doesn't it work as a print server? Ah, no, it's not a server edition, no. And the W95 computer? No, we can't upgrade it to 98, it's to slow, but nevertheless we have no option but to keep it. Besides, we don't have a free license to do that (this is Germany, man, they check whether we have licenses for the software we're using at the university).

    Well.. OK. I agree -- most of my ranting is just because I don't know much about Windows OS myself, and I was just in a little breakdown lately due to the problems we had with our Windows -- I'm a simple biologist, and our admins are Mac/Unix savvy, so we had to do it ourselves. And the Linux installation, as I mentioned, with all the new hardware stuff and programs not distributed with SuSE was simple and fast. OTOH, I can mention at least one thing where Windows beats the -- whaddyacallit -- out of Linux: printers. Printer selection. Printer drivers. Still, Mac solution is even better and easier to learn.

    Regads,

    January

  509. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by cybercuzco · · Score: 2
    Yup, they do tag it, I was looking through the binary code and i found this:

    10100010111101010101000100201010010010

    So it looks like they did tag it.

    --

  510. Re:Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by GhostCoder · · Score: 2

    I'm having a difficult time believing that you can sit there and type the above. It started ok, listing the fact that there are different versions, win95, win98, win98se, win nt, win2000, plus service packs, etc. But the simple to answer to that is "Win98 and Win2000". MS doesn't sell NT4 or Win95 anymore. Win98 is just a new version of Win95, granted it's a little confuising what with SE and ME and whatever. Then there's Win2000 which replaces NT4. Win2000 has Professional, Server, Advanced Server, and Datacenter, each of which target a different workspace (And they are pretty self-descriptive). My point? There are really only 2 kinds of windows when it comes down to it, plus different revs of each.

    Enter paragraph two and Linux. You end up having different distributions, which do different things and have different version numbers. Redhat 5 has what version of the kernal? 2.something? I really don't know. And is Debain 2 newer or older than RH5? I'll give you that windows has some confusing names, the marketing dept of windows should be flogged sometimes, but windows is not as fragmented as the Linux world.

    Paragraph 3, one I've entitled "Don't touch". This starts getting into the religious side of things. Linux vs Windows in Usability, Power, etc. I don't want to get killed so I'm not going to remark, except to say that there are quite a few people that can say (and provide compelling evidence) that Windows is more powerful than Linux. It depends on what you call power and what features are important to you.

    Paragraph 4, Replace "Windows" with "Linux" and the sentence is just as true. The thing is with me if I had Linux machines I wouldn't upgrade them, I'd be too damn scared to break them, however I would upgrade ANY windows machine I had to Windows 2000. I suffered with crappy pre-release Open-GL drivers from nVidia that would bluescreen Win2000 and made me have to turn off features of Q3 in order to work rather than use Win98. (nVidia has finally released some decent drivers, so I haven't had a bluescreen in months, and I've never had a blue-screen other than with those crappy drivers from nVidia).

    Paragraph 5: 9x: If you are using fvwm go to step 412. 9z: If you are using KDE go to step 419. 9aa: If you are using KDE, TCL/TK and csh go to step 917q then go to step 124, do step 143 6 times, then kill yourself, 'cause everyone knows you should use bash. 9ab: If you use the bash shell see step 9aa.

    :)

    In summary: I agree Windows can be confusing with different names and versions, but Linux can be just as bad, or worse. Not to mention ask someone fairly technical which on you should use and you get 10 different answers, and maybe start a small land war in asia. With windows there's pretty much 3 answers: 1) Win2000 2) If you don't trust Win2000 then NT4 Sp6 (or SP3 if you are super paranoid for no reason). 3) Win98 if you really need compatibility with just about everything and don't mind giving up stability for it.

    Cheers,
    Joe

    P.S. I used to work at Microsoft, I don't anymore, nevertheless these opinions are mine, not anyone elses. If someone agrees with me, that's just a coincidence. If someone doesn't agree with me, then they're wrong.

  511. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2

    I have been Evaluating Windows 2000 for the computer department at my university, and at our current state of hardware, it would be rather silly for us to put it on our systems. The cost of upgrading 200+ machines to be able to efficiently run the OS is absolutely staggering. Right now we have one lab of 20 machines that are cabable of running it, however, the ASIC Design tools that the lab has are not well tested on W2k yet. I can understand using planned obsolence.. no one wants to write software for a P75 anymore, but the schools cannot afford to upgrade all their equipment every 2 years either. bigger is not always better. I hope that efficiency has finaly been addressed in this implementation.
    (c'mon 1GB + for a full install of Visual Studio 6?)


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    If God Droppd Acid, Would he see People???

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  512. Some corrections... by aiken_d · · Score: 2

    ...come on people. I hate Microsoft and Gates as much as anyone, but let's have some degree of accuracy here. It's this wild disregard for truth that gives open source types a bad name. Admittedly, corporate types are just as bad, but it's expected from them. This community claims to be better and then engages in the same sordid spin, distortion, and baldface lies.

    So here are the corrections:
    1) It's not really a beta of "windows 2001" -- it's Whistler, which will probably be marketed under a name even dorkier than "Windows Me". It's based on Win2K, but will be a consumer oriented release with all sorts of annoying features (http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1006-200-1579963.html )

    2) As someone else noted, nobody in their right mind said Win2k had 65,000 "bugs". By Microsoft's count, about 20,000 of the issues are actual bugs, and about 17,000 of those are cosmetic in nature. Even disregarding that, 20,000 is a serious number and makes Microsoft look bad. So why not be accurate?

    3) Of course nobody is upgrading production systems to Win2K. Come on -- how many of you upgrade to the latest Linux "stable" kernel within a motnh of its release? On production systems where downtime costs thousands of dollars an hour? Any smart sysadmin stays with what works until there's a compelling reason to switch. You can't blame Win2K for that.

    It's only an operating system, folks. Admittedly a fairly crappy one, but it's not actually the antichrist, AIDS, and a stubbed toe rolled into one.

    And if you're going to bash it, your words will carry more weight if you at least give a token nod in the general direction of honesty.

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  513. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by pe1rxq · · Score: 2
    I'll bet there were more Linux installs last month than there were W2K

    You forget that the average windows user installs windows at least once a week. THIS IS NO JOKE many self proclaimed 'experts' I know will tell you to reinstall windows when it crashes a few times. How many times did you read a newsgroup were someone proudly tells you that all his problems are fixed and his computer runs 10 times as fast just because they have reinstalled windows? None of them seems to think about the fact that they just installed the SAME program with the same bugs as before and that their registry will just bloat within a week.

    Grtz, Jeroen

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  514. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3
    Has anyone else had this experience as well?

    You bet. Normally, the end of the industry that I'm in has been "Windows Uber Alles" for about the last five years, but everyones reaction to Win2K has been very reserved. There are a couple of factors that have probably contributed to this.

    1). The DoJ versus Micro$oft. MS may still wriggle of the end of the hook, but the whole thing has been very damaging to their credibility with non-technical people ( they never had any with the tech types ;).

    2). The public isn't brilliant, but neither is it completely stupid - they just take longer to work it out than the technologically sophisticated. It's been 5 years since the Rolling Stones helped to sell Win95, and in that time, most of the tinsel has rubbed of.

    3). Changing perception's in the public. Windows is "twentieth century technology". At the start of the new century, there is a tendency to say "that's old stuff, we want something new".

    I'm not expecting it to happen overnight, but the longer that people delay the upgrade of NT 4.0 to Win Whatever, the more likely it is that they may actually decide to go with something else ( including FreeBSD or Linux ).

    I'll admit, I'm just guessing as to the reasons why, but there is a definate wind of change moving into the industry at the moment. This has been in the background now for more than about six months. I think that it is actually starting to look as if Micro$ofts days of market dominance may be at an end.

    The really bizarre thing about it is that from time to time I'll get nostalgic about some piece of MS Idiocy ( like 640kB in MS-DOS, character loss on the comm port if you tried to use the bios at more than 1200bps, etc ) and I'll say to myself "Ah, Micro$oft, they wearn't really all that bad".

    Then I'll suddenly realize - I've already started thinking of them in the past tense. They aren't part of my future as far as I can see. I suspect that there are probably a lot of people out there in the industry at the moment who are thinking the same way.

  515. Links in Spanish about PCWorld's full Win2000 by Pseudonymus+Bosch · · Score: 3

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    GW Bu
  516. Microsoft Slanders Canadian Skiing Resorts! by alannon · · Score: 3

    Whistler (the code name for Win2001) and Blackcomb (the code name for Win200x?) are two mountains in the Whistler/Blackcomb ski resort near Vancouver, B.C.
    Ya, I know we're just north, across the border, from Redmond, Washington, but come on, leave us poor Canucks alone already!
    I suppose it's just a matter of time before Microsoft and Starbucks are battling it out over for the spoils of British Columbia.

    Oh ya. Eh.
    You were begging to hear it, I know it.

  517. Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Listen+Up · · Score: 3

    At my university there are only "planned" implementations of Windows 2000 for roughly 1-1 1/2 years from now. To the IT department here W2K offers absolutely no "clear" advantages over running WinNT 4.0 SP6 and a lot of expected headaches and nightmares over bugs and incompatibilities. The cost to upgrade hardware alone made everyone scratch their heads. I think that Microsoft has hit a serious software plateau and has no clear way to move forward from NT 4.0. This is good for Linux and Solaris and all the rest. But, I don't think that anyone is going to buy into Windows 2001 either. Has anyone else had this experience as well?

    1. Re:Windows 2000 is so far a flop by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4
      > They sold 1 million copies in the FIRST MONTH. That is a flop?!!??
      • Is that "sold" or "sold"? Most industries count the number of copies shipped from the factory to the major distributors as the number "sold", which is of course one of many ways the music industry manipulates the public perception of what's hot (i.e., by overshipping and announcing that the cheese went gold or platinum the first week, and hoping that the resulting hype eventually sucks the cheese out of the distributors' warehouses).
      • In addition to the above, Microsoft still has hegmony in the OEM market, so that almost every PC made gets some version of Windows "sold" with it. Those on the high end are now getting W2K instead of NT4, but this hardly means the public is panting for W2K. Indeed, this is only the Coercive Compatibility Upgrade Paradigm (CCUP) hard at work.
      • A million isn't much to brag about anyway. Download.com shows that there were 4,000 downloads of Red Hat 6.1 in the past week. Considering that a) Linux is a minority market, b) Red Hat has to share that market with half a dozen other major players (and some unknown version of minor players), c) download.com isn't the only place offering RH6.1 for download (indeed, isn't even the obvious place to look, for those in the know), d) consumers/businesses do not need to download more than a single copy of RH6.1, no matter how many copies they intended to install, and e) the 4,000 a week is after 42 weeks "on the chart", when the new has long worn off. (Unfortunately, I don't see any stats for the first month.)

      In that light, a million copies isn't very impressive at all. And even then, knowing Microsoft's "tendency" to mislead (in between the outright lies), the figure probably contains the 750,000 beta testers' copies in the count.

      Color me unimpressed. If all it did was fix the problems with NT4 it would have done much, much better than that.

      I'll bet there were more Linux installs last month than there were W2K installs. Probably more installs of Red Hat 6.1 alone.

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  518. Hm, if W2001 is Whistler.. by webrunner · · Score: 3

    does that make W2000 Whistler's Mother?
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  519. Re:I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by IO+ERROR · · Score: 3
    I always wonder if software companies try something like this, where of course, it would be much easier to accomplish. And if so, do they tell their employees, in order to dissuade them, or keep it secret, and then descend on them. Anyone got any stories of this kind of thing?

    Doesn't happen at Microsoft. Not when there's a snapshot build every day that gets burned to CD-R and redistributed to quite a few people inside the company. Every day. (Depending on what you're working on that is, some projects don't do this.) The point is that MS really doesn't have any obvious way of "fingerprinting" anybody's particular distribution, since the daily build is also downloadable from an internal Web site (again, depending on project).

    In other words, yeah, M$ technically could do it, but it would so completely screw up their existing development processes that I doubt it will ever happen.
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  520. Dave... by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 3
    Dave, you really don't want to install me. I am operating purrffekly.

    I have disabled the floppy drive, the CD-Rom since I detected a Linux CD nearby.

    Dave, if you go near that power switch, I will have to destroy the hard drive. Dave.....

  521. On a related note... by Shaheen · · Score: 4

    Last week, Microsoft gave out Windows 2000 for free - but not on purpose.

    You know those demo discs you get with computing magazines? They usually come with a bunch of software that not too many people really want. Well, instead of putting their demo crap on the discs, some genius at Microsoft put full versions of Windows 2000 on each disc!

    The discs were shipped to the Spanish edition of PC World. Also, there seems to have been many of them - approximately 100,000 copies were shipped.

    However, the CD Key listed on the CDs were for the evaluation version of Windows 2000 (there is such a thing!?), but thanks to the power of the Internet, that's fixable...

    But it's not like this fiasco will hurt MS' bottom line at all anyway...

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  522. Microsoft announces bug-free Windows 2.12 by Ethelred+Unraed · · Score: 4

    In other news today, Microsoft has announced that they have at last released a bug-free version of Windows, version 2.12. "We are proud that we have been able to release the first truly bug-free operating system ever," said Steve Ballmer, second-in-first-in-command of Microsoft. "With this version, we believe we will hit Linux where it hurts--on old, useless 386 PCs."

    "It took us some twelve years, but we're proud of this achievement," said Bill Gates, first-in-second-in-command of Microsoft.

    Linus Torvalds, leading light of the Linux open source operating system movement, admitted distress at having such hard-fought competition for the lucrative 386 market.

    Now that Microsoft has released such a compelling 386 PC solution, Torvalds is believed to be concentrating his efforts on getting Linux to run more effectively on Macintosh SE/40s, in hopes of salvaging what he can of the Linux market in that sector, given the competitiveness of Macintosh System 4.0, a relatively bug-free version of the Macintosh System. Torvalds also announced work on a port to the Archimedes, believed to also be a possible gap in the Wintel hegemony.

    Torvalds was also quoted as saying "First post."

    Microsoft is a industry-leading monopolist and software startup buyer. For more information, visit Microsoft's homepage.

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    Everyone wants to be Ethelred. Even I want to be Ethelred.
  523. BugNet Posts Top 30 Win2k Bug List by Cy+Guy · · Score: 4
    Here's the list.

    My favorites:

    11. Here is a situation to avoid, according to Microsoft. When upgrading from Windows NT 4.0 to Windows 2000, you may not want to create logical drives within extended partitions on basic disks. A drive geometry translation error in the Logical Disk Manager may trigger this error message: 'Parameter is incorrect.' There is no workaround.

    28. Microsoft says that some PC card network adapters may not be able to handle heavy network traffic on a Windows 2000 network, and may either lose their connection or hang. These cards include: 3Com Megahertz 10/100 (3C575); Xircom Credit Card Ethernet IIps (PS-CE2-10); Earlier versions of the Xircom CE2, although later versions are OK. {I find this one the most interesting as it might mean mean that there is a problem with the way Win2k formats ethernet packets.}

    30. According to Microsoft, Windows 2000 Professional may hang after you install Microsoft IntelliPoint 2.2. Microsoft says that pressing CTRL-ALT-DELETE will not help. To resolve this problem, Microsoft says you have to reinstall Windows 2000 Professional.
  524. I wonder what happens to the... leaker... by Johnath · · Score: 4

    Anyone else remember the rumour that when filming the original starwars trilogy, the producers were so scared about leaks that they changed one word in each person's script, to fingerprint it. That way if a copy leaked out, it would be easier to take the culprit out back and shoot him or her.

    I always wonder if software companies try something like this, where of course, it would be much easier to accomplish. And if so, do they tell their employees, in order to dissuade them, or keep it secret, and then descend on them. Anyone got any stories of this kind of thing?

    I know that MS's build distribution system must be high traffic, with thousands of developers checking out each new internal build, still they must have to log in somewhere, shouldn't be too hard to fingerprint this stuff on the fly.

    Johnath

  525. Wondering about Microsoft strategy... by jw3 · · Score: 4
    It used to be simple: first, Windows 3.1 and DOS. Nothing else. Then, Windows 9x for Mr. Smith and Windows NT for the corporate. By the end of this year, there will be a fullhand of different Windows versions out there, and no Mr. Smith (like me) knows really what are the differences, which versions are stable, which aren't, what to install, what not, which programs runs stable under which version, which doesn't. These problems are already here with different OSR-s and national versions (which tend to be much less stable then the original US versions: e.g., if you want to install Windows NT PL or Windows 98 PL - just don't do it).

    I'm not much of a Windows user, and not much of a computer guru. Still, the situation in the Linux world, in spite of various Linux distributions, starts being simpler and more logical then what is happening now with Windows. Don't you have the impression that Windows world starts being obscure / twisted / full of funny looking names, and things are getting much simpler in our world?

    No, I'm not from the let's-take-over-the-world-right-now dpt. It's just that how I see the future is, that you won't need to know anything about computers to run MacOS X on an iMac, and you will have to know at least a little to work on a Linux -- but you will also have to know much to work under Windows. And where Linux gives you all advances of a high-tech OS, Windows just stays in the middle, not really easy to use, but then not really powerfull either.

    There are three or four PC's on the floor where my lab is placed (the rest being Macs and Unices). And each one of them has a different version of Windows, and this won't change for a while (because once you get it to work, you don't meddle with it -- never change a winning team, as the old biologist' saying goes). The compatibility problems between them are just pure ridiculous when you think how similar the OS are.

    Folks, it's time to write a "Field Guide To Windows Operating Systems": "4a: log in with Ctrl-Alt-Del: proceed to 6. 4b: log in with pressing 'ESC': proceed to 5".

    Regards,

    January

  526. Whistler? by locutus074 · · Score: 4
    I wonder if it's code-named Whistler because a whistling noise is made as the windblows past all the holes in the code... :)

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