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Bill Gates On Linux

King-of-darkness writes "USA Today had an interview with Bill Gates on june the 30th. Gates seems to be considering Linux as a passing thru competition just like OS/2., and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies."

1,194 comments

  1. Typical by cageyjames · · Score: 5, Funny

    (-1) for Bill Gates for being a Troll

    1. Re:Typical by Uatu · · Score: 5, Funny

      (-1) for Bill Gates for being a Troll

      Does this means I can actually ignore the article and not feel guilty when I post about it ?

      Great! That's a first...

    2. Re:Typical by krisp · · Score: 2, Funny

      "No computer will ever need more then 640kb of system memory" -- Bill Gates.

      Yah, and Linux isn't competition either.

    3. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 0, Insightful

      "No computer will ever need more then 640kb of system memory" -- Bill Gates.

      "Yah, and Linux isn't competition either."

      Yeah and Bill definitely said that.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    4. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Well those are our current competitors"
      - Bill Gates, about Linux, right in the fucking article.

    5. Re:Typical by ThrasherTT · · Score: 4, Funny

      (-1) for Bill Gates for being a Troll

      A troll. Literally. See page 120 in the 3E Monster Manual.

      --

      All Your Memory Are Belong To Java
    6. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      As much as losers like you like to make fun of Bill Gates, he never said that.

      http://www.usnews.com/usnews/biztech/gatesivu.htm

    7. Re:Typical by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and if you look at the pic, he's chunked up quite a bit, hasn't he?

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    8. Re:Typical by geekee · · Score: 4, Funny

      Isn't posting about the article responding to a troll? Shame on all of you. :-)

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    9. Re:Typical by terkozer · · Score: 5, Informative

      As great of a quote as this is to bash on Bill.. it is simply not true, but is in fact an urban legend of sorts that has been widely circulated on the internet.

      Here is an interview with him clarifying the fact.

      There is also a good interview in the New York Review of Books that also attempts to shed a better light on the matter.

    10. Re:Typical by macdaddy357 · · Score: 1

      Did anyone notice Bill Gats' "hair" in the picture with that article? Who does he think he's fooling with that ridiculous rug?

      --
      How ya like dat?
    11. Re:Typical by OS24Ever · · Score: 1
      "No computer will ever need more then 640kb of system memory" -- Bill Gates.


      Bill never said that, or so he claims.
      --

      As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

    12. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Clinton said he didn't have sex with that woman, either.

      I'm not saying that Bill did say that; thing is, *him denying* that he said it doesn't make that fact, either.

      I wonder if the real truth will ever come out. When I went to college in the mid80s I remember hearing that 640k joke quite often; and this was before the real media hype surrounding Gates and MS started. So...I wonder.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    13. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 0

      "As great of a quote as this is to bash on Bill.. it is simply not true,"

      Tell the guy above me. He's the one that said it. I know all about this myth. I was trying to jolt him into realizing that quote was wrong. I don't think I did a very good job of it, though. ;)

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    14. Re:Typical by qta · · Score: 1

      That was why he was "visonary"

    15. Re:Typical by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 1

      "No computer will ever need more then 640kb of system memory" -- Bill Gates.

      Bill Gates never said that. If he did, though, there'd be some truth to it. (Note: I said SOME.)

      There's a lot you can do with 640K and text mode. If one were inclined, they could probably handle quite a few of today's regular tasks with a 640k machine running a few measly megahertz. Computers aren't exactly being programmed with peak efficiency in mind. (That's not a bad thing)

      That whole world would fall flat, though, if you brought graphic stuff into the mix. Anybody who ever said "A gig is overkill" never used Photoshop or After Effects.

    16. Re:Typical by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      You quoted this 640K thing twice today. Can you please provide a reference? Did he say that at a conference? Over lunch? In an article? In a book? Or is it just BS someone made up?

    17. Re:Typical by Patik · · Score: 0

      He's also earned billions of dollars and leads the most dominant software company in the world.

    18. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "You quoted this 640K thing twice today. Can you please provide a reference? "

      No I didn't. The guy ABOVE me said it. Look here: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=69527&cid=6340 059

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    19. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 0, Informative

      Tell this guy. I was replying to him sarcastically.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    20. Re:Typical by mbourgon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, hunt around - I've seen the video. It was Bill at an Apple II conference, 80 or 81. Didn't one of the old Apple CDs have the video?

      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    21. Re:Typical by sporktoast · · Score: 1


      Hey Bill, nice comb-over.

      --
      In a related story, the IRS has recently ruled that the cost of Windows upgrades can NOT be deducted as a gambling loss.
    22. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      If you find it, I'd love to see it! :-)

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    23. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are 45 years old and you have nothing better to do than post on slashdot? How sad...

    24. Re:Typical by El · · Score: 2, Funny

      ``The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers.''
      -Bill Gates, The Road Ahead, pg. 265

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    25. Re:Typical by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 1

      hell, look at the 1st macintosh, that thing only had 128KiB of RAM, and it ran well for it's time! (i haven't seen a mac that boot faster)

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    26. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      "You are 45 years old"

      Mr. AC: You obviously did not pass elementary math :-)

      College:1985, 18 years old. Now subtract .....

      Idiot.

      FYI, I'm on vacation....and it's too damned hot to be outside, or I'd be out hiking and away from this infernal computer

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    27. Re:Typical by heliocentric · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dear SB, how do you type with boxing gloves on?

      sorry, I just saw your signature of "SB" and I had to say something, my appologies if you don't understand what I'm posting about.

      --
      Wheeeee
    28. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wuh? If you are 18 years old and have nothing better to do than post on slashdot, *then* you have a problem. You should be out shagging and drinking.

      A 45 yo slashdot reader at least has old age as an excuse.

    29. Re:Typical by Krojack · · Score: 1

      Is what he said is 640K ought to be enough for anybody.

      Quote Here

      --
      If Microsoft built cars, the Linux community would make a car that was powered
      by the sun, was reliable, five times as fast, twice as easy to drive, and
      available freely - but only 5 percent of the people would use it.
      - Fortune

    30. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      I'll admit cluelessness on that joke :-(

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    31. Re:Typical by andreMA · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Saddam Hussein "earned" billions of dollars and not long ago commanded the 4th largest military in the world.

      This is as meaningless and irrelevant as the analogus statements made about Gates. "Earning money" is not a character reference unless the money was earned honorably. Where Gates falls on that scale is a subject for debate, but citing his wealth out of that context is meaningless as far as I'm concerned.

    32. Re:Typical by heliocentric · · Score: 1

      Go here for the first SB question and feel free to continue reading more. I highly recomend the CGNU one for good humor for nubes.

      --
      Wheeeee
    33. Re:Typical by smallpaul · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Sorry dude. Slashdot's UI sucks.

    34. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you not find a big enough Linux ad?

    35. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      Hey. Thanks. I've seen references to the Strong Bad stuff on /. but didn't really know what it was all about (maybe a new deodorant? :-)

      I didn't get any sound in the CGNU one tho - is there supposed to be sound? Looked like it - damned flashplayer for linux; works fine on some flash and not on others. I really wish macromedia would fix this thing.

      I *always* have my boxing gloves on :-)) Best defense against a troll, you know. (blunt weapons over edged weapons)

      SB
      ( gotta admit tho, on the Gentoo install I just built the flashplayer emerged nicely, didn't even have to restart mozilla and it just....worked. Heh. Mostly. )

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    36. Re:Typical by heliocentric · · Score: 1

      Yes, the CGNU is supposed to have sound and the sound is what really makes for the most humor.

      Ok, so it emerged and worked and all, but how long did that process take? Emerging for me has been slow.

      --
      Wheeeee
    37. Re:Typical by BeerCat · · Score: 1

      er.. factors of an exceedingly large prime number: 1 the number itself Gee, I wish I was as smart as Bill.

      --
      "She's furniture with a pulse"
    38. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      If you're talking about the flash part, it was, oh, 8-10 minutes (wasn't really paying attention, did emerge netscape-flash and went back to reading /. :-). If you're talking Gentoo, it was a few days worth of work to get where I am now (emerging KDE took about 14 hours). It really depends on the system and how much you're using it in the meantime. I have a 1200 mhz Duron with 512m ram, so this system is pretty quick.

      Figured there was sound. Fix this thing, Macromedia! Flash works on, oh, probably 80% of the files I've played on here. The missing sound is pretty symptomatic. Damned if I'll file *another* bug report. Not like they ever answer anyway...

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    39. Re:Typical by operagost · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Actually, the USA Today interviewer was trolling too:
      Bill Gates: Well those are our current competitors. I mean, it's no different than in the past people used [IBM's operating system] OS/2. USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2. BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious. That was IBM, a company 15 times our size. Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. OS/2 was IBM's product, and the IBM army marched behind that product.
      LOL! Who are they hiring for technical journalists, 19 year old X-Box fanboys? I'm surprised they didn't ask what OS/2 WAS.
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    40. Re:Typical by operagost · · Score: 1

      That would go well with the Comdex one where he says "OS/2 is the platform for the 90's".

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    41. Re:Typical by James+Littiebrant · · Score: 2, Informative

      Bill Gates never said that! It was the CEO of IBM who said that quote!

    42. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      Sure would.

      Just incidentally, I spend a half hour or so doing some searches, and couldn't find anything. Lots to search thru tho.
      Interesting thing I did find is that the first incidence of that phrase occurs on Usenet (google archive) back in '92. Hmm.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    43. Re:Typical by slagdogg · · Score: 1

      I'm sure he meant that the breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor primes from the product of two large prime numbers, it's a fairly easy mistake to make. Let's all be nice to ol' Bill, eh?

      --
      (Score:-1, Wrong)
    44. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If Microsoft built cars, the Linux community would make a car that was powered
      by the sun, was reliable, five times as fast, twice as easy to drive, and
      available freely - but only 5 percent of the people would use it."


      The car would have to be assembled at the home. There would be a steering wheel which is only used to navigate the car some of the time. There would be 47 pedals that each respond to varying levels of pressure. The manual would contain no illustrations and only cover half the functionality. A passenger seat is available to add to the Linux car, but the installation procedure requires new tools that you'll have to research how to use. The headlights and blinkers work, but the windshield wipers are still in development. (Nobody thought to copy that functionality until MS did it 4 years ago.) The Linux Community would bash MS for their wiper addition, claiming that one of their modes work only intermittently. However they'll cheer on the Linux team when they finally figure out how to copy that function they thought was useless and would make the users stupider. You'll be able to get a moon roof for free, but once you install it you'll find that you have to replace a component in the engine because suddenly the tires won't turn anymore. There's no automatic transmission, only manual, and it's got 19 gears plus 3 seperate modes.

      Despite the well known fact that consumers want easy to use products that do what they need them to without much fuss, the Linux Community will act stunned and surprised at every turn that only the few people with the interest and the time will want anything to do with this car. Meanwhile, the Microsoft car still sells quite well and people drive quite happily with it. They've even got a large selection of games to play.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    45. Re:Typical by jez9999 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      You'll be able to get a moon roof for free

      MOON roof? WTF is that? Over where we live we call it a sunroof. Do you live in Antarctica?

    46. Re:Typical by jnana · · Score: 5, Funny
      Yeah, I believe Bill Gates when he says 'trust me, i never said it.' I mean, he is an honest non-megalomaniacal guy who's not given to distorting reality in whatever way is convenient at the moment.

      Back to surfing the web with WinME, "the greatest user os ever built".

    47. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent up.
      Don't get me wrong. Microsoft's OS sucks. It sucks alot, in many ways. But in the single way that matters most to me: convenience of use; it sucks less than linux. What is wrong with the linux developers anyway? Are they so geeked out and out of touch with non-geek humanity that they're utterly incapable of making ez ui?

    48. Re:Typical by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

      The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers

      If the number is large how do you know it is prime?

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    49. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "MOON roof? WTF is that? Over where we live we call it a sunroof. Do you live in Antarctica? "

      Is Google too hard to use?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    50. Re:Typical by Johnny+O · · Score: 2, Informative

      Why do ppl keep saying he didnt say that.

      He is quoted in the Peter Norton book: Inside the IBM PC

      We are talkin 1981 and the 8088 days....

      I still have that damn book ;-)

    51. Re:Typical by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Well actually, yeah it is. All I see in Google is a load of cars WITH moonroofs.... I honestly have never heard of one, nor can I see what the hell it is in the pictures of those cars, not can I see any moon roof definitions. So what is it??

    52. Re:Typical by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I can't find it either. The earliest I found definate refference to it was in 1986.

    53. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      Once upon a time, I had a pile of Apple CDs from the "early" days (heh)

      Wish I still had them.

      Nice search, lots more detailed then mine. Ye gods, what have I started? :-)

      Then again, if anyone could find the truth in this, it'd be slashdotters :-)

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    54. Re:Typical by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      A moon roof is essentially the same thing as a sun roof. The difference is that one lets light in, the other doesn't. If my memory is correct, a moon roof is clear glass and a sun roof is tinted or opaque. Or something like that.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    55. Re:Typical by FransUNC · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If the linux community used half the time it spent slamming and trying to discredit Bill Gates and Microsoft in general towards improving linux, MS would probably not be able to compete and be out of business by now.

    56. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, you're right. I was just making the point that I trust Bill Gates less than I trust a used car salesman, and a lot of other people (oss-inclined or not) feel the same way, so the fact that he is on record as denying it several times means _absolutely nothing_. I think it is kind of silly to point to his disavowal as if that means anything at all. If he were a trustworthy person, it would mean something, but I don't think anybody has ever accused Bill Gates of being honest or trustworthy -- save perhaps his mom.

    57. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying that hair style is a comb-over, could lead one to believe that it is real hair... which it clearly is not.

      Maybe he thought that we'd think it wasn't a toupe, if it looked like a bad comb-over to throw us off?

    58. Re:Typical by badasscat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, I can't find it either. The earliest I found definate refference to it was in 1986.

      Note what the quote you're reading in 1986 actually says, though... "Bill Gates couldn't imagine why anyone would need more than 640k with MS-Dos", which is pretty much true. I doubt he even said that, but if he did, it wasn't such a dumb thing to say - and may have even been said in the context of promoting a next-generation graphical interface that would require more memory.

      On the other hand, all this does is illustrate that you can't prove a negative. Lots of people around here saying things like "he can claim he didn't say it, doesn't mean it's true!" Well, I can say your claim to have not killed JFK isn't true either, but I would probably look pretty ridiculous doing it. Of course, you probably couldn't prove you didn't kill JFK, but that doesn't give me the right to say you did.

      Statements like the one you found in 1986 are how rumors get started, and rumors turn to urban legends simply based on the fact that it's often impossible to prove a negative, to prove something didn't happen. If nobody here can provide proof (and not the "I heard it was on some Apple CD in 1981" nonsense), then it fits the definition of folklore.

    59. Re:Typical by Read+Icculus · · Score: 1
      Is Google too hard to use?
      Now you're getting into the spirit!
      google "FUD"
      --
      Anti-social? My code is just platform-specific.
    60. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 'large prime number' is a prime because it's called a prime number...

    61. Re:Typical by Durandal64 · · Score: 1

      Hm, way back in the day, that quote used "Apple" in the place of "Linux community." But in this new version, the doors would simply refuse to open because of a missing dependency in libdooropen.h.

    62. Re:Typical by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      Hey, I'm certainly not saying it's a real quote. I just cited that as the earliest reference to the supposed quote.

      I agree. I'd love to know when he said that. I'm a fan of quotes and I'm disturbed by the number of quotes that I can't find sources for. I know when and where JFK made his send a man to the moon speach. But I can't find any citation to when Stalin made his famous supposed quote on deaths, tragedy, and statistics. Was it in a speach? Probably not. Was it in a book? Was it in a letter he wrote, or something he said to an aid? I can't find a reliable source to when or where he said it. Yet everyone cites this quote to Stalin.

      You are correct though. You can not (usually) prove a negative.

    63. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Bill never said that, or so he claims.


      This statement is true. The previous statement is false.

    64. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was the CEO of IBM who said that quote!

      Lots of people have said that quote. They're quoting Bill Gates when they say it.

    65. Re:Typical by gostats · · Score: 1

      No not a troll a hobbit! Just check out his house!

      Much of the house is built underground into the hill.

    66. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, that's a comb over? Fuck man, you haven't see many comb-overs in your short life, have you? That's just a shitty haircut, shittier than Bill's usual shitty ones.

    67. Re:Typical by pod · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      What is commonly called a 'sun roof' is actually a 'moon roof'. Sun roof blocks the sun (it's the solid/metal sun roof). Moon roof is the see-through type roof.

      So, in fact, over where you live (I assume sunny, as opposed to Antarctica) they should call it a moon roof, because that's what it is.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    68. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it's not, it would be a huge stretch to say that. When you 'factor 10', you calculate the factors of the number 10. When you 'factor large prime numbers', you calculate the primes of those numbers. Which si hardly a breakthrough.

    69. Re:Typical by cerberusss · · Score: 1
      ...the Linux Community will act stunned and surprised at every turn...
      There's an awful lot of generalisation going on here. How can someone reply to this in a useful way?
      --
      8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    70. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, we should all believe Bill when he says (in PolitiSpeak) that he didn't say that.

      I happen to know someone who was at the trade show where he said that.

      So Nyer.

    71. Re:Typical by konmem · · Score: 1

      It could just be my copy, but the troll appears on page 180 ...Score: -1 Troll

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    72. Re:Typical by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      I always thought it was called a sun roof because it let you see the sun / let the sunlight into the car more. It doesn't seem to be incorrectly named at all. Moonroof would imply that it lets you see the moon, which it rarely does whilst driving, and it only as valid as sunroof.

    73. Re:Typical by Cramit · · Score: 1

      I can easily prove I did not kill JFK; he was shot Nov 22, 1963; 19 years before I was born, and i have a Birth Certificate to prove it

    74. Re:Typical by chef_raekwon · · Score: 1

      , the Microsoft car still sells quite well

      problem with it though, is that the hood is welded shut.

      --
      We're like rats, in some experiment! -- George Costanza
    75. Re:Typical by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      Please supply proove that you do not, have not and never will own or use a time machine...

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    76. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please supply "proove" that you are not a virigin.

    77. Re:Typical by j-pimp · · Score: 1

      At this point we need better marketing. We have a user interface. We have office productivity. We have better development tools than any deity worshipped by members of the slashdot community. We could use some better printer support. We are holding out well on the CRM front. What we really need is to win the hearts and minds of a few marketdriods.

      --
      --- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
    78. Re:Typical by 72beetle · · Score: 1

      If nobody here can provide proof (and not the "I heard it was on some Apple CD in 1981" nonsense), then it fits the definition of folklore.

      Wait a minute. I was computing in 1981 (although in those days, I was all about TRS-80's), and I don't recall CD being a storage option back then, for Apple or anyone else. Matter of fact, Sony didn't introduce the CD until 1982, so I'd say the 'Apple CD' theory is as full of shit as Bill is.

      -72

      --
      -Those who dance are considered insane by those who can't hear the music.
    79. Re:Typical by vmfedor · · Score: 1
      --

      I like my women how I like my sugar.. granulated.

    80. Re:Typical by canadiangoose · · Score: 1

      I am probably totally wrong, but wasn't the 640k barrier a software limitation, not hardware? I know that the original 8086 could only access 1 megabyte of memory, 640k RAM and 384k hardware I/O, but wasn't the real problem caused by the way DOS addresses the memory? I have heard that it addressed RAM from the higher addresses down, so that easy expansion beyond 640k would require addressing memory below address zero. If this is true, they it doesn't really matter whether Gates actually said 640k would be enough or not. He designed (or aquired) an OS with serious expandability problems, so he obviously held the opinion that expansion beyond 640k was unneeded.

      --
      Never eat more than you can lift -- Miss Piggy
    81. Re:Typical by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 1

      "There's an awful lot of generalisation going on here. How can someone reply to this in a useful way?"

      His generalization was a rebuttal. I don't think he intended for anybody but the original poster to reply.

      Gotta say his point is pretty good, though. Linux technical superiority goes only so far.

    82. Re:Typical by dazhdot · · Score: 1

      I call it head burner, stop discussing now.

    83. Re:Typical by rifter · · Score: 1

      Others have linked to strongbad, none linked to the email mentioned, which is this one. There is more in this one on the subject. And this one. Ok, so there are a lot of them...

    84. Re:Typical by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      No, there wasn't. But Apple could have (note the *could have*) recorded it on standard videotape and put it on CD later. It's something I would've done *grin*

      Too bad there's no real evidence of it. I'd PAY MONEY to see a video like that....

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    85. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As non-intuitive as it seems, that's how things are, and, damnit, it cost me a karma point, so I know I'm right.

    86. Re:Typical by jo42 · · Score: 1

      (+5) as Bill Gates further inserts head up ass...

    87. Re:Typical by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 1

      Ahh- Now if I knew an easy way to figure that out(or more to the point a quick way), I could be a god in cryptography.

      --
      OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
    88. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Call me crazy, but I've heard bill gates talk many times, and the bill gates they interviewed in the linked usnews story doesn't sound like the one i know at all.
      Did you hear him talking smack to shaq at the x-box live demo? He's the most ackward, reserved guy ever, not the type to start an interview with "No! That makes me so mad I can't believe it!"

      i must be paranoid or something.

    89. Re:Typical by Darioush · · Score: 1

      It is rather funny that he is not concered of win.... been 'pushed out'... Oh, i think it is because his brain has some invalid pointers..... (maybe he has mis-matched linux/win.... ??)

    90. Re:Typical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How can someone reply to this in a useful way?
      I don't know. You sure haven't been able to do it.
  2. But... by 2names · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "passing through" technologies don't last as long as Linux has already.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    1. Re:But... by Roto-Rooter+Man · · Score: 4, Interesting

      OS/2... 1988-2002. This is shorter than Linux how?

      --

      The goatse guy for president. Win one for the gaper!
    2. Re:But... by aallan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      OS/2... 1988-2002. This is shorter than Linux how?

      Oh come on! OS/2 was dead in not long after Warp got released, which was what, '95 or '96? The banks still used it, but nobody else did, everybody knew it was on the way out.

      Al.
      --
      The Daily ACK - Eclectic posts by yet another hacker
    3. Re:But... by Acts+of+Attrition · · Score: 1

      Let him call it a "passing through" technology all he wants. The worse he talks about Linux, the sweeter it will be for all of us when it bites him in the ass.
      To him Linux is just "passing through" to us it's "Pass it along"

    4. Re:But... by bladernr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That depends on what you call a "passing thru" technology.

      CORBA has been around since at least 1991 (longer, I think), and most agree that it beat Microsoft in the DCOM-CORBA "Object Wars" (as evidenced by Microsoft moving on to Web Services). Although CORBA now provides the underlying technology for things such as J2EE, it is largely gone as far as a standalone technology. Was CORBA "passing thru" or was/is it a real technology?

      OS/2 was also around for quite a number of years, and was until very recently an actual product. Great OS, IMHO. If we want to define Linux as being around long enough to not be "passing thru", then that applies to OS/2 as well.

      DR-DOS? PC-DOS? Microsoft outlived them both. Or, to be fair, Microsoft did what it does best, redefined the game.

      Mac OS? Doesn't get me started (although I like to think its making a comeback with OS X... made me a convert... UNIX OS with great apps and interface)

      Now, I'm no defender of Microsoft, but I think what Bill Gates was probably saying was "Hey, we've faced down stiff competition before, and won. How is this different?" On that point, I have to agree. Maybe they will lose this time, but they have definatly been down this road before and know a little something about smashing threats.

      (no, this is not a troll. My favorite OS'es are Linux and Mac OS. Just trying to credit where its due)

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    5. Re:But... by laserjet · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I wouldn't say OS/2 lived to 2002... it certainly was not completely dead, but it was nearly non-existenet in the early to mid nineties except in specialized markets like bank computer.

      linux had had about the same lifespan (1988-1994 = 6 years), but is still strongly growing and showing some ballz, and the community is much bigger than the OS/2 community was, at least online (a rought comparison, as OS/2 was largely before the internet wave).

      not to mention that MS basically partered with IBM on OS/2, then back-stabbed them while secretly working on a competeting OS (windows).

      Those who don't learn history (or choose to ignore it) are bound to repeat it, Bill.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    6. Re:But... by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 5, Informative

      Let me assure you, lots of banks STILL use OS/2 and they will do so for the foreseable future. The fact that you don't use os/2 does not mean it is dead. It is as dead as Fortran and Cobol.

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    7. Re:But... by Azghoul · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I gotta assume someone else has already brought this up, but come on! What else is the head of a major public corporation supposed to say?

      "Yes, we think Linux is a serious threat to our core business". POW, stock prices get hammered, they get sued.

      The guy has to be the leader of the company, he's not there to look objectively at anything!

    8. Re:But... by swordboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "passing through" technologies don't last as long as Linux has already.

      He means on the desktop. Obviously, even Bill knows that Linux kick MS ass on the server side. But until Linus starts bringing the GUI into the tree, then I would tend to agree that Linux will never make significant inroads to Windows.

      Heck - Linux doesn't even have a desktop. X/KDE/Gnome/etc are responsible for that. And those run on other unices, too. I'm not sure why Linux = Windows competitor to most. It has nothing to do with a desktop OS.

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
    9. Re:But... by pytheron · · Score: 2, Informative
      Working in an investment bank recently, in their production server floor, what did I find, but a small OS/2 box stashed away in some corner, with a notice popped up on the screen:

      "Your license has expired - please contact your IBM representative to discuss renewing this or any other license you may have"

      So, yes, banks still 'use' it, though sparingly. Most of the OS/2 machines had notices on them from 2000 saying "We'll turn this off in 3 years time if no-one uses them in the meantime"

      --
      "I am not bound to please thee with my answers" [William Shakespeare]
    10. Re:But... by Surak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the community is much bigger than the OS/2 community was, at least online (a rought comparison, as OS/2 was largely before the internet wave).

      Do you remember the "Team OS/2" astroturfing? The Linux community doesn't even need to do stuff like that. It's truly grassroots, even as it's attracted the help of the big names, including OS/2's father, IBM.

      The difference with IBM and OS/2 is that they were in an already weakened position when OS/2 was around. The PS/2 line was one of the biggest flops of all-time for IBM, and they were simultaneously trying to sell Windows-based machines and still push OS/2 as their main OS. They were too scattered with that, along with the big divorce lawsuit with Microsoft over their Joint Development Agreement. On top of all that, this is when Microsoft was insisting on per processor license agreements, a practice which got them hand-slapped by the FTC and later the Justice Department.

      Linux, on the other hand, is relatively unencumbered by all that baggage, with the noteable exception of the SCO lawsuit, which at this point, has no direct bearing over Linux itself, just IBM, and I don't think they're really sweating it any, despite what Darl McBride would have you think.

    11. Re:But... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 2

      I think you're right. Linux isn't a "passing through" technology. It's a niche player. Depending where things go it might even become the OS to beat, for the server side.

      I don't see Linux making it for the end-user. At least not without someone with a whole lot of money redesigning it from the ground up. Kind of like what Apple did with FreeBSD. The problem is that the GPL is going to make this kind of difficult. Sharing source is a pain in the ass for a company trying to make money.

    12. Re:But... by gr8fulnded · · Score: 1

      Novell must not have gotten that memo then.

      --Dave

    13. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > CORBA has been around since at least 1991 ... [snip] ... and most agree that it beat Microsoft in the DCOM-CORBA "Object Wars"

      Oh really? On what evidence do you make that extravagant statement?

      Where is CORBA now?

      COM/DCOM will hang around for a while out of necessity (and the sooner it dies the better), but CORBA!!!

      Jeezus! CORBA was a looser from the get go.

    14. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux requires more expensive support personnel, which generally swamps the cost of the OS.

      You mean like people who actually know what they are doing instead of just randomly clicking pretty widgets ? I wouldn't let the average Win32 admin (usually the one guy @ the office who knows a bit about computers) anywhere near my servers, Windows or otherwise. Even the trained professionals (MCSE's) are a joke.

    15. Re:But... by nolife · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you've ever checked in at a United Airline ticket counter or one of the gates at one of thier hubs, your information was being run on Win3.1 with TCP/IP and Netbeui run off of an OS/2 backend over token ring. The advantage back then was the mainframe connectivity and protocols OS/2 provided (now they have a Linux machines to convert the protocols when needed). They are slowly (and I mean SLOWLY) moving away from this but it is still running fine and has been for over 10 years. Almost all of the smaller stations have been converted to straight TCP/IP without the OS/2.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    16. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although CORBA now provides the underlying technology for things such as J2EE...

      CORBA has nothing to do with J2EE. Sure you can use CORBA with Java, but J2EE is built on RMI.

    17. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What did it loose?
      Oh! You meant lose, you sorry pathetic fuck for a man!

      Love and giggles,
      LoseNotLooseGuy

    18. Re:But... by bladernr · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, J2EE is built using RMI-IIOP (or Internet-InterORB Protocol, or the CORBA protocol), not the original RMI-JRMP (Java Remote Message Protocol). J2EE transactions are CORBA transactions. J2EE security is CORBA security. JNDI naming is CORBA naming. That is how all of the cross-app-server compatability works (or rather, will work, in the future, hopefully, but thats an entirely different topic)

      You should read the J2EE specifications, its all in there. J2EE hides all of that CORBA stuff, but its in there.

      CORBA is quite alive and well, with new specifications arriving all the time, especially in the telco arena (for network management, etc, there is still lots of active work).

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    19. Re:But... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The thing is many people think the purpose of Linux is to "beat" MS windows. While I think that it will surpass MS in the server area, the desktop may or may not happen, or it may take a number of years for the desktop. But the most important point is that Linux will ALWAYS be around and it is not a competitor of any OS. It is a movement "By the Poeople and For the People". So whether it "beats" MS and takes 90% of the desktop and or server market does not matter. There will always be plenty of developers working on it commercially, academically and non-commercially.

      There is currently too much commercial money in Linux from many different players for it to just "go away". Also, MS's typical tactics that they use to "beat" the competition won't work on Linux. Price cuts may keep some from switching, however many that want to switch do it not just because of cost, but also choice. People and companies are tired of the MS slogan of give them the razors and sell them the blades. Most people are not dumb enough to buy into getting heavy discounts from MS. Because they all know that MS will try to make it back some other way once they are locked in. Many people and companies are also tired of the anti-competitve tactics and their freedom of choice being taken away. When you build your infrastructure on MS, then all those app you use are designed to function "best" when you ONLY use other MS stuff. I personally think that MS's goal is to be the ONE developer of all software. Sure, some of the small meaningless shareware type stuff will still float around. But for any of the bigger apps, protocols and codecs, MS wants to hoarde that and be the only controller. It kind of reminds me of a "One Ring to Rule Them All" type of deal.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    20. Re:But... by fitten · · Score: 1

      ...and some admin are pretty decent. Our 10 or so guys admin about 7,000 Windows machines and around 4,000 Un*x or Un*x-alikes.

    21. Re:But... by geekee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To be fair, Bill Gates didn't call Linux a "passing through" technology. That was the poster's choice of words. A more accurate statement statement would be that Linux is Windows latest competition. Gates never came out and said Windows would actually beat Linux, but instead lais out their plan to maintain supremacy. Ultimately, they can't beat Linux on price, so Windows will need to be able to boast better features (ease of use, for example) to maintain their desktop monopoly. Personally, I think Windows will die a slow death.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    22. Re:But... by cshark · · Score: 1

      You know, for someone who was there, he has an odd recolection of the facts. Anoyne else noticed how fat gates has been getting lately?

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    23. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, yeah yeah! FUD and crap.

      If Linux were as commercially successful as Windows, there would be plenty of "Linux Certified Engineer (LCE)" courses so that Joe Fuckwhit can get a job as a lowly sysadmin.

      Your task for today: -

      Learn the difference between causes and effects!

    24. Re:But... by imnoteddy · · Score: 1
      not to mention that MS basically partered with IBM on OS/2, then back-stabbed them while secretly working on a competeting OS (windows).

      MS did not work on Windows in secret. Although most people think that the history of Windows starts with 3, there were earlier versions. They pretty much sucked, and not many apps were written for them. However at one point Excel was supported on OS/2, Windows version 2 (yes, there was a Windows 2), and Mac.

      Windows 3 was considered by many to be a stopgap until a new OS/2 was ready but turned out to be popular, and the strategy shifted from moving from Windows toward OS/2 to a strategy of expanding on Windows.

      --
      No electrons were harmed creating this post, though some may have been subjected to electrical and/or magnetic fields.
    25. Re:But... by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Has anyone told Bill Gates that Linux isn't like OS/2? Personally I never liked OS/2 though I know many who would swear by it.

      Apples and Oranges. Microsoft has great marketing skills but no idea what they are talking about. It shows in this interview with Bill. OS/2 was never this popular. Not only IBM but many other companies are using Linux. Hell, even Oracle has announced Linux is their primary development platform. OS/2 never had that from anyone.

      How many OS/2 web servers have you guys been hitting lately btw? OS/2 database servers in use? Sure banks use OS/2.. how many banks out there compared to # of other businesses in the world?

      See my issue with Bill's comments? Same ol' FUD. Life is good :D

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    26. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Was CORBA "passing thru" or was/is it a real technology?

      That brings up a good point. Many folks now (in 2003) believe that the "market" is now saturated with DCOM installations. Why? Not becuase of the design of a specific Object Request Broker architecture, rather it's embedded into most of the modern Windows implimentations (All the way from Windows 95 through Windows 2003 Server...).

      Personally, I've done contract work on a CORBA-based project that books travel arragements. I've never used DCOM (or as they used to call it, "Network OLE" -- shudder) as an engineer. Only dealt with it as a end user.

      As I always say, just because a certain product has strong marketshare, does not make it the "cleanest" solution for all projects. Most cool-headed folks realize this.


      Brian Mitchell

    27. Re:But... by mormop · · Score: 1

      We're back to the Iraqi information Minister then....

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    28. Re:But... by Hypocritical+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the fact that banks use OS/2 does not make it alive.

      It is as dead as Fortran and Cobol.

      So in other words, its dead.

      --
      If you liked licking my balls, add me to your foes list!
    29. Re:But... by RoLi · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Linux' open source nature makes it very different.

      And let's face it: All MS did the last 20 years was defend their DOS/Windows dominaton. Network effects helped them greatly, OS/2 went away almost by itself (of course MS will always be MS so they also blackmailed German computer makers not to preinstall OS/2 - however OS/2 would have died anyway.), hardware makers fought the battle for them on servers. Microsoft had only to make sure x86 stays MS-only and hardware-maker would make the hardware cheap and fast enough to endanger Unix.

      Linux changed all that.

      On servers Linux is extremely successful and has already surpassed Windows in Europe, on embedded systems it is about to do the same. On the desktop we still have the big problem of weak software support, but unlike IBM or Microsoft the open source community has the power to create a complete desktop from scratch: KDE. It includes everything from browser to office suite and is certainly good enough for mainstream needs.

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

      Are you one of those pre-operative types?

    31. Re:But... by buckinm · · Score: 3, Funny

      So in other words, its dead.

      No, it just wishes it was dead.

      --
      This isn't any ordinary darkness. It's advanced darkness.
    32. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is as dead as Fortran and Cobol.
      Exactly.

    33. Re:But... by drunk_as_in_beer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At the risk of feeding the house trolls, how does Linux "obviously" kick MS's ass on the server side?

      At the risk of getting trolled here myself...

      * Linux distros cost in the same order of magnitude now of what winows installations cost.

      Umm.. When did Windows installation become free?

      * Linux requires more expensive support personnel, which generally swamps the cost of the OS.

      This is a myth. It may have been true during the dot-com boom, but these days even your experienced Linux/UNIX admin are cheap and ready to work right away.

      * Microsoft offers a reasonably clear roadmap for the next five years for which a CIO can plan, Linux does not (before the knee-jerks respond: the fact that you don't read ms whitepapers doesn't mean that they dont exist).

      This has very little to do with comparing two server operating systems.

      * Giant websites run both Linux and Microsoft successfully. At the very least, it's not "obvious" that linux is better per se.

      For running websites, Linux tends to be much easier to maintain. Yes, Linux is easier to use than Windows for many server tasks. This may come as a surprise to those who haven't used Linux much, but its true. And the admins who have experience in both Linux and Windows (and UNIX) will back me up on this.

      --
      --Drunk as in Beer
    34. Re:But... by michrech · · Score: 2, Funny

      They didn't backstab IBM.. They were "innovating" and IBM just couldn't keep up with them! Yea, that's it!

      *takes anther puff of the crack pipe*

      Ahhh...

      --
      bork bork bork!
    35. Re:But... by Amorpheus_MMS · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think the word you're looking for is UNdead.

    36. Re:But... by oudzeeman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Fortran is FAR from dead. It is used extensively in high performace computing. Computational chemistry, biology, CFD, ... most of this is still Fortran. See what simulations people run on top500.org computers. Most of that code will be written in Fortan.

    37. Re:But... by FauxReal · · Score: 1

      A friend of mine was hired as project manager for a 100k+ seat rollout from OS/2 to WinXP... for whatever reason they decided to stick with OS/2. I can't remember what the reason was why they kept it. I've seen many gas stations running OS/2 Warp as well.

    38. Re:But... by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      If he meant "on the desktop" then why didn't he *say* X/KDE/Gnome? I doubt that even Bill is that ignorant. No, I think he was using the term "linux" the way it is popularly used outside the geek circles; to mean distributions such as RH, Suse, Mandrake, etc.
      Remember who his audience is, here.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    39. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      COBOL is still used all over the place - not dead at all. Uncool maybe - but not dead.

    40. Re:But... by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      DR-DOS is still alive http://devicelogics.com (you fail it!)

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    41. Re:But... by hackrobat · · Score: 0, Troll
      (no, this is not a troll. My favorite OS'es are Linux and Mac OS. Just trying to credit where its due)
      Oh good you mentioned that! Else you'd've been modded troll, and flamed to death. We're the Slashdot community :-> Be careful.
    42. Re:But... by Greyfox · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Exactly what astroturfing was that? Team OS/2 was a volunteer organization with very little actual support from IBM. IBM kept them at a distance due to the "Lunatic Fringe" of rabid OS/2 zealots who would view even constructive criticism of the platform as "FUD" and denounce it as such.

      I was a member of Team OS/2 and coincidentally an IBM contractor. A lot of us (Teamers) and a few (About 4 IIRC) (real) IBMers went to the '95 COMDEX on our own dime and our own time to do the grassroots advocacy there. All IBM provided was some OS/2 install CDs and some exhibitor passes to let us get into the show before the doors opened. Oh yeah, and some really gay pink OS/2 shirts...

      The astroturfing that year, as I recall, came from Microsoft. They brought a bunch of their own employees to try to counter the efforts of Team OS/2 and make it look like they had a grassroots group, too. We saw about a quarter of the number of "Team Microsoft" on the floor and someone suggested that they be waylaid and left duct-taped in a booth back in the skid row... Oh wait, that was me...

      Anyway, Team OS/2 was not an astroturfing effort. The Team's relationship to IBM was always an uncomfortable one and many of the teamers inside the company and out have since moved to Linux. Linux already has far more momentum than OS/2 did. It runs on more platforms (Including the IBM mainframes that OS/2 was SUPPOSED to be ported to,) enjoys the support of more big companies and offers a platform that can not be killed by a single company.

      Moreover, Bill Gates knows this. He didn't get to be the world's richest man by chance or luck alone. He didn't technically lie in his first statement; no doubt Linux is no different from OS/2 in his view in that he has to find a way to kill it as quickly as possible. Just as he did with OS/2 by providing discounts on his software PC resellers (including IBM's PCCO) who didn't offer an OS/2 pre-install option. OS/2's installation process was one of its weak points, and Microsoft made sure that every potential user of the operating system would go through it.

      Microsoft's only open methods of attack against Linux are legal and in marketing. SCO's threat to sue every Linux user on the planet has already caused several companies that I know about to back away from the operating system. Expect to see more legal attacks from Microsoft or their minions and possible lobbying in Congress to make the OSS method of application development illegal. I expect a huge marketing campaign attacking the credibility of Linux as well. Don't put anything past them, they're protecting their monopoly here. You don't stay the world's richest man by luck or chance either.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    43. Re:But... by hackrobat · · Score: 1
      "passing through" technologies don't last as long as Linux has already.

      "passing through" technologies are like fart--they last for a while, making you uncomfy, but they go on their own. Linux is like shit--somebody has to clean it, or it's going to stay there and stink all day! (And with so much shit floating around!)

      C'mon Bill! This ain't no farting^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hpassing through!

    44. Re:But... by stefanvt · · Score: 1

      OS/2 still lives on as EcomStation.

      I used OS/2 WARP 3 & 4 (but switched to linux) and absolutely loved the system. Although it had it's quirks, like the single input queue that caused the WPS to hang and the whole system became unresponsive.

      But apart from that the WPS was absolutely wonderful, GNOME & KDE could use some of that technology.

    45. Re:But... by Epistax · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Excuse me, but what qualifies something as dead? I don't think usage alone is enough. Take VHS. You can buy them, rent them, and millions of people own them; billions are owned. It's dead.

      I call something dead if it is in a critical region, downward spiral, inside a event horizon, (etc etc). Now back to the previous example if someone released a VHS cassette that stored 100 hours, the medium would be 'revived', or 'resurrected', if only for a short time. It can be dead and still be in wide use. (IMHO)

    46. Re:But... by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      NextStep is dead and Jobs could not even revive it inside Apple.

      You're clueless. OSX is NeXT. It has a shelf and a dock and is based on Mach and has a Unix interface. What else do you want?

      NT/2000/XP now has a larger installed base on the desktop than all other OS's combined by a high multiple. The reason is that it does what people want it to do for what they are willing to pay in time, trouble, and money.

      No. The reason is that it comes preinstalled on every PC. Every PC manufacturer has to pay the MS tax (maybe it's time to let manufacturers decide what they install on their machines). There are a lot of non-technical people out there who only use it because they don't know how to change it. Most of them can't even install Windows so if they had a choice they might try Mandrake or Redhat which are both simpler to install than Windows.

      Here is an open (pun intended) question: if you all are so smart and its so easy to make money from the stupid and ignorant, why aren't you all rich?

      Because contrary to popular belief not everyone is an asshole. In fact most people interested in OSS are not interested in ripping people off. It's hard to have both of those interests together.

      "Those who don't learn history (or choose to ignore it) are bound to repeat it".

      So true, so get learning. Pick up a book or something that doesn't involve brain-washing yourself to love MS just because you don't have the technical ability or inclination to try something new. Arguing against OSS is about the dumbest thing one can do in 2003. It was hip a couple of years ago but now it's quite obvious that the development model works. Linux has progressed rapidly and is spreading to many different markets including the desktop and embedded devices.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    47. Re:But... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Those who don't learn history (or choose to ignore it) are bound to repeat it, Bill.

      And those who do know history will find new ways to make mistakes.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    48. Re:But... by hankaholic · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Such is why RMS pushes for people to call the OS GNU, the kernel Linux, the desktop environment KDE/Gnome/whatever running over XFree86, etc.

      People see "Linux" as the entire system. I'd love to see some companies putting money into other aspects of the OS than the kernel.

      --
      Somebody get that guy an ambulance!
    49. Re:But... by Surak · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but Team OS/2 was started by IBM. So call it 'quasi astroturfing' if you like, but OS/2 was never a true grassroots thing like Linux is.

      Microsoft's only open methods of attack against Linux are legal and in marketing. SCO's threat to sue every Linux user on the planet has already caused several companies that I know about to back away from the operating system. Expect to see more legal attacks from Microsoft or their minions and possible lobbying in Congress to make the OSS method of application development illegal. I expect a huge marketing campaign attacking the credibility of Linux as well. Don't put anything past them, they're protecting their monopoly here. You don't stay the world's richest man by luck or chance either.

      Yeah, but bottom line is that SCO can't sue everyone Linux user on the planet, they have zero credibility and zero legal standing. The few companies that are backing away probably aren't very entrenched in Linux anywhow.

      Microsoft *will* go down, it's just a question of when. Look at this history of the computing industry and tell me how they won't.

    50. Re:But... by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      Dude, just because no-one you know uses it doesn't mean it's dead. There are billions of lines of currently used COBOL and Fortran. It's a damn sight more alive than OS/2 that's for sure. I wish it wasn't, and I wish I got to code in something better, but to say that it's dead is just clueless.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    51. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering what FUD is an acronym for, how does that sentence even make sense? Hell, the three things it stands for don't even go together most of the time, and I've never seen anyone use it anywhere that makes sense.

    52. Re:But... by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Obviously, even Bill knows that Linux kick MS ass on the server side.

      Could you please define "kick" for me?

      MS controls 3-4 times the server marketshare as Linux. We're not talking a niche here either, we're talking a 60% versus a 15-20% marketshare.

      How exactly do you equate that to Linux kicking ass?

    53. Re:But... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but linux never really intended to go head to head against the Windows empire.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    54. Re:But... by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      Free support is dead, therefore OS/2 is dead. Dead things have no future.

    55. Re:But... by doinky · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd wager that OS/2 at its peak had more desktops running it than linux does now. The sales we hit were in the high single-digit millions -- these are user seats at big corporations, not servers.

    56. Re:But... by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      Linux distros cost in the same order of magnitude now of what winows installations cost.

      Bull. Linux is FREE. Even if you buy a distribution it is much cheaper than Windows. Basically though, you can use pretty much any distro you want + Apache and you have a no-cost webserver.

      Linux requires more expensive support personnel, which generally swamps the cost of the OS

      I love this arguement. Personally I wouldn't want any MSCE touching my computers. They may be cheaper but that's because they're less skilled too.

      Microsoft offers a reasonably clear roadmap for the next five years for which a CIO can plan, Linux does not (before the knee-jerks respond: the fact that you don't read ms whitepapers doesn't mean that they dont exist).

      Yeah, they can plan to pay to upgrade again and again and again. They can also plan to waste a lot of time with DRM issues when it's not possible to make images to install on machines.

      Giant websites run both Linux and Microsoft successfully. At the very least, it's not "obvious" that linux is better per se.

      You forgot to mention that far more websites use Linux rather than Windows.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    57. Re:But... by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Actually he has to look objectively at the situations (and I'm sure he is), but he need not tell anyone else about it. He's responding to these questions exactly as he should be, regardless of what he's thinking.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    58. Re:But... by joto · · Score: 1
      OS/2... 1988-2002. This is shorter than Linux how?

      Well, did OS/2 have any users before OS/2 2.1? Did linux have any users before Yggdrasil? Or more realistically, did OS/2 have any users before Warp 3, or linux before Slackware?

      In any case, I think it's fair to say that actual users for both operating systems came at about the same time, even if OS/2 had been in development longer. That's at least what I remember, but I was an undergrad student back then, and didn't know too much about what went on in the real world, so I may be mistaken.

      But OS/2 died much sooner. Sure, you can dispute that, and say that IBM never abandoned OS/2, but that didn't mean it attracted any new users. After the introduction of Windows 98 and NT, I think you could count the number of new OS/2 users on one hand. Meanwhile, linux shows no sign of stopping it's growth.

      Does that answer your question?

    59. Re:But... by Bandman · · Score: 1

      as soon as he references it directly, it exists in his world, and he can't have that.

    60. Re:But... by GeekyGuru · · Score: 1

      "Dead" is so relative... I would rather think of things in terms of "paradigm shifts". When a technology is no longer capable of solving new problems, or is no longer capable of being modified/enhanced so that it can solve new problems, then it would be a candidate for being labeled "dead". (i.e., a better idea/solution is thought of, and a "new paradigm" is born which replaces the older paradigm. The problem with Windows is that it is has become a Winnebago with a swimming pool on top... it had it's day, but it just has too many security related problems (not to mention stability problems). "That's not true" you say? Have you ever had Explorer lock up on you? Were you able to get anything done after that? Perhaps the OS was still running and you didn't get a blue screen, but you sure as heck had to reboot the machine to get any real work done. Windows is on the way out. Perhaps not in 5 or 10 years, but eventually, Bill Gates and crew will be limited to servicing those unlucky few customers who have legacy software that runs only on Windows.

    61. Re:But... by trudyscousin · · Score: 1

      "Oh yeah, and some really gay pink OS/2 shirts..."

      I'm sure you guys didn't need t-shirts like that to identify you as the happy, enthusiastic attendees that you were.

      Oh, wait...

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, write technology blogs.
    62. Re:But... by Afrosheen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think by calling it 'dead' they're referring to a 'dead-as-in-latin' definition. Latin is a dead language but it's still used in many professions (the sciences, medicine, courtrooms, etc). Latin is dead in the sense that it's no longer evolving or changing, it's set in stone and will never improve or degrade. Same goes for OS/2 and any other OS that's no longer improved. It's dead because it no longer grows. :)

    63. Re:But... by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      LOL - that's the best Gates bash I've seen in a long time. Thanks for the laugh.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    64. Re:But... by Ryan+Stortz · · Score: 1

      One of the big things that will insure that Linux isn't a "passing through" technology, is that no one company owns it. The source is free to all, allowing a million permiantations. OS/2 wasn't open and free, and one company owned it. They can kill/pull it when they don't see that it's worth it. Linux is different. Right now, I don't think IBM or even Linus could kill/pull Linux.

      --
      Bugs are just features that have been fixed.
    65. Re:But... by El · · Score: 1

      Didn't Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft, say that "tech stocks, including Microsoft" were seriously overvalued?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    66. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ultimately most advocacy is astroturfing -- a good chunk of the Linux Jihad is getting their bread buttered through Linux, just like Team OS/2 was primarily IBM "partners" and OS/2 sysadmins etc.

      But ... Linux Advocates actually has an argument beyond "I hate Microsoft" and "Windows Sucks". Which is why they are less of an industry joke than Team OS/2.

    67. Re:But... by El · · Score: 1

      Linux is already the OS to beat for the Server, and is fast becoming the OS to beat for embedded work. Yes, it's a niche player on the desktop, but that has more to do with the difficulty of retraining users than with quality fo the OS. However, since Microsoft changes the user interface with every major release, people might get tired of constantly trying to keep up with M$ and switch to something more consistent for their desktop -- I just don't see this happening in the near future.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    68. Re:But... by Mirus+Nex · · Score: 1

      I have to agree...

      I've got 10 years of Linux experience and would choose it over Windows for any task outside of music, video or print production (OS X for ANY task).

      Windows, can NOT be compared to Linux in ease of administration in a server environment. My current work environment consists of OS X, Solaris, Linux, Windows (XP/NT/2K) and Digital Unix (Tru64/OSF). For a server environment I prefer Linux and OS X. Sorry, but GUI != ease of maintenance. In 5 seconds I can configure just about any setting on a Linux server either locally or remotely. Need to change a host address - vi /etc/resolv.conf, need to add a network alias - ifconfig, etc...

      I would challenge any NT admin against the clock, and time == money. Here's a good one, do a fresh install of XP/NT on one box and an install of RH 9 on another. Don't log into either, now disconnect the monitor, keyboard and mouse and change the hostname on either one... Do'h no default remote login for XP...

      Ask anyone who manages both Windows and *nix servers which is easier and quicker to maintain...

    69. Re:But... by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      Strange... I work at a bank (heck, I have worked at many banks) and there are tons of people maintaining and coding COBOL apps. I see them daily in front of their green terminals.
      These people make a living from it, and *nobody* even *thinks* of replacing existing COBOL apps. They work, and that is what counts. Heck, I'm pretty sure that *suggesting* to replace those COBOL apps will get you fired ;-) Any newer development (think ebanking) mainly is a application server that will connect to the mainframes deep in the entrails of banks by means of MQSeries or some other way of communication.

      A language that doesn't grow, is stable... That is what counts for banks (and insurances and any bigger financial institutions)

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    70. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OS/2 webservers today?

      Well, I guess VAX/VMS was never significant, since there aren't many web servers TODAY running it. Are you really that slow?

      OS/2 had a little corporation called IBM behind it, and probably was bigger (%-wise) than Linux is today. Linux has been talking big shit for years, and hasn't gone anywhere. You zealots (I'm merely a user, BTW) have already adopted the same cynical, snotty, already defeated attitude of OS/2 zealots. I can read the writing on the wall.

    71. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I love this arguement. Personally I wouldn't want any MSCE touching my computers. They may be cheaper but that's because they're less skilled too.

      And I love this argument. Anybody with an MCSE is less skilled and that is why they get payed less. Personally I wouldn't want any Linux users touching my computers, and your argument is a good example why. Highly skilled or not, arrogant assholes aren't worth the money.

      Yeah, they can plan to pay to upgrade again and again and again. They can also plan to waste a lot of time with DRM issues when it's not possible to make images to install on machines.

      Or not. We have used Windows 2000 for 3 years now and we can keep on using it forever if we want. Nobody is forcing us to upgrade.

      You forgot to mention that far more websites use Linux rather than Windows.

      You forgot to bring some numbers to back that up. If you do, try and remember that Apache installs != Linux installs.

    72. Re:But... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Linux is already the OS to beat for the Server

      Nonsense

      and is fast becoming the OS to beat for embedded work.

      If by fast becoming you mean 10 years from now a few people might use it.

      Yes, it's a niche player on the desktop, but that has more to do with the difficulty of retraining users than with quality fo the OS.

      I personally don't use it because of the quality of the OS, specifically the driver support. Of secondary concern is the availability of software, including some very important web services (such as my bank's virtual credit card number service).

      However, since Microsoft changes the user interface with every major release, people might get tired of constantly trying to keep up with M$ and switch to something more consistent for their desktop -- I just don't see this happening in the near future.

      Yeah, me neither. Changing the user interface with every major release is considered by most to be innovation, a positive, not a negative.

    73. Re:But... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Trust me, COBOL's not dead yet! Where I work, they're trying to replace the old COBOL software with Java, and at the rate they're going, COBOL will outlive all of us!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    74. Re:But... by NineNine · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has great marketing skills but no idea what they are talking about. It shows in this interview with Bill.

      Microsoft is one of the largest companies in the world, and Gates is one of the wealthiest people in the planet. And you are who, exactly?

    75. Re:But... by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      We stood out in a crowd fabulously!

      To this day the people responsible for the color decision swear that "they were 'coral'!" Uh huh...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    76. Re:But... by El · · Score: 1
      Nonsense


      Nice to see you backing up your opinion with facts and references.


      If by fast becoming you mean 10 years from now a few people might use it.


      I'm working on a product right now that runs Linux. Just because they don't tell you that it's running Linux, doesn't mean that half the products out there aren't already running Linux. Again, why resort to facts, when you can just assert your opinions?


      I personally don't use it because of the quality of the OS, specifically the driver support.

      Really? That's precisely the reason I use Linux. Mandrake comes bundled with support for every old piece of hardware I own (including my digital camera, at no extra cost). Win2K only supports hardware shipped in the last two years. Hardware manufactures have ZERO incentive to develop a driver for XP for hardware they no longer sell. Unfortunately, M$ manages to change the OS enough that the old drivers no longer work.


      Changing the user interface with every major release is considered by most to be innovation, a positive, not a negative.


      Changing the user interface was said to cost $2000 per seat in retraining costs for companies upgrading from one M$ OS to the next. Sounds like a pretty big negative to me! And of course, companies are just flocking to replace Win2K with WinXP, aren't they?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    77. Re:But... by ros0709 · · Score: 1

      There's a new COBOL standard out in the last couple of years, and a new one being worked on ...

    78. Re:But... by konmaskisin · · Score: 1

      and umm OS2 was closed source and you had to pay a lot of money to be able

      And for consumer and office systems IBM ***DID NOT*** "march behind" OS/2. They've kept it alive ... barely.

      With Internet standards for things like web/http, email/rfc821 (?), xml, ogg, etc. etc. *AND* a free open OS the situation is very different. After all not just IBM is behind it try:

      RedHat
      SuSE
      Sony
      Sharp
      Sun
      HP ...

      Etc.

      Bill, try googling for Linux versus googling for OS/2 then do the math ..

    79. Re:But... by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      OK then, OS/2 will run on old hardware for as long as that hardware functions, but once a major change occurs then you won't be able to use OS/2.

      OS/2 is unlikely to ever get Opteron or Itanium support, probably doesn't do firewire, USB2. I doubt it has support for the latest 3D hardware.

      So as you can see, it's doomed. It won't be long before it will do about as much as Win 3.11.

    80. Re:But... by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Microsoft outlived this. Hmmm... How bizarre. I can't buy PC-DOS Wow...

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    81. Re:But... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Nice to see you backing up your opinion with facts and references.

      I was following your lead.

      I'm working on a product right now that runs Linux.

      So am I. Doesn't mean that more than 10 people are going to ever use it.

      Just because they don't tell you that it's running Linux, doesn't mean that half the products out there aren't already running Linux.

      You're right, it doesn't. It also doesn't mean that these products are running Linux.

      Again, why resort to facts, when you can just assert your opinions?

      Just following your lead.

      Really? [Driver support is] precisely the reason I use Linux.

      I suspect that more people fall into my category than yours.

      Win2K only supports hardware shipped in the last two years.

      Huh? Are you saying Win2K doesn't support hardware which wasn't shipped in the last two years? I have several devices running with Win2K which contradict that. Or are you saying Win2K doesn't support hardware which has only shipped recently? I have other devices running with Win2K which contradict that.

      Hardware manufactures have ZERO incentive to develop a driver for XP for hardware they no longer sell.

      I'm sure Microsoft is happy to provide such incentive. Besides, don't most Win2K drivers work on XP? I mean, I don't know, since I use Win2K. Microsoft hasn't forced me to upgrade yet. I'm sure by the time they do there will be XP drivers for all my hardware.

      Finally, if we're going to talk about incentive, what is the incentive for hardware manufacturers to develop a driver for linux? There is some, depending on the product, but for many products there is none.

      Changing the user interface was said to cost $2000 per seat in retraining costs for companies upgrading from one M$ OS to the next. Sounds like a pretty big negative to me!

      Only if you actually make the change! The fact that companies decided to do it must mean that the change was worth $2000 per seat!

      And of course, companies are just flocking to replace Win2K with WinXP, aren't they?

      Of course they aren't. When did I say they were?

    82. Re:But... by esper · · Score: 1
      a good chunk of the Linux Jihad is getting their bread buttered through Linux

      Not necessarily relevant... Some (I suspect most) of us are getting our bread buttered through Linux because we're a part of the jihad, not the other way around. I got hooked on Linux first, then went out specifically looking for a Linux job; I did not start pushing Linux because it paid my bills.

    83. Re:But... by sbillard · · Score: 1

      even Bill knows that Linux kick MS ass on the server side

      Ummm...that is some good karma whoring fan boy, but you need to take a good look around you. Do you mean to say that Linux has made significant inroads to Windows on the server side?

      Outside the firewall - perhaps, but most business servers are inside the perimeter and they are not Linux. From my perspective - in the financial services industry, Linux has about a 0.1% installation ratio to other platforms on the server side. linux doesn't kick ass. Not at all. And Bill knows it.

    84. Re:But... by u-235-sentinel · · Score: 2, Informative

      Saying this you must also believe that McDonalds has the best food in the world. Over 13 bln sold :-)

      --
      Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
    85. Re:But... by operagost · · Score: 1

      They outlived this too, right?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    86. Re:But... by njdj · · Score: 1

      lots of banks STILL use OS/2

      Which banks are using it for what?

      I've been contracting for banks and other financial institutions for the last 8 years, during which I've worked at 5 major banks and 2 other financial institutions, and I've never seen OS/2 in use in that time. Maybe they are running legacy apps on them (I'm a developer) - but a system that nobody is doing new development for is dead. Look at the job ads on the financial sector boards. There is demand for Windows, Solaris, various Unices, Linux, some IBM mainframe. I talk to a lot of other contractors in the financial sector and never met anyone in that time who develops for OS/2. OS/2 people started to "abandon ship" when Windows 3.0 came out. It may be in use but it's basically a "zombie". To compare it with Fortran is ridiculous - Fortrash may be an obsolete language, but people are still using it for new development.

    87. Re:But... by njdj · · Score: 1

      Heck - Linux doesn't even have a desktop.

      Pedant. Maybe people shouldn't say "Linux" when they mean "GNU/Linux with XFree86 and Gnome or KDE", but we all know that they do, and that that's what most people mean when they say "Linux".

    88. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is as dead as Fortran and Cobol.

      So it's in the coffin, but it keeps scratching at the lid and keeping decent folks awake at night?

    89. Re:But... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      "passing through" technologies are like fart--they last for a while, making you uncomfy, but they go on their own. Linux is like shit--somebody has to clean it, or it's going to stay there and stink all day!

      That must make Windows like a sewer pipe with a leak, then...

    90. Re:But... by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1

      Not to mention realtime telemetry processing, which is what we still use Fortran for. The graphical front end is a Motif app written in C (yes, plain old C) but the backend stuff is all Fortran. Although there are a number of modules, mostly low-level utilities, that haven't been touched in over 10 years, large parts of our system are still actively upgraded with new features on a continuing basis.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    91. Re:But... by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      And I love this argument. Anybody with an MCSE is less skilled and that is why they get payed less. Personally I wouldn't want any Linux users touching my computers, and your argument is a good example why. Highly skilled or not, arrogant assholes aren't worth the money.

      I don't see how it is arrogant to want someone more skilled. You can hire a fast food cook to cook for your wedding but why would you?

      Or not. We have used Windows 2000 for 3 years now and we can keep on using it forever if we want. Nobody is forcing us to upgrade.

      Actually they are forcing you to upgrade. MS has a product life cycle and when it has completed its course you will no longer have support.

      You forgot to bring some numbers to back that up. If you do, try and remember that Apache installs != Linux installs.

      Even after I reread my comment I failed to see where I said Apache = Linux. Anyway, last I checked Linux has about 55% and Windows only has about 35% of the webservers that make up the internet.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    92. Re:But... by bladernr · · Score: 1

      I wasn't saying the outlived the product line. They outlived the competative threat.

      Doing what they do, the redefined the game for DOS. There is no mass-competition on DOS anymore because Microsoft redefined the game to be Windows, something they could more easily monopolize (for a long variety of reasons, mostly the complexity of the system, bug-for-bug compatability, etc).

      For OS/2, hey, great OS, just no longer a threat. I believe it was a thread at one point (although people will debate that), but it is certainly not a threat to any Microsoft product now.

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    93. Re:But... by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      OS/2 never really intended to go head to head against the 'Windows empire' either. There was a certain extreme faction of OS/2 advocates just like there is with Linux.

      Some of them have crowded onto the 'linux platform' and they, plus former Amiga fanatics and various other malcontents, make up one of the noisier wings of the 'Linux community.' Some would say they detract from the value of Linux.

    94. Re:But... by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Most early versions of Excel for MS-DOS came bundled with a 'Windows runtime' version.

      That means that, while most early Excel users ran it from MS-DOS, they installed a little vestigal version of Windows, the stub of a full Windows 2, to run Excel from within.

      I remember the truly underwhelming experience of running Excel with a Windows 2 runtime on my turbo XT. I think I still have the disks around. But then I still have a complete boxed set of Windows 1.03 in my collection.

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

      Its not dead, just "mostly dead"

    96. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So opinions only matter is you're really wealthy and/or your company is really large and successful?

      You're a fucking tool.

    97. Re:But... by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      But until Linus starts bringing the GUI into the tree, then I would tend to agree that Linux will never make significant inroads to Windows.

      Linus apparently uses KDE, and has stated on more than one occasion that his main interest in Linux is as a desktop operating system.

      And it does indeed work well in that regard. I personally haven't booted any OS but Linux for five years now, and it's not because I don't do desktop/office kinds of things with my computers.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    98. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, like many, are underestimating the number of Linux installs out there.

    99. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hell, the three things it stands for don't even go together most of the time,"

      What a load of animal waste.

      Uncertainty and Doubt create Fear. Have you been watching the news and stock markets at all the last two years?

    100. Re:But... by Nevyn · · Score: 1
      The thing is many people think the purpose of Linux is to "beat" MS windows. While I think that it will surpass MS in the server area, the desktop may or may not happen, or it may take a number of years for the desktop.

      While Linux may well co-exist with say the mainframe OSes or FreeBSD or QNX, I find it hard to believe that Microsoft will let it co-exist with Windows. If they keep 90%+ of the desktop they'll kill Linux in the server. They've shown no desire previously to co-exist with anything, and I can't see them starting now.

      But the most important point is that Linux will ALWAYS be around and it is not a competitor of any OS. It is a movement "By the Poeople and For the People". So whether it "beats" MS and takes 90% of the desktop and or server market does not matter. There will always be plenty of developers working on it commercially, academically and non-commercially.

      You need members to have a movement, if MS can reclaim the businesses it's lost and/or stop hardware vendors from supporting it. Linux will have lost, it'll be that thing we tried back at the millenium and it will die.

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
    101. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is basically a UNIX clone, and borrows from UNIX heritage anything that makes it worth having. Linux is not innovative - it's just a clone, people. Everything good about Linux has been copied from other (more successful) operating systems, and often copied incompletely. It's really just a bad joke by that Finnish guy.

    102. Re:But... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Getting a bit off-topic, but I thought that Latin was regarded as a 'dead' language, because nobody actually really speaks it anymore. Sure, it's used in certain religious ceremonies, various professions, etc, but it's no longer evolving because it's not being used to deal with everyday life in, say, a village or town.

    103. Re:But... by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Saying this you must also believe that McDonalds has the best food in the world. Over 13 bln sold :-)


      No, but I'm not going to say that Ray Croc or any of his subsequent CEO's "don't know what they're talking about". They *clearly* know the food biz. And who would I be to say that they don't?

    104. Re:But... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      While Linux may well co-exist with say the mainframe OSes or FreeBSD or QNX, I find it hard to believe that Microsoft will let it co-exist with Windows. If they keep 90%+ of the desktop they'll kill Linux in the server. They've shown no desire previously to co-exist with anything, and I can't see them starting now.
      MS has had 90%+ of the desktop for a while now, and yet Linux on the server is growing exponentialy. More and more big time players like Oracle, HP, IBM, SAP, Sun and now PeopleSoft are supporting Linux. These heavy weights won't let their investments just die off. People are moving Linux to servers and the data centers and MS can't stop it. While having the the desktop market may help with small companies, it does little for larger corporations, and large corporations is where the majority of IT money comes from. I work for a fortune 500 enterprise and we are moving more and more of our data center to Linux and Solaris. We went with J2EE over .Not. Most of our desktops are MS windows and that had no effect on our decision for a server environmnet.
      You need members to have a movement, if MS can reclaim the businesses it's lost and/or stop hardware vendors from supporting it. Linux will have lost, it'll be that thing we tried back at the millenium and it will die.
      Linux will always have memebers. While commercial members help, they are not needed. MS can't stop the big hardware vendors because most of them use industry standards which can be implemented in Linux. Linux has very good hardware support for having little vendor support. People can always write drivers and reverse engineer for compatibility. Also, MS has no control over the hardware industry. Players like Dell, HP and IBM have far more sway. Dell, HP and IBM are the ones selling all that hardware, NOT MS. Also, you are only thinking in terms of the US market. MS has far less power outside of the US. The US only makes up 5% of the worlds population. Nations like German, Mexico, India, China, etc are using Open Source much more now and some are passing laws requiring the government to perfer Open Source. Linux's future look nice. You just have too look at the REAL picture and not the picture the MS FUD campaign is trying to paint.
      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    105. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like he said, Linux doesn't have a desktop. Even "GNU/Linux with XFree86 and Gnome or KDE" doesn't have a desktop.

    106. Re:But... by drsmithy · · Score: 1
      You're clueless. OSX is NeXT. It has a shelf and a dock and is based on Mach and has a Unix interface.

      OS X's Finder does *not* have a shelf. It's one of the reasons it's so frustrating to use.

      No. The reason is that it comes preinstalled on every PC.

      You're both right. It's got a huge user base because it comes preinstalled on most machines _and_ it does what people want it to do.

      Every PC manufacturer has to pay the MS tax (maybe it's time to let manufacturers decide what they install on their machines).

      Bullshit. This wasn't true fifteen years ago and it isn't true today. It's always been possilbe to buy machines from manufacturers who haven't paid a dime to Microsoft.

      There are a lot of non-technical people out there who only use it because they don't know how to change it.

      There'd be at least as many who use it because it just works, as well.

      Most of them can't even install Windows so if they had a choice they might try Mandrake or Redhat which are both simpler to install than Windows.

      How simple it is to install is largely irrelevant (I've never understood why it gets talked about so much). You generally only install an OS once. You *use* it every day.

      Arguing against OSS is about the dumbest thing one can do in 2003. It was hip a couple of years ago but now it's quite obvious that the development model works.

      It works well for some things, not so well for others. UIs on Linux systems still have a long way to go.

    107. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So opinions only matter is you're really wealthy and/or your company is really large and successful?

      If the opinion relates to "what will continue to make me wealthy and/or my company large and successful", normally I'd say yes.

      In this specific case I'd say the 'opinion' is just more FUD. "What I need people to believe right, now in order to remain as wealthy as possible"

      --
      Karma: Anonymous (Mostly the result of being a coward)

    108. Re:But... by nickco3 · · Score: 1

      He means on the desktop. Obviously, even Bill knows that Linux kick MS ass on the server side. But until Linus starts bringing the GUI into the tree, then I would tend to agree that Linux will never make significant inroads to Windows.


      Good God, No! The desktop is a Userland application, it has absolutely no business being in the kernel. Even Windows used to run on top of DOS, until Bill realised he could bundle them and kill off IBM DOS and DR DOS. There was no technical justification, it was purely a tactic against his competitors. In exactly the the same way as Netscape lost their air supply.

      --
      -- Nick "Hallo this is Beel Gates, und I pronounce weendows as ... WEENdows"
    109. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When you build your infrastructure on MS, then all those app you use are designed to function "best" when you ONLY use other MS stuff."

      There was a time when Apple was touting it's Power PC platform as being faster than the Wintel. What they failed to mention was that in order to get that "speed boost" you had to use native software written to take advantage of the Power PC.

      Be sure to point that finger in other directions besides MS. Others are just as guilty.

    110. Re:But... by rifter · · Score: 1

      I don't think admitting to being able to discern coral and salmon from pink is going to help protect you from homophobes... :)

    111. Re:But... by rifter · · Score: 1

      "Every PC manufacturer has to pay the MS tax (maybe it's time to let manufacturers decide what they install on their machines)."

      Bullshit. This wasn't true fifteen years ago and it isn't true today. It's always been possilbe to buy machines from manufacturers who haven't paid a dime to Microsoft.

      You are right that not "every PC Manufacturer" has to pay the MS Tax. But all the big ones did (Compaq, HP, Dell, IBM, etc) and they still do now, despite MS agreeing as long ago as 1996 that they would no longer charge this tax. This is one of many reasons Dell's attempt at starting a line of linux desktops and laptops failed (the linux boxes in fact were priced so high it seemed one was paying *twice* for Windows on these machines which did not even come with Windows, and some within Dell said you actually were). It is also one of many reasons OS/2 had trouble (IBM machines that came with OS/2 came with windows installed and OS/2 in a box, so you paid for Windows *and* OS/2. At least in this case you actually got what you paid for.)

      When you make people pay more for a computer that is incompatable with everyone else, you automatically make it a no-brainer not to buy your computer. Ask Apple about that. Linux has only been able to make the inroads it has because you can download it for free or buy it without having to be told you can do so by your almighty OEM.

  3. And don't forget about! by mrpuffypants · · Score: 2, Funny

    Let's be serious. I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC. We bet on graphical user interface. We bet on the NT technology base. Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net; Longhorn Web services go along with that.

    And who had the guts to teach all of us about data loss, crashes, blue screens, and monopolies?

    Thanks Microsoft!

    1. Re:And don't forget about! by kalidasa · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We bet on graphical user interface.

      Funny, I seem to remember that someone else had already proven the GUI in the market when MS "bet" on it.

    2. Re:And don't forget about! by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Several somebodies had actually.

      Microsoft was the LAST person to the party when it came to the GUI. The same thing goes for "NT" technology. Billy is still trying to effectively replicate both MacOS and OS/2.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Well Bill, you know happens when you bet to often.... The house eventually wins.

    4. Re:And don't forget about! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Oh yes. "Pear computers" or something ike that. I remember them betting on a 32-bit architecture instead of 16-bit. Needed far fewer hacks to get to work when true 32-bit machines came out.

    5. Re:And don't forget about! by laserjet · · Score: 1

      Jeezus, I think "bet" is a bad word choice by Bill here... I mean, come one. Lets say you had the Win9x code bas over here, and the WinNT code base over there. Which one would YOU bet the company on? Not really a tough choice. The only person that would "bet" on Win9x, well, shit. I can't think of anyone.

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    6. Re:And don't forget about! by MasteroftheVoxel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's be serious. I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC. We bet on graphical user interface. We bet on the NT technology base. Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net; Longhorn Web services go along with that.

      Let see:
      - IBM bet on the 16-bit PC.
      - Apple bet on the graphical user interface
      - Netscape bet on the web.
      - The NT technology base (thats "new technology" technology for those don't know) was forced down user's throats.
      - Sun bet on the internet and Java (MS calls this stuff .NET and C#)

      Yeah, MS took some big risks there

    7. Re:And don't forget about! by 91degrees · · Score: 0, Troll

      NT 3.5 did have a few things going for it that while already fairly tried and tested, not everyone had (unless I'm mistaken, which I very much might be). Things like a journalled file system, prememptive multi tasking and memory protection. There were a few systems that didn't even have long filenames back then.

      Not that MS really pioneered anything with these features. They were all well established on many other systems, but they were far from being the last to the party.

    8. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually NT was achitectually based on VMS (the chief architect was hired away from DEC). So it's not really "new" nor "innovative."

    9. Re:And don't forget about! by anandrajan · · Score: 1

      And perhaps Microsoft will bet on a 3DUI with Longhorn and linux/XFree will clone it.

      Linux commandment: Do unto Microsoft what Microsoft does unto <insert-fucked-company-name>

      --
      Anand Rangarajan anand@cise.ufl.edu
    10. Re:And don't forget about! by *weasel · · Score: 1

      they 'bet' on graphical, because their users were very happy with command line, and everyone -hated-windows 1.0 : it was a huge bet for them to freeze dos at 6.22 and make everyone upgrade. he didn't mean a 'bet' as in "we dont know if a gui's going to work" a 'bet' as in "we dont know if we'll lose all our customers on this one".

      they have never innovated. they've assimilated and incorporated. and they just keep growing. (no borg analogy intended).

      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    11. Re:And don't forget about! by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "data loss, crashes, blue screens"

      Don't blame MS. It's all your fault for not properly shutting down your computer.

      It is now safe to mod me troll.

    12. Re:And don't forget about! by aldousd666 · · Score: 1

      I think this is insightful. not just funny. I know the house is out there, all they have to do is watch gates cheating a little while longer before they kick him out on the street. Who might the house be? Well it's you and me the consumer. We've been getting screwed by a cheat.

      --
      Speak for yourself.
    13. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they are both were trying to bring
      PC style apps onto the stability of a Unix platform.

    14. Re:And don't forget about! by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      *nix has had a 3d gui for many years. Wanna bet Bill will "embrace & extend" it?

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    15. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Only MacOS was later to the party than MS with those technologies.

    16. Re:And don't forget about! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      PMT and memory protection were fairly common at that point unless the only system you're basing your judgement on is System 6.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    17. Re:And don't forget about! by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      (BTW Mac's 68000 was 32-bit internally)

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    18. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same thing goes for "NT" technology. Billy is still trying to effectively replicate both MacOS and OS/2.

      Actually, NT was based on OS/2. In those early days there were hardly any differences in the kernel. Microsoft licensed all that stuff from IBM (or something like that).

    19. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      preemptive multithreading and posix compaitbility only came to MacOS with OSX. That makes it LONG after NT.

    20. Re:And don't forget about! by Mirus+Nex · · Score: 2, Funny

      Really, come on, hasen't everyone seen Jurassic Park?

    21. Re:And don't forget about! by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      My ppc popermac (7100) that I got in 95 sure didnt have memory protection and it only had cooperative multitasking.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    22. Re:And don't forget about! by DarkVein · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, that's a very good summary of why MS has been a good business. They let other people shoulder the venture risk, often with MS' funding, then they take the (prospected and analyzed) risk of a full deployment of that technology. If their product is often inferior, it's inconsiquential to the Gee-Wiz factor and the confidence people have[/had] that the company would improve it. In the past, MS was usually the first one to show people new tech.

      ...which brings us to today (and reality). You'll be hard pressed to find anyone in the tech sector that has confidence in MS' responsibility to deliver good code. MS has to rely on managing bureaucracy's confidence in MS, which still exists because MS is a successful business. Thanks to the Internet, and MS' demonstrated incompetence at using it as a tech showroom, MS is no longer the first company to show tech to most people. Now the companies that actually shouldered the initial risk can show the tech off. MS can still offload initial risk, minimizing their liabilities, but it's harder to yank the rug out from their "partners" now. Recently, they've tried patenting ideas their partners are developing that they're funding. Half the time, they've got a contract that permits it, and the other half of the time it's illegal but the patent department thinks they have the right contract.

      Anyhow, MS can still fund innovation, but the other two leverages are gone. That leaves us with the business practice of funding innovative and/or useful projects and selling the results with a service plan. Oddly enough, that's what OSS-interest companies are learning how to do.

      Segueing back to the first paragraph, I've some political speculation. In the USA there's a tendancy to try to team up and pick a winner, which is why people tend to try to stick with the popular choice, even if it's inferior. This is probably because of the mindset of strategic voting required for multi-candidate plurality voting to function in a reasonable way. That is, everyone decides to buy MS because that'll give MS more money (resource) to work with to improve their product, as opposed to giving a lot of candidate companies a little money. This may explain why countries with wiser voting systems (like Borda Count, Instant Runnoff, or {my favorite} Condorcet's Method) more readily adopt Linux, BSD, or adopted BeOS.

      --

      I'm as mimsy as the next borogove but your mome raths are completely outgrabe.

    23. Re:And don't forget about! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      MacOS and RiscOS both used cooperative multitasking at that stage. Many systems at the time with memory protection had a very crude system since not everything had an MMU.

    24. Re:And don't forget about! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Yep. Very nice it was too. Meant that they could go up to a full 32-bit architecture with minimal problems, no nasty hacks to address more than a megabyte, and no switching between different modes to run legacy apps. (Granted, switching to PPC caused its own set of problems)

    25. Re:And don't forget about! by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      (BTW Mac's 68000 was 32-bit internally)

      BTW, the 68000 series was actually made by Motorola, used in teh Apple IIgs and teh Commodore Amiga, among other machines.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    26. Re:And don't forget about! by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      indeed think sgi allowed it to be downloaded from their site, but I cannot find the link :-( MaxOS X got a bice one here!

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    27. Re:And don't forget about! by thisgooroo · · Score: 1

      apple iis didn't use the 68000. the used 6502s (forgot who made them, but they were similar to the motoola 6800s, and were also used in the pre amiga commodore machines)

    28. Re:And don't forget about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another big problem is the anti-MS trolls. Negative critisism will always be more noticed than constructive critisism or good words.

      Yes 95 and ME were buggy but most bugs any user will ever encounter on a NT/2K/XP system today is due to 3d party drivers/software and NOT MS related. MS is actually QUITE savant when it comes to coding. Actually some of the MS internal articles/codes is some of the best I've seen (not that I'm an expert or anything).

    29. Re:And don't forget about! by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      As I recall, Apple IIe used the 6502's, just like the Commodore 64, but the Apple IIgs was a 16-bit system and used 68000. I could be wrong. Also, I may be thinking about an Atari of the same time period. Atari's first (and last, so far as I know) 16-bit offering was also 68000-based (and Commodore inherited a lawsuit when they bought Amiga. The lawsuit was with Atari over patented technology that Atari supposedly owned that was put in the Amiga. Those patents were helpful for the Amiga kicking Atari out of the market). Hmm....

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    30. Re:And don't forget about! by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      Yes 95 and ME were buggy but most bugs any user will ever encounter on a NT/2K/XP system today is due to 3d party drivers/software and NOT MS related. MS is actually QUITE savant when it comes to coding.

      And yet, as an end user I don't care one bit if it's someone elses code that locks up my XP when Linux runs beautifully on the same machine, without ever hanging.

      You see, I have to run those third party drivers (NVidia's graphics drivers in this case) in order to get the same functionality on both platforms. If I went with MS' graphics driver there goes TV-out.

      Now, it's interesting that (if it's indeed the case that it's the only third party driver I'm running on this system that keeps locking it up) the same company can botch their most important Windows driver, and produce a beautyfully running driver under Linux. To say the least.

      I'm not surprised though, that if the driver docs for Windows haven't shaped up since NT 3.51 (which was the last time I had to write one for Windows), third party driver writers have a hard time producing correctly working drivers for Windows, while they don't seem to have the same problems with Linux due to the transparency of the latter. And note that we're comparing closed source drivers here.

      Or maybe it's just the same old Windows crap as always. I know it's not hardware, I've never had a Linux crash on this machine.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    31. Re:And don't forget about! by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Commodore bought up the company (MOS Technologies, ISTR) that made the original 6502. The //c and later //e used Western Design Center 65C02s. The "Platinum" //e used a GTE Micro 65SC02.

      Of course I have to know this, I maintain an Apple ][ emulator! *g*

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    32. Re:And don't forget about! by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Apple IIgs did not use a 68000.

      The IIgs's CPU is the Western Design Center 65C816, same as later used in the Super NES. It's a 16-bit CPU, 24-bit address bus (rather like a 286?), but it's an ugly bag on the side of the 6502 architecture.

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  4. new? by kmac06 · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies. This is obviously some use of the word 'new' with which I am not familiar.

    1. Re:new? by Jonsey · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, that's common.

      It's either "new" as in GNU/Linux or "new" as in the African animal.

      --
      I assert that my comment is only my opinion, not that of any employer, past, present or future.
    2. Re:new? by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 1

      Is this like what "Is" is ?

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    3. Re:new? by jsse · · Score: 2, Funny

      This is obviously some use of the word 'new' with which I am not familiar.

      .NEW

    4. Re:new? by pooh666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      New is not the issue. The issue is how many jobs are out there for asp, .Net MSsql vs opensource jobs? I VERY rarely see a job in our market(BC Vancouver) for even the most popular of opensource coding, PHP. So how in the hell is open source going to win like that? Even if it is true that many of these companies that are publicly MS are using Linux and BSD in the background, how is that going to help the movement progress?

      Eric

    5. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like:
      1) Tablet PC.
      2) SQL as a File System.
      3) Office Suites.
      4) Multi-language Programming Framework.
      5) A whole bunch of crap that failed.

      If I am not mistaken, it is Linux that has very little new functionality. Yes, MS copies (so does Ford, GE, Sony and every other major coorporation) but inovation is also high on the list.

    6. Re:new? by MisterFancypants · · Score: 1
      This is obviously some use of the word 'new' with which I am not familiar.

      The .NET CLR alone is more innovative than anything the OSS community has produced in the past 5 years.

      Time to wake up and realize that Microsoft of 2003 isn't Microsoft of 1991 and when you put 3 billion dollars per year into R&D it tends to translate into some Really Cool Shit.

      You can badmouth Microsoft's business practices all you want, and I'd support you on that issue, but to try to pretend that their recent software isn't a highwater mark in the industry is to be a fool in denial.

    7. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies. This is obviously some use of the word 'new' with which I am not familiar.

      Slight misquote. What he actually said was, "Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing companies that develop new technologies into bankruptcy so we can steal their stuff.

    8. Re:new? by trashme · · Score: 1
      The .NET CLR alone is more innovative than anything the OSS community has produced in the past 5 years.
      Really? So what does .NET do that Java doesn't? What's so innovative?
    9. Re:new? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      My brother holds that Microsoft's main technology, and the place where their real innovation happens, is in "business practices."

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    10. Re:new? by Eric+Savage · · Score: 1

      "New" meaning "not just an open source version of something already out there".

      --

      This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
    11. Re:new? by stu10 · · Score: 1

      "...That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies"

      Quite enjoyable considering the story immediately preceding this one.

      "Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas ... is the first Hollywood production created entirely on Linux."

    12. Re:new? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Really? So what does .NET do that Java doesn't? What's so innovative?
      Its a common language runtime instead of Java lanaguage runtime.

      (Yes, I know anything can compile to Java byte-code, but that doesn't mean it was intended or is best suited for it).

      That's A Big Deal. It's a well rounded runtime that is well designed and effective and its language neutral-ish (not perfect, but pretty good).

      That's what .NET does that Java doesn't. Java = Syntax, Runtime, Library. .NET = runtime.

    13. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your brother is wrong. MS' business practices were invented by IBM in the '70's. Incidentally, they got IBM in to an anti-trust suit too.

    14. Re:new? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Being a monopoly isn't technology, it's not difficult, and it's not original.

      Although it's MS's only competitive advantage, it's certainly not innovation

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    15. Re:new? by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      But how is a common language runtime all that exciting unless it actually runs on a variety of platforms? Is there a .NET virtual machine available for anything but Windows running on x86? I mean, if the platform is that singular, who needs a runtime at all?

      --
      I do not have a signature
    16. Re:new? by Sabbath.sCm · · Score: 1

      You've obviously never used a Windows OS. There are several examples of their new technologies that can be seen in action when using windows, like the BSOD, the VXD panic, etc.

    17. Re:new? by cperciva · · Score: 1

      Look at what he said, closely. Gates didn't say that Microsoft was *inventing* new technologies; he said that Microsoft was *pushing* them.

      The graphical user interface was around long before Microsoft Windows came along, but it would have taken far longer to become commonplace without Microsoft Windows.

      Microsoft's contribution is not to invent the new technologies, but rather to find the new technologies which have a good chance of succeeding and pushing them forward.

    18. Re:new? by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Really? So what does .NET do that Java doesn't? What's so innovative?
      Its a common language runtime instead of Java lanaguage runtime.

      Having dug into the guts of the CLR on a recent assignment, your assertion happens to be untrue. The CLR is a C# language runtime that also has fully supported cross-compilers from other languages. Just like the Java VM, the .NET runtime is language specific and other languages get to subtly compromise their capabilities when they are compiled into it. Just take a look at the bytecodes that get built from C++ or J#. Hexagonal peg, pentagonal hole. (each one sorta fits, but none as well as C# :)

      The fully supported aspect of the various cross compilers appears to be important to external observers. My only conclusion is that that the name of their VM was very well chosen... Then again, marketing has always been their forte.

      Regards,
      Ross

    19. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft may clone Apple. But Linux Clones Microsoft.

    20. Re:new? by WNight · · Score: 1

      How is MS Excel any more innovative than OOCalc? They're both copies of Lotus 1-2-3. How does being closed-source make Excel better than OOCalc?

    21. Re:new? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      Mono is coming along nicely. Console apps will run depending on what they do. But you have a good point.

      I didn't say .NET was better than JAVA, but the fact that its not targeted for a single language is something that JAVA does not have.

      That's all I am saying.

    22. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've forgotten about iLoo?

    23. Re:new? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      My assertion is true.

      "Out-of-the-box" there are multiple (aka common) languages that use the runtime. Yeah, some work better than others - that's how it is with all languages.

      Compared to Java, there is one syntax supported by Sun: Java. There are alternatives, but they are community projects. That's what .NET has that JAVA doesn't.

    24. Re:new? by Slime-dogg · · Score: 2, Funny

      Heh... In MS's way:

      Dim myGUI As Apple.GUI
      Set myGUI = New Apple.GUI
      myGUI.Parent = System.Microsoft
      myGUI.Creator = System.Microsoft.Developers

      Dim myFS As IBM.SDA.HPFSDerivative
      Set myFS = New HPFSDerivative
      Dim winOS As System.Win
      Set winOS = New System.Win
      Set winOS.FS = myFS
      Set winOS.GUI = myGUI

      Sorry, it's VB6ish. Everything that they have has been copied, bought, or blatantly stolen (disk compression, ahem) from some other company.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    25. Re:new? by Quixadhal · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Microsoft has produced lots of NEW things in the last few years.

      NEW DRM support, to protect you from viewing your files.

      NEW online registration, to keep you from using your computer.

      NEW media codecs, to make sure that you start migrating your media into a DRM-enabled format so you can be charged for it later.

      NEW service packs, to ensure that your software has new bugs that can be fixed in future service packs, along with even better DRM support!

      and of course,

      NEW EULAs!!! To ensure that you no longer have to make worrying choices about upgrading or which files you want Microsoft and their good buddies at the RIAA to see.

    26. Re:new? by ctve · · Score: 1
      3) Office Suites

      Like lotus 1-2-3?

      If we are comparing operating systems, I can't think of much new functionality in Windows either, except for stuff that should have been there 10 years ago, and wasn't.

      If you want to talk about Microsoft vs Open Source, as providers, ask yourself which office suite has fully documented XML documents in all versions, works cross-platform, and has features in beta to save files as PDF. Or which browser has built-in pop-up blocking and a download manager?

    27. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn you beat me to the punch.

    28. Re:new? by ctve · · Score: 1
      It's irrelevant if it's language neutral, if everyone is coding in C# anyway!

      I haven't met anyone who is sticking to VB. Reason - the change from VB to VB.NET is quite painful anyway, and all the reasons for using VB over C++ (less likely to get memory leaks, faster to get off the ground) are gone. They do the same thing now, but with different syntax.

      The only other language I know which is leveraging .NET is COBOL, and that can be compiled to java code anyway.

      And when it 'commonly' runs on Linux, I'll consider switching my company web work from PHP.

    29. Re:new? by danheskett · · Score: 1

      And when it 'commonly' runs on Linux, I'll consider switching my company web work from PHP.
      Thanks to MONO thats not far away.

      But note, I didnt say or claim it was better. I just claimed they had that ability and it was better than Java's cross-language facilities - which is just about indisputable.

    30. Re:new? by TopShelf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ho hum, another "MS is so successful only because they're a monopoly" post. Did you ever consider that it takes something to actually become a monopoly in the first place, one that fostered an unprecedented (PC software) industry expansion over the last 20 or so years?

      MS does actually provide value to a huge customer base - there's a reason that their monopoly has thrived. Like it or not, MS has played a large role in the progress of desktop systems over the last two decades.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    31. Re:new? by Eric+Savage · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? Can you honestly tell me that Excel hasn't always been better than 123? It had to be, because 123 was the market leader and MS had an uphill battle.

      Being closed-source doesn't make Excel better. Being better makes it better.

      My point is that almost every open source project out there is just a clone of some closed source one. Fine with me, but the OSS community has yet to show any real innovation in professional software. Why? Simple economics. If someone isn't paying you for your program you have no real incentive other than ego to get them to use it.

      BTW, I have OO installed at home, and not Excel.

      --

      This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
    32. Re:new? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it takes something: Stabbing your business partner (IBM's PC division) in the back, and climbing over their corpse.

      It's easy to get big if you have no scruples. All you have to do is have less integrity than the next guy.

      Doesn't make it right.

      If MS was so convinced they had a good product, they wouldn't be destroying competitors left right and center. They would let their products compete on their merits, not artificial lock-in tactics.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    33. Re:new? by adamy · · Score: 1

      I was trying to use Geos on my C64 long before I ever saw MS Windows.

      Graphical Windowing systems were well on the way w/o MS "Pushing" them.

      Coca Cola is the dominant soft drink in the world. doesn't mean it is good for you.

      Yes, I m drinking a coke right now, but at least I'm not using windows.

      --
      Open Source Identity Management: FreeIPA.org
    34. Re:new? by banzai51 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And Linux hasn't? Start nameing OS features that Linux 'invented' and didn't just rework.

    35. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think 'new' is used in an unfamiliar sense. But I think the word 'pushing' is euphemistically, though appropriately, chosen.

    36. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is obviously some use of the word 'new' with which I am not familiar.

      It's short for 'newly acquired'.

      Hmmm.
      [submit]
      You must wait 20 seconds before hitting submit! You only waited 19 seconds!
      Fuck you! [back] [submit]
      Oh, I've changed my mind! Now you have to wait 2 minutes, and it's only been 46 seconds!
      WTF?? [back] [type experience on the end of post to kill time] [submit]

    37. Re:new? by gh · · Score: 2, Informative

      If the CLR was a "C# language runtime", wouldn't you think that I would be able to exercise all the functionality of that runtime through C#? There are handfuls of functionality put into the CLR that C# the language DOES NOT SUPPORT, but other languages such as VB.NET, JScript, and J++ do support. On top of that, there's functionality that as far as I can tell none of them support.

      Contrast that with the JVM which foremost only supported Java. Every other language has had to conform itself onto the JVM. There is some conformity required by the CLR, but not as much.

      Going forward Microsoft has atleast put forward the intent (both in words and Microsoft research projects) to keep moving the CLR in the direction of "Common Language". Sun and the JCP have no such intent with the JVM.

    38. Re:new? by torcaza · · Score: 1

      Its a common language runtime instead of Java lanaguage runtime. (Yes, I know anything can compile to Java byte-code, but that doesn't mean it was intended or is best suited for it). That's A Big Deal. It's a well rounded runtime that is well designed and effective and its language neutral-ish (not perfect, but pretty good). That's what .NET does that Java doesn't. Java = Syntax, Runtime, Library. .NET = runtime.

      I have to disagree with you in a few things
      The syntax is not completely unified in .net, take managed c++ for example, it really different from vb.net syntax, what is neutral is the objects provided by the runtime but there is a lot of language specific things
      On the other hand, you refer to libary for java if you mean external libraries .net has them too, they're called assemblies and in the end c#,vb.net,etc are just a layer on top of the real language wich is msil (Microsoft Intermediate Language), i could write a few laguanjes that could be interpreted and converted into java source and then compiled into a runnable format and i will have a cross language cross platform software developing platform

      Well at least that's my opinion, i use C# everyday somethings are good, some don't it's not as innovative as i would have expected considering is almost a clone of java in some aspects.

    39. Re:new? by kavau · · Score: 1
      ...and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies over the edge, so that they can continue to make profit off their error-prone and outdated technologies they stole from some other company a few decades ago.

      No, it's just the familiar 'new' as you and I understand the word.

    40. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And do you realize that Vancouver, at three hours driving from Seattle, is basically the MS backyard?

    41. Re:new? by thisgooroo · · Score: 1

      wrong. they were used more than a 100 years ago by a guy named rockefeller (weren't his business practices respnsible for the anti trust laws?), probably also by many other robber barons long before that

    42. Re:new? by thisgooroo · · Score: 1

      both with wordperfect and lotus123 the early versions of microsoft's competing products were lousy, but got installed because microsoft offered package deals to the system builders like compac etc which enabled them to sell loaded systems with "everything you need preinstalled" for substantially less cost than sombody who packaged windows, wordperfect, and lotus123 on his machine (the same trick the tried later with internet explorer). don't forget that the end customer usually didn't have much infpormation to compare the installed software to available alternatives they styed inferior until the marketing cut off the air supply of their competitors

    43. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Linux is reinventing UNIX 1989.

      Only better.

    44. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, more like "if we don't invade Iraq, they will take all our bases that belonged to us with their WMD's!"

    45. Re:new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The .NET CLR alone is more innovative than anything the OSS community has produced in the past 5 years.


      Where'd you get your programming degree? Devry? So long as you're not writing actual applications that require actual optimization and control, .NET is fine. Or do you enjoy riding the short bus in VB/C# land? ROTFLMAO.

    46. Re:new? by WNight · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that it's unreasonable to say open-source programs aren't at all innovative when they fill the same niche as another program, but that closed source ones are.

      People seem to think that Excel is innovative, but OOCalc isn't. Why the difference? Is it because one of them is open source and the other isn't? I suggest this only because people go on about Open Source never innovating, which suggests that closed source companies must be innovating pretty much all the time.

      I think that having a server-class operating system as a desktop machine, with uptimes of months (all the time between lan parties) that I can also use as a firewall, web/file server, bandwidth shaper, etc, is pretty innovative. As in, I don't see MS offering anything like that.

    47. Re:new? by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Flamebait? What's the matter, can't take your own medicine?

  5. OS/2!! by NitroPye · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    OS/2 Delivers!

  6. Uhm, yeah. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Insightful


    This is the guy that managed to overlook the internet when he wrote The Road Ahead in 1995.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Uhm, yeah. by bstadil · · Score: 4, Funny

      or thought that a real breakthru would be an algorithm to factor large PRIME numbers.

      --
      Help fight continental drift.
    2. Re:Uhm, yeah. by laserjet · · Score: 1

      Did he really? I was going to buy that book, but never did. Can someone that read it give me the jist of what the "road ahead" consisted of?

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    3. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      It kind of is, because much of cryptology relies on large primes as keys, and if you could easily factor them it would be trivial to break keys (see Distributed.net RC64 etc. of a brute-force method).

      Of course, nowadays there are alternates but today it is still of significance.

    4. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Carbonite · · Score: 1

      Are you sure he wasn't referring to an algorithm for finding large prime factors?

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    5. Re:Uhm, yeah. by dago · · Score: 1

      noooo... it really sounds serious ... please ban anonymous coward from /., he's so stupid

      (for those wondering, according to some webster : prime means "having no factor except itself and one")

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
    6. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just think about exactly what a prime number is and why it's trivial to factor them for a moment.

    7. Re:Uhm, yeah. by dago · · Score: 1

      One of the most funny but not said as such things written in the book was his story describing him going to a movie, at the same time a (she) friend was going also and having all the time their mobile switched on ... to share that moment.

      IIRC, it was telled to illustrate how technologies are improving relationships between peoples.

      Well ...

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
    8. Re:Uhm, yeah. by sehryan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      Just because he discounts it now doesn't mean he can turn around and dominate it later.

      --
      The world moves for love. It kneels before it in awe.
    9. Re:Uhm, yeah. by bstadil · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      Help fight continental drift.
    10. Re:Uhm, yeah. by SegFaultCM · · Score: 1
      A relative gave it to me. I read it, laughed, and got rid of it.

      Pretty much, "I see the future of computers as being all linked together - sharing data, and evolving beyond what we currently know. Now, pardon me while I put a spin on everything else every other company has done and I'll change the names of their technologies."

      The whole book claims "innovations" (God, that's such an over-used word now-days) that were already done by someone else.

      Remember, the only reason Microsoft has any impact is because it is a monopoly - not because it is popular.

      --
      -- SegFault
      "One day, some time ago, something important happened."
    11. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful


      > And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      Heh. Eight years later and Microsoft's biggest contributions to internet culture are browser integration, Outlook backdoors, and e-mail trojans. I don't think he 'gets' the internet now any more than he did in 1995.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    12. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Surak · · Score: 3, Informative

      There were not one, but TWO versions of this book. IF you manage to find a copy at a bookshop, you're more likely to come across the second edition, which is basically an entire rewrite that includes the Internet. Most of it was about how Microsoft software would run your refrigerator, dish washer, TV, change the pictures on your walls etc. It was kind of a description based on his own house, which is a technology showcase in its own right, in Redmond, Washington.

    13. Re: Uhm, yeah. by jsse · · Score: 1

      Heh. Eight years later and Microsoft's biggest contributions to internet culture are browser integration, Outlook backdoors, and e-mail trojans.

      Together with Windows' Update, there are HUGE contribution I tell ya.

      It 'contributes' ~45% of our bandwidth cost.

    14. Re:Uhm, yeah. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Yep. A breakthrough to factor products of large prime numbers would be useful. However, the factors of a prime number such as 12409 are 1 and 12409.

    15. Re:Uhm, yeah. by deadsaijinx* · · Score: 1

      and if you could easily factor them it would be trivial to break keys

      HAHAHAHA! Beware! For I have the incredible powers to factor prime numbers in my head. Just give me any prime number!

      1 factors into 1 and 1
      2 factors into 2 and 1
      3 factors into 3 and 1
      5 factors into 5 and 1
      7 factors into 7 and 1
      11 factors into 11 and 1
      13 factors into 13 and 1
      and so on and so forth...


      HAHAHAHA! As you can see, I can now break any keys! P|-|34R /\/\3y3 |33+ 5K1||z0rz!

      --
      YOU SUCK BALLS!
    16. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Polo · · Score: 1

      Well, duh. The idea is not to acknowledge the competition. (or in the case of this article to play down the threat).

    17. Re:Uhm, yeah. by AstroSmith · · Score: 1

      They certainly devote a boatload of resources to competition they liken to OS/2:
      Resources for Competing with Linux
      Complete with SCO FUD headlines!

    18. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah right....check out the stock price.. What a joke...Balmer and Bill need to step down and let some fresh blood run the show.

    19. Re:Uhm, yeah. by cK-Gunslinger · · Score: 2, Funny

      Whew! Afer years of work, I've finally got it!

      The algorithm for factoring any large prime number (X) is:

      Factors of X = X and 2.. Oh wait, d'oh!

    20. Re:Uhm, yeah. by PD · · Score: 1

      Without even thinking about it, or doing any math, I can tell you that the factorization of the number 37 (a prime) is 1 and 37.

      All I need to know to factor a prime number is the definition of a prime.

    21. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are a dumb ass.

      What you should have said is "factor large numbers".

      A "much of cryptology" is bogus. Only the RSA alorigthm uses Prime numbers (or "nearly prime" numbers).

      Take two large prime numbers and multiple them together to get the result. Now give just the result to somebody and have them try to factor it (ie, come up with the original prime numbers).

      THAT is the hard problem.

    22. Re:Uhm, yeah. by GigsVT · · Score: 2, Informative

      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      If by that you mean "buy a browser, bundle it with the OS to kill the competition, take a BSD TCP/IP stack and kludge that into the OS, buy up dozens of popular Internet sites".

      Microsoft never contributed anything to the Internet in the way of innovation. What they have they bought from other companies.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    23. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also a little known service known as Hotmail...not sure if you've heard of it. Oh...and MS Passport...MSN perhaps...IIS...seems to me like he 'gets' the internet.

    24. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Vryl · · Score: 1

      Perhaps only RSA uses prime numbers, but the problem of solving the factorisation of large numbers can be shown to be the equivilent of the Discrete Logarithm Problem, and is a issue for many other cryptosystems as well.

      Actually, this is not quite true ... if you can solve the discret log prob, then you can factor, but the reverse has not shown to be true.

      cf Applied Cryptography, Schneier, p262.

    25. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how every Slashtard gets all flame happy whenever a Microsoft story comes up. Do you you fuckwits actually think you know more than Bill Gates? If so, why aren't you a multi-billionare?
      Huh? Why not?
      Really...I'd like to know.

      Just a guess, but I think the man might actually kow what he's talking about. Either he made a company that puts together incredible software, or he started a company that puts together horible, buggy software yet still manages to sell it to almost everyone in the developed world. Either way, the man knows what he's doing and he's damn good at doing it.

      Go out and make your first million and then we can talk...but right now you're just another whiney little lunix tard sitting in his parents' basement, buying another black trenchcoat on EddieBauer.com.

    26. Re: Uhm, yeah. by dh003i · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Really? Hotmail -- crap. Slow, crap. Most people have ISP's, and can get e-mail through those ISP's, as well as web-access. MS Passport -- privacy-violating crap. MSN -- more crap, with moderators who act like little nazi's. IIS -- crap which I don't need and never will. Intenret Explorer -- crap. IE does not remember forums like Phoenix, and if you go forward/backward, it forget anything you entered in a forum; furthermore, it uses non-standard's compliant web-rendering. Outlook is ok, but hardly innovative. There is little logic in bundling a calendar, daily plannar, etc, in with an e-mail program. They should be separate programs. MSN IM is ok, I suppose; though it was not the first, and offers nothing of significance over any other IM's.

      There are better browsers, chat-rooms, e-mail progs, and IM's out there than the one MS provides; and MS hasn't been a leader in any of these areas, but simply a follower.

      Internet browsers and e-mail programs have been around for many many years. Chat-rooms -- them too. It's called IRC. IM's are relatively new, but not an MS creation.

      Outside of IM programs, the real great apps on the internet are things MS has nothing to do with, and seems to have no plans of getting involved in. Look at the internet radio stations (see Yahoo's radio station). Look at P2P programs and other file-sharing programs. The FreeNet. Distributed computing to spread parallel work out accross the internet (see SETI).

      So, we've established that MS isn't really an innovator, nor really a leader, in any categories of significance (nope, not even office progs...they're just standard and ordinary). MS is not good at innovating and creating superior software. They have yet to do either so far.

      What MS is good at is getting people to accept crappy product over better ones: advertising and behind closed-doors corporate agreements.

    27. Re:Uhm, yeah. by deuist · · Score: 1
      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      Just because he discounts it now doesn't mean he can turn around and dominate it later.

      You're missing the point. Bill Gates said that Microsoft is coming out with new technology. Using a monopoly to force other companies into bankruptcy then only to adopt their technology is completely different.

    28. Re: Uhm, yeah. by pohl · · Score: 1

      I think he "gets" the internet perfectly. He just doesn't like it because it's not in his best interest.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    29. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Shippy · · Score: 1

      I've heard this so many times and responded just as many...

      That's because Microsoft is the largest target to attack. The same thing will happen to Linux as it gains desktop market share. It's just as easy to cause e-mail trojans on Linux.

      All you have to do is attach a malicious binary to an email and send it to a Linux user. Any program they run will have the privileges of that user which includes having the power to remove everything from their /home directory, which can easily piss people off. Furthermore, it will have access to read their files which means it could read the text file which holds the person's Mozilla addresses. It would then be easy to open up a port and, if the code includes its own ability to send mail, forward itself to other unsuspecting users.

      Sure, this assumes they use Mozilla or whatever, but it's very easy to put in a check for all sorts of mailers and since many people have broadband and their friend sent it to them, the Joe Sixpack user won't think twice about runnin' that cool new proggie.

      --
      -Shippy
    30. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why aren't you a multi-billionare?
      Because daddy didn't loan us 10 Million bucks to start our business, and we mostly have higher morals.

    31. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you you fuckwits actually think you know more than Bill Gates? If so, why aren't you a multi-billionare?
      Huh? Why not?
      Really...I'd like to know.


      Who knew more, Bill Gates, or Albert Einstein?

      If Einstein was so smart, how come he wasn't a multi-billionaire?

      Your argument is as stupid as you are.

    32. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also a little known service known as Hotmail...not sure if you've heard of it.

      So "innovation" means "buying someone else's company"?

    33. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Shippy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wow, look at all the evidence you back this up with. Sure, I don't use Hotmail or Passport 'cause I don't need to, but IIS? Have you used the one in Server 2003 or are you just going off of the Code Red scare?

      Outlook is ok, but hardly innovative. There is little logic in bundling a calendar, daily plannar, etc, in with an e-mail program

      That's funny, I remember Outlook being touted as a Personal Information Manager and Communication solution, not an e-mail program. I actually love how it works. Someone can send me a meeting request and it'll automatically enter it into my calendar. I can easily propose a new time if necessary and all people will get that update. With the Exchange back-end, I can see it all on the web or on my Pocket PC. If they were separate programs, it would be harder to work together and actually less secure because they would be in separate process spaces so allowing only the calendar to talk to email and not other stuff is harder to do. How about you offer some valid reasons why they should be separate programs?

      So, you bring up a bunch of categories that _you_ think are the real great apps and since MS doesn't work with them, that doesn't make them an innovator? Also, you say they're not a leader in any categories of significance, even though their Office suite is the most widely used and I personally think it beats the crap out of OpenOffice.org.

      All you spew here is rhetoric with no real examples. So you don't like a couple of their programs (such as IE). Use something else and be happy! Just because they're not #1 doesn't mean they are the most innovative. MacOS X is way innovative and they always have been, but are they the #1 OS? No. They're always doing innovative things with their hardware. Are they the #1 seller of PCs? No. It doesn't mean they're not innovative, though.

      Please actually try the latest software and experience the full feature set before you spew your zealotous rhetoric.

      --
      -Shippy
    34. Re: Uhm, yeah. by schon · · Score: 1

      All you have to do is attach a malicious binary to an email and send it to a Linux user.

      OK, and what happens when they receive it?

      Will it run automatically, just by telling the browser that it's a midi sound file, but having a '.exe' extension?

      No.

      Will it run automatically, when the user clicks on it?

      No.

      When the user saves it to their home directory, will it run automatically when he/she clicks on it, because the system thinks "well, it's name ends in .exe, so therefore it must be an executable"?

      No.

      I think maybe spreading a malicious binary to Linux users might be a tad harder than you try to make it out to be.

    35. Re: Uhm, yeah. by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      There's also a little known service known as Hotmail.

      Which they bought, didn't create.

      Oh...and MS Passport

      Which createad a lot of negative press but, to date, I'm not sure I've found a website that actually uses it, other than Hotmail (?). Certainly not for making payments.

      MSN perhaps

      You mean the second-rate ISP? I know someone in Denver who got it when they moved out of DSL range. Had so many problems he cancelled it and got a local ISP and it worked great. Cable is now available in his area so now he uses that. But the only experience I've heard with MSN was quite negative.

      IIS

      Sure, it exists, but most servers use Apache and Linux, not IIS and Microsoft. And IIS was definitely catch-up to Apache.

      seems to me like he 'gets' the internet.

      Well, yeah, in 2003 just about everyone "gets" the Internet. Buy an existing free email service to compete with Yahoo, try to monopolize online payments, launch an ISP to compete with AOL, and launch a webserver to compete against Apache. Sounds very reactionary. Shows he understands how to play catch-up and recognize a threat once it exists. There isn't much evidence that he's any good at anticipating threats before they materialize... although I guess with Palladium he's trying to address it all in one blow. :)

    36. Re:Uhm, yeah. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      There are a variety of factors really. First off, I didn't weasel an OS from a Seattle computer shop to sell to IBM, and I didn't weasel out of that deal and sell to any buyer who wanted to copy IBM's success in the PC field.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    37. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should have, asshat.

    38. Re: Uhm, yeah. by someonehasmyname · · Score: 1

      Code Red wasn't a "scare," it was an epidemic.

      --
      Common sense is not so common.
    39. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You are missing the point. Right now it is harder to get a linux user to execute a malicious binary, but that is only because all linux users are pasty white geeks that know better. What the parent said was that if Linux had the same number of users, then they would also have the same dumass users that are currently on Windows and open every attachement that they get.

      Also, your little Q&A shows that you don't have a clue what you are talking about. By default, Outlook won't even let you touch an attachment with a .exe extension. If you want to get an executable, have the sender zip it up.

      Please take your ignorance someplace else. Try kuro5hin- that place is full of ignorant people.

    40. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're such a fucking moron.

      Are you trying to tell me Albert Einstein knew more about selling software than Bill Gates?

      Jesusmotherfuckingchrist...you people need to die.

    41. Re:Uhm, yeah. by AstroDrabb · · Score: 2, Funny
      I have just had a breakthrough in finding the solution to Billy's problem.
      #include <stdio.h>

      typedef struct {
      int num1;
      int num2;
      }FACTORS;

      void find_factors(FACTORS* fF, long f)
      {
      fF->num1 = f;
      fF->num2 = 1;
      }

      #ifdef _DEBUG_
      int main(int argc, char* argv[])
      {
      FACTORS f;
      find_factors(&f, 1200);
      printf("Factors of 1200:\n%i, %i", f.num1, f.num2);
      return 0;
      }
      #endif

      This code is copyright (c)2003 SCO Corp.
      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    42. Re:Uhm, yeah. by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      For extra credit, a perceptive student may see the one limitation of the find_factors function. : )

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    43. Re: Uhm, yeah. by TrippTDF · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I totally agree with what you are saying here. Microsoft is as big as it is not because of it's innovation or creativity in the programming realm, but rather in the business and marketing one.

      Microsoft has the money to throw themselves into any market an dominate it- look at the Xbox. They saw an opening in a market, and jumped in full speed and are now a competitor. How many other companies could have gotten into this market when MS did, and been as successful?

      This is why Linux should scare MS as much as it does: It's not that Linux is more stable, better looking, or any other million reasons; it's that MS can't beat out Linux in the business side.

      Just as P2P networks are going to force the entertainment industry to give us high quality stuff if we are going to pay for it, Linux is going to force MS to truly have to innovate and create something really amazing to get our money.

      At least, I hope.

    44. Re: Uhm, yeah. by AstroDrabb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      **Wow, look at all the evidence you back this up with. Sure, I don't use Hotmail or Passport 'cause I don't need to, but IIS? Have you used the one in Server 2003 or are you just going off of the Code Red scare?

      Umm, sorry. IIS in 2003 has not been out nearly long enough to say anything about its merits let alone its security or lack therof. Come back in a year or two when all the crackers have had their fun. One big problem with a rewrite is that you lose all those bug fixes and security fixes.

      **If they were separate programs, it would be harder to work together and actually less secure because they would be in separate process spaces so allowing only the calendar to talk to email and not other stuff is harder to do. How about you offer some valid reasons why they should be separate programs?

      Again, your are way off. How are programs running in a seperate process space insecure? You want programs in a seperate process space to create security and stablity between two different applications. The way programs have been desinged to interact is by using something called a standard. This is how all these servers can talk to one another, how you can browse the web and do many more things. MS has standards that they use for their own programs. Though they are just a greedy monopoly and do not believe in sharing or encouraging standards compliance. They want to keep their "standards" proprietary and call them "trade secrets" or "IP". What if every other programmer or corporation took this same approach? We would not have servers that could talk over tcp/ip, the internet, etc because everyone would be doing their own thing like MS.

      **So you don't like a couple of their programs (such as IE). Use something else and be happy!

      Again, with MS practices, it is very difficult to exercise free choice. You have to fight against "integrated" products, closed protocols, closed document formats, etc. MS does not want any user or corporation to have choice and they have continually shown that. If they cared about their customers having the ability to make a choice, then they would work with standards compliant technologies. If they want to "extened" a techonology, they would share that back with the IT world and have the extensions become part of the standard intstead of hoarding it.

      What I find sad is just how effective the MS FUD and marketing machine really is. You seem to actually believe the stuff that you are spewing. No corporatioin becomes an monopoly by caring about choice, standards or customers. They get there by unethical business practices.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    45. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck are you trying to say? "They're" maybe? Learn the damn english language or don't bother posting.

    46. Re:Uhm, yeah. by binary+paladin · · Score: 1

      In order to get to the point of being a monopoly you have to get quite the user base first. Microsoft didn't just appear from an abyss with a sudden monopoly (if you can really even call it that).

      Gates made a lot of very smart, very cut throat, very shady decisions that put him on top. I'm not saying this is an example of a good company that got out of hand. I'm just saying there's a lot more than the monopoly factor. It explains MS now, but certainly not how they came to be.

      And yeah, "innovation" is word that's used WAY too much. It's almost as bad as the word "solution." Everyone is selling "solutions" now-a-days. Thank goodness I'm just a tech.

    47. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this case "turn his company around on a dime" means "leveraged the power of a monoply to crush the original innovator by giving away an equivalent product with their OS and further developing 'extensions' which break web standards to prevent new footholds". Or did you mean this as a compliment to Microsoft?

    48. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you know that Hotmail was, like many other MS products, bought, not made by MS. Don't even get me started on Passport. I'd like to keep my personal information secret, thank you very much. Now about IIS... I don't see how propietary standards do anything but fragment the internet. They do not make it better. They just give one company more control. I'll stick with CGI.

    49. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about:
      875892137049857234908578923758923478956243 85689431 78957138495789145891437895743819257782346572643785 64327865781364785617834567816578163457861347856728 43657892436757234865784376578243675432785678432657 81762874561732864781632784613278564784326571643756 14327856781326478321675634107856714378657812365476 32546715236450312765173644573^12646325471263475827 36487216847362714527364512367457612354716235478162 354712634512793649

    50. Re: Uhm, yeah. by siamSam · · Score: 1

      What MS is good at is getting people to accept crappy products over better ones

      While I'll agree with the general spirit of your post -- I'll take the liberty to reword your last statement. No thanks required.

      What MS is good at is getting corporations to accept products that are good enough.

      All personal opinions aside, that's really what most companies are looking for. Bleeding edge and best in the market aren't always what purchasing managers are willing to go for.

      Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM - er... MS.

    51. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck u, boligmic

    52. Re:Uhm, yeah. by dspeyer · · Score: 1
      There's no use in prime factoring large numbers if you're limited to word size. You should use the GNU Multiple Precision Library (there are others, but this one will annoy BG most).

      I might also suggest testing the input to make sure it's prime. The library can do that for you IIRC

    53. Re:Uhm, yeah. by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Its such a bitch. Its soooo unpopular yet millions still willingly use it productively everyday. Maybe, just maybe, you're talking out of your ass.

    54. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps was so scared silly of it that he chose not to mention it.

      Think about it: the sole advantage of your product is customer lock-in; making it so that anyone considering using a different platform would have a difficult if not impossible time migrating.

      Then a technology comes that along that, by fundamental design, is platform-independent, threatening your (and more importantly, your shareholders) revenue stream.

      All you can tell your customers is that this new technology isn't that great and won't last, whilst in the meantime prepare a Plan B just in case this threat doesn't go away.

      The threat doesn't go away.

      So you go buy Mosaic, and "embrace and extend" the standards on which the internet was based, ensuring that all those precious customers of yours won't be able to run their web applications on another platform.

      Then tell everyone that you invented this marvelous new technology.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    55. Re:Uhm, yeah. by jabbadabbadoo · · Score: 1
      You know, The Road Ahead was written in '94, a few months before the web took of mediawise. At that point, Microsoft was planning to build their own proprietary web, but then Internet hit so they turned around (rather quickly, actually.)

      While you can say a lot of bad things about this man, he is in fact quite good at seeing what's around the digital corner.

    56. Re:Uhm, yeah. by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Did he really? I was going to buy that book, but never did. Can someone that read it give me the jist of what the "road ahead" consisted of?

      Think _1984_. Oh, wait, Gates said that it never came true! Such genius.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    57. Re:Uhm, yeah. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      I'm a /.'er, i can't get up before noon!

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    58. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.


      With all the billions spent on Internet Explorer, that's one expensive dime they turned around on. But I guess when you're as rich as Bill, it is just chump change.
    59. Re:Uhm, yeah. by pz · · Score: 1

      HOLYSHIT man, thanks for the link! And here I thought no one ever read my stuff ...

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    60. Re: Uhm, yeah. by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

      Whether or not he gets it, psycologically, you can't discount that almost all the browsers used on the internet came from redmond.

      For example:
      http://www.google.com/press/zeitgeist.ht ml

      Check out the browser chart. Look at IE 5.0, 5.5, and 6.0. Compare to everything else combined.

      ~Wx

      --
      sig?
    61. Re: Uhm, yeah. by darnok · · Score: 1

      > I don't think he 'gets' the internet now any more
      > than he did in 1995.

      I think he 'gets' it very well indeed.

      It's just that 'his' Internet includes things like DRM, micropayments and browsers integrated with the OS, but 'my' Internet doesn't. Whether 'his' or 'mine' ultimately wins out, or whether they manage to co-exist, is a matter for market forces and/or the intervention of many governments to decide...

    62. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      Oh, thanks for setting the record straight, I thought it was what the courts found - that he decided to use whatever means available to crush Netscape, legal or not.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    63. Re:Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Factors of X = X and 2"

      That's not a bug.

      That's a feature further enhanced in SP2 with a new license. Only available if you have the sercive contract of course. And dont worry we'll fix the new security leaks right after they are widely exploited.

    64. Re:Uhm, yeah. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft saw and realized the Internet was out there.

      They just thought for a time that private networks like AOL and their MSN would prevail.

      MSN was included for free on Windows 95 beta. Anybody who was a beta tester, or who got ahold of a copy of a Windows 95 beta could dial up and wander around a free MSN with no charges for connection. It was a non-Internet MSN, with some connectivity to the Internet. They were basically shaking out a wholly Microsoft Network, similar to the proprietary parts of AOL.

      The assumption seems to have been that the Internet would be overshadowed by proprietary networks.

      And with regard to Mosaic: Microsoft licensed Mosaic. Andreesen, on the other hand, just stole the development team, closed the source, and ran with it. If Netscape had 'won' we would be in about the same shape as we are now. They were really big on proprietary extensions to the Netscape server technology hooked into by their browser, ya know.... Kinda like Microsoft with IIS only different, cuz the brand name was different.

    65. Re: Uhm, yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But at the same time MS technology is behind why 95% of the worlds homeusers are on the net?

      Having an OS with a browser and mail-client intergrated is actually a POSITIVE thing.

      Oh and you are aware that there is and has always been a bitchload of backdoor problems, bufferoverflow exploits, viruses etc for NIX ?

    66. Re:Uhm, yeah. by UltimateZer0 · · Score: 1
      And then proceeded to realize his oversight, turn is company around on a dime, and now has a large slice of that internet pie.

      Mmm. . . pie. . .

      --

      --- I'm going to get a score of -1 for this post because the mods are fuckers.

    67. Re:Uhm, yeah. by kni52 · · Score: 1

      In other news: The search for the value of Pi, which has been computed since 2000 BCE starting with the ancient Babylonians, has ended. Earlier today William Gates, CEO of Microsoft, the creators of the Windows operating system, announced that Microsoft had solved this age old problem. Microsoft has decided to include this new, more accurate value of pi in each new copy of Windows. Windows users are encouraged to upgrade as soon as possible, as their mathematical computations will now be incorrect. It is rumored that the value of pi included in this new version of windows, called Windows Pi, is equivalent to 3.14.

      --
      My subtext is just a figment of your imagination.
  7. Ingoring the threat by Dr+Tall · · Score: 0

    If Gates thinks he can ignore Linux and make it dissappear, he's quite mistaken.

    1. Re:Ingoring the threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Thank you for quite possibly the most moronic sheep comment on Slashdot. Ever.

    2. Re:Ingoring the threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what? You're right. Gates doesn't even need to waste his effort ignoring Linux for it to dissappear.

      It's a failure all on its own.

    3. Re:Ingoring the threat by laserjet · · Score: 1

      I don't think he is really ignoring it. While he may appear to say it's just a passing fad, you can bet they are not ignoring it in the MS board room while Linux is slowing chipping away at their server, desktop, and office market. One PC at a time...

      --
      Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
    4. Re:Ingoring the threat by nomadic · · Score: 1

      You sure you're willing to take such a courageous, outspoken stance on slashdot?

    5. Re:Ingoring the threat by Dr+Tall · · Score: 0

      You're right, apparently the moderators here don't appreciate people speaking their minds. I thought it was pretty un-arguable that ignoring something doesn't make it go away.

    6. Re:Ingoring the threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Really? Care to explain? I guess developing rapidly and spreading into new markets is a failure. MS must be the biggest failure of them all.

      idiot.

    7. Re:Ingoring the threat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but you're seem to be too dense to understand why you were called a sheep.

      Do you know what's a "cliché"?

      At the risk of offending you... if you were "speaking your mind", your brain appears to have easy days... ;-)

  8. What did you expect? by FortKnox · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lets see, chief shareholder of MS (which competes with Linux), in a PR interview claims that they are better, and linux will go away.

    What do you expect people? Bill Gates annouces that Linux is pretty damn good and may give it a whirl, in other news MS stock drops 50%.

    This is just bait to get you guys all riled up. Welcome to PR.

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:What did you expect? by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      I like what you started with the /. picture thing in your sig, they really should consider adding that to /. as a profile option.

      Now, to avoid a -1 Offtopic, I agree with you about the article, it's just smack talking. Wars are won by deeds, not words.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    2. Re:What did you expect? by Merk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, but it does make me really curious about a few things.

      • What is Microsoft's true impression of Linux as both an OS and as a competitor?
      • How clued in are the top-level people about the capabilities of Linux?
      • Will their strategy of ignoring it and spreading FUD change if Linux starts getting nearer to 10% market share?

      I think the mere fact they talk about Linux in a USA Today interview with Gates says a lot. Besides, in the interview itself he isn't completely dismissive about Linux or OS/2. He said that OS/2 was serious competition because it had the weight of IBM behind it. If he's publicly saying the same thing about Linux then they are saying in public that it's a major threat.

      Personally, I hope they misunderestimate Linux right until it kills them. I stand by my belief that once non-windows home computers have around 20% of the market share, MS is doomed. At that point, hardware manufacturers will be losing serious sales if they release products with only Windows drivers. Software manufacturers will either release only for Windows, or make the software multi-platform and increase their potential market by 20%. Game manufacturers will be in an even better situation. If they release for PC only, they hit a small market, if they make the game multi-platform, not only do they get the additional computers (Linux, OS X, etc.) but additional consoles as well. If MS loses the monopoly on Windows machines as game computers, and Apple decides to break their monopoly on Office by doing what they did with Safari... at that point MS is dead. Let's just hope they don't know it yet.

    3. Re:What did you expect? by Tingler · · Score: 1

      Lets see, chief shareholder of MS

      Uh, no. Please check your facts.

      link

    4. Re:What did you expect? by Scareduck · · Score: 1

      "misunderestimate"?? You surely mean "underestimate".

      --

      Dog is my co-pilot.

    5. Re:What did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is misunderestimating something the same as overestimating it?

    6. Re:What did you expect? by adilsonoliveira · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have an old friend (and linux fan, like lot's of people there) working there at the development and, despite it's just talk among the employees he told me: 1) MS is very, very aware of free software in general and gnu/linux specialy as a treat, probably the biggest they ever faced. 2) Despite the aparences (see Balmer's shows), they are very smart people and they have labs running all there is under the sun and even real internal applications running on several different platforms for evaluation on real life situaions. The upper managemment knows everything about it. 3) This is pure speculation. He thinks they will continue the FUD trying to slow down teh free software movement and at the same time, trying to bring in the best ideias to compete technologicaly. So, in my mind, this interview is just what was told here already: pure PR.

      --
      Faith can move mountains. I prefer dynamite.
    7. Re:What did you expect? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      No... "misunderestimate" is a valid word. It's new, so you must embetter your language skills and learn it. It was created in 2002 by our extra-cool President G.W. Bush.

    8. Re:What did you expect? by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1
      I agree completely, and I suspect MS know this too. They would do anything in their power to stop that happening. Say, giving away software (and even hardware?) to the 20% of people who might consider using linux.

      Alternatively, if linux use gets large enough that a significant number of MS customers want interoperability with Linux - and MS cave in to their customer's demands - that itself would probably ultimately kill MS (with two-way interoperability, the barrier to changing to Linux is reduced to practically zero).

      The real fight though is not between Linux and Microsoft. It is about control. Control of the hardware, control of the software, ability for a 'comsumer' to modify their own equipment, ultimately, the ability for citizens to be able to be able to perform arbitrary computations. This must be enshrined as a universal right of Man, as the alternative is too horrible to comprehend.

      Surely, in a society based on free and open exchange of information, open source/free software will ultimately 'prevail', if only because it is surely a much more efficient utilization of resources. Of course, I'm not including 'monopoly leverage' as a resource here, so take this with a grain of salt....

    9. Re:What did you expect? by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1

      And how exactly is a list of recent transactions on MS shares supposed to support your comment?

    10. Re:What did you expect? by Merk · · Score: 1

      No, George Bush has tot me the airur of my waze. Beefour I usta spel it like that, but his waee of dewing thingz has struk a kord in me like a nukulear bom going off. Now, I saye "misunderestimate" like a gud Amerikun.

    11. Re:What did you expect? by tkittel · · Score: 1

      >I hope they misunderestimate Linux right until it kills them.
      > I stand by my belief that once non-windows home computers
      > have around 20% of the market share, MS is doomed.
      > [snip]
      > Let's just hope they don't know it yet.

      JEEESUS MAN!! Not so loud, are you mad...

      we want to keep it a secret damnit! :-)

      sssshhhh....

    12. Re:What did you expect? by Canadian+FBI · · Score: 1

      I think most of your questions are answered, or at least touched on, in the Halloween memos. Some are now pretty dated, but one can assume that they see Linux as at least as much of a threat today, and probably more of one.

    13. Re:What did you expect? by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      Personally, I hope they misunderestimate Linux right until it kills them....If MS loses the monopoly on Windows machines as game computers... at that point MS is dead. Let's just hope they don't know it yet.

      So what you're saying, essentially, is you're looking for the day when Microsoft's monopoly gets replaced by a Linux monopoly. How is this better for freedom of choice, again?

    14. Re:What did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said that OS/2 was serious competition because it had the weight of IBM behind it
      Can someone remind me why M$ handed SCO a pile of licencing money... this is the same FUD about Linux needing IBM to get anywhere.

    15. Re:What did you expect? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      that would be funny.
      Bill shows up, dressed in clothes he slept in, his hai a mess, 2 day growth on his face:
      "We're so screwed. Linux will totally dominate us, hell, just before I got here I sold all me shares. Fuck it, let Balmer go down with the ship."

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    16. Re:What did you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So what you're saying, essentially, is you're looking for the day when Microsoft's monopoly gets replaced by a Linux monopoly. How is this better for freedom of choice, again?

      Nope, poster didn't say that at all, you did in your abysmal paraphrasing.

      How exactly does a "Linux monopoly" develop when everyone has rights to see and change the source?

    17. Re:What did you expect? by Tingler · · Score: 1

      And how exactly is a list of recent transactions on MS shares supposed to support your comment?

      If you look at the last transaction of Bill Gates, 04/29/03. You will see he had 183,499,336 remaining shares.

      If you look at the last transaction of Steve Balmer, 05/30/03. You will see he had 410,968,074 remaining shares.

      Steve Balmer has almost 2 ½ times the number of shares Bill Gates has.

      If you look closer, you will see the Bill Gates has been selling off Microsoft stock like crazy over the last couple of years. Does he know something the rest of us don't?

    18. Re:What did you expect? by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1
      If you look closer, you will see the Bill Gates has been selling off Microsoft stock like crazy over the last couple of years. Does he know something the rest of us don't?

      Err, maybe he'd prefer to take his billions in salary rather than dividends? ;) Maybe he's investing in media companies and needs the cash? Maybe he's been blackmailed by the FBI into giving them shares, in exchange for not releasing their photographs of him engaging in wild sex, alone in his server room? How the f*ck should I know?

      More to the point, what do you think he knows?

    19. Re:What did you expect? by OneEyedApe · · Score: 1

      Linux can refer to SuSe, Redhat, Gentoo, Debian, SourceMage, Slackware, etc. And it is reasonable similiar to the *BSD crowd, enough that a competent programmer could port a well written app without too much trouble. There is are quite a few, if not too blasted many choices in the "Linux" world.

      --
      Life sucks, but death doesn't put out at all....
      --Thomas J. Kopp
    20. Re:What did you expect? by Tingler · · Score: 1

      The average person would pull money out of the stock market to take care of a large expense, such as buying a bigger house or education. Once you get to the financial level Bill Gates is at, it is all a game. It is like a score on a pinball game. The objective of your money is to make more money. If it isn't doing it fast enough when it is, you put it somewhere that you feel will be more effective.

      He may want to purchase an island & relax where he can get a better tan than Redmond. Say Oahu, for instance. Even if this is the case, he doesn't need the money. He could keep the shares at Microsoft, forget about them, & it wouldn't affect him one iota.

      You have to consider the emotional connection he has with Microsoft. Given the time & effort he put into this company, it is probably like a child to him. I would imagine it might be difficult to relinquish control in that circumstance. Or he may simply want to put it behind him.

      I see Bill Gate's massive sell off of Microsoft stock as an indication of his belief that whatever he is moving his money to will be more profitable in the long term than Microsoft will be. There are more than a few Gates haters on the site, but you have to give him credit that he can manage money. If he thinks there are things out there that will be more profitable that MFST will be, I would be inclined to believe him.

    21. Re:What did you expect? by ablair · · Score: 1


      "Personally, I hope they misunderestimate Linux[...]"

      "misunderestimate"? Oh no... George W. starts using it, and now it's common in American parlance. I guess this is the way standard English is turned into American English. The rest of us just keep misunderestimating the benefits of US cultural enrichment.

    22. Re:What did you expect? by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      I stand by my belief that once non-windows home computers have around 20% of the market share, MS is doomed. At that point, hardware manufacturers will be losing serious sales if they release products with only Windows drivers.

      That's one of the major hurdles, though -- how will we ever get to 20% market share without the cooperation of the hardware manufacturers? There's no way that 20% of the market will embrace Linux if it doesn't run on their hardware.

      I'll continue to vote with my wallet, though. I buy nothing unless it's supported in Linux.

  9. Yeah.... by TedTschopp · · Score: 4, Funny

    They keep bring us new stuff like MS-Bob.... and Clippy... and...

    Oh I don't want to have all the fun, you can come up with some...

    What other new innovative things has Microsoft done that really were flops.

    --
    Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    1. Re:Yeah.... by devnull17 · · Score: 1

      Ironically, OS/2.

    2. Re:Yeah.... by hendridm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > They keep bring us new stuff like MS-Bob.... and Clippy...

      Of all the stuff they've released in multiple markets over the past two decades, all you can find to troll with are Microsoft Bob (an application from 1995) and Clippy. Seems to me they might not be doing so bad after all. Why not compare modern versions of MS apps to versions of Mac OS or Linux from 1995 then?

      I love Linux, but the Microsoft Bob troll is so crusty, like no mistakes were made with Linux or OS X over the years...

    3. Re:Yeah.... by TWX · · Score: 1

      Of course, they got rid of OS/2 because it wasn't entirely their baby from the get-go, was too stable, and wouldn't have guaranteed the string of frustrated upgrades that users have been forced into buying.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    4. Re:Yeah.... by mmol_6453 · · Score: 1

      I don't recall any feature of Linux that completely flopped.

      And, when it comes to OS X, I don't think you can use the phrase "over the years"...

      --
      What's this Submit thingy do?
    5. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is MS-Bob like Baghdad Bob?

      "Linux is not a good OS, we will beat the infidels. Our cause is just."

      I miss Baghdad Bob. :-(

    6. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And, when it comes to OS X, I don't think you can use the phrase "over the years"..


      Are you counting "Rhapsody", the whole Blue Box thing, and all the other fits and starts Apple had trying to get to a modern OS?

    7. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah, they're definitely getting better over the years. And how are they doing that? Well, let's see, they changed from NetBEUI (spelling) to TCP/IP as their main standard. They went from using WINS to using DNS. They are moving their authentication from SMB to LDAP. Hmmm, so basically they are FINALLY moving to all the standards that Unix, Linux, *BSD, etc have been using all along. And they tout this as "innovation." Same old Microsoft as always.

    8. Re:Yeah.... by zulux · · Score: 1


      Ok....

      Here's a recent Microsoft (financial) failure:

      XBOX.

      Hell, Sony sells more PSOne's in Japan than Microsoft selles XBOX's in Japan. And Microsoft subsidises the XBOX heavily. Nintendo and Sony both make money on hardware sales.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    9. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      like no mistakes were made with Linux or OS X over the years...

      Let's not forget Gentoo Linux. Hoo-boy did that ever suck! Moving on...

    10. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slant Bill all you like, but above all, for better or for worse, he lead a company that brought an OS to the masses. MS isn't the most reverand of companies but it is the most successful - considering most here just love to compile Linux with the latest patch where is the basis that they're more knowledgeable or have more resources than BG\MS?

      Go ahead, mod me -1 troll.

    11. Re:Yeah.... by Traa · · Score: 1
      They keep bring us new stuff like MS-Bob.... and Clippy... and...

      funny you mention clippy, since I just saw his brother 'blinky' the lightbulb in OpenOffice and I was wandered if this was included because of irony or innovation?

    12. Re:Yeah.... by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      It's not so much that those are the only things we can find to troll with. Those are just the two things that Microsoft ever actually came up with on their own. Everything else was done on the coattails of someone else. We don't have a huge base of innovation to point at with that company.

      You have to give them credit for trying to come up with human interface innovations but neither of those should have ever made it off the research floor. Linux is the research floor, and the collective peer review of thousands of developers tends to prevent such mistakes from happening in the first place.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    13. Re:Yeah.... by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Hell, Sony sells more PSOne's in Japan than Microsoft selles XBOX's in Japan.

      While your at it, why don't you take a look at automobile marketshare in Japan and compare that with the world. Japanese cars do far better in Japan than they do in the US or Europe.

      Your analogy is lousy, you obviously don't understand the market.

    14. Re:Yeah.... by mbourgon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually a couple of years ago, there was a gigantic thread here about Microsoft's "Innovation". People would throw up innovations by Microsoft, someone else would cite either the company bought by MS that had that tech, or the original idea. Hell, Cleartype was done by Steve Wozniak back in the 1970's. It's actually quite depressing - you'd think they could come up with something new.

      IIRC, there was an innovation - apparently they have a patent on a two-way door hinge.

      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    15. Re:Yeah.... by TedTschopp · · Score: 1

      I actually owned a copy of Bob.... So I'm not totally Trolling here. I'm just pointing out one of their most spectactual failuars.

      If you want a modern failuar, how about how 2 years ago everything was .NET.

      How about HailStorm.

      How about the Windows CE. How about Windows ME.

      How about that stupid research project where they are going to record every conversation and everything I see and every event I attend, then sell it back at me. And then a couple months later their CEO has the balls to say that technology isn't becoming Orwellian. YEAH SURE!

      Don't get me wrong. I'm typing this away on my MS computer. I run my Tolkien Website on a Windows 2K server. But you have to admit MS doesn't really innovate or make standards.

      They standardize/bastarize others standards and roll it out to 95% of the market via their OS. This is what makes them a good thing for the industry. When the take a good standard and make it a part of their OS. It becomes the standard. This is also the problem with MS. When they pick a bad standard or bastardize a good standard, they screw 95% of the populace.

      ok... I need to breath.... Slowwww... Down.... Sign off....

      Ted Tschopp

      --
      Fantasy remains a human right; we make in our measure and in our derivative mode... -- JRR Tolkien
    16. Re:Yeah.... by El · · Score: 1

      According to The Microsoft "Hall of Innovation" (Admittedly biased), MS-Bob and Clippy are the only true M$ innovations. Everything else was copied from someone else.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    17. Re:Yeah.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      the reason why7 those are dragged our:
      1) hyped by MS as the next big thing. In truth, Bill gave is soon to be bride control of it, and that was a huge mistake. The peopel working on Bob relized it wqas going to fail, and would have stopped, but she had to push it through.

      2)they where MS originals. thing they developed and not
      embraced and extended."

      Everything MS trid to do as an original has failed.

      the mistaks in Linux and OSX has mostly been do to somebody trying something different, attempting to innovate. Most of it worked.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    18. Re:Yeah.... by Slime-dogg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here's my own personal list.

      • MS Bob
      • MS DOS 6.0
      • Windows 98 & SE
      • Windows ME
      • MS PhotoDraw
      • MS Project
      • MS VB 1-6
      • MS Visual Source Safe
      • Any UML stuff before .NET
      • SQL Server / Open Wormage
      • "Trusted" Computing
      • Windows Scripting
      • The Win32 API
      • Failure to embrace x86/64 until it was hyped by other companies as good.
      • Failure to embrace Firewire
      • Did I mention VB?
      • COM, DCOM, ActiveX / DLL Hell
      • CSS / PNG Support in IE
      • IE vulnerabilities
      • Refusal to ship a good JVM
      • WinXP not playing well with other OS's at install
      • Server GUIs
      • Touting MCSE as an official computer education

      I could keep going, I guess. I have much to bitch about, and yet people insist that even their shit is golden. Gag me with a spoon.

      Oh, last but not least: "Developers! Developers! Developers! Developers!"

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    19. Re:Yeah.... by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

      Japan is important in the long term, but you mustconsider that XBox, like it's sony competitor, is only the first step in the larger goal of dominating the living room. I think that considering that the XBox has been quite successful in the west (in terms of market penetration, obviously not financially yet), the next iteration of the XBox will almost certainly be better recieved in Japan than the current XBox is.

      The whole argument that "M$ loses money on hardware while Sony and the big N are making money" is niave and ignorant. M$ almost certianly has a financial strategy that is planned out for the next 10 to 15 years. I will not be surprised if it works for them either.

    20. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rhapsody was really a product aimed at developers and ex-Nextstep users and was not pushed as a major product.

    21. Re:Yeah.... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Of course, they got rid of OS/2 because it wasn't entirely their baby from the get-go, was too stable, and wouldn't have guaranteed the string of frustrated upgrades that users have been forced into buying.

      That's not a new thing, either. "Planned obsolescence" is older than MS. But it's very American, I think.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    22. Re:Yeah.... by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      actually, from what I understand, clippy came out of the research they did with bob, so they're not really separate projects, more a continuation of one after another

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    23. Re:Yeah.... by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      What other new innovative things has Microsoft done that really were flops.

      Well, there was the NSA Backdoor innovative feature, but that got mixed reviews.

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    24. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the point the poster is trying to make is that MS-Bob and Clippy are pretty much the _only_ things MS has innovated. They have bought or licensed just about every other one of their software products.

    25. Re:Yeah.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, Microsoft, and you, doesn't understand the videogame marekt. Just because you can build an OS doesn't mean you can build a console.

      Your analogy blows donkey balls...

  10. OS/2?? by MyHair · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Silly Bill, did he forget that Microsoft and IBM partnered on OS/2?

    Off to RTFA to find out....

    1. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He probably thinks on that issue as Microsoft pretending to join with IBM on OS/2 in order to sink them so Windows would come out on top.

    2. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not to mention that NT is built on OS/2 Technology. Which means 2000 is Built on OS/2 technology. How else could a corrupted MBR cause an "OS/2!!" error?

      Anyone remember those? hmmmmmmm

    3. Re:OS/2?? by Zathrus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sure, but the last significant collaboration was OS/2 1.2. 1.3 was done primarily by IBM (and was considered pretty much the only usable 1.x release, which isn't saying much). OS/2 2.x was entirely IBM, and all MS code had been expunged from the kernel by the time OS/2 Warp came about... IIRC, the only MS code left at that point was in the file system (HPFS and FAT). OS/2 Warp was considerably more stable than prior versions.

      Of course, IBM couldn't market its way out of a paper bag when it came to desktop systems, they had absolutely horrid support, fairly crappy and overpriced development tools (VisualAge was too little, too late, and too buggy), and it never garnered the support necessary to become a serious contender... and I say this as someone who was an OS/2 fanatic back in the day. And while MS was slow on the uptake when it came to the Internet, IBM was downright glacial... most people ran Netscape for Windows under OS/2, which sucked... IBM did finally release a browser (which was damn good for the day), but long after most had given up.

      AFAIK, even the banks are moving off of it now... OS/2 was long a mainstay in the financial world, especially at banks and ATMs. Most ATMs now run NT or a proprietary OS. There just isn't any reason to keep OS/2.

    4. Re:OS/2?? by MyHair · · Score: 1

      Okay, you apparently know your OS/2 history better than I do. I thought MS was into it when it had a 32-bit codebase.

      My first OS/2 was 2.1. It was awesome except for the lack of apps. (And the fact my 386SX PC was really too slow to run it until I upgraded my PC for Win95. For those that don't recall, a 386SX was 32-bit but had to perform two 16-bit memory reads to fill the 32-bit registers. A real drag in 32-bit mode.) None of the built-in apps had a 64k limit. You could use the edit command and Notepad equivalent on enormous text files. OS/2 really whetted my appetite that wasn't satisfied until I discovered Slackware.

    5. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PARTNERED? Microsoft WROTE OS/2!

    6. Re:OS/2?? by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      That's pretty much right on the money. IIRC, the NT team was brought over from Digital (remember them?) - or at least had some serious input from DEC/Digital. For a while it was looking good that NT was going to be multi-platform (Alpha, MIPS, Intel, what else?).

      Personally, I started with OS/2 2.0 up through Warp 3.0. I remember the lack of a good web browser at the time (think there was one built into OS/2 though?). Completely skipped Win95/Win98 except for games (dual-boot) and went straight to NT4 after using it at work. So I probably used it for 2-3 years as my only operating system at home.

      The real fun of the OS wars was reading the CANOPUS forum (that the name?) on CompuServe and watching the FUD battles over Win95 vs OS/2.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    7. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Most ATMs now run NT or a proprietary OS.

      "Or"??

    8. Re:OS/2?? by starfish23 · · Score: 1

      NT 3.5.1 ran on PowerPC, MIPS, x86, and Alpha.

      IIRC, NT 4.0 dropped support for all but x86 & Alpha.

      Dom

    9. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAIK, even the banks are moving off of it now... OS/2 was long a mainstay in the financial world, especially at banks and ATMs. Most ATMs now run NT or a proprietary OS. There just isn't any reason to keep OS/2.

      I work for the IT staff of a bank. One of our big projects this year is to start replacing all of our OS/2 based ATMs with Windows ones. Seeing as how we're a pretty small bank, I imagine that larger banks with more resources are doing the same, if they haven't done so already.

    10. Re:OS/2?? by bahamat · · Score: 1

      What? The operating system that Microsoft didn't work on is stable and usable?

      Somehow I'm not surprised.

    11. Re:OS/2?? by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      My first OS/2 was 2.1. It was awesome except for the lack of apps.

      My first OS was OS-XY 4.0. It was totally awesome, except that it existed only in my head.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    12. Re:OS/2?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The generally-accepted excuse for OS/2's slow death is VisualAge running in the $N,000-range, while MS pushed Visual Studio for free at college students and convention attendees.

      That said, I don't know about the initial Warp release (3.0) being "considerably more" stable; OS/2 2.x and up were solid, so it's hard to argue. (Hardware support continued to suck through much of Warp 3's lifetime; I had the misfortune to trade out an S3 864 - incompatible with my SCSI card through Diamond misengineering - for a Trident card, and from there had to end up with a Cirrus Logic board which took quite a bit of fiddling to run with a hardware-accellerated mouse pointer that wouldn't appear in funky shades of purple. As I discovered later on another machine, the S3 drivers weren't capable of the same resolutions-per-video-RAM as their Windows counterparts.

      Anyhow, there were still significant chunks of Microsoft Engineering left, though the code certainly had a bit of turnover. The integrated Windows support was a license of Win3.1, even as MS developed 3.11 to break it; the "Single Input Queue" bug in the GUI (allowing a frozen application to lock a still-running system) was blamed on Microsoft's approach to implementing IBM specs during the cooperation period (suggesting MS coders did touch Presentation Manager, even as MS itself was pushing the Win3.x Program Manager as the Road Ahead), and didn't disappear until Warp Server 5, AKA "Aurora."

      Warp 3 was 2.x with the addition of dynamic timeslicing to the ("Warp") kernel, a TCP/IP stack (first 'desktop' OS to ship with its own stack, beating Windows by a year, and Apple by...?), an improved visual design, and the sort of cleanups you got between, say, Windows 95 and 98, or NT 3 and 4 perhaps? Warp 4 ("Merlin") added some yet-tastier icons, quashed more bugs, and threw in the WarpCenter (Lotus SmartCenter taskbar), VoiceType and other such Neat Stuff...

      Then Aurora was pushed out the door, and the death throes commenced, with the release of various "Second Edition"-type CDs (now that it'd become difficult to update a base install of Warp 4 for lack of a browser to run on it; IBM's update page would no longer view in the included WebExplorer, and recent Netscape required a few FixPaks installed before it could run), and the eventual fobbing off of the whole thing to the eComStation guys and that other company you never hear about (who, apparently, just took the license to do reinstalls and corporate support of existing IBM versions, which is why you never hear.. no new development from them.)

  11. subbing articles on himself by pytheron · · Score: 5, Interesting
    What is Bill Gates doing submitting stories under his pseudonym (king-of-darkness) ? Anyways, an interesting bit in the article I thought was:

    BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious. That was IBM, a company 15 times our size. Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. OS/2 was IBM's product, and the IBM army marched behind that product.

    Now replace IBM with Microsoft, and OS/2 with windows. Not so clever now Mr. Gates !

    --
    "I am not bound to please thee with my answers" [William Shakespeare]
    1. Re:subbing articles on himself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No this is true. Lots of banks have been using OS/2. (My bank was still using it last year)

    2. Re:subbing articles on himself by Doctor+Hu · · Score: 1
      BG: ... Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. ...
      OK, this is taking BG out of context, and he was exagerating to make a point, but I'd take a side bet that those banks that weren't using IBM mainframes for their main operational data processing mostly didn't buy into OS/2. A minority in the banking business, granted, but including some pretty big companies.

      Arguably, with OS/2, just as with the PS/2 hardware line, IBM was intent on continuing the mainframe/ terminal approach that worked so well for so many years. BG came from the opposite direction, bet that having a cheap but adequate offering that spanned home and low-level office would be ubiquitous enough to compete, and turned out to be right.

    3. Re:subbing articles on himself by Spackler · · Score: 1


      Now replace IBM with Microsoft, and OS/2 with windows. Not so clever now Mr. Gates !

      Now replace IBM with "Natalie Portman", and OS/2 with Grits! Not so clever now Mr. 443963!

    4. Re:subbing articles on himself by Simon+(S2) · · Score: 1

      Now replace IBM with Microsoft, and OS/2 with windows.

      that would mean linux=windows.
      oh no!

      --
      I just don't trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesn't die.
    5. Re:subbing articles on himself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, IBM was pushing this big proprietary stack of software called Systems Application Architecture (SAA) -- of which OS/2 was only a small part. Only the True Blue shops bought into it.

      As IBM started to swirl down the toliet, EVERYONE else made out like bandits. Not only Microsoft, but all the big Unix vendors too.

      But Gates is right -- people did use OS/2. There were many huge 10^4 seat deployments (and still are!) - mostly in banking and insurance. It was also the only choice for a PC application server for a while.

  12. He is correct by dnoyeb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He is right. Windows is pusing the technologies. Pushing them in the way they desire. nevertheless, they are. Linux has a long way to go for smooth MultiMedia usage.

    Nevertheless, he is only right for now. Linux is a locomotive, and its only picking up steam.

    1. Re:He is correct by mhore · · Score: 1, Funny
      Windows is pusing the technologies.

      Can you do that in public? ;-)

      Mike.

      --

      Mmmm......sacrelicious.

    2. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You're kidding me right? The only reason I still have my Linux box is because it's a better PVR (using MythTV) than any Windows box is. I don't even use Linux as my primary OS (OS X fits that bill). But Linux rocks at multimedia for the enduser now, and because of that it's found a place on my LAN.

    3. Re:He is correct by Aadain2001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would have to disagree with you. I think Linux is pushing new technologies faster than MS is. Take a look at the 2.5.x (soon to be 2.6.x) kernels. They represent the most modern kernel out there. MS doesn't have all the features in their ntkernel that Linux does, and probably won't for another 5 years. And Linux is very much multimedia friendly. Just look up a few programs such as Xine or Mplayer. These players alone will play ANYTHING out there, and do it very well. To this day I have yet to find a person saying "Linux isn't ready for desktop use" that has tried the latest release from Redhat or Mandrake or SuSE. They are always referring to distros over two years old or older, which was the last time they touched Linux. They just don't get that Linux moves faster than MS has, does, or ever will. And as someone above said, Linux is a train and it's only picking up steam.

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    4. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Linux rocks at multimedia for the enduser now." huh? maybe you've invested enough time to figure it all out, but Linux is WAY OVER the average end user's head right now.

    5. Re:He is correct by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      the absolute fun part.... there is absolutely nothing he can do to make linux fail/go away. Nothing at all.. not even the US government can make linux fail.

      this is the part that everyone underestimates linux on.. cince it is out there in it's entierity, and the GNU tools are out there also 100% free and with source code...

      It cant be stopped, it cant be made to fail, it cannot be destroyed...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    6. Re:He is correct by PyromanFO · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Just with regards to multimedia, alsa still doesn't have software mixing enabled by default. A feature Windows has had for a decade, a feature that the average user will notice, in fact they will notice it to the point of being a showstopper, and it isn't enabled by default yet. On most systems you can't play more than one sound at a time, through alsa or oss. With a little configuration file tweaking and some application support, it could be enabled for oss and everything else, but nobody has done it yet.


      Its just one example of a situation with Linux that keeps it from being ready for the desktop as far as Multimedia is concerned.

    7. Re:He is correct by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Umm... I'm going to disagree with you, because basically all that you listed are not innovations but duplications & extentions.

      Xine & Mplayer are great players but do they do anything new and "innovative"? KDE & Gnome again different look and feel but not really innovative. Office again not innovative. Great examples of duplicating ideas, that often work better than the original (after a few vers) but innovative? No.

    8. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, if SCO can prove that Linux contains unauthorized code, that could put a stake through the heart of Linux for a good while.

      Also, the GNU license has not stood up to a court challenge either, so there is a very good chance that a company with deep enough pockets could litigate Linux out of existence.

    9. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does any of these things magically evaporate the sourcecode everywhere?

      nope...

      It cant be killed :-) nice try... please play again.

    10. Re:He is correct by nege · · Score: 1

      I agree with you - Linux can usually DO these things...it is more a matter of it can sometimes take an act of God to get them to work! And sometimes..they go in just as smoothly as a windows program. So the thing here is that it is a crapshoot whether or not it will work in the first place. I love linux, and wish I could run it on the desktop full time. My personal solution was to buy two nice nearly identical computers, then get a nice flat LCD monitor and a KVM. Problem solved! Use linux for what it does best, and MS for what it does best! (Apps that dont work or dont exist on linux).

    11. Re:He is correct by James_Duncan8181 · · Score: 1
      Umm...I have just tried sofware mixing of 5 different sources and had it work with a regular Debian alsa setup (sid, emu10k).

      Have you tried this recently?

      --
      "To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
    12. Re:He is correct by fitten · · Score: 1

      Can't be killed, true. It's like letting the cat (code) out of the bag. Once it's out, it's out. However, litigation and the like can scare the money away from Linux in a big way, which would relegate Linux back to its tinkering/hacking existance from long ago. You wouldn't see any more of the YYY School switches to Linux... AnyTown, USA switches to Linux... or CompanyB switches to Linux posts anymore, at least for a long time.

      Think logically, not emotionally.

    13. Re:He is correct by battjt · · Score: 1

      Both xine and mplayer will play more formats than Media Player. It is easier for me to deal with video on Linux than W2K due to format support.

      --
      Joe Batt Solid Design
    14. Re:He is correct by mrroach · · Score: 1

      Why aren't ESD or ARTS acceptable? Does it really matter to anybody whether /dev/dsp can be accessed by multiple applications when ESD/ARTS can accomplish the same thing with network transparenct thrown in to boot?

      Nice rant, but try again.

    15. Re:He is correct by PyromanFO · · Score: 1

      emu10k does hardware mixing, so if you left it at default that was probably why it worked.

      If you changed the settings, thats what I was talking about.

    16. Re:He is correct by PyromanFO · · Score: 1

      Because you have to write your applications for ESD or ARTS output. Anything that outputs to OSS will still lock the whole system. Most close source applications don't give you a choice of sound system output, its OSS or bust. Even the recently released NWN client only outputs OSS. Alsa setup by default would software mix everything coming in OSS as well. It would also handle input copying to multiple applications..

    17. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Microsoft later adds the capabilities developed by others in the media example you chose. Out of the box Windows (at least my 2k box) can't play DiVX, ogg, flac, and mp2 (support dropped). I'm sure there are plenty more. Certainly there are more third party Windows multi-media applications available than for Linux, but this has absolutley nothing to do with MS `pushing the envelope' (unless it's under a Congressman's door.)

    18. Re:He is correct by Neon_Mango · · Score: 1

      I could have moded but I'd rather speak my mind.

      I have used every versions of Windows Media Player since version 6 and I can tell you Linux (running mplayer) is FAR better then ANY other OS/Media Player combo out there. Does Windows Media Player play Windows Media, Quicktime 6, Real Media 9, DivX, Xvid and mpeg1-4 video? No it doesn't. Heck mplayer even plays back DVDs flawlessly. Mplayer under linux gives you one piece of software that plays almost any video format you can find. That is what I call excellent multimedia support.

    19. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The average user must be a fucking idiot then. Let's see:

      1. Download and install a media app

      2. Download proper codecs

      3. Configure media app using easy-to-understand text file.

      Oh no mommy that's too hard!

    20. Re:He is correct by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Because running artsd along with a hefty application (a modern shooting game) will take up around 90% of the CPU. (This is on a AMD XP 1800) ESD is worse by a fraction of a percent.

      Either makes the game completely unplayable... they make the difference between screen refreshes at 45 hertz and eight.

      Even apart from games, blocking /dev/dsp makes a BIG difference. When mozilla can deadlock itself because multiple Flash plugins want to play sounds at the same time, it is a serious problem. ("Oh, your web browser has stopped responding? Well just run /usr/sbin/lsof|grep dsp and tell me what it prints...")

      The only reason it's a problem is because ALSA, for "compatibility with the OSS standard", defaults to blocking audio. They have no technical reason to do this.

    21. Re:He is correct by Xabraxas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you missed the whole point of his post. He never said mplayer or xine was innovative. He said they were good players. He did say that the 2.5-2.6 kernel is ahead of MS and I'd have to agree with that.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    22. Re:He is correct by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Using the DSP wrapper programs, artsdsp or esddsp, you can allow programs to write to OSS-style /dev/dsp and still mix the waveforms in a userspace daemon. Some desktop environments (KDE3) start all programs in such a wrapper by default.

      However, combining the overhead of those wrappers with the slowdown of waiting for a user process to mix audio means that even playback of a single mono stream can suffer a perceptible burbling. And if you really start to mix in more streams, it just gets worse.

      I can rarely bear to run KDE for more than a few minutes without executing "killall artsd". I intend to get an emu10k card to alleviate the problem (it should let me mix 32+ streams in hardware before I notice the blockage)

    23. Re:He is correct by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      **Linux has a long way to go for smooth MultiMedia usage.

      What are you talking about? I have been able to play any DVD I have tried with Linux using MPlayer or Xine. I have been able to play any multimedia I have wanted with MPlayer. I can listen to ogg, mp3, etc. I can watch MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 with no problems. Didn't you just read how the animated film Sinbad was made entirely with Linux? I wonder how they could make a feature length animation using Linux with its poor multimedia support? I wonder how others have been able to use Linux on other films like LOTR, Scooby Doo, and others? Yes the multimedia is just crappy. I wonder how I can use my digital camera without problems? I wonder how I can use pendrives, media readers, tv cards etc with Linux. Hmmm.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    24. Re:He is correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do pardon me, but you, Sir, are a geek, and your (innocent) post is just the proof of that.

      The average Mommy will stop at your step 2 the latest ("What are 'codecs'? Which are the 'proper' codecs? Shit."), keep Windows in the damn machine, and go feed the screaming kids. Not to mention "configuring" the "media" app with an "easy-to-understand" (LMAO!) text file... Can you understand that?

    25. Re:He is correct by Puu · · Score: 1

      Didn't you just read how the animated film Sinbad was made entirely with Linux?

      I admit i didn't read that article, but one would assume they didn't quite leverage the desktop multimedia capabilities of some Linux distro, but rather just used a Linux PC farm to render the damn thing...

      It's really no question of multimedia support at all, but just a matter computing power. I'll have to go check what software they used, but it probably involved running very long shader ptograms on a very large amount of very small polygons -- IOW, pretty much pure math.

      I hope I don't sound like my horse is high, tho. I'm no expert, anyway.

    26. Re:He is correct by Aadain2001 · · Score: 1

      But most (almost all) modern computers have this hardware support and it will be used by default from a plain installation of any of the major distors. I personally run Redhat 9.0 as my desktop and I had to do NO tweaking to get it running to my satisfaction. I installed Nvidia drivers (which are just great, Nvidia really paid attention to what the users wanted), installed games through WineX3, setup email, everything. All from nice GUI programs, just like you would in Windows. Seriously, try installing a modern distro. You'll be shocked at how big the advances have been.

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    27. Re:He is correct by bridnour · · Score: 1

      The only problem I see in your comment is that the NWN uses SDL (Simple DirectMedia Layer) which can output to OSS, ESD, or ARTS -- usually without having to specify which. In fact, I'm running the NWN client now using KDE/ARTS.

    28. Re:He is correct by OneEyedApe · · Score: 1

      If there is no technical reason, they will probably stop doing it shortly. From what I have seen, OSS is on the way out, and ALSA will be the standard in 2.6.* kernels.

      --
      Life sucks, but death doesn't put out at all....
      --Thomas J. Kopp
    29. Re:He is correct by runderwo · · Score: 1
      Using the DSP wrapper programs, artsdsp or esddsp, you can allow programs to write to OSS-style /dev/dsp and still mix the waveforms in a userspace daemon.
      Thanks! I had no idea those existed. Very helpful.
    30. Re:He is correct by cscx · · Score: 1

      These players alone will play ANYTHING out there, and do it very well.

      If by "very well," you mean "seg faulting when trying to load files that other players do just find."

      This is personal experience talking.

    31. Re:He is correct by cscx · · Score: 1

      That's cause they'd get sued by Real, Apple, and what have you. They have to follow the rules... mplayer reverse-engineers proprietary codecs (didn't they get in trouble for this?) and masquerades it as OK as it's "open source, you can't touch us."

    32. Re:He is correct by CTachyon · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the mechanism by which esddsp and artsdsp redirect the audio can cause a few programs to crash. I'm not sure exactly what the deal is, but the more complex a program is the more likely it seems to be that it will crash under a wrapper. Sadly, the closed-source programs that most need a wrapper frequently fall under that category.

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    33. Re:He is correct by LadyLucky · · Score: 1
      You don't know much about kernels, do you. Just because you don't know much about how non-linux kernels work, doesn't mean they don't have functionality. Linux has one of the least feature complete of the unix kernels.

      Also, due to its threading model (As you say though, this is getting fixed) highly multi-threaded apps such as Java server side software tend to suck ass on Linux.

      --
      dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
    34. Re:He is correct by Aadain2001 · · Score: 1

      Java "sucks ass" on any platform :)

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    35. Re:He is correct by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1
      If there is no technical reason, they will probably stop doing it shortly.

      Maybe. I'm skeptical that authors of closed-source Linux programs will be eager to change to ALSA. Including it in 2.6 will encourage them, but ASLA's OSS compatibility will let them go on repeating "If it ain't broke, don't fix it".

      I can't find the ALSA FAQ online, so below I'll paste in their answer about why OSS emulation only allows as many simultaneous players as the hardware supports, and why they don't intend to change it:
      • Q: When I play something and I try to play something other the second attempt
        will not fail but instead it hangs waiting for the completion of the first
        sound.
        A: This is definitely the standard behaviour as described in many official
        documents that now ALSA follows. There is no reasons to complain about that
        for the following reasons:
        - it's the right (standard) way
        - the application that want a different behaviour can open the device in
        O_NONBLOCK mode
        - all modern OSS drivers in mainstream kernel (cmpci, es1370, es1371,
        esssolo1, maestro, sonicvibes, vwsnd) works in the same ways and the
        others have to be intended buggy
        - we want you ask to broken applications author to fix them ;-)
    36. Re:He is correct by darkpurpleblob · · Score: 1
      To this day I have yet to find a person saying "Linux isn't ready for desktop use" that has tried the latest release from Redhat or Mandrake or SuSE.

      Well, now you've found one. I installed Redhat 9.0 a month ago, and it's not ready for desktop use for me. I had previously tried Redhat 6 and 7, and I definitely agree that there have been significant advancements over the years. Software installation hassles and lack of keyboard shortcuts is what turned me away.

      Personally I believe Linux is not ready for the desktop until software installation is as easy and straight forward as it is currently on Windows.

  13. Maybe if Microsoft Developed for Linux by cloudscout · · Score: 4, Insightful

    OS/2 was once a joint product between IBM and Microsoft. In fact, I have an old OS/2 book with a foreword by Bill Gates himself where he refers to OS/2 as "the future of computing". That is why NT originally had an OS/2 subsystem and supported the HPFS filesystem from OS/2.

    With Linux, Microsoft has never had its hand in the pie. They have never had any control over its development. Linux bears no similarity to OS/2 as a competing technology. To suggest it is just wishful thinking on Bill Gates part.

    1. Re:Maybe if Microsoft Developed for Linux by Animats · · Score: 1

      Good point. Microsoft "compatibility" tends to be fake. While NT originally had an OS/2 subsystem, it only supported version 1 of OS/2 and was never upgraded. So it was only a migration tool, not real compatibility. Microsoft did the same thing with OpenGL. And Java. And C++. And, most effectively, HTML.

    2. Re:Maybe if Microsoft Developed for Linux by hawkestein · · Score: 2, Informative

      Don't forget POSIX! Windows NT had a POSIX subsystem, but it was effectively useless.

      --
      -- Will quantum computers run imaginary-time operating systems?
    3. Re:Maybe if Microsoft Developed for Linux by os2Forever · · Score: 1

      In spite, of my moniker. I love Linux. About Mr. Gates. There is only one way - that a[hlso]*e can beat Linux. ** Give away Windows (XP) for free or next to nothing. Just like MS Corp. did with Windows 3.1, in the old days. (You don't think they were giving you so much of everything, for nothing, did you?)

  14. This is USA Today by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The magazine with the widest readership in the nation. It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result. The last thing Mr. G wants to happen is for your PHB to read USA Today and think, "Huh. This Linux thing is a big deal."

    So, here he says it isn't a big deal. I'm sure that in real life, he cares a great deal about it.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    1. Re:This is USA Today by seanmeister · · Score: 4, Funny

      And just to prove it, there's a big banner ad running on top of the article for the eMode IQ test...

    2. Re:This is USA Today by FatherBusa · · Score: 1

      I actually think articles like this advance the Linux cause immensely. The lead-off question is essentially "So, aren't you scared out of your wits by this whole Linux thing?"

      Bill says: "Of course not," but the reader necessarily thinks, "Why is he asking that question? Apparently there's this other OS (I've never heard of) that's threatening MS. Hmm."

    3. Re:This is USA Today by Otter · · Score: 1
      This is USA Today...The magazine with the widest readership in the nation. It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result.

      Hey, I may like my news presented entirely in colored graphs, but at least I know the difference between a newspaper and a magazine.

      The last thing Mr. G wants to happen is for your PHB to read USA Today and think, "Huh. This Linux thing is a big deal." So, here he says it isn't a big deal. I'm sure that in real life, he cares a great deal about it.

      Geez, ya think? He's spinning instead of being strictly candid with an interviewer?

    4. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The magazine with the widest readership in the nation. It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result.

      Umm, slow down there. I agree that the readership of USA Today is largely comprised of idiots, but

      It ain't no magazine, it's a newspaper. If you compare it with magazines, it would rank #38 or so in circulation, way behind #1 Modern Maturity.

      Your reasoning that popular implies idiotic doesn't hold up under scrutiny. Among newspapers, #2 behind USA Today is the Wall Street Journal, only about 10% lower. And #3 is the NY Times.

    5. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Darn it. I only got a 126...

    6. Re:This is USA Today by Red+Rocket · · Score: 0, Flamebait


      Among newspapers, #2 behind USA Today is the Wall Street Journal, only about 10% lower. And #3 is the NY Times.

      You think WSJ readers are intelligent? Haven't you seen the Monty Python skits?
      "I'm a chartered accountant and my name is... Well, I can't remember my name right now, but I am a chartered accountant."

      Granted, he probably read the Financial Times instead but six of one...
      And how about that WSJ editorial page. Absolute, total, utter, lying bullshit. It takes an idiot to believe that stuff. NYT ain't much better (Judith Miller, anybody?)
      And as if trying to prove the guy's point, how about this sentence in the USA Today article,
      "We're actually providing even lower pricing now for education then[sic] we ever have..."
      I expect that kind of writing on Slashdot, but this is supposedly a journalist writing this article.

      --
      - Hail to our fearless misleader! Fool speed ahead!
    7. Re:This is USA Today by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      What about teen and/or fashion magazines, like Cosmo? I don't know if USA Today readers, on average, are dumber...

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    8. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The magazine with the widest readership in the nation. It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result. Emphasis added.
      Actually, that means the reader-IQ-average should be 100 which is average by definition.
    9. Re:This is USA Today by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      Given that we're talking about newspapers, not magazines (I'm an idiot), I'd say that most newspaper readers are probably above the average IQ. So, USA Today's average is probably lowest or all the newspapers.

      And no, I don't read a newspaper every day. This isn't an ego based assumption. (Even though I'm really really smrat.)

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    10. Re:This is USA Today by damiam · · Score: 1
      It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result.

      I think that honor would have to go to the National Enquirer.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    11. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too.
      The fix is in...

    12. Re:This is USA Today by Tyreth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That IQ test has to be a joke. In some of the questions they practically gave the answers away. I'd be surprised if anyone scored But then, I guess that's why they advertise it on USA Today. Let the readers think they're intelligent :)

    13. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I scored 138, but I don't think this test is very good.

    14. Re:This is USA Today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try answering questions completely at random.

      Ie, mimic IQ->0.

      The results are enlightening.

    15. Re:This is USA Today by slagdogg · · Score: 1

      lol ... yeah got a 95 guessing randomly ... ergh!

      --
      (Score:-1, Wrong)
  15. where'd they get that picture? by utexaspunk · · Score: 2, Funny

    it must've taken a lot of photoshop work to edit out the doobie and the smoke...

  16. Of course by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
    What did you expect Bill Gates to say? "Ohmygawd, it's going to kick our butts"?

    If "Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies," those new technologies sure seem to push back.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  17. Forbidden words in the precence of Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pffffft! Dont use the "L" word!

  18. Oh, for Christ's sake by 2names · · Score: 0, Troll

    OS/2 hasn't been a player for many, many years. Accept it and move on.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    1. Re:Oh, for Christ's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Neither has Linux. It's had, what, 3 years of being slightly important so far? OS/2 had many more.

    2. Re:Oh, for Christ's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There years in desktops, maybe, but it's been a important player in servers longer than that.

    3. Re:Oh, for Christ's sake by fussman · · Score: 1
      "OS/2 important\n"

      Segmentation fault(core dumped)

      --
      Support Israeli punk bands. Man Alive.
    4. Re:Oh, for Christ's sake by dildofire · · Score: 1

      if i'm not mistaken, any ATMs still run OS/2. it may not be a true player, but it's certainly not completely irrelevant.

  19. Titanic by MonkeyDluffy · · Score: 1
    Didn't they say the same thing about the Titanic? It's only a glancing blow, nothing to worry....

    -MDL

    --
    Happy meals fund terrorism
    1. Re:Titanic by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      The titanic was woefully underdesigned too.

      That's why so many people died. The cruiseline was just too arrogant to acknowledge the possible faults of their product.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Titanic by Dr.+Photo · · Score: 1

      "The titanic was woefully underdesigned too.
      That's why so many people died. The cruiseline was just too arrogant to acknowledge the possible faults of their product."


      Bull. The Titanic was overengineered.

      The ship sank simply because it was run as if it were unsinkable. Death by hype. :)

      [Which makes it an apt analogy for a bunch of companies strewn along the wayside; not just today's Microsoft.]

    3. Re:Titanic by MonkeyDluffy · · Score: 1
      For its time, the Titanic was overdesigned, and carried more lifeboat capacity than what was required. It just had a little bad luck :).

      Note: The Titanic was designed to stay afloat with as many as four compartments flooded. A typical collision would only flood two compartments, if the collision damaged the watertight bulkhead between them. Too bad that the glancing blow allowed 5 compartments to flood.

      -MDL

      --
      Happy meals fund terrorism
    4. Re:Titanic by fitten · · Score: 1

      Wasn't there also supposedly some impurity in the steel of the hull that, in low temperatures, made the hull brittle?

    5. Re:Titanic by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This sounds highly fishy considering that it was such a DISASTER. If what you say is true then there really is NO REASON for anyone to have died when the Titanic went down.

      At worst, they should have been able to deploy all of the lifeboats and then picked stragglers out of the water later.

      Or was it that the Titanic merely met some legal requirement that was woefully inadequate for the number of passengers aboard?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  20. News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by Radon+Knight · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > Gates seems to be considering Linux as a passing
    > thru competition just like OS/2.

    Well, what would you expect him to say? That Linux may (if people get their act together) start threatening Windows on the desktop, and that people are really not fond of Microsoft's draconian licensing schemes and forced inclusion of DRM in their products?

    A newspaper interview with a businessman is nothing more than an opportunity for free advertising. You don't think Bill knows that?

    1. Re:News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by zakezuke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I feel sorry for people who actually believe Bill Gates. I mean, I'm not saying he's not a creditable source or anything, the fact that he's a business man. His primary intrest is selling a product. When quoted on things like "no one will need more then 640k" was pretty much an accurate statement in 1982 or so. I did just fine on my atari with 64K of ram, steller with 1meg of ram. But times change.

      So yea, anyone reading any interview with Bill Gates must remember the fact that he is selling a product. That's his job, that's what he does best. Not nessicarly true or false, just marketing.

      As far as linux is concerned, it's in a much more unique position then OS/2. OS/2 is a closed source program, which roughly means as soon as it's no longer profitable to do so, they will not support it. An unsupported closed source product is about as useful as a condom machine in the vatican. Part of the reason I bothered at all with the *nix scene was the fact that some of my hardware was supported under OSS solutions that just didn't get win95 drivers. This I consider to be one of it's strengths, the fact that something contributed by just a small group of people can benifit me.

      Even if Linux doesn't achive the level of use that microsoft windows for consumer grade operating systems, I don't think i'd give a shit. I'm not going to be like the OS/2 users out there and become a fanatic just because I have made a choice to use specific software. Works great for me, does it's job well, and so long as it's free i'll use it.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    2. Re:News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not nessicarly true or false, just marketing.

      Soooo, marketing is outside of the realm of true or false now? Handy!

    3. Re:News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by JesterXXV · · Score: 1
      A newspaper interview with a businessman is nothing more than an opportunity for free advertising. You don't think Bill knows that?

      Since when does Microsoft need free advertising? People who have no more than a basic knowledge of what a computer LOOKS like know who Microsoft is. I'd say this article was much more beneficial to Linux, just because the word "Linux" was in it - some more of the populace just learned a new word, even if they know nothing about it.

      --
      Yo mama so fake, she failed the Turing Test.
    4. Re:News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When quoted on things like "no one will need more then 640k" was pretty much an accurate statement in 1982 or so.

      That is not a quote, and was never supposed to be. It was a joke invented 15 years ago, when its falsehood was self-evident to all listeners. It is apocrypha- an external summation of their business practices in designing MS-DOS, but not something Gates has even been alleged to have said.

    5. Re:News flash - Bill Gates downplays linux by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      Soooo, marketing is outside of the realm of true or false now? Handy!

      No, marketing is outside the realm of reality. That's what marketing is! It is not physical, technical, or any other form of specifications. It's not a objective evaluation of what a product actually is and it's fuction in life. Trully good marketing is about subjective fluffy stuff that you can't define in a dicitonary so you can't prove to be true or false, it's about evoking the consumers imagination to make them believe it's the best thing since sliced bread. It's about making a promise that some product is the future and if enough people buy into that fantisy it becomes true. Marketing is about hopes and dreams and selling you a product which you may or may not need.

      It's hardly about true or false, those are tangable things. This is why you never take credit in what a business person says about a product being sold. They don't have a clue, why should they, they just sell shit. I feel sorry for people who listen to something Bill Gates says in the same way that I feel sorry for a person who listens to a used car salesman. It's not like they actually know about the car's history, chances are it was just bought at auction, and is so much better that that guy down the road who also buys cars at auction, probally the same auction.

      The future is now, this is designed to increase producity, it's the next generation, designed for the real world, great new taste, feel the power, get it now, supplies are limited. Yep, there is not an infinate supply, so better get it now while supplies last. What is it? Could be anything, but that doesn't matter, we need you to buy it. Don't buy that one, ours is better cause we make it better. Automated and customized to meet your present and future needs. Don't delay get it now for christ sake.

      All this crap is best ignored...

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  21. History repeats by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
    Gates seems to be considering Linux as a passing thru competition just like OS/2., and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies

    I'm sure the IBM zealots said the same thing at the time. Probably even snickered, too.

  22. Microsoft's WMD by Alpha_Nerd · · Score: 4, Funny

    Microsoft's secret weapon of mass destruction: http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3

    1. Re:Microsoft's WMD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ROFLMAO! So true, though. So true.

    2. Re:Microsoft's WMD by wizarddc · · Score: 1

      http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2003-06 -30&res=l

      Need to use the whole url to preserve this mother for posterity.

      --
      Th
    3. Re:Microsoft's WMD by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 1

      For those of you that missed it, the comic is in reference to this article.

      --
      Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
    4. Re:Microsoft's WMD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The site www.penny-arcade.com is running Apache/1.3.26 (Unix) PHP/4.2.2 on Linux

  23. Nobody used OS/2? by utahjazz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I gotta agree with Bill's reaction on that one. The interviewer lost all credibility when he said that. He's one of those people that thinks he knows the technology market because he uses technology, which at best only tells you about consumer technology.

    None of his friends used OS/2 so nobody used it. I guess nobody uses mainframes either, and the Internet was invented 10 years ago.

    1. Re:Nobody used OS/2? by presroi · · Score: 1

      My private bank (Deutsche Bank) was running OS/2 on their service terminals / ATM machines until last fall.

      When they switches to Win2K, they had to upgrade to some PIII-600mhz and the machines were out of order for 2 weeks. Every time I passed some technician.

    2. Re:Nobody used OS/2? by TalMaximus · · Score: 1

      None of his friends used OS/2 so nobody used it. I guess nobody uses mainframes either, and the Internet was invented 10 years ago...by Al Gore.

    3. Re:Nobody used OS/2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A whole lot more people use Linux than ever used OS/2.

    4. Re:Nobody used OS/2? by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Not on the desktop.

      I worked for a Fortune 500 company with 5,000 desktop installations of OS/2, and we were one of the smaller examples. There were larger companies like American Express, US Bank, Norwest, etc. that had OS/2 installations in tens of thousands.

      OS/2 on the server side pretty much never latched on. At the time PC servers were really only for file/print. Email was generally handled by the Mainframe, as were database and applications.

      At the time the web started growing in popularity, OS/2 didn't have a viable web server to allow it to be used. Same problem Netware had.

    5. Re:Nobody used OS/2? by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Because we all know that the reason the systems were out of order was because it was running windows, and not because the people writting the software to run on the systems screwed up ...

  24. That's true in USA, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..Linux is gaining more popularity in Germany, Korea and India.

    I think Microsoft will keep its monopoly in such countries as USA, France or Great Britain, that's all

  25. mirror of article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Gates on Linux
    USA TODAY:There seems to be some worry at Microsoft about Linux and some of these Web-based things like Sim Desk that have popped up. Houston, Munich, and Beijing have all been considering using Linux-based products rather than going through Microsoft. How much of this is a concern?
    Linux is the current OS competition, but it's no more threatening than OS/2. Remember OS/2?
    By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY

    Bill Gates: Well those are our current competitors. I mean, it's no different than in the past people used [IBM's operating system] OS/2.

    USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2.

    BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious. That was IBM, a company 15 times our size. Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. OS/2 was IBM's product, and the IBM army marched behind that product. People always think today's competition is somehow different and unique in some way. Let's be serious. I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC. We bet on graphical user interface. We bet on the NT technology base. Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net; Longhorn Web services go along with that. You always have to do something very dramatic to move things up to the next level. Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface? Who else is going to push that forward? Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface? We've chosen to do that. If we didn't believe in those things we wouldn't be increasing the R&D budget the way that we are.

    USA TODAY: There has been some criticism of the way in which you're been competing against Linux, and in The New York Times, assuming it was accurate, reporting that the e-mails in Europe talked about undercutting Linux at any cost, per se. How do you react to that, and where do you cross the line of that going back to some of the behaviors that surfaced in the Justice Department case?

    BG: Well I'm not sure what you mean by undercutting. We will never have a price lower than Linux, in terms of just what you charge for the software. We compete on the basis of, if you look at the value you get out of the system and the overall cost that the system has that apply in our software. For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project. And so the question is can that 3% [compensate], in terms of how quickly you get the system set up? How much value you get out of that system, can it justify itself in that way? And that's the business that we're in every day.

    USA TODAY: On May 14th, Orlando Ayala [Microsoft's senior VP for the Small and Midmarket Solutions & Partner Group, which aims to introduce Microsoft products to smaller companies and purchasers] in his e-mails authorizing him to draw from a special fund to offer the software set discounts or even free if necessary, under no circumstances lose against Linux. Has Microsoft changed its behavior patterns?

    BG: The idea is that we're in a competitive situation, that we're willing to provide a better price. This is not a general problem. This is about education situations, and educational bids are very, very price sensitive, and we've always provided super low pricing for education. We're actually providing even lower pricing now for education then we ever have, but it's been unique pricing for us, literally since the company was founded. And yeah, we, on educational bids, we will meet competition. That's considered healthy pro-competitive behavior.

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    1. Re:mirror of article by DrRiffic · · Score: 1

      you really think USATODAY.com is going to be slashdotted?

  26. Extremely ironic... by Noryungi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In the article, he basically says that few companies have the guts to innovate, and that Microsoft does this constantly...

    Surprise: Xerox did that way before Microsoft ever thought about it. And Bill himself only thought about it when he saw one of the first demo model of the Apple Lisa (if I remember well). And that's just one example among many.

    Microsoft never innovated: it just latched on all the good ideas. GUIs, ACLs, www browsers, spreadsheet, heck, even the mouse was invented by somebody else.

    So, what kind of "innovations" has been created by Microsoft? Maybe Clippy. But that's it, and we all know how helpful that is...

    And for those who may believe that Microsoft improved on all of these, I have just four words for you: Blue... Screen... Of... Death.

    Whew! Enough ranting. You can start modding me down, now.

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:Extremely ironic... by mccalli · · Score: 1
      So, what kind of "innovations" has been created by Microsoft?

      Just the one that I can think of - use-based dynamic menus. Perhaps someone can point me to earlier cases of this, but I still like it and still find them useful.

      There appears to be a religious objection to them in the Linux world, I suspect primarily because the idea came from Microsoft. OK - so some people hate them, meaning that the feature should be configurable. Despite that, I'd like to see dynamic menus start making their way outside of the Windows world.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    2. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate the dynamic menus because they defeat the purpose of a GUI (IMHO). By making features hard to find you'll never use them. To me the power of a GUI is be able to quickly see a large number of options.

      But hey, as long as they aren't forced on me I don't have a problem with it :)

    3. Re: Extremely ironic... by evilroot · · Score: 1

      Mod down someone who took a shot at M$?!

      Inconceivable!

    4. Re:Extremely ironic... by Simon+Brooke · · Score: 1
      So, what kind of "innovations" has been created by Microsoft?
      Just the one that I can think of - use-based dynamic menus. Perhaps someone can point me to earlier cases of this, but I still like it and still find them useful.

      Xerox InterLISP-D/LOOPS, 1982. On a bitmapped display. With a windows and a mouse.

      --
      I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
    5. Re:Extremely ironic... by wfberg · · Score: 5, Insightful


      Just the one that I can think of - use-based dynamic menus. Perhaps someone can point me to earlier cases of this, but I still like it and still find them useful.

      There appears to be a religious objection to them in the Linux world, I suspect primarily because the idea came from Microsoft. OK - so some people hate them, meaning that the feature should be configurable. Despite that, I'd like to see dynamic menus start making their way outside of the Windows world.


      It's not so much religious as practical. Think about it. Everytime you stop using a feature for w hile it disappears. Not once, not twice, all the time. Use it or lose it. If you start using a feature, the menu-option reappears.

      This means your menu items are never in the same place! You quickly lose all efficiency, especially for menu-items that don't have icons in front of them. You can never sit down at some one else's workstation and expect things to be in the same place. I can't tell my mom she should use the third option from the top (which comes in handy sometimes when she's using a Dutch version of Office, whereas I'm using an English version and the translations are farfetched at best).

      Also it changes the way pull down menus have worked for years, with the sole exception of most-recently used files (only at the bottom of the File pull down menu). Talk about breaking the user's mental model of your app!

      GUI gurus know this. They tell you, if an option is not available, disable it (gray it out) so the relative position remains the same. This somehow applies to context menus, but not to pull down menus?

      I'm all for simple vs. advanced pull down menus, but self-adjusting.. Puh-lease. Not to mention my startmenu is at the same time not alphabetized, as well as unpredictably axing applications all the time. I used it yesterday, now it's gone, but the app I used last a few months ago is still there.. Yikes.

      I don't know if self-mutilating pull down menus are a True Microsoft Innovation (R) but yes, they are annoying. There are plenty of better GUI enhancements that could be supported..

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    6. Re:Extremely ironic... by aallan · · Score: 1

      Just the one that I can think of - use-based dynamic menus. Perhaps someone can point me to earlier cases of this, but I still like it and still find them useful.

      Argh...

      There appears to be a religious objection to them in the Linux world, I suspect primarily because the idea came from Microsoft. OK - so some people hate them, meaning that the feature should be configurable. Despite that, I'd like to see dynamic menus start making their way outside of the Windows world.

      No, please, not that, I'll take the paper clip before having to use crappy dynamic menus that constantly move features around so I don't know where they are anymore. Please... *sob*

      Al.
      --
      The Daily ACK - Eclectic posts by yet another hacker
    7. Re:Extremely ironic... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      Just the one that I can think of - use-based dynamic menus. Perhaps someone can point me to earlier cases of this, but I still like it and still find them useful.

      There appears to be a religious objection to them in the Linux world, I suspect primarily because the idea came from Microsoft. OK - so some people hate them, meaning that the feature should be configurable. Despite that, I'd like to see dynamic menus start making their way outside of the Windows world.

      From a pure GUI standpoint Dynamic menus are an abomination. Users should be presented with a set of alternatives not exceeding 7 at a time. If you have all that much to display USE ANOTHER PRESENTATION METHOD. A menu is supposed to be a shortlist, not a catalogue.

      Besides, how are you supposed to make a dynamic menu work on a touch screen? Badmouth them all you want, but they are more common than people realize. No you don't see them on people's desk... unless that desk happens to be at an industrial process station, a point of sale system, an appliance, etc.

      Plus, have you ever tried to explain how to use those complex widgets to anyone? How do you document a dynamic menu? (Click... no... select... well select then drag over to... no what you want isn't there yet, drag over to..)

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    8. Re:Extremely ironic... by tuxathon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't you know: Microsoft invented TCP\IP (backslash intended), text editors (vi is a clone), and 3D grapics (OpenGL stole Mr. Gates idea). Microsoft is the real victim here. If the rest of the world would simply respect their prowess, stop reverse-engineering their products, and sell their ideas to them, we would all be happy.


      Must ... not ... gag ...

    9. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what kind of "innovations" has been created by Microsoft? Maybe Clippy. But that's it, and we all know how helpful that is...

      Never, ever, forget the badness that was M$ Bob. According to reports, Bill's future wife was the project manager. I have no idea what that says about either of them. The illusion of security through not even trying to be secure.

    10. Re:Extremely ironic... by mormop · · Score: 1

      Well, getting someone to stay at home with the kids is a sure way to keep them out of the office where they can do any more damage

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    11. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In the article, he basically says that few companies have the guts to innovate, and that Microsoft does this constantly...

      Surprise: Xerox did that way before Microsoft ever thought about it."

      Gates: Few comapnies innovate, but we do
      You: Xerox inovated before you even thought about it

      He didn't say Micorosft were the first ever people to innovate, so why did you make this comment?

    12. Re:Extremely ironic... by mormop · · Score: 1

      Was a bit uncalled for really, mod me down someone I have the guilt of collateral damage ...

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    13. Re:Extremely ironic... by hackrobat · · Score: 1

      It isn't ironic... the bloke is lying!

    14. Re:Extremely ironic... by AlexeiMachine · · Score: 1

      Well, one innovation from Microsoft I really like is the "ClearType" technology for LCD screens. My laptop runs at 1600x1200 resolution with a 144dpi setting and the text is *crystal clear*.

      I've installed SuSE on the same laptop, but the result is not the same (not even in the same league). I can use large anti-aliased fonts, but I've got nowhere near the same display quality.

      I don't know if OS X has it (or some equivalent tech), but once you get used to it, it's very hard to go back...

    15. Re:Extremely ironic... by marauder404 · · Score: 1

      That's nonsense. Who does it first is less important than who does it most significantly. History is sprinkled with examples of someone inventing something, but someone else credited to making it significant or perfecting itg. WorldWideWeb was the first browser, but Netscape was the household name. Pocket electronic organizers have been around for a long time, but Palm made them commonplace. The Wright brothers invented powered flight, but Glen Curtiss made it significant. Humphrey Davy invented the electric light, but Edison made it practical.

    16. Re:Extremely ironic... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Can we apply that standard to Linux? What major technologies are being explored in Linux that wasn't already done in other OSs?

      Linux made things cheap but nothing really new seems to come from it.

    17. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in a special place in hell, those dynamic menues fade up slowly rather rather than at full speed. Not only is the app gone, it takes the user longer to determine it's gone. Hell = XP.

    18. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! Please mod the parent post up! Another brain damaged product that screws with the menus is Lotus Notes. Options appear and disappear depending on where in the application the focus happens to be. If the focus is on a header in the headers window you get one set of options, if the focus is in the message that header refers to you get different options. As a result you have to click on everything and check the menus in between clicks to try to find that damn feature you think you saw once. Who the hell thought that was clever?

    19. Re:Extremely ironic... by nicodaemos · · Score: 1
      I agree with Bill. Microsoft very well may be the most innovative company to hit the high tech industry. Disagree? Well, lets look at the facts:
      • Who came up with the concept of bundling software desktop productivity apps with the operating system?
      • Who came up with the licensing scheme to force hardware vendors to pay them for every machine sold, regardless of what OS was installed?
      • Who first pioneered the practice of publishing faulty and/or poor performing api's to the world while allowing their own app developers access to better api's?
      • Who pioneered the concept of trademarking a generic name like Windows? Had Linus been innovative, he would have named Linux as Kernel, Micro-Kernel or simple OS. While I'm on this, perhaps even better names would be Desk or Desktop ... but I digress.
      • Who pioneered the practice of aggressively marketing their "innovative" product development while surreptitiously purchasing or copying everyone else's technology?
      • Who pioneered EULA's that essentially made the end user a slave to their software vendor?
      • Who raised the product announcement marketing bullshit factor to a such a high level that the phrase, vaporware, had to be created?
      • Who consistently managed to get consumers to pay through the nose for "new" products that were essentially cosmetically modified versions of the same buggy products they already owned?
      • Who first managed to get customers to pay for upgrades to the buggy releases they originally purchased?
      • Who pioneered the notion of charging customers to report a bug?
      • Who first came up with the idea to partner with hardware vendors at the BIOS level to lock out competing OS's?
      • Who came up with the idea to provide software CD's as a mult-billion dollar lawsuit settlement?
      • Who may soon generate a huge revenue stream from selling anti-virus tools to fix viruses propagated by their buggy OS and apps?

      C'mon people. Linus, PARC, IBM and even the talented Steve Jobs never did as much. All Linus did was create a solid, well performing kernel .... big deal, like that's worth anything. Had he been really talented, like Bill, he would have copied and extended all the GNU pieces so he could claim copyright on them and killed the FSF. Ha, ha, now that would have shown Stallman what innovation is all about. Emacs, my ass.

      Microsoft is more innovative than Rockefeller and Standard Oil. Whereas the latter had to resort to age old techniques such as industrial sabotage and thugs to kill competition, Microsoft created new techniques such as leveraging lawyers and contracts to lock out and starve the competition. Hell, even Hitler could have learned a thing or two from the master BillG. Instead of all that gas chamber and kristalnacht stuff, Bill would have suggested a more creative strategy. First, mandate that all middleware such as roads, freeways, alleys, waterways require signed permits for use. Second force everyone to sign up at a central server for permits. Third, display a blue screen of death for all non-aryans who submit permit requests. Within a short period, all non-aryans in Germany would have starved for being unable to get to work, buy food, etc.

      Finally, BillG's illegitimate father, Saddam Hussein, could've used a bit of his son's wisdom. Saddam should've claimed that his WMD were bundled in with the people of Iraq and that they couldn't be disabled without adversely affecting the lives of the people. Also, he could've made available the documents surrounding the WMD's ... but at a price. Under RAND licensing, He should've charged $100 millon a page to anyone who wanted to view the documents.

      Bill has shown great creativity and innovation in the use of Marketing & Legal to control/enslave large groups of people and generate huge sums of cash. Technologists, CEO's, dictators and despots alike could have all benefited from his wisdom.

      Sig Heil, Bill G, sig heil.

    20. Re:Extremely ironic... by ctve · · Score: 1
      I hate that, but never bothered to find out how to get rid of them.

      Anyone?

    21. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is one thing that Microsoft invented. The start button and the task bar...

      By the way the first time I saw it on linux I was very disappointed :-) but now it kind of makes everybody's life easier.

    22. Re:Extremely ironic... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

      Sorry, MS did NOT invent cleartype. It was around apple for a long time.
      The Microsoft "Hall of Innovation"
      Have you tried Redhat 9? The fonts using XFree86 4.3.x with Xfont look much better on my laptop then they did with MS Windows XP and clear type. Whit cleartype there was too colour fringing.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    23. Re:Extremely ironic... by damiam · · Score: 1
      There appears to be a religious objection to them in the Linux world

      My primary objection is that stuff disappears without you asking it to, which makes it harder to get to what you want. They do remove clutter by hiding infrequently used items, but it's much easier to remove the stuff you don't want, and know that they stuff you do want will stay there.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    24. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was the 80s way of doing things -- you also saw this behavior with lots of old Mac apps.

    25. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he probably was refering to GUIs there, but forgot to say so.

    26. Re:Extremely ironic... by Oloryn · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Microsoft never innovated: it just latched on all the good ideas. GUIs, ACLs, www browsers, spreadsheet, heck, even the mouse was invented by somebody else.

      Keep in mind, Microsoft uses 'innovate' in a marketing sense (remember Microsoft is really more of a marketing company than a technology company). In this sense, 'innovation' isn't about inventing new things, it's about incorporating new things (whereever they were invented) into product. As far as Marketing is concerned, technology isn't real until it's part of a sellable product (and at Microsoft, it's not real until it's part of a Microsoft product). In the sense they use it, they do innovate. The spin is that they use it in that sense, knowing that people will take it in the technical sense (i.e. actually inventing new things). Typically marketing ploy, really - use a word in a specific sense, so that you can claim that in some way you're speaking the truth, but take advantage of the fact that people in general will take that word in a different sense.

    27. Re:Extremely ironic... by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      *The* GNU kernel and the Bazaar style of software development.
      Enough said.

    28. Re:Extremely ironic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      intergrated software...

      Browser integrated into the system as both file-explorer and browser (which I quite like even though I use Opera)... Same goes for MediaPlayer being bundled and somewhat integrated.
      Dynamic menus are nice.
      Which OS came with videoconferencing via the net bundled first ?

      etc etc etc

    29. Re:Extremely ironic... by Vladimus · · Score: 1
      I pretty much agree. Dynamically limiting or moving functionality is annoying for advanced users and admins, and absolutely terrifying to most end-users.

      However, dynamic menus do have their place with certain functions. A system-maintained menu of most recently (or most-commonly) accessed files and programs is a godsend, and seems to be quite lacking in many Linux programs, including the window managers.

      --

      A rolling stone is worth two in the bush!

  27. Dear Bill by Spackler · · Score: 4, Funny
    Bill,

    I am using Linux. Send me 8 copies of 2003 Advanced Server (under the GPL of course) for the same price, and I will be happy to switch.

    spack

    1. Re:Dear Bill by PDHoss · · Score: 5, Funny

      Dear Spack,

      Thanks for writing. I'll get your software in the mail right away; I just need your mailing address.

      Oh, never mind, here it is in my SQL box, right here next to your SSN, your home phone, your shopping habits, your mothers maiden name, your dog's favorite food, and a complete catalog of your web surfing history.

      MidgetsInLeather.com? Come on, spack.

      Love, Bill.

      --
      ======================================
      Writers get in shape by pumping irony.
    2. Re:Dear Bill by yukonc · · Score: 1

      Yes, its called rpm or aptget or any other easy binary install

      Geesh!

    3. Re:Dear Bill by sTalking_Goat · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Dude I don't know about you, but I've never compiled OpenOffice from source, in fact if you pick up a good distro (Mandrake 9) you can have everything you need installed from the get go.

      Kinda makes your point moot doesn't it?

      --

      My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...

    4. Re:Dear Bill by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, I didn't need to compile Office2000 from source, and it installed just by popping the CD in and answering a few questions. Can you say the same about Linux?

      Yes, except I didn't need a CD (network download) and didn't have any questions to answer.

      If you have any other queries or trolls, don't hesitate to ask.

    5. Re:Dear Bill by zulux · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Show us an operating system besides Windows that doesn't require you to hold esoteric knowledge to install an easy-to-use word processor and email app.

      Yes.

      Get a Mandrake 9.0 ISO.

      Serisously. It goes somthing like this:

      Insert CD.

      Partition things. Install things. Add a password. Reboot.

      Congrats, you now have Linux with a pretty desktop, OpenOffice, Kmail and Mozilla.

      Compair with XP:

      Insert CD. Partion things. Format. Reboot. Install. Type in long setrial number. Reboot. Install more things. Install Office XP. Reboot. Register XP. Install SP 1-3. Reboot.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    6. Re:Dear Bill by Christianfreak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So tempting to mod you down like the troll you are but why not bite instead.

      If you just go to this little link right here you'll find a very easy to use Office app that you can install in a few clicks on Windows, Solaris or Linux. And not only does it not have to be compiled, it doesn't cost your money or freedom either!

      Or perhaps you'd like the entire linux OS, free of licensing, without having to compile a single thing. Here are just a few examples.

    7. Re:Dear Bill by phallstrom · · Score: 1

      "Last time I checked, I didn't need to compile Office2000 from source, and it installed just by popping the CD in and answering a few questions."

      You mean the office where you pop the CD in, wait, answer some questions, watch it install, reboot to complete installation, reboot again, then go to the windows update site and install all sorts of updates and patches -- one at a time because they are all "special" -- have it ask for the office CD for each one -- which is in the drive, but for some silly reason it won't find it, reboot, reboot, reboot, etc...

      and we're done. Now open up word and select some menu and have it tell you that this isn't installed and where is the office cd?

      Yes... simple. :-)

    8. Re:Dear Bill by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      email and emacs come pre-installed on most Linux distros..

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    9. Re:Dear Bill by mt2mb4me · · Score: 1

      if you go to a free seminar you will get a NFR copy of server 2003 with 25 client license

    10. Re:Dear Bill by Lord+Kholdan · · Score: 1

      Those are treating the symptons, not the cause.

      Linux distros are already at the point that DVDs are becoming full in the effort to have every program supplied with them. But do you really believe it's possible to have every imaginable program distrubuted with the distro? I don't.

      What about supplying RMPs, Ports or whatever format that is the flavor of the distro? (Yes yes, Ports are *BSD packages, put your pitchforks away). That won't work either because not all programs come with those, source is still the de facto distribution format and even if other formats are available they're usually out of date.

      To have precompiled packages away requires the combined (somewhat unreasonable) effort of all developers. That is the reason it can't work.

      Then what?

      MAKE (pun intented) compiling easier! Either drag&drop or doubleclick compiling.

    11. Re:Dear Bill by Unclaimed+Mysteries · · Score: 1

      Dear Spackler,

      I'll do it if you can just get rid of these damb gophers in my yard!

      Yr. Obt. Svt.,
      Bill

      --
      -- It Came from C. L. Smith's Unclaimed Mysteries.
    12. Re:Dear Bill by JGag21 · · Score: 1

      There is no service pack 2 or 3 for XP, yet. So subtract about 15% of that time off.

    13. Re:Dear Bill by TheCabal · · Score: 1

      So tempting to mod you down like the troll you are but why not bite instead.

      So I'm to blame for your lack of control now?

      For a bunch of self-appointed geeks, you all sure missed the point in your fervor to defend whatever it is today that isn't Microsoft.

      I've said it before, I'll say it again and use smaller words so you all understand: Linux isn't going to be a viable desktop replacement until Grandma can install something like OpenOffice or StarOffice as easily as she can on Windows.

      All the responses I've seen aren't viable. You expect a home user to know how to use apt-get or a network install of an rpm? HA! I use OpenOffice on a Win2k box, and I find it a major pain in the ass as compared to Office2k. And it certainly doesn't like the multiuser situation very much, either.

    14. Re:Dear Bill by Christianfreak · · Score: 1

      Oh come on! Do you seriously think your grandma can install Office or Windows? Seriously! People call me all the time because they can't figure out how to install stuff, or what choices they need to make if they get the installer to run, or heck even how to get the computer to boot of a disk or CD (in the case of installing an OS).

      "Grandma" runs whatever came on her computer when she bought it at Best Buy, give or take a few viruses she opened in Outbreak.

      As for your opinion of Open Office, its your opinion, if you like Office, fine, use it. I prefer the other. But quit spreading FUD about how hard it is to install the alternatives, because its not really any different.

    15. Re:Dear Bill by TheCabal · · Score: 1

      That's right. Grandma runs whatever is on the PC she buys at BestBuy or CompUseless. And last I checked, they're not selling a whole lot of Linux preinstalls.

      But is it FUD to say that the average person wouldn't know how to do a network RPM install? I'd wager that the pitiful Muggles wouldn't even know how to log on to the console, much less know how to invoke the proper switches to fetch an RPM off the network. Compare that to sticking the Office CD into the CD-ROM drive, and BAM! Autorun launches and here's a nice installer. Why can't we see that in Linux? Maybe it's the damn macho factor. I still see the Slackware crowd poo-pooing the RedHat users, etc... our Unix admin here likes Sendmail over Postfix just because it's more "manly" even though it takes him all day to get the damn thing tweaked and tuned. Apparently, things are supposed to be esoteric and difficult in Linux.

      I know, whenever I say anything that isn't hypercritical of Microsoft nor heaps praise upon praise on Linux, it gets everyone running around screaming FUDFUDUFUDFUD!, but you all have to grow up sometime. To embrace Open Source, first you have to have Open Minds. That includes giving credit where credit is due.

    16. Re:Dear Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Spakler,

      I send you this file in order to have your advice

    17. Re:Dear Bill by f0rt0r · · Score: 2, Informative

      You obviously never users Mandrake's package manager. OpenOffice is preinstalled with Mandrake 9.x, but let's assume that it wasn't.

      Click on start->Configuratioo->install software

      Type in "openoffice" and click on search
      Click on "openoffice" in the search results window
      Click on install
      Wait until it says installation is completed.

      Now use OpenOffice. When you are done, go have dinner at an expensive restaurant with all the money you just saved by not buying MS Office XP. Heck, bring your family too, the saving will cover all of them.

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
    18. Re:Dear Bill by Sanction · · Score: 1

      Actually, with the money you save not buying Office XP, make the down payment on a new car...

      Ugh, I am a frequent Windows user, and I don't have Office. I just can't justify spending that kind of dough for a minimal increase in features.

      --
      Well I'm the doctor and I say you're dead, so shut up and take it like a man!
  28. Finally, an interview with Gates! by PhysicsGenius · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Mr Gates,

    Given that UNIX technology has been around for almost 40 years now and the Linux implementation of that standard in particular has been with us for 12 or 13 years, wouldn't it be fair to call Windows, the first 32 bit versions of which have only been with us for 8 years, the passing fad?

    1. Re:Finally, an interview with Gates! by Shippy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Who cares how long it's managed to be around? How could it be called the passing fad? It hasn't passed yet and is obviously doing very successful so.... where's the interesting point here? So what. UNIX has been around for 40 years and Linux for about 12 to 13 compared to 32-bit Windows' 8. Neither Linux or Windows has died out yet so none of them are passing fads. One's merely younger than the other *shrug*

      --
      -Shippy
    2. Re:Finally, an interview with Gates! by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1


      Not that I know my computer history as well as some, but isn't for-pay software itself a passing fad?

      My impression was that one of the areas that Microsoft innovated was having the gumption to charge for what others gave away for free, inasmuch as it was simply the enabler that made the interesting part, the hardware, work.

      Now if that's not true, I'll happily stand corrected.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    3. Re:Finally, an interview with Gates! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My impression was that one of the areas that Microsoft innovated was having the gumption to charge for what others gave away for free, inasmuch as it was simply the enabler that made the interesting part, the hardware, work.

      Now if that's not true, I'll happily stand corrected.

      It is very much not true. Back in the olden days, you leased software (such as a compiler) for thousands of dollars per year. Back then, IBM had about the same reputation that Microsoft has these days and for many of the same reasons. In some ways it was worse, only IBM itself was a supplier of operating system-level software.


      Microsoft's big innovation was having the gumption to charge for what others created, which gave them their base.

    4. Re:Finally, an interview with Gates! by pmz · · Score: 1

      Neither Linux or Windows has died out yet so none of them are passing fads.

      To make a biological analogy, Windows could be viewed as a lifeform already occupying 90% of its ecosystem with little room for growth and debatable ability to reuse the space behind it (i.e., Microsoft is its own largest competitive force in the market).

      When an established ecosystem dies, the smaller players, e.g. Linux and others, come to fill in the area now fertilized by the decomposing life from before. The prior lifeform might still exist but only in a much smaller niche surrounded on all sides.

  29. Arrogance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What a lightweight interview, the interviewer should have pushed Gates on his desire to leverage DRM as an anti piracy measure to lock down an open hardware platform.

  30. Of course it's a different situation.... by 403Forbidden · · Score: 2, Informative

    In the OS2/Windows battle they were both retail packages, and one crashed much more than the other.

    With the Linux/Windows battle you have an open source, cheap, stable, varied and fully customizeable system vs. a repeat of the same old win2k base... no matter what crappy name you throw on it. Also, Linux ditros don't have crappy software licences which i'm sure nobody likes.

    Microsoft is blind to view this as the same battle as OS/2. They are underestimating their opponent and it will be their eventual downfall.

    1. Re:Of course it's a different situation.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, cause I know people like my mom are just so fed up with using windows, Linux is her only hope. "Hey mom, got that Linux system runnin' yet?" "No, I'm still compiling" Bah-dum, ching!!

  31. The Ultimate Dupe? by TrollBridge · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now I haven't read Slashdot forever, but how many articles throughout /. history do you suppose were titled "Bill Gates On Linux"?

    --
    There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
    1. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how many articles throughout /. history do you suppose were titled "Bill Gates On Linux"?

      Oh boy oh boy oh boy oh boy!

      Nine! Dafinitely Nine!

    2. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by tweakt · · Score: 2, Interesting
    3. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      Speaking as someone who has been reading Slashdot before Rob Malda created user IDs here (no joke), I can agree with your "ultimate dupe" statement... There have probably been more articles about what Gates and Microsoft have said about Linux than any other story here. Each time, it is presented with a little bit different perspective, but not by much. :^)

    4. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      Just to add one more little anecdotal tidbit to my nostalgic posting, I wanted to mention that before user IDs were created on Slashdot, you could enter in any name and email address that you wanted... People would routinely spoof as "Bill Gates" and write these funny posts... Other people would spoof as "Steve Jobs" and so on. It made the "Gates on Linux" stories that much more fun. :^)

    5. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by maelstrom · · Score: 1

      Yes, I remember those days as well.... People were actually upset that UIDs and accounts were created... After all, before then the "community" was small enough that you could actually trust people to put the proper credentials. Its been downhill ever since ;)

      --
      The more you know, the less you understand.
    6. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I was always hoping that there would be another community to come along that was about the same size (and intelligence level) as the pre-User ID slashdot... Sadly that hasn't happened (to my knowledge). Kuro5hin was a good start, but it quickly became overly political... Macslash has gained some steam, but it still doesn't seem to have the amount of people that Slashdot had before implementing user IDs -- that, and they are Mac only. Do you know of any that discuss general technology issues?

    7. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by sharkdba · · Score: 1

      previous poster:
      Its been downhill ever since ;)

      and:

      I was always hoping that there would be another community to come along that was about the same size...

      I've seen this types of posts ("Ah, those were the days") before, not only here, but on other discussion forums as well. What can I say? stuff changes, accept it. In this case, why is growing of /. considered a Bad Thing?

      --
      The purpose of life is to find the purpose of life.
    8. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      It's a matter of the signal to noise ratio... A few years back, the amount of "noise" on slashdot was minimal... Nowadays we have the moderation system to deal with this issue, but it still doesn't approach the quality and quantity of "signal" of the pre-User ID slashdot... Back then you could read everyone's comments and get very little noise. I guess it's kinda like what happened to usenet over the years....

    9. Re:The Ultimate Dupe? by maelstrom · · Score: 1

      Serveral friends and I started a site called signalnine.com, but not a lot of tech seems to get discussed.... most of us still seem to just read slashdot.

      --
      The more you know, the less you understand.
  32. freaky by TWX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The other interesting thing to note is that the first two cited "yay us!" entries are for types of technology, and the latter three, NT, .net, and Longhorn, are all marketing terms. So, rather than focus on saying things like 'improving video throughput', 'improving hardware abstraction', or 'developing more rhobust parallel computing', they are descending into marketing bull.

    What's scariest is that since Bill is at the forefront (even if Ballmer is CEO) and has succumbed to this, it's further demonstrating Microsoft's continued rotting from the top; no signs of abetting it.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  33. Big Difference by jbrayton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The big difference between other Microsoft competitors and Linux is that the others have to be lucrative for the companies developing them. IBM had no reason to develop OS/2 if it was not going to be a profitable project.

    The development of open source alternatives is typically not for the purpose of selling the software at a profit. Therefore, unlike commercial alternatives, they will not be cancelled if they cannot make a profit. I think that gives the open source competitors a huge advantage.

  34. Bad bet by jsse · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We bet on the 16-bit PC.

    Yeah, that's IBM's thing...

    We bet on graphical user interface.

    Wasn't that from PARC, Xerox?...

    We bet on the NT technology base.

    That's VAX's thing, right?

    Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net

    Hold you bet cowboy! This time is different! That's YOURS thing to bet with!!

    Think again!

    1. Re:Bad bet by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

      >We bet on the 16-bit PC.
      >Yeah, that's IBM's thing...
      Actually IBM started out the PC design with an 8085 processor left over from their datamaster project. It actually WAS BG's idea that they use the (then) new Intel 8088 cpu.

    2. Re:Bad bet by echo · · Score: 1

      Except that the 8088 wasn't 16-bit.. you have to wait for the 80286 for that.

    3. Re:Bad bet by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      We bet on graphical user interface.

      Wasn't that from PARC, Xerox?...


      They were just fooling with concepts. They didn't have any plans to do anything with it at the time. Some Apple people saw it and they decided to produce a computer based on that. So I guess it was Apple that were betting on it. They were the ones who got the system up to a workable GUI and demonstrated it as a commercial success.

    4. Re:Bad bet by jsse · · Score: 1

      It actually WAS BG's idea that they use the (then) new Intel 8088 cpu.

      It sounds like nobody but BG was interested in 8088 when you say it that way.

      How aobut Nimbus computers from Research Machines Ltd? Though I must admit BG suceeded where the others failed, but BG was definitely not the only one betting on that IBM's 16-bit addressing processor.

    5. Re:Bad bet by zenyu · · Score: 1

      Except that the 8088 wasn't 16-bit..
      The 8088 is 16 bits, it's just a low cost version of the 8086. The difference being the memory bus is 8 bits, but the core is still 16 bits. Both chips have 20 memory address lines and 16 i/o address lines. You shift a 16 bit segment register up 4 bits and add it to a general purpose register to get the twenty lines for memory addresses (1MB).

      The 80286 was a better chip, but it was still 16 bits and had 24 address lines. Still segmented. I think BillG maybe meant they bet on 32 bit processors?

    6. Re:Bad bet by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      'Cept IBM was considering the (32-bit) 68000 too.

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    7. Re:Bad bet by Puu · · Score: 1

      It wasn't quite like that. Apple's Raskin did original academic work on it and inspired the PARC people (before he joined Apple and started the Macintosh which gave the GUI to Lisa).

      http://mxmora.best.vwh.net/JefRaskin.html

      You're completely right that Apple was the one to bet on it, and how Xerox never leveraged the concepts their PARC guys were fooling with (like the laser printer, for one).

  35. First step ... by jmays · · Score: 1

    BG has done this before ... a lot. The first thing you do when you are afraid of a competitor is admit their existence in a negative connotation.

    --
    KARMA TAG! You're it.
  36. MS Idealogy? by sixdotoh · · Score: 1
    One thing about MS that I've noticed is that they seem to avoid certain issues directly, apparantly with the hope that they will eventually go away. One of the biggest examples, of course, is the whole anti-trust lawsuit. I remember reading a book on the whole issue (can't remember the title), and the book made the point that had McDonalds or Disney had been brought to court on similar matters, they would have been at the DOJ's door asking "what can we do to make the problem go away." Instead, MS seemed to face this huge issue with an arrogance, and lo and behold, they did got through the issue on top.

    I don't think Linux, however, will fade into oblivion no matter how much MS wishes it would. It has been around long enough already, and just in the past few years has made so many advances into the commercial/business world.

    --

    This post was brought to you by the number 584811 and the characters / and .

  37. And the next question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh crap, problem... Windows BSOD again... gimme a minute while I reboot...

    *Bill twiddles his thumbs looking innocent*

  38. Sure Linux is just passing through by ACK!! · · Score: 1

    Like a huge tank through the landscape. Dream on Gates. This is not the effort of a huge company that can simply be discounted. This is a grass roots efforts of people dedicated to forge a better way of computing for their own goals.

    Sure, the IBM and the RedHat companies contribute a lot but the system like FreeBSD and others could and did survive before and will again if it has to.

    His remarks are the flip bits of puking FUD.

    --
    ACK /ak/ interj. 2. [from the comic strip "Bloom County"] An exclamation of surprised disgust, esp. i
  39. I liked this part by missing000 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Bill Gates: Well those are our current competitors. I mean, it's no different than in the past people used [IBM's operating system] OS/2.

    USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2.

    1. Re:I liked this part by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 4, Informative

      nobody used OS/2?
      I briefly worked for 'fortis' a huge international company, did insurance and investing. thousands, if not tens of thousands of OS/2 seats.
      and just the other day i pulled up to a wells fargo atm, and it was out of order... OS/2 in a reboot loop....
      OS/2 was a major player, if not for very long...

    2. Re:I liked this part by Sentry21 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Gates is right though. OS/2 was huge - just not in the desktop home-user circles. Hell, my bank still uses OS/2. They're one of the largest banks in Canada, and they're an IBM shop through-and-through. They run on IBM's big iron mainframes, they use IBM's WebSphere (JSP and the whole shebang), and they use OS/2 on their desktops (with Netscape 4).

      People nowadays just seem to think that nothing happened, but while it might have been as big a phenomenon as Windows, it sure isn't dead.

      --Dan

    3. Re:I liked this part by Aliencow · · Score: 1

      I work for Canada's biggest bank, and unfortunately, even though we are an all IBM shop (Mainframes, desktops, laptops, everything...) , NT4 is used on desktops and has been for the last few years... Will soon upgrade to 2000..

    4. Re:I liked this part by pmz · · Score: 1

      They run on IBM's big iron mainframes, they use IBM's WebSphere (JSP and the whole shebang), and they use OS/2 on their desktops (with Netscape 4).

      It would be interesting if IBM created a porting layer for Linux, so eventually those OS/2 apps could run on IBM-branded Linux desktops.

    5. Re:I liked this part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Howard Stern used OS/2.

    6. Re:I liked this part by deck · · Score: 0

      Bill G is equating Linux to OS/2 to get the suits making the acquisition/purchasing decisions to avoid it since Linux will obviously (according to Gates) go away in 10 years and not be a player. Nothing more than marketing FUD which he expects the above mentioned to belive and therefore bodyblock the use of Linux to make the FUD come true.

    7. Re:I liked this part by doinky · · Score: 1
      IBM's goal was, and presumably still is, to get customers like that bank to write all their new apps in Java; so that "porting", once the big customer was finally willing to change platforms, would be easier.

      that's a hell of a lot easier than writing a "porting layer" for linux. Nobody liked even having to recompile big proprietary apps when both ends were UNIX, remember?

    8. Re:I liked this part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IBM paid Howard Stern to use OS/2.

      People say OS/2 had "bad marketing" -- well Howard Stern and the "OS/2 Fiesta Bowl" pretty much sums it up.

    9. Re:I liked this part by Kentrosaurus · · Score: 2, Funny

      I had a much more frightening experience with a wells fargo atm, it was rebooting win2k. I was horrified enough to visit the teller and fill out a withdrawl slip.

    10. Re:I liked this part by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1

      I've got OS/2 on a Dell OptiPlex sitting 4 feet away from me right now. It's the base for a voicemail system (Repartee). Runs solid -- has since 1999. The vendor was in recently pushing an upgrade based on win2000Server. I gently showed him the door muttering something about mission critical and needing to keep my job.

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    11. Re:I liked this part by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      I work for Canada's biggest bank, and unfortunately, even though we are an all IBM shop (Mainframes, desktops, laptops, everything...) , NT4 is used on desktops and has been for the last few years... Will soon upgrade to 2000..

      Yes, that's the Royal Bank, my wife worked there for 8 years or so, and she reported to me that when they made the changeover to Windows NT everything got a lot slower.

      She also had a number of run-ins with the clueless admins there, the whole thing was depressing, both for her because she had to put up with their incompetence, and for me, because I had to listen to her complain about it.

      Let's not even talk about the poor customer.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    12. Re:I liked this part by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      Interesting.... About 6 months ago, I approached a Wells Fargo ATM just in time to see it reboot. It was running NT 4.0 Service pack 5.

      The interesting part being the diversity of the OS on the ATM.

    13. Re:I liked this part by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1
      ATMs and kiosks (especially bus / train / boat / airplane schedules) really need uptime at least when there are people around.

      Here, the automated bus schedules were down for a week with a Windows NT error message. Also, the other week at an airport some of the terminals above the check-in were offline and showed some Windows based error message instead of the departures and gate numbers. In one lobby I used to pass on the way to work was visible from the street a machine which showed the BSOD most days.

      It's kind of sad when religion / ideology dictate choice of technology instead of criteria like performance. Kiosks and other public relations devices ought to be using proven stable systems like BSD, Linux, QNX or Novell. Perhaps a PR campaign is needed to remind people that software shouldn't crash and that it's not normal for it to do so, except if you stay with MS.

      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
    14. Re:I liked this part by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      Vancouver's Skytrain mass-transit system also runs on OS/2. There's an OS/2 box sitting in every train. I thought that was pretty neat.

      --Dan

  40. Linux is bigger. by mmol_6453 · · Score: 1

    I suspect Linux, in terms of developer/tester count, is larger than Microsoft. Think about it. Linux bugs are submitted by anyone who can find them. Microsoft only accepts bug reports from people who pay-per-incident to report them.

    --
    What's this Submit thingy do?
  41. He's technically right by mblase · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances.

    This is true enough; the latest big MS strategy is unquestionably .NET, and they are essentially the company on that (well, that and the next version of Office) by making it the core of all their latest server offerings.

    The fallacy is confusing "bet the company on" with "innovated the technology for". .NET, for all it's glory and marketing, is a hyperextension of what Java originally promised. Microsoft may have a lot of money in R&D, but they rarely push the envelope -- at least not before someone else has shown it can be pushed.

  42. why give a damn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if bill wants to ignore linux, hurray! the best thing for linux and open source is for bill to ingore it until it's too late. So why are people pissed at Bill? I'm confused.

  43. Do you believe me now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While on Microsoft campus: Good.

    Everywhere else: ...silence...

  44. whew... by theoddball · · Score: 1

    "USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point."
    /quote

    Well, that's a relief.

  45. Too bad by ciryon · · Score: 1
    This might sound like a flamebait but real innovation isn't coming from microsoft or Linux hackers.

    Innovations for windows are created by other companies and Linux hackers seem to concentrate on making the innovations for windows work in Linux.

    I'd love to see something NEW in Linux, like Apple's newly revealed Exposé but it never shows up. I'm probably hoping for Enlightenment to prove me wrong.

    Ciryon

  46. Linux is here to stay ... by bigjocker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't know about you, but that interview told me a lot more than BG wanted to. In the first answer he seems to get really angered about the claim that "nobody used OS/2" and ends up sumarizing why Microsoft is the best company in town.

    Linux is here to stay, and they know it. This is _not_ like the OS/2 days. OS/2 was IBM's, GNU/Linux is a comunity, they can't sweep linux out of the market because most linux users uset it because they won't run anything from Microsoft. I know I do.

    Even if RedHat, Mandrake and all commercial distros dissapear and SCO's FUD manages to kill Linux (highly unlikely) the mentality, press coverage and community that has gathered around GNU/Linux will live on in the *BSDs and even in OSX.

    All the people and companies spreading FUD and satanizing Linux have, in some way or another, gained a lot from the GNU/Linux movement. SCO has lasted a little longer than it should have because of OpenLinux, OSX and Windows have incorporated software and ideas that were born in the GNU/Linux/*BSD world.

    Even if Linux is to dissapear the "damage" is already done ... USA Today is interviewing one of the richest and more powerful man on earth and the main topic is Linux.

    Some would say that the "world domination" thingie has already started.

    --
    Life isn't like a box of chocolates. It's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.
    1. Re:Linux is here to stay ... by resignator · · Score: 1

      Not to troll here but this what the hell did all the linux fanbois expect B.G. to say? Talk to any business owner about HIS product and they will say its better than the rest. It is called capitalism and commercialism and this is what people do to sell their product. Blind devotion to linux makes my stomach turn just as much as the garbage B.G. spews. No OS is perfect. Both linux and M$ have a long way to go. The only real way I see linux winning the war is making its interface extremely simple ( you know point and click ). Since alot of distros are starting to included installation wizards I run into more and more people who have tryed linux but ultimately they all come back to M$. Why? Point and click, point and click. Oh and games, games, games. I bet half the linux users who bitch about B.G. havent even tryed winXP. I use linux and windows on my machines simply because I can. Not a huge fan of either. All fanbois can die...on both sides. You are worse than a bunch of patriotic nazis.

      --
      "At first, we thought it was just another snake cult."
    2. Re:Linux is here to stay ... by BeerCat · · Score: 1

      Talk to any business owner about HIS product and they will say its better than the rest. Actually, Gerald Ratner, head of a chain of >100 jewellers publically called his products "total crap" But then his company went down the tubes...

      --
      "She's furniture with a pulse"
    3. Re:Linux is here to stay ... by resignator · · Score: 1

      my point exactly...

      --
      "At first, we thought it was just another snake cult."
  47. My paraphrase of Bill Gates by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 0, Redundant
    all your base are belong to us

    you have no chance to survive make your time

    ha ha ha

    --
    Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    1. Re:My paraphrase of Bill Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AYB is NOT FUNNY.

      never was funny

      never will be funny.

    2. Re:My paraphrase of Bill Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you are the ultimate entity who defines what's funny and what's not just like what's black and what's white?

  48. More confident than a while ago... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 1


    Anyone thing that Linux has gone from being a 'the main competetor' to 'another OS2' due to their confidece that the MS funded SCO FUD campaign seems to be doing pretty well at derailing Corporate Linux (TM)?

    I suspect that he would love it if the same kind of breaks were applied to Linux that were applied to BSD after their legal troubles.
    </>

    Not that I care, Free operating systems will live on even if Linux itself dies - it'll be a real loss for sure, but not a total from-square-0 (lots of the driver code for example is probably reusable). There might be some corporate disinterest, but it can survive even that - it only needs a core of developers to keep at it for it to grow and prosper.

    --
    Beep beep.
  49. Confused!!!! by dimer0 · · Score: 1

    In one answer...

    We will never have a price lower than Linux

    And in the immediate next answer ...

    The idea is that we're in a competitive situation, that we're willing to provide a better price.

    Umm.. What gives?

    1. Re:Confused!!!! by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      He's referring to purchase price in the first quote, and total cost of ownership in the second. Microsoft has, for quite a while now, attempted to show that it costs more to operate/support Linux than it does Windows. Funny thing is, I thought Ballmer admitted that even this was wrong a few months ago.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  50. Lies, FUD, alligations, and things left unsaid ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 1
    ...And yeah, we, on educational bids, we will meet competition. That's considered healthy pro-competitive behavior...

    Bullshit I can smell it a mile away. The reason you can say that you can beat linux in this market is because linux isn't a corperation that can make an educational bid (at least not in the public school system). And since MS has the ability to bid both software only and software + support costs they can undercut because their client list is so much longer. Any 5-Guy Linux shop will contract at a yearly rate for what would be close to a salary. So yeah, MS can underbid in a public setting, but that's just because the bid process is messed up, not because linux sucks.

    You can tell Bills scared, everytime some type of sensationalism is mentioned he plays it off like nothing happened. The fact that he's acknowledging it makes me think of a quote...

    "First, they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win." - Ghandi

    Looks like it's only a matter of time. Did anyone else notice there was not a definante "no" from the old MS inceptor himself that MS will make products for the linux platform. They know of crossover, and other apps like it, they know it's possible. But they want to keep as much money tied in as they can, wait though, the only thing for sure in life, is change.

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
  51. A Propagandist As Vacant As Bush: +1, Patiotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    ------------------

    Mr. Gates, why would anyone (who knows about
    software applications) want to port your crap software to GNU-Linux?

    Cheers,
    W00t

  52. If you think by 2names · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Linux is only "slightly important" then you have no business connecting to the Internet and no idea how many servers are running this OS. While Linux may not matter much on the desktop right now, it is absolutely KEY in the server market.

    Now, turn around, pull your thumb out of your ass, and read something educational.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    1. Re:If you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Server-wise, what does Linux do that the other flavors of UNIX can't? Linux is hardly essential.

    2. Re:If you think by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Server-wise, what does Linux do that the other flavors of UNIX can't?

      Be installed on 100 machines without paying for a licence for each one.

    3. Re:If you think by hdparm · · Score: 0

      Running on Intel (cheap) architecture?

    4. Re:If you think by madman101 · · Score: 2, Informative

      And clearly you have no idea how many machines ran OS/2. Linux is on thousands of web servers now, but OS/2 ran tens of thousands of ATM's, which have only recently been converted. OS/2 was on many more desktops than Linux is now.

    5. Re:If you think by rutledjw · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I don't know how this is "Insightful" but...

      Linux truly runs the gambit of support from zilch (but completely free) to 24x7 support for mission-critical applications. This is great when you have development and test environments where you don't want to pay licensing/support for something that customers will never see. You're lowering overhead which nowadays is very important

      On the technical side, being able to modify Linux means that it can run in a number of environments from the desktop/workstation (where a larger, less efficient kernel that has more stuff compiled into it doesn't matter) to a server (where stability and speed are more important) to very small devices (where a small memory footprint is important).

      If you're talking stability, security, and speed and other *nix features/functions, then yeah, Linux is not a very compelling product. But merely copying *nix isn't what made Linux popular in the first place!

      --

      Computer Science is Applied Philosophy
    6. Re:If you think by cowbutt · · Score: 1
      what does Linux do that the other flavors of UNIX can't?

      Support best-of-breed Free and Open Source applications like Apache without lots of fumbling around compiling from source (unless you want to) and installing the GNU toolchain.

      --

    7. Re:If you think by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      So can FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD. Sorry, doesn't hold up.

      -uso.

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    8. Re:If you think by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1

      Linux is on thousands of web servers now, but OS/2 ran tens of thousands of ATM's, which have only recently been converted. So lets assume that thousands means 9,999 servers that linux runs on. OS group Percentage Windows 49.2% Linux 28.5% Solaris 7.6% BSD 6.3% Other Unix 2.4% Other non-Unix 2.5% Unknown 3.6% Do you honestly think that there are slightly over 40,000 thousand webservers? Note From netcraft: Microsoft Windows has a significantly higher share of the web when one counts by computer, rather than by host, as in the conventional Web Server Survey. The survey shows 49% of the computers running the web are Windows based; a little more than all of the Unix-like operating systems combined. As some of the 3.6% of computers not identified by Netcraft operating system detector will in reality be Windows systems, it would be fair to say about half of public Web Servers world-wide are run on Microsoft operating systems. End Netcraft Note: This means everyone runnint NT/2k/XP with IIS/Apache on a cable modem counts twords MS's total here thus Redmonds dominance here is more due to their position on the desktop rather than the server market. I cant find the numbers for host but either way your 'Just now its on thousands of computers' is bunk..

      --
    9. Re:If you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about freeBSD, netBSD or openBSD. I know many more people that use those OSs than linux (and yes, they use *gasp* apache and all those other 'best-of-breed Free and Open Source applications'

    10. Re:If you think by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      Let me format that
      Linux is on thousands of web servers now, but OS/2 ran tens of thousands of ATM's, which have only recently been converted.

      So lets assume that thousands means 9,999 servers that linux runs on. OS group Percentage
      Windows 49.2%
      Linux 28.5%
      Solaris 7.6%
      BSD 6.3%
      Other Unix 2.4%
      Other non-Unix 2.5%
      Unknown 3.6%

      Do you honestly think that there are slightly over 40,000 thousand webservers?

      Note From netcraft: Microsoft Windows has a significantly higher share of the web when one counts by computer, rather than by host, as in the conventional Web Server Survey. The survey shows 49% of the computers running the web are Windows based; a little more than all of the Unix-like operating systems combined. As some of the 3.6% of computers not identified by Netcraft operating system detector will in reality be Windows systems, it would be fair to say about half of public Web Servers world-wide are run on Microsoft operating systems. End Netcraft Note:

      This means everyone runnint NT/2k/XP with IIS/Apache on a cable modem counts twords MS's total here thus Redmonds dominance here is more due to their position on the desktop rather than the server market. I cant find the numbers for host but either way your 'Just now its on thousands of computers' is bunk..

      --
    11. Re:If you think by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

      so what major companies are selling any *BSD on their servers , with support ?

      didnt think so. Linux is the closest thing out there for a enterprise level OS on intel.

      --
      "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
    12. Re:If you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which one should be modded redundant?

    13. Re:If you think by cowbutt · · Score: 1
      Fair point. I was mainly referring to proprietary UNIXes like Solaris, AIX, SCO, Irix, HP-UX etc (for at least two of those, compilers are a cost-option).

      For what it's worth, in my experience, Linux is much more widely used (excluding appliances) in the UK than any of the BSDs. The only place where that isn't the case is some ISPs.

      I think Linux's USPs over the BSDs are the broader hardware support, "brand recognition", and finally a more friendly UI (even on the command line) compared with "traditional UNIX", as a result of using GNU- instead of BSD-sourced components wherever possible. --

    14. Re:If you think by Roto-Rooter+Man · · Score: 1

      This sounds like some other math I read once:

      "OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. herefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts."

      Probably about as accurate too.

      --

      The goatse guy for president. Win one for the gaper!
    15. Re:If you think by plusser · · Score: 1

      Linux can be turned into a very efficient real time operating system, Windows can't, but ironically MSDOS is a real-time operating system. To be term real time, an operating system must be able to control itself to very tight schedule. This is the domain of safety critical systems that must have fail safe routine to ensure lives are not in danger. Welcome to the real world application. You wouldn't drive a car that had wheels that would fall off at any moment, nor would you build medical equipment that could turn itself off if you press the wrong combination of keys. In these applications you would dream of using Windows, in fact you would want to use the most reliable technology you can get your hands on. Amazingly the most reliable technology isn't exactly the newest, and it does depend on what you are building. But for the most part operating systems like Linux are ideal, as they can be tailored to fit the space available, removing all the fancy stuff that is unnecessary. If you think about, in the near future, this is where the real money will be. For example, you can now purchase an electrical box that can be retro fitted to a diesel engine. This device contains an micro controller that reduces the speed of the fuel pump when you lift the throttle (or gas pedal), thus reducing the fuel consumption of the engine. Devices like these really can make the money and save it too. So comparing Linux with Windows is like comparing a diesel engine with a steam engine. In twenty years time we will all get romantic about Windows, like a stream train. But in reality they take a long time to stoke, need constant overhaul and are not as economical as they make out to be.

    16. Re:If you think by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1

      No these numbers are from netcraft, the parent stated there were only thousands of linux webservers. No organization chalenges netcrafts numbers. If 28% of all webservers are Linux and there are only 10K servers he is saying there are less than 40K webservers on the internet. if the math seems hard youll get in in the 3rd grade..

      --
    17. Re:If you think by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. I was thinking how it compared with non-free kernels. However, it does have better hardware support than other free kernels.

    18. Re:If you think by Read+Icculus · · Score: 1
      Be installed on 100 machines without paying for a licence for each one.
      Prepare yourself for the *BSD onslaught... well you would have to prepare yourself if *BSD wasn't dead.
      --
      Anti-social? My code is just platform-specific.
    19. Re:If you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Mods on crack (again)!

      How's this comment overrated? It should have been moded up - Linux is an Enterprize class server, performing outstandingly well on Intel platform. Fuck, that's why it's replacing UNIX all over the place.

    20. Re:If you think by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      Server-wise, what does Linux do that the other flavors of UNIX can't?

      Generally supports a lot more hardware and performs better. It's more stable than some Unixen, particulalry SCO. It's free. It develops quickly, and is nearly always the first to support new high-end hardware these days, Opteron being a case in point. Lots of Unixen will never be implemented on newer hardware.

      Because Linux is implemented on such a wide variety of hardware, you don't have to bother with 6 different flavors of Unix, you just use Linux on all your boxes, which saves a great deal of administrative time and cost.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    21. Re:If you think by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      I've never posted on usenet concerning NetBSD. Please add in my five servers (two at home and three at work). Thanks!

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    22. Re:If you think by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

      And run on extremely cheap hardware. Have you priced a Sun box recently?

      --
      What a long, strange trip it's been.
    23. Re:If you think by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      A certain online travel booking company is switching from SGI to Linux. Plans are for somewhere in excess of 200 identical servers. Fairly mission critical, I'd say, for a company with 38million members.

      I'd love to be able to say that it's Expedia, but it's not. I don't think Bill would stand for one of his drone companies defecting to the enemy.

    24. Re:If you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Computer Science is Applied Philosophy

      Uh, and by that you mean Philosophy in the Logic sense, right?

    25. Re:If you think by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      For most Unices, x86 is alien to them. AMD's X8664 is another one.

      How about be run by people who do not want, or can not afford, to pay thousands of dollars for the license, and many more thousands of dollars for the hardware to run it?

      How about run a web server capable of very high hit rates for under a thousand bucks>

      How about supercomputing? How many unices are in the top 100 supercomputers? (seriously, anyone know?)

      How about rendering movies so inexpensively (server AND destop used there)?

      Hell, how about get media press!?! When is the last time HPUX got non-trade press coverage?

      Neil Cavuto on FNC today was talking about Linux. Favorably.

      Here is another one, you can go down to Borders or Barnes&Noble, or go online to Amazon and buy a book on Linux, and use it to set up a server *and* learn about the whole thing. All for the paltry cost of maybe 50 bucks plus a few hundred for hardware, assuming you don't have some laying around.

      Essential? Depends on what you consider essential. Lower IT costs are considered essential by Amazon, Merril Lynch, Google, and many many others.
      Clearly they consider Linux's capabilities essential.

      Go ahead, try to build a Google on an expensive proprietary Unix OS and Hardware w/o losing your shirt financially speaking. Then tell me it can't do things that traditional Unices can't do.

      Oh, and here is one last one:
      The traditional, proprietary Unices were unable to move anywhere near the desktop, bridging the gap between server and workstation/desktop. Linux is.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    26. Re:If you think by usotsuki · · Score: 1

      Yeah. I'll give you that.

      Then again if SCOrdure [btw, ordure == SHIT] gets their way, we may have to go BSD.

      Ah, WTF, just give me FreeDOS.

      -uso.
      Or can anyone burn me a CYGWIN setup with X and everything?

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    27. Re:If you think by rifter · · Score: 1

      Note From netcraft: Microsoft Windows has a significantly higher share of the web when one counts by computer, rather than by host, as in the conventional Web Server Survey.

      That's because it takes more computers to run a site on MS Windows than it does on Linux. Additionally, IIS virtual domain capabilities are laughable compared to those of Apache, thus one Linux box can run many more sites than any Windows box ever will simultaneously.

  53. I have got bad news for you Bill by Azadre · · Score: 1

    Linux betted on a secure, open source OS. I think the people will go with that over your bloaty OS X wannabe. Sorry Bill.

  54. Microsoftie English by pubjames · · Score: 5, Funny

    I love the bizarre way Microsofties speak.

    Normal person: Hey, like your hair cut Bill!

    Bill: Thanks. I'm super-serious about my hair. Before it was totally random but now I'm totally dedicated to getting serious about it. My hair has my 100% committment and I'm going to be super-concentrating on that from now on.

    1. Re:Microsoftie English by Enry · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't you worry about my hair, let me worry about blank.

    2. Re:Microsoftie English by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hair, HAIR!!! You're not seeing the big picture.

  55. Dave Haynie got this one right 5 years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Comparing the current situation with Linux to that of OS/2 is either wild optimism or a thinly veiled red herring tactic. The best nutshell analysis of the microsoft vs. OS/2 non-event was explained by Dave Haynie like 4 or 5 years ago:

    You had IBM with OS/2, a decent technology bundled in a moderate product with a really horrible installation routine, there taking on Windows head to head for about a year. And yet, despite all of the money IBM spent promoting OS/2, you couldn't even get it bundled with most of the IBM-branded PCs. That sent the clear message that OS/2 support was something like half of IBM plus the rest of the PC world against the other half of IBM. IBM did essentially nothing with their nine month lead over Windows 95, and pretty much gave up afterwards (sure, it still exists, probably as near as your nearest MAC machine, but the world is already crowded with embedded OSs no one knows about).

    here's the link to the interview where the quote was made.

  56. Never mind that one by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

    I want to see a shot of him at a formal event -- wearing a tux!

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    1. Re:Never mind that one by Chundra · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there're a lot of people who want to see him shot -- wearing a tux or not.

  57. I compare it to this... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. (Mahatma Gandhi)

    This gives me an idea how far along Linux is in competing with Windows. No, I wasn't expecting Gates to bow down to Llnux, but there's many ways of claiming you're better.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:I compare it to this... by lysium · · Score: 1
      I recall the 'laughing' stage was approximately 2 years ago, when Microsoft (perhaps Ballmer specifically?) was calling Linux "communist." I guess that didn't really have the effect they thought it would have...

      ----------

      --
      Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
    2. Re:I compare it to this... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. (Mahatma Gandhi)

      Lucky for Gandhi he didn't live in the USSR. The rule there was: First they give you a show trial, then you confess, then you go break rocks in Siberia.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    3. Re:I compare it to this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Step 4 should be updated to say, "Then you die a slow, painful death." Far more realistic.

    4. Re:I compare it to this... by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it has to some degree.

      Does your boss favor a Linux solution? Has your company switched over to the GPL for their software licenses?

      (I expect the minority of people whose companies have to loudly answer yes. The rest of you know you can't say so....)

  58. They always think they're different. by hndrcks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "People always think today's competition is somehow different and unique in some way."

    And the roadside is littered with companies that believed they were "somehow different and unique" from everything that had gone before - where are they now?

    --
    Everyone will start to cheer when you put on your sailin' shoes.
  59. It's an _ok_ article by Shippy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... but still didn't find it that gratifying. A couple of things that I would like to note though:

    Windows does seem to be a platform that does a lot of innovation. I've seen the betas of Longhorn, they're really doing some awesome architectural change to the OS. I don't think Linux users can deny that the most popular window managers out there aim to imitate Windows' look-and-feel so as to be familiar with those users. What does this result in? A clone machine. Nothing risky and new is done very often and really pushed out (I'm talking about KDE or Gnome doing something major and pushing it out) for fear it'll push potential new users away due to its dissimilarity with Windows.

    Don't get me wrong. Linux is very stable and the kernel is getting so rock-hard and that is very impressive, but until there's really a reason to make people's heads turn, people will remain on Windows. They need to see something that turns their head and they say "Wow, that's something that makes my computing life easier that's not available on Windows." Only then will desktop users really consider switching. But as long as the advertising scheme for Linux is "Just like Windows!", there won't be a super compelling reason for people to switch. Oh yeah, the lack of software hurts, but we've beat that catch 22 into the ground.

    Of course, another problem is that once it's done on Linux, Windows will probably embrace-and-extend it. That's a slight downside of the cost arrangement of Linux. If someone was to get some new innovative thing into Linux, nobody can afford to get protection for it such as patents. Sure, most of you may not like software patents, but face it, it's the way it is and you have to protect yourself whether you like the system or not. I'm not saying MS will steal the code, but they have a whole slew of programmers that can tinker with something until they figure it out.

    This is all stuff easier said than done. Since MS is the 900lb gorilla, they have a lot more freedom to do the pushing than the following. These are just my opinions, though.

    --
    -Shippy
    1. Re:It's an _ok_ article by ender81b · · Score: 1

      Exactly right. Consider Mac OS X, the current (IMHO) desktop OS to beat. It has everything anybody could ever need, grandmas can sit down at it and feel comfortable and apple STILL only controls a fraction of the market.

      You can say that it is due to the need to buy Apple hardware instead of being able to install it on x86 machines but I really wonder. Apple obviously feels it cannot compete with Microsoft which should tell the Linux people what they are up against. If linux could get to that level would people really drop windows? Or would they stick with what they knew and liked?

      I mean, Linux as a dekstop machine sucks for most people. Hell, i'm a computer geek and I can't stand using it as a dekstop (server yes, desktop no). Everything you could want in a desktop is not there. You don't have easy hardware setup, you don't have easy software install, you don't have a coherent and logical desktop enviroment (although the latest offerings are getting extremely close to this), you don't have games, and nothing "just works."

      I think what will be interesting is if the Open Source people can get their software to finally become more easy to use, et al and then see what happens to Microsoft. As it stands now they aren't a threat because the stuff they make just isn't as good as either Windows or Mac OS X.

    2. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Windows does seem to be a platform that does a lot of innovation. I've seen the betas of Longhorn, they're really doing some awesome architectural change to the OS.

      Ok I call your bluff....

      what are they doing? are they changing to the linux model of kernel modules so we never have to reboot again for every little thing?

      have they change to microkernel?

      you mention architectural change... something that cannot be verified wothout viewing the source code. and is NOT just changes to the pretty icons or how you input things... architectural change is at the OS level, something that Linux has been way ahaead of them for years....

      Windows XP, built on the same crap that is NT3.51... in fact I found a couple of bugs that are STILL THERE from the 3.51 days....

      they want changes??? look at BSD or linux for innovation not the crud that MS gives us every 2 years with nothing more than new icons and some idiot moving the tools around in the menus...

    3. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >>>>Since MS is the 900lb gorilla, they have a lot more freedom to do the pushing than the following.

      Well, how can you take down a 900lb gorilla? Simple; 1,000,000 mosquitos. Each one just takes a small drop, but they eventually add up. And each drop of blood equals food for its youngin's. Then you get more and more mosquitos. They feed off of each others success.

      In a way, thats the way open source works. We're all blood suckers. We just give it freely.

      --
    4. Re:It's an _ok_ article by fermion · · Score: 1
      once again let's review history

      The GUI chain goes xerox->Lisa->Macintosh->(Windows)
      X->(KDE|GNOME)
      with some convergence

      the memory management chain goes
      DEC->Windows
      The NT memory management, the only one that really worked, was written based on the DEC model.
      Unix->(Macintosh(PMM) & Linux kernel)
      In early 90's Apple moved to the page memory model

      internet browsers

      First WWW browers back in '93 for X and Macintosh
      Mosaic released later that year for X, Macintosh and Windows
      Netscape released browsers derived from the Mosaic codebase in early '94
      Finally MS licenses Spyglass, also based of Mosaic, and released IE in mid '95
      The main contribution of IE was the incredible horizontal scrolling text.
      Honorable mention for Cyberdog

      You are correct that MS will embrace and extend. They may also innovate. However, the UI is pretty much stolen. XP looks line OS X, not the other way around. The browser was pretty much stolen and extended as other companies thought up new features. The new longhorn file system has been thought about extensively for many years by many other people, for instance in 'The Humane Interface.' I am sure it is an amazing implementaton. I am also sure that like always, it is a feature mismash that sacrifices usability.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    5. Re:It's an _ok_ article by DJ+Rubbie · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, KDE and Gnome, along with other GNU applications put together, is much more than Windows. A couple days ago I convinced one of my friend to switch to Linux, after I showed him Mozilla with the popup blocking and tab browsing, KDE with multiple desktops, OpenOffice.org opening MS Word documents, and all the configurations that can make the GUI smoother for daily usage. Most of those functions (tab based browsing, popup blocking, multiple desktops) are not present in a default Windows installation, and the other functions are certainly not Free in the Windows world. My friend stared in awe when he finally did notice all the default applications (The Gimp, Xine, all the games) that came with Mandrake 9.1, whereas Windows comes with, Windows itself.

      Linux is certainly not like Windows, and when Microsoft starts to clone functionalities in KDE/Gnome, wouldn't people say that Windows is just like KDE/Gnome/Linux?

      --
      Please direct all bug reports to /dev/null
    6. Re:It's an _ok_ article by mormop · · Score: 1

      I don't think Linux users can deny that the most popular window managers out there aim to imitate Windows' look-and-feel so as to be familiar with those users.

      mainly because Linux is currently trying to pull users away from a 95% desktop share and this'll only happen if the trauma isn't too great. When Windows starts morphing into a KDE/Gnome or whatever clone you'll know Linux is winning

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    7. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Shippy · · Score: 1

      Well, yeah. Windows along with other GNU applications is also much more than Windows. Take Windows, add Mozilla (or Avant Browser) with popup blocking and tab browsing, use a free util (or just about any nVidia driver) for multiple desktops, OpenOffice.org, and turn off all the fancy fluffy stuff to make the GUI smoother for daily usage. Sure, most of this stuff is not present in a default Windows installation, but it does come with a good amount of utilities (I _love_ MovieMaker). Besides, who wants to have their OS installed with 5+ web browsers and 3 or 4 different word processor. Most people don't. They want the 1 browser that works great and the 1 word processor. A lot of people complain about the bloat in Windows, but if you look at a typical Linux install, it's rather bloaty as well and most of the time, newbies won't even know 70% of the programs installed. You just know about the ones that appear in their KDE/Gnome menu. The rest is waste that could be better spent on other things.

      --
      -Shippy
    8. Re:It's an _ok_ article by cREW+oNE · · Score: 1

      Most of those functions (tab based browsing, popup blocking, multiple desktops) are not present in a default Windows installation, and the other functions are certainly not Free in the Windows world. ... Euh.

      On windows we can have Opera, Mozilla, and a dozen other tab-based browsers. (Avant, just to name one.) And Avant and Mozilla are free!

      Multiple desktops... windows has that. Most modern display drivers come with that feature. (free)

      Popup blockers ... well, they were basically invented for windows-based machines first :) (And most tabbed browsers can block them.)

      There's absolutely no denying that Linux/KDE/Gnome/Mozilla have come a long, long way. And they're awesome pieces of software. But face it, most popular *nix windowmanagers copied a lot from Windows, just so people like your friend could feel right at home.

      There's nothing wrong with copying the good bits. As long as it's legal :)

      --

      +++ATH0

    9. Re:It's an _ok_ article by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      Innovation for its own sake is a bit pointless, if nobody wants it, it's not innovation, it's just being different for the sake of it.

      OK. So Microsoft are making big changes in Longhorn - cool. But will that be successful? Dunno. How many XP users do you know that switched back to the "classic" theme, that rearranged stuff to be more like how they were used to?

      Of course, you can't use the excuse familiarity to stop people usign new ideas. But I see people say things like "Desktop Linux is sooooo non-innovative". Actually, there are quite a few innovations in there, it's just that most people don't know about them.

      File type detection based on content, as opposed to file extensions? Strong network enabled filing systems (think kio_slaves)? Model/View/Controller based configuration systems? Automatic package installers/resolvers?

      Yup, you saw them all on Linux first. But people look at the default Red Hat desktop and go "ooh look, it's kind of like Windows, these guys clearly can't innovate". Well obviously that isn't entirely fair, Red Hat deliberately change the defaults of both desktops to make them resemble each other, and the lowest common denominator they can both manage happens to resemble Windows (compare default gnome desktop to default red hat desktop for instance). But people say it anyway.

      Anyway, as the basic stuff gradually gets nailed (stuff like multimedia, proper file associations, shared config etc) you'll start seeing more branching out, experimentation and so on. Right now of course all the work is focussed on making something that is a strong desktop, UI research can wait until that's sorted out.

      Remember - being different for its own sake isn't innovative. It's a pain in the arse. Linux is built for people to use, not as a research lab.

    10. Re:It's an _ok_ article by sheldon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most of those functions (tab based browsing, popup blocking, multiple desktops) are not present in a default Windows installation, and the other functions are certainly not Free in the Windows world.

      tab based browsing... Uhh, Mozilla and Opera are available on Windows. Mozilla is still free of charge.

      popup blocking... Amazing new toolbar from google.

      multiple desktops... It's a free download, if you want it. Personally I prefer my multi-monitor setup instead.

      But multiple desktops has been around since at least Windows 3.1, it's not that new.

      You're making the mistake of underestimating the competition, thinking that these things don't exist in Windows just because you lack experience with it.

    11. Re:It's an _ok_ article by DJ+Rubbie · · Score: 1

      Given that most people do not know about Mozilla, do not know about popup blockers, and do not know about the powertoys Microsoft offers, it is irrelevent to the average user who does not download any so-called add-ons to their operating system.

      Users care about what's on their system at the time of the installation, they don't like to get out of their way and spend time getting extra plugins. This is why people are happy with Microsoft Internet Explorer, MS Works/Office, and settle for a single desktop.

      --
      Please direct all bug reports to /dev/null
    12. Re:It's an _ok_ article by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Linux is certainly not like Windows, and when Microsoft starts to clone functionalities in KDE/Gnome, wouldn't people say that Windows is just like KDE/Gnome/Linux?

      Actually people tend to compare things they see to similar things that they've seen before. So if Microsoft steals an idea from Linux, Linux is still "like Windows" as long as the user saw Windows first (and most possible switchers will have).

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    13. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Linux is built for people to use, not as a research lab.

      I think youre getting it all wrong. Linux has always been a sort of research lab for geeks to tinker around with. And from what I understand the community doesnt want it to be anything else. If someone would develop an easy to use desktop manager for it, the community would bash him for not thinking geek.

    14. Re:It's an _ok_ article by openartist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I broadly agree, at least about the tendency to imitate Windows rather than create completely new (and better) things. The latest KDE has most of the features of XP, including the annoying ones (like minimising a window when you click on its taskbar icon and the window is already displayed). It even has its name written up the side of the start bar like Windows. I think this is a result of the approach "We are against Windows", which means Windows sets the agenda. It would be really nice (may be unrealistic in the real world, though) to just say, "I don't care what Windows does or doesn't do, let's create something completely new and innovative that is the best in its own terms." I am for Linux. Let's innovate!

      --
      Attract flames, have an opinion (any opinion).
    15. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Smudgie · · Score: 1

      what are they doing? are they changing to the linux model of kernel modules so we never have to reboot again for every little thing?

      Unfortuately, I believe the answer to your question can be distilled down to just three letters: DRM (ala Palladium or whatever they call it now)...

    16. Re:It's an _ok_ article by ookaze · · Score: 1

      I wonder how the parent could be modded up so much, when his parent clearly stated it was talking about a default Windows installation.
      And no, Mozilla, the google bar or "multiple desktops" are nowhere in a default Windows install.
      Talking about "multiple desktop", it is nowhere as powerful as a Linux desktop one, be it Gnome or KDE. And don't get me started on sessions. Let me count ... I have 11 applications that automatically get started and placed where I left them before logging off, on the virtual desktop I left them on.
      On Windows XP, I can't even have Explorer there at the place I left it in some circumstances.
      Don't get me started on watching videos too : I just can't read correctly all the videos I have on Windows (and most where created on a Windows machine), event though I have *4* different players on the Windows XP client, and all of them pass without a hitch on Linux with MPlayer.
      These are the "innovations" that makes me reluctant to use any Windows desktop nowadays.

    17. Re:It's an _ok_ article by Puu · · Score: 1

      The GUI chain goes xerox->Lisa->Macintosh->(Windows)

      Just a minor correction: Jef Raskin, who pioneered (predicted and figured out) the GUI in his academic career, and significantly influenced the Xerox PARC people, started Apple's GUI program with his Macintosh project. Lisa was originally a command line computer, but then got the GUI from the Macintosh project (and got the priority and the better resources, got finished first, but turned out to be too expensive to make much sales).

      Google finds interesting stuff about Apple's GUI development and how the jealous Steve Jobs nearly managed to kill the Macintosh project. (After the Lisa people told him to go play with himself somewhere else, and how the helpless Raskin won him over to support GUI, how they together then visited PARC, and how Macintosh thrived after Lisa flunked...)

      To sum up, Raskin -> Xerox -> Macintosh -> Lisa -> Windows

    18. Re:It's an _ok_ article by sheldon · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Given that most people do not know about Mozilla, do not know about popup blockers, and do not know about the powertoys Microsoft offers, it is irrelevent to the average user who does not download any so-called add-ons to their operating system.

      Only in your mind.

      The average user knows how to download stuff and install it just fine. Napster would never have had the millions of people using it, if your theory was correct. Perhaps the reality is that the features you talk about really just aren't that compelling to the average user?

      I know I could do without tabbed browsing, and multi-desktops isn't all that useful. I only need popup blocking because of other lamers.

      Users care about what's on their system at the time of the installation, they don't like to get out of their way and spend time getting extra plugins.

      You're definately a typical Linux user. You've never had to deal with endusers, or you'd know this statement is false.

    19. Re:It's an _ok_ article by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you've convinced yourself that Linux is better by nitpicking.

      Unfortunately your usage does not in any way resemble my usage of a computer. So your experience is completely irrelevant.

  60. No MS Linux Apps? by WC+as+Kato · · Score: 1, Funny

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    Yeah, just like no one will ever need more than 640k of RAM!

    --
    --- I'm Green Hornet's sidekick not Inspector Clouseau's!
    1. Re:No MS Linux Apps? by MImeKillEr · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yeah, just like no one will ever need more than 640k of RAM!

      PSA: This is an urban legend.

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    2. Re:No MS Linux Apps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's hilarious! Gates is a visionary but sometimes he miss fires. Or maybe he's just doing his marketing FUD.

  61. Reminds me of somebody by dacarr · · Score: 1

    You know, the late Iraqi minister of information. That's who Bill Gates is starting to remind me of.

    --
    This sig no verb.
  62. Re:just the text sir by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  63. wow by asv108 · · Score: 3, Funny
    I never thought I would see hard hitting journalism coming out of USA Today, I thought the questions would be more like:
    • What's it like be the richest person in the world?
    • How big is your house?
    • Do you have a big gold vault like Scrooge McDuck, filled with cash?
    I'm glad USA Today surprised me with decent questions, maybe there is hope for other media outlets (cough.. Fox News).
  64. Speech recognition by LinuxWhore · · Score: 1

    Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface?

    Gee, let's see: IBM ViaVoice for one, and Dragon Naturally Speaking for two. Microsoft didn't innovate that, they assimilated it.

    --

    I am MuchTall
    1. Re:Speech recognition by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Are there any open source movements in that direction? It's a tough problem, and one that might gain prominence in the future.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    2. Re:Speech recognition by LinuxWhore · · Score: 1

      IIRC, IBM does or did have a ViaVoice library ported to Linux. No, it's not OSS, but I'm not even sure this is relevant given the context of his statements. He implies that Microsoft, and Microsoft alone brought us those technologies due to thier bold daring, and not the reality which is that they saw another opportunity to further kill off competition with sheer monopoly weight.

      --

      I am MuchTall
  65. This is basically a dig at IBM by MsGeek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Heh, this is so fsckn funny...

    Bill Gates bringing up OS/2 and comparing it to Linux is basically his way of raising his middle finger in the face of IBM. Gates and IBM had their rancourous falling-out over OS/2, and now that IBM has put much of its still-considerable muscle behind Linux this is his way of talking smack about IBM.

    Gates' arrogance is amazing. Read between the lines here. He's saying "we killed OS/2 and we're going to kill Linux...the SCO lawsuit is just the beginning."

    Thing is, you can't kill something that has no leaders and is not backed by a rival corporation. Even if Linux was temporarily crushed by MS action or government fiat, it could be revived at any time because the code is free and open and anyone who understands it can build on it.

    Read your Greek mythology, Mr. Gates. Hubris goeth before a fall.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  66. "Microsoft Pushes Tech" by waltmarkers · · Score: 1

    When Mr. Gates says Microsoft is the force pushing technology, is he refering to pushing around other tech companies? Restraining trade, or coping features directly from other systems. Or is he refering to pushing customers to a locked in microsoft system by implamenting propriitary standards such as .NET or breaking compatibility with other standards such as JAVA?

    Oh yes, Microsoft definately "pushes" technology!

  67. Bill G. on keeping up the monopoly by bogie · · Score: 1

    Talking about how Microsoft will do anything to undercut Linux in bidding situations and keep it from gaining ANY marketshare

    "That's considered healthy pro-competitive behavior."

    I'm sure that's the same thing the Mafia says about breaking kneecaps.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:Bill G. on keeping up the monopoly by reverendslappy · · Score: 1

      Maybe you wouldn't call underbidding your competitor healthy, pro-competitive behavior. But construction contractors, defense contractors, government project contractors, advertising agencies, web development companies, and consultancies, along with basically every company involved in bidding for work anywhere on the face of the planet do it every day. And my guess is that if you don't consider underbidding your competitors "healthy" and "pro-competitive", you probably wouldn't last too long in a competitive business environment.

      It's sad that Linux doesn't have the juice to do the same thing, but them's the breaks. Welcome to business-land, kid.

  68. +1 (Funny) to bill gates by zaroastra · · Score: 1

    passing thru competition?!?!? That's why(and not necesarely on this order) Almost every render farm used on movies uses linux... All major laboratories (phisycs (i work at one), medical, etc) uses it... Governments, regions and cities are moving to linux... Almost all big companies run at least a couple of servers with linux... Some even have taken linux to the desktop (worked on one of those also)... The open source community grows from day to day... Some of the biggest machines around (top 500) are linux cluster machines... (how many of those run windows?!?) Nasa uses linux... Defence agencies use linux... And the list goes on... Yet another marketing measure... but the reality is they are chicken scared of running out of theyr monopoly... And I can assure you they will as soon as desktop linux works well (overall and applications). Z

    --
    I'm trying to get modded "Interesting Flamebait Informative and Insightful Redundant Troll" *-* Please Help *-*
  69. Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How much server market share did O/S2 have? How much does Linux have? I can agree to be a bit arrogant when you are the head of a company, that is your right, and I think the desktop business MS has is pretty tight vis a vis Linux in % terms, but the server market, that is without question being more and more taken by Linux and Unix on the high-end now that companies realize where to place windows (low-end and application servers like it was intended ie Exchange SQL etc.)

    1. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by MImeKillEr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not sure about server market share. I ran OS/2 Server on my support box when I was a L2 TCP/IP tech at IBM Austin. I liked it a lot more than NT4, but I'm weird. I like the underdog simply because they're at a disadvantage.

      Mod me down if you want, but if Linux commands were a lot more like DOS (which I already know) I'd be running some sort of Linux on my PCs at home. Frankly, I haven't the time to try to remember all of the equivalent Linux commands for those I already know in DOS.

      Not to mention - does Linux have plug & play support? I dunno.

      I *can* tell you that a lot (all?) ATMs ran OS/2 (showing a DOS window to the user) and that large companies (Traveler's for one) and even the FBI were OS/2 users. Why? More secure.

      Ever seen a virus for OS/2? Nope. Ever see a rootkit or other exploit for OS/2? Nope. True, market share was a lot less than Windows, but this doesn't mean that since it had a smaller userbase that it was any less secure. I realize it doesn't mean it was more secure, but since Windows and the Linux flavors are built off of common files (that is, common between the versions) this means that they are less secure.

      Microsoft even stole from IBM - NTFS is a modification of OS/2's HPFS (High-Performance File System).

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    2. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by Knife_Edge · · Score: 1

      "Mod me down if you want, but if Linux commands were a lot more like DOS (which I already know) I'd be running some sort of Linux on my PCs at home. Frankly, I haven't the time to try to remember all of the equivalent Linux commands for those I already know in DOS."

      You got modded up my friend, so at least part of your post must be quality. Unfortunately, I am deeply suspicious of this part. I find it hard to believe that anybody uses the DOS command line to do complicated things, for extended periods of time. Could you please explain what you do at home that involves DOS? Maybe I'm wrong.

      I do know that if you have trouble remember Linux commands that have a rough DOS equivalent, and would like them to be the same as DOS, then all you have to do in bash at least is make yourself a set of shell aliases. All you have to do is figure out the command once, put an alias to it in your .bashrc file (or .bash_profile), and use it as if it were a DOS command, from then on!

      Here's an example, you do not want to remember that 'ls' is the command to list the files in a directory. You would rather use the DOS command 'dir.' Add this line to your .bash_profile -

      alias dir='ls --color | more'

      Simple huh? That is just one example. If you want one command to execute multiple commands, you must use a shell function instead of an alias. There is lots of documentation for this.

      Bash also supports tabbed completion, shell history, pipes, and the commands pushd and popd, features I can think of off the top of my head that makes it a superior command line to DOS. There are lots of other shells available on Linux, too.

      Though its other merits may be in dispute, I can say with complete confidence that the Linux command line is vastly better than anything DOS has to offer, and you just don't know what you are missing. If you really use the DOS command line frequently, you are already doing so much unnecessary work that your time would be better invested in learning the Linux command line.

      Now, if you have a lot of custom batch files or something, I could see how you would be hesitant to go through the work of porting those.

      Otherwise, I cringe to think of what your life must be like without tabbed completion, let alone any other feature I mentioned. Oh, no tabbed completion hurts...

    3. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      I also have issues with someone who says a dos command shell is better than any unix shell (csh, ksh, bash, sh, etc...).

      Now OS2 did have ReX - which may be what our friend is talking about - a neat scripting language built into OS2 (one of the reasons I was considering moving to it). However lack of such basic things as history and string replacement in a shell makes it tedious - regardless of how fast you can touch type.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    4. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Ever seen a virus for OS/2? Nope. Ever see a rootkit or other exploit for OS/2? Nope. True, market share was a lot less than Windows, but this doesn't mean that since it had a smaller userbase that it was any less secure.

      No, but it means that it was a much less interesting target for hackers. There are dozens of operating systems that have never had a virus or root kit, just because nobody has ever been motivated to try hacking them. It also helps that OS/2 was on the decline as the Internet was becoming popular.

      I realize it doesn't mean it was more secure, but since Windows and the Linux flavors are built off of common files (that is, common between the versions) this means that they are less secure.

      I'm trying hard to find any logical statement in there and am failing badly. Software that maintains files between versions is less secure than software that is rewritten from scratch with each version? How does this apply to OS/2???

    5. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by MImeKillEr · · Score: 1

      You got modded up my friend, so at least part of your post must be quality. Unfortunately, I am deeply suspicious of this part. I find it hard to believe that anybody uses the DOS command line to do complicated things, for extended periods of time. Could you please explain what you do at home that involves DOS? Maybe I'm wrong.

      Generally anything involving manipulation of files. Before working for IBM supporting OS/2, I'd never used an OS with a GUI, nor a mouse. For me, its second-nature to fart around in DOS.

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    6. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by MImeKillEr · · Score: 1

      I'm trying hard to find any logical statement in there and am failing badly. Software that maintains files between versions is less secure than software that is rewritten from scratch with each version? How does this apply to OS/2???

      Well, it may not directly relate to OS/2, but you're telling me that every flavor of Linux is written completely from scratch? So, they reinvent the wheel everytime? And this is the same with Windows? They don't use components from existing OS' and make the OS from scratch for every version?

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    7. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Well, it may not directly relate to OS/2, but you're telling me that every flavor of Linux is written completely from scratch? So, they reinvent the wheel everytime? And this is the same with Windows? They don't use components from existing OS' and make the OS from scratch for every version?

      We are totally failing to communicate. New versions of OS/2 are based upon old versions of OS/2. New versions of Linux are based upon old versions of Linux. New versions of Windows are based upon old versions of Windows. New versions of PalmOS are based upon old versions of PalmOS. I don't know what this "proves" about security in OS/2 or Linux or Windows. I don't think it proves anything at all! I don't know why you brought up the issue of new versions being based upon old ones back in the top post. You said: since Windows and the Linux flavors are built off of common files (that is, common between the versions) this means that they are less secure. I still don't know what you meant.

    8. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by MImeKillEr · · Score: 1

      As I said, it doesn't necessarily have to do with OS/2.

      What I meant is, since Windows and Linux are built off of previous versions of their respective OS', they're pulling old code thats either already exploited & patched, or not yet exploited. I wasn't saying that Windows & Linux shared code between the two.

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    9. Re:Denial is the 3rd stage of the psychosis by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Code that has been exploited and fixed is now fixed. It is more, not less, likely to be secure than new code.

  70. Handy Microsoft Dictionary Entries by burgburgburg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Innovate: Wait until someone develops something. Create inferior replication, use monopoly power and define as "part of the system" to crush original.
    Feature: Bug
    Compete: Use cash reserves/FUD/monopoly power to undercut superior products from other companies. When they are no longer viable, triple the price and then triple it again.

    1. Re:Handy Microsoft Dictionary Entries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just described the OSS development model to a T.

  71. Porting ? by DeBeuk · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?
    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.


    That would be like considering to sign his own death-warrant.

    --
    Reality has a notoriously liberal bias -- Stephen Colbert
  72. Bill Gates = HULK by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 4, Funny

    BeoWoof Clustar? When Gates don't understand GATES SMASH!

  73. Except that Bush is not vacant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except that Bush is neither vacant, nor a propagandist. He is merely someone who presents the facts in order to promote truly progressive policies.

    1. Re:Except that Bush is not vacant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Except that Bush is neither vacant, nor a propagandist. He is merely someone who presents the facts in order to promote truly progressive policies.

      huh. huh ha. Ha ha ha. WHAAAAAAA HAAAAAA HAAAAAAAA HAAAAAAAA! Ha HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA- SNORRRRT! HAAAAAAAA HAAAAAAAAHA HAAAAAA HA Ha. Ohhh, man. That was a good one, there, fan-boy.
      None so blind as those who will not see.

    2. Re:Except that Bush is not vacant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      I hope you don't really believe that. He's extremely radical to the point of not even being Republican anymore. What happened to states' rights?

      Bush, with every speech, pushes the American people into further misery where he pretends to be the sole relief to that misery. He acts like we need him to fight terrorism when all he's really doing is creating endless fear. He uses this fear to justify everything and anything he does. How many times were we on high terror alert? How many times were we attacked? See my point?

      Bush is a nationalist masquerading as a patriot. It is "un-american" to disagree even though, oddly enough, that is what founded this country. The first ammendment gaurantees us that right, yet we are made to fear exercising that right.

      He is merely someone who presents the facts

      I guess you're going to tell me that WMD were facts. I guess the CIA was wrong when they told the president that the evidence was not verified. I guess it wasn't a lie when the president told us he found WMD even though the "mobile weapons lab" he pointed to were really stations for filling up hot air balloons. The only thing that is undeniable now is that Bush is a liar and he can't say the word nuclear.

  74. I like Paulie Shore better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C'mon Mr. Gates you are a really bad comedian

  75. Flaming Bill.... by MyHair · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Okay, I RTFA'd. Bill neglects to mention that OS/2 was at one point the future of Microsoft.

    BG: . . . I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC. We bet on graphical user interface. We bet on the NT technology base.
    Huh? You bet on the 16-bit PC? 640k jokes aside, what other options were there at the time? GUI? Xerox/Mac beat you to it, and it was popular before you did it. NT tech? Hello, you stabbed 32-bit OS/2 in the back and used VMS as a model for the first NT, later making NT more like old Windows by incorporating more and more into the "microkernel".

    BG: . . . We will never have a price lower than Linux, in terms of just what you charge for the software. We compete on the basis of, if you look at the value you get out of the system and the overall cost that the system has that apply in our software. For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project. And so the question is can that 3% [compensate], in terms of how quickly you get the system set up?
    Is it just me, or was he struggling? And I wonder if the reason MS licensing is such a low percentage due to the higher support costs for their buggy software. (Yeah, yeah, a flame.)

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.
    "At this point"? Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all. Or maybe I'm reading too much into a figure of speech.
    1. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Fascist+Christ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He's trying to change history.

      Remember, reality means nothing these days. It's all about making the public think they know something. See it in public relations, politics, product advertising...

      Salt is NOT bad for you.
      Tomatoes are NOT vegitables.
      The USA is NOT a democracy.
      Microsoft did NOT revolutionize the PC.

      Yet people believe.

      --
      TodayTM BillyJoelTM GoogleTMd for StitchTMes due to WindowsTM while RollerbladeTMing with an AppleTM and a PopsicleTM
    2. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Double-O-Penguin · · Score: 1

      Microsoft will go where the money is. Let's assume that tomorrow morning everybody gets out of bed and comes to the conclusion that Linux beats Windows without question. Microsoft wants to survive, and Microsoft isn't stupid. If the market moves to Linux, then they'll employ some spin doctors to minimize the amount of public-image-fallout from actually offering a Linux product.

      While that scenario won't happen, there is one I _can_ imagine. Microsoft has a great deal of influence with hardware and software companies. I could see them exercise their influence in an attempt to gain an indirect foothold within the Linux software world. That's how they've always done things. They take control over some aspect of an emerging technology, and use that to reinforce their poduct line and their business objectives. It'll be a little more difficult to accomplish with Linux because of the nature of open source, but there are already closed source programs for Linux available for sale. It's reasonable to think that such offerings will continue to grow as the Linux user base grows. Could an opportunity arise in the future that could give Microsoft a foothold? I think it's possible especially when you consider that making Linux "ready for the desktop" means that people uninterested in open versus closed source will be the majority of software buyers. Will Mirosoft ever have total control over the Linux software world? No.

    3. Re:Flaming Bill.... by roka · · Score: 1

      "At this point"? Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all. Or maybe I'm reading too much into a figure of speech.

      You are. Definitively. Actually I bet he smiled like an idiot while saying that.

      I think that's quite a valid substitue:

      USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider throwing away your crappy corporation and pay all the developers to write oss?

      BG: WTF?

      (Well, if I were Bill Gates, I would definitively do that - I have all the money I never need, why not do the only thing that makes humans happy?)

    4. Re:Flaming Bill.... by pmz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      BG: . . . We will never have a price lower than Linux, in terms of just what you charge for the software. We compete on the basis of, if you look at the value you get out of the system and the overall cost that the system has that apply in our software. For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project. And so the question is can that 3% [compensate], in terms of how quickly you get the system set up?

      What's so interesting is that this exact same argument is used by other companies against Microsoft. Sun does it with their servers and will be doing it with that Mad Hatter desktop. I'm sure Red Hat is doing it every day. Even IBM will come in with a jab or two about their servers.

      I find the bit about "personnel costs" regarding Microsoft's offerings hilarious, by the way. Bill G. himself admitted two weeks per person per year lost due to Windows 9x. How much do to Outlook viruses? How much due to IIS worms? How much due to constant manual intervention for Windows servers?

    5. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how every Slashtard gets all flame happy whenever a Microsoft story comes up. Do you you fuckwits actually think you know more than Bill Gates? If so, why aren't you a multi-billionare?
      Huh? Why not?
      Really...I'd like to know.

      Just a guess, but I think the man might actually kow what he's talking about. Either he made a company that puts together incredible software, or he started a company that puts together horible, buggy software yet still manages to sell it to almost everyone in the developed world. Either way, the man knows what he's doing and he's damn good at doing it.

      Go out and make your first million and then we can talk...but right now you're just another whiney little lunix tard sitting in his parents' basement, buying another black trenchcoat on EddieBauer.com.

    6. Re:Flaming Bill.... by _xeno_ · · Score: 1
      USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

      BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

      "At this point"? Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all. Or maybe I'm reading too much into a figure of speech.

      You're reading too much into the speech. He's giving himself an out if Linux should somehow manage to triumph and win over Windows. (I seriously doubt that'll ever happen, but who knows? Those desktop projects might surprise me yet.) He's trying to avoid something like the misattributed "640K should be enough for anyone" quote. Basically, if Linux becomes important enough to be a serious threat to the Windows operating system, he'd be a fool not to consider porting Microsoft applications to it. Just like there are Mac versions of Office, if Linux managed to become important enough to have a sizable software market, then it might become incredibly foolish not to do a port.

      However, I see no reason to consider such a thing at this point in time. Linux isn't a desktop system and there are so few people who use it that writing commerical software for a Linux desktop is a losing proposition. (Besides, which do you use, KDE or GNOME?)

      Who knows what the future will hold? Bill Gates doesn't have a 100% record on predicting the future - and he's not foolish enough to burn bridges that he might later find himself needing to cross.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    7. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Double-O-Penguin · · Score: 1

      And I love how every individual with an ingrained, uneducated Linux user stereotype feels compelled to comment about how insignificant we must be because we don't have a billion dollars. Why don't you roll the clock back, put me in Bill's position where there is no pre-existing competition and the computer world was in its infancy and see if I couldn't make a buck or two. I probably wouldn't make as much money because of something that could be best described as "questionable" business practices. Yes, I'll agree that the man is intelligent. He also happened to find himself in the right place at the right time. By the way, I'm 26. I don't live with my parents. In fact, I OWN my own house. And last time I checked my closet, no black trenchcoats. And last time I checked my bookmarks, no EddieBauer.com in sight. Think I'm the odd man in the Linux crowd? I doubt it. Why don't you come back when you aren't whining yourself, and add something constructive to the conversation.

    8. Re:Flaming Bill.... by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      The first three are TRUE. I'm still debating the fourth point.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    9. Re:Flaming Bill.... by MrDolby · · Score: 1

      "why not do the only thing that makes humans happy?)"

      Correct, pay them to waste time.

    10. Re:Flaming Bill.... by 2short · · Score: 1

      Bill generally says a lot of things, and says several in this interview, that reflect a point of view regarding Microsoft that you'd expect from, well, Bill Gates. For an obective viepoint on a company, its founder is just not a good choice.

      But I think you (and others) are off base in your critsism of the "bet the company" comments:

      "You bet on the 16-bit PC? 640k jokes aside, what other options were there at the time?"

      8-bit, which most personal computer software customers owned. This wasn't today, where moving up from 32 to 64 bits is only a question of "when"; this was the first doubling. Plenty of MS customers probably didn't see the need for 16 bit. The "bet" wasn't supporting 16 bit, it was not supporting 8-bit.

      "GUI? Xerox/Mac beat you to it, and it was popular before you did it."
      Sure, Mac had it, and a lot of people I knew derided it as a toy, and told Mac people to "get a real computer". Again, MS had a lot of customers who liked the command line. (I understand there are still fans of CLIs in existance, bizzare as it might seem). The "bet" was not on providing a GUI, it was on dropping the CLI.

      "NT tech? Hello, you stabbed 32-bit OS/2 in the back"
      If by "stabbed in the back", you mean they decided it wasn't the way to, and that IBM was screwing it up (particularly the marketing), so they dropped it. They "bet" that NT could beat OS/2, despite OS/2 having a big head start, including a bunch of their own sunk costs.

      "BG: ..."
      "Is it just me, or was he struggling? ..."
      No, he's not struggling. He says license costs are at most 3% of any IT project. MS based or not. I don't know where he gets that number, but it sounds reasonable to me (and I expect Bill has decent research on such things). He's saying he can't compete with linux on "price" (obviously), but he can compete on "cost" if he makes software that saves you that 3% (or more) in other areas.

      "Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all"
      Of course they'd consider it. MS doesn't do the things they do (good, bad, or ugly), as part of some vendetta. They do them to make money. If they think they can make more money porting apps to Linux than not, they'll do it. The figure of speach here is "no consideration". Bill means "less than a minute of thought per year", which is all it should take anyone to figure out MS isn't going to make any money porting stuff to Linux given the current state of market shares, user bases, etc.

    11. Re:Flaming Bill.... by roka · · Score: 1

      In fact he is a step ahead:
      He is not only doing that - he is also paying people to waste other peoples time :)

    12. Re:Flaming Bill.... by bheerssen · · Score: 1

      BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

      "At this point"? Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all. Or maybe I'm reading too much into a figure of speech.


      If he had not qualified that statement, could you imagine the brew-ha-ha that would result when MS Office XB (Extreme Buggering - due 2007) for Linux is released? I think the reason for the qualification is that he doesn't like all of the 640k jokes running around.

      --
      (Score: -1, Stupid)
    13. Re:Flaming Bill.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Bill knows better then to say "we will definatly never do x".

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:Flaming Bill.... by smagruder · · Score: 1

      The US is indeed a democratic republic, and has been from the start... just read the Constitution--it doesn't use the word 'democracy' but still defines the democratic institutions we still have today. And subsequent amendments increased the degree of democracy, via direct election of Senators and universal suffrage. Of course, is the U.S. move to full democracy "complete" yet? Not by a longshot.

      And salt really isn't bad for you, unless you consume large quantities or have high blood pressure.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    15. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Karl_Hungus · · Score: 1

      The first three are TRUE. I'm still debating the fourth point.

      No. The tomato is a fruit, not a vegetable.

    16. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      The USA is NOT a democracy

      How so? I do understand that right now it's not looking too democratic but the US is a democracy. Don't give me any of that "we're a republic" crap either because the two are not mutually exclusive. So what part of: "Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives" does the US not prescribe to?

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
    17. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how old are you? My guess is 14.

    18. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I love how every individual with an ingrained, uneducated Linux user stereotype feels compelled to comment about how insignificant we must be because we don't have a billion dollars.

      Well...let's see...I never implied that you were insignificant. I simply stated that you simply don't have the superior business sense of Bill Gates, because if you did you would have a billion dollars. So I hardly think it's reasonable for you to critique his talent.

      Why don't you roll the clock back, put me in Bill's position where there is no pre-existing competition and the computer world was in its infancy and see if I couldn't make a buck or two.

      Why don't you do it right now if you're such a guru? What...are you trying to say Bill Gates made it impossible for you to capitilize on any new technologies? Perhaps you're just too fucking lazy. Trying going upstairs to get your own damn Twinkies instead of having mommy cut them up and bring them down to you, for a start.

      He also happened to find himself in the right place at the right time.

      Oh boo-fucking-hoo. See? I was right...all you fuckwits do is whine.

      I don't live with my parents. In fact, I OWN my own house.

      The attic above their garage doesn't count, big guy.

      I'm not sure if you caught the point of my original post, but I'd rather you shut the fuck up instead of trying to justify your existence to some anonymous coward. My comment was constructive...I was trying to get you half-wits to realize how fucking stupid you are so you'd stop trying to prove your 1337n355 by rehashing inane MS jokes.

      Now go buy one of these so I pick you tards out and kick your ass when I see you on the street.

    19. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Puu · · Score: 1

      Basically, if Linux becomes important enough to be a serious threat to the Windows operating system, he'd be a fool not to consider porting Microsoft applications to it.

      This is an interesting idea. Like everyone knows, the Office apps are extremely good breadwinners for MS. Things may eventually come to a point where providing the OS isn't necessary for their hold of their markets (office software, servers, home multimedia, so on). Sorta like how they sacrificed the potential income from a web browser. (Poor analogy tho, I know.) It'll be interesting to see what the MS Linux Distro is like, when it comes.

    20. Re:Flaming Bill.... by starz2far · · Score: 0
      BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

      "At this point"? Very interesting that he seems to admit they might consider it at all. Or maybe I'm reading too much into a figure of speech.

      Well. Microsoft makes software. Microsoft makes software for the MAC OS. Why not the Linux OS? Once it gets big enough, think about it. Bill Gates isn't going to simply go away once his OS monopoly has been defeated. He still has other options.

      MS Office (Word, Excel, Access, Frontpage, Etc)
      MS Internet Explorer
      MS VB, C++, J++, etc
      MS Outlook (Express)

      And all their other ... stuffs. For Linux, availible 2005 Eh? =)

    21. Re:Flaming Bill.... by MyHair · · Score: 1

      For an obective viepoint on a company, its founder is just not a good choice.

      Agreed. This is partially why I retitled my post "Flaming Bill" before I submitted it. Bill's words on Slashdot are by default a troll, but I couldn't resist flaming back.

      8-bit, which most personal computer software customers owned. This wasn't today, where moving up from 32 to 64 bits is only a question of "when"; this was the first doubling.

      The 8086 & 8088 (original IBM PC) were 16-bit machines. (The 8088 was an 8086 with an 8-bit external data bus, but still fully 16-bit processor.) The 6502 (Apple ][, Commodore 64 and others) were 8-bit, and at the time the OS that came with the hardware was pretty much the only alternative. (CPM excepted.) Microsoft wasn't a hardware vendor, but they won the contract to make IBM PC DOS. I'm not sure they had any other choice but 16-bit unless they wanted to make an alternative OS for Apple or Commodore or Tandy. (The Tandy's might've been 16-bit anyway, but I don't recall.)

      "GUI? Xerox/Mac beat you to it, and it was popular before you did it."
      Sure, Mac had it, and a lot of people I knew derided it as a toy, and told Mac people to "get a real computer". Again, MS had a lot of customers who liked the command line. (I understand there are still fans of CLIs in existance, bizzare as it might seem). The "bet" was not on providing a GUI, it was on dropping the CLI.


      Many people, myself included, thought Windows was also a toy. But MS didn't get rid of the CLI. DOS was the foundation of Win1.0 through WinME, and only in WinME did they try very hard to hide it. (They tried a bit with Win95 and Win98, but not much.) WinNT-XP isn't DOS-based, but the command line is still readily available as a VM. Only MacOS really seemed to abolish the CLI, but it's back with OS X. I've been a CLI fan all along. There are things that are just much simpler and faster to do in CLI if you know what you are doing.

      Re:NT/OS/2: I don't recall the MS/IBM fallout that well, but my impression is that MS ditched IBM when they decided they could keep more money for themselves by doing so. As far as marketing goes, I doubt their partnership would've prevented MS from marketing OS/2. It was probably a smart money move for Microsoft, but I still think OS/2 as the desktop OS would've been way cooler.

      Re:Price/Cost: I am way too cynical about proprietary software right now to be very objective about this, but my gut feeling is that proprietary software costs more to support, and I don't think the 3% rule includes frequent MS upgrades. Like I say though, I'm not being fair or informed on this point.

    22. Re:Flaming Bill.... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      He's trying to change history.

      Considering that he said (more or less, not an exact quote): "_1984_ did not come true", well, did he ever _read_ the thing? How history is manipulated to suit the current regime? That was a major thread in the work.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    23. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could send patches to [x]wine.

    24. Re:Flaming Bill.... by blkmajik · · Score: 1

      MS *has* ported at least one of it's applications to Linux. Way back in the day I remember getting a link off of irc for Windows Media Player. This was for the 1.2.x kernel series. When Linux 2.0 came out there was a small change to the OSS api that broke Media Player.

      I'm not sure if the version I used was "public" or not, but I did download it from microsoft.com and it was Linux native.

    25. Re:Flaming Bill.... by nickos · · Score: 1

      Of course, is the U.S. move to full democracy "complete" yet? Not by a longshot.

      You;re absolutely right, they'd have to have democratic elections first.

    26. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Fascist+Christ · · Score: 1

      Think of "elected representatives" under the same light of making people think they know.

      You have a bipartisan system, each half wanting to retain its power. As much as they compete, they require each other to survive. (ie: if a third party came in and made reforms, it could severly cripple the two party's dominance)

      Also consider that election results are often no more surprising than the flip of a coin.

      Most importantly, politicians know that the amount of money speant on the campaign is usually the largest factor. It's just advertising. With parties so large with access to so much money, it makes it nearly impossible for anybody else to compete. We end up trusting whoever the parties put into the race. Then we flip a coin. You are left with two choices, shot in the left foot or the right.

      Why do people perpetuate this system?

      Why do people buy crummy RIAA music? Why do people constantly use MSWindows? Why did ZIP win over SuperDisk?

      Because people don't know any better. Go ahead and tell me that MSWindows is the best choice for most people, just understand that most people don't realize that they have a choice.

      --
      TodayTM BillyJoelTM GoogleTMd for StitchTMes due to WindowsTM while RollerbladeTMing with an AppleTM and a PopsicleTM
    27. Re:Flaming Bill.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are just as full of prejuidices as the "slashtards" you are speaking of.

      Oh, well. I'm sure you.. err.. - ok I'm not sure. But you will probably get a little bit wiser when you get older.

  76. Just take the tablet PC for example. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody but Bill can see the potential. I mean it's huge, but people just don't get it. MS is so far out there in terms of the new stuff that everybody else is just . . . like, they don't get it.

  77. But Linux is good! by whitelabrat · · Score: 1

    Comparing OS/2 and Linux is a dangerous mistake.

    People actually use Linux and like it too. And you'll never be able to beat free, especially in this economy.

    Bill having some OS envy? Hmmmm.

    1. Re:But Linux is good! by MImeKillEr · · Score: 1
      ..Especially considering that Microsoft 'back-doored' OS/2 by creating Windows while supposedly helping IBM with OS/2.

      OS/2 was superior in a lot of ways. Its downfall was caused by:
      1. Ineptitude by IBM marketing

      2. IBM charging OEMs for assistance in developing drivers

      3. Lack of driver availability

      4. Lack of OEM support from HW vendors for said drivers

      5. Microsoft's market saturation with Windows


      -- A former OS/2 Level 1 and Level 2 support tech.
      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
  78. Innovation by HoloBear · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think Microsoft use the term innovation in a rather (semantically) different manner to everyone else. I don't mean to bash MS because that's been done to death, but it would seem that they use innovation to mean something along the lines of: Take existing ideas, streamline them, dumb them down and support them to the masses. Its rare that you see something new come from MS, although I'm sure it must of happened a couple of times (clippy anyone?). This isn't necessary a bad thing, but their not unique in doing such. They innovate by taking known idea's, and giving them to everyone. Of course this is how most things are done, it's just that MS have the audience to do it rather more dramatically than anyone else. Unfortunately that also means that the majority of the audience aren't CS graduates etc. And the innovation seems such that it's real innovation. Which is a shame.

    1. Re:Innovation by kisrael · · Score: 1

      That's actually a really good point, I wish someone would mod parent up.

      I think a lot of geeks tend to downplay the importance of the "utilitarian gloss" that Microsoft is pretty decent at. Make things pretty, but keep them accessible.

      (Argubly, a lot of Linux is pretty derivative too; it's innovation lies in doing what's been done but for free, and with some other improvements like stability.)

      I think the Windows task bar mighta been a Windows innovation in many ways; it certainly beat out what Apple had then by making running programs viewable at all times. (I even like it better than what Apple has now, come to think of it.)

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    2. Re:Innovation by Oloryn · · Score: 1
      I think Microsoft use the term innovation in a rather (semantically) different manner to everyone else

      See my earlier post on this. They approach the idea of innovation from a Marketing perspective, and then take advantage of the spin caused by the fact that most people approach it from a technical sense

  79. A helpful summary by spiritraveller · · Score: 2, Funny
    Look at this picture.

    Now, here's what he's saying:

    "WTF! Linux? OMG, Linux is so owned... noone ever got fired for buying MSFT. Oh yeah, and we're innovators too."

  80. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gates is a flamer! Who knew!

  81. Passing competition ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What does he mean "passing" competetion? Does he think Linux is just one day all of a sudden going to disappear? "Yeah, guys, remember that Linux thing? Well, it just passed."

    Besides, I don't think Linux and Windows are very comparible. We should look at Linux as a Unix, not as another Windows.

  82. Bill has questions. I have answers. by nullard · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Gates: Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface?

    Me: Apple

    Gates: Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface?

    Me: Apple

    --


    t'nera semordnilap
    1. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      No, Gates is right in that regard: Microsoft has one of the best speech recognizers around. Apple doesn't have the resources to come even close; Apple has almost completely gutted their research labs. Where Gates is wrong is in thinking that having the best speech recognizer matters.

    2. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by nullard · · Score: 1

      No, Gates is right in that regard: Microsoft has one of the best speech recognizers around. Apple doesn't have the resources to come even close; Apple has almost completely gutted their research labs. Where Gates is wrong is in thinking that having the best speech recognizer matters.

      No, Gates is very wrong. Gates implied that nobody else had the guts to try. My Performa 6200CD had decent speech recognition for commands (not dictation) in 1994. Apple was working on speech recognition since at least the the beginning of PPC use.

      MS might be doing good work in speech recognition, but they aren't the only company with the "guts" to do it. Hell, if you include speech recognition outside of the OS level, there's IBM with ViaVoice and Dragon's Naturally Speaking. I'm sure there are others. Gate's arrogance at claiming that only MS can do this is astounding.

      --


      t'nera semordnilap
    3. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by xombo · · Score: 1

      I love how the troll lacked to deny apple's use of handwrighting recognition. The only thing before apple in that realm was Go!, and we all know how many people use those.

    4. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS have one of the best speech recognisers around, but they bought it from another company, based on the work done at Cambridge University.

    5. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by bheerssen · · Score: 3, Informative

      Dragon Naturally Speaking by Scansoft has been winning awards since 1997. I first saw a demo of the product at the 1997 Comdex in Las Vegas and was suitably impressed. Microsoft, on the other hand, debued it's first speech recognition software in 2000 with the MiPad. And that was merely a prototype, not a working product.

      Without arguing the merits of either technology, it does look like another case of MS jumping on the bandwagon long after it had gathered steam.

      --
      (Score: -1, Stupid)
    6. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      You are just another one of those mindless Apple zealots. Handwriting recognition goes back to the 1960's. Of course, Apple had a decent handwriting recognizer. That was developed in their ATG. The ATG doesn't exist anymore. Whatever advanced technology Apple now puts into their products is either left-over code from their glory days, or it is licensed from third parties.

      Apple doesn't hire the kind of people anymore who develop this kind of technology, Apple is mostly about design and software development these days. If you don't believe me, show me some job postings for computer science research, or show me some recent publications from Apple on handwriting recognition, speech recognition, or other advanced technologies.

      But, hey, don't let reality stop you. To you, anybody who doesn't glorify Apple must be a "Troll", reality be damned.

    7. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      My Performa 6200CD had decent speech recognition for commands (not dictation) in 1994. Apple was working on speech recognition since at least the the beginning of PPC use.

      Yes, that's when Apple still had a research lab. Now, they don't anymore.

      MS might be doing good work in speech recognition, but they aren't the only company with the "guts" to do it.

      Nor did I make any comment about Gates's comment whether other companies have "the guts" or not. But MS is one of the few companies that has the resources to actually work on connected speech recognition. Apple doesn't anymore.

      Gate's arrogance at claiming that only MS can do this is astounding.

      It's not arrogance, it's reality. It costs a company millions of dollars a year to maintain a speech research group and the number of commercial research labs that still do this kind of work is dwindling. Apple isn't making that kind of investment; in fact, Apple gutted their entire research lab.

      It will probably be Microsoft vs. open source in the speech recognition area, where the open source effort will be carried out largely under government grants and at academic institutions, and be partially sponsored by companies like Intel (if Microsoft doesn't blackmail them into stopping their support for open source).

    8. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by nullard · · Score: 1
      It's not arrogance, it's reality. It costs a company millions of dollars a year to maintain a speech research group and the number of commercial research labs that still do this kind of work is dwindling. Apple isn't making that kind of investment; in fact, Apple gutted their entire research lab.

      The arrogant part is here:

      USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2.

      BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious. That was IBM, a company 15 times our size. Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. OS/2 was IBM's product, and the IBM army marched behind that product. People always think today's competition is somehow different and unique in some way. Let's be serious. I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC. We bet on graphical user interface. We bet on the NT technology base. Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net; Longhorn Web services go along with that. You always have to do something very dramatic to move things up to the next level. Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface? Who else is going to push that forward? Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface? We've chosen to do that. If we didn't believe in those things we wouldn't be increasing the R&D budget the way that we are.


      He acts as if all those innovations happened because MS had the "guts" to make them happen. The truth is that MS didn't work on any of those things until others had proved them. The risks he touts were minimal. The innovation was mostly duplication of proven concepts. That was the point I was making in my post.

      I was pointing out that others had already done all of Bill's "gutsy" and innovative stuff before MS even thought of them. I used Apple as an example because, if I'm looking to prove that MS was not the first to do something, I look first to Apple. It's usually a good place to start.
      --


      t'nera semordnilap
    9. Re:Bill has questions. I have answers. by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      I was pointing out that others had already done all of Bill's "gutsy" and innovative stuff [...] if I'm looking to prove that MS was not the first to do something, I look first to Apple. It's usually a good place to start.

      Well, if you think that Apple was "gutsy and innovative" in these areas, think again. Apple research worked in speech recognition, handwriting recognition, and GUIs long after other places had done all the legwork and invested enormous sums of money into those areas. And Apple's investment in research only lasted a few years; they stopped as soon as they hit hard times.

      The truth is that MS didn't work on any of those things until others had proved them. The risks he touts were minimal.

      Why do you speak in the past tense? Microsoft doesn't have usable speech recognition, they don't have good ink integration, and they don't have usable connected handwriting recognition. The risk of investing in each of those technologies is still the same as it has always been: after spending millions of dollars on each of them per year, either they don't work well enough at all, or nobody wants to use them.

      I'm really getting tired of people holding up Apple as an example of a company that creates innovation. If they are creating all those wonderful new technologies, where are they being created and who is creating them? Apple doesn't have a research lab and they aren't investing much in research. Their jobs page doesn't even have a "Research" category. Apple is an upscale computer design shop, and a good one at that, but nothing more. They were flirting briefly with the idea of becoming a research powerhouse, but they just didn't have the money to keep it up.

      For better or for worse, Microsoft is one of the few companies that still invests big in computer science research in the private sector. Which only goes to show that investment in research isn't well-correlated with product quality, at least in the short term. But Microsoft still has to do it because their only hope of selling more software in the future is to constantly change what people expect from software.

  83. Translations by f97tosc · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2.

    BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious. That was IBM, a company 15 times our size.

    BG Translation: We owned them. I cannot say this, less it appears as though we have been a monoply for a long time

    USA TODAY: There has been some criticism of the way in which you're been competing against Linux,...about undercutting Linux at any cost, per se.

    BG: Well I'm not sure what you mean by undercutting.

    BG Translation:I know exactly what you mean by undercutting. (How the h3ll did this come out?)

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    USA TODAY Translation: I am a moron.

    BG: There's no [need for] consideration of that at this point.

  84. MS does not have to port Software at all by presroi · · Score: 1

    It has to realize that "most" win32-Software already runs under wine - somehow.

    When Microsoft starts to support this already running software, no one can call Bill a lier. Well, no problem with that.

  85. Well it could have been the New York Times by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Funny

    " The magazine with the widest readership in the nation. It probably has the lowest reader-IQ-average as a direct result."

    Would you have rather that the interview had been in the New York Times, written by Jayson Blaire as he sat in his Manhattan den, performing in his mind a visit to Gate's office in Redmond?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  86. Surely not a passing technology by brrrrrrt · · Score: 0

    I think Linux and for that matter the BSDs cannot be a passing technology.

    Differences with os2 for instance:

    - They have not been hyped by ad campaigns and marketdroids, but have grown patiently and steadily purely based on the qualities they had

    - They exist for over ten years

    - They have a very large and ever growing community of developers, admins and users around them that back them. Mostly not for money, but because they enjoy working with it

    - Microsoft inspires a lot of people to back some sort of counter movement with their marketing, judicial and economic tactics. Which will just naturally be Linux, which is their arch enemy.
    Even if those people are just armchair Linux supporters, they still support it.

  87. NY Times jab by spoonyfork · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: There has been some criticism of the way in which you're been competing against Linux, and in The New York Times, assuming it was accurate, reporting that the e-mails in Europe...

    [bolding mine] Zing! Ouch for the New York Times. Here I thought USA Today and NYT were 0wnzerd by the same parent company Gannett. I guess not.

    --
    Speak truth to power.
  88. The LATE Iraqi Information Minister? by Baron+of+Greymatter · · Score: 3, Funny

    He's alive and well (he surrendered to US forces and was released last week) and would be the perfect spokesman for Microsoft.

    "There is no Blue Screen of Death, never! All Linux infidels' stomachs will roast in hell! We shall defeat them with Trustworthy Computing and shoes!"

    --
    Microsoft's VP of Customer Service is Helen Waite. If you are having problems with their products go to Helen Waite.
  89. Victory! by naejulak · · Score: 0

    "We're actually providing even lower pricing now for education then we ever have, but it's been unique pricing for us, literally since the company was founded." --Bill Gates

    This is great news. My thought has always been that while destroying Microsoft is going to be impossible--even taking half their market share will be a grisly, ugly battle that Linux may not win--forcing them to be competitive is a completely feasible goal. Gates is saying, basically, that Linux is forcing them to set lower prices for schools, which is great. While from the Linux perspective, Microsoft winning a bid is a bad thing, from the school's perspective they just got the best price they've ever gotten on software because Linux exists. And I call that a victory for Linux--and quite possibly my tax dollars.

    1. Re:Victory! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No dude. That's not great news.
      These so-called low prices are per seat discounts from already inflated prices. This is not a good thing and you're a moron for buying it. Even if they gave away everything in the classrooms, you would flip if you knew what they charge districts for networking and almost all school networks in the US are on NT. This is bullshit. This is NOT good news. If you think it is, you're a fucking idiot.

    2. Re:Victory! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well maybe "fucking idiot" is a bit rough. I shouldn't be such a jerk. I was emphasizing that there's nothing good about educational "discounts" from MS. But something tells me my message will be lost if I come off as an asshole and that's pretty tough language in this situation. It's an important message and I don't want to spoil it by being unnecessarily rude, so I apologize for that.

    3. Re:Victory! by naejulak · · Score: 0

      "These so-called low prices are per seat discounts from already inflated prices. This is not a good thing and you're a moron for buying it." I'm not saying the prices are now "low" -- or that any penultimate goal for the linux community has been reached. I'm saying that it's an improvement--a small one, perhaps, but an improvement nonetheless--over the higher prices that Microsoft could still charge were Linux not to exist. If you believe that Microsoft charging lower prices is in fact a degradation from the previous state of affairs, than I'd like to know why.

  90. 3%? by retto · · Score: 0

    For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project.

    I don't know where he got those figures from, but 3% doesn't seem accurate. Those personnel, communications, and hardware costs are often unavoidable fixed costs. If you need a T-1 line between offices, that isn't going to change depending on what OS you are running. Why didn't he just go ahead and toss in the rest of the fixed costs?

    "Gee, Linux isn't a lot cheaper over Windows Server if we factor in the cost of the building into the project."

  91. Re:Dear Linus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    I am using Windows XP. Please send me a copy of Linux that will run all my current apps and handle all my current data files without conversion problems, and I will be happy to send you the price of a retail copy of WinXP.

    OK, before you mod me to -1000, think about this for a second. This is precisely the way the mainstream users look at the PC market. (Actually, they're an even tougher crowd than this, and I could have added a few more requirements to the list above. But that will suffice for a first approximation.)

  92. OMFG! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


    > or thought that a real breakthru would be an algorithm to factor large PRIME numbers.

    I've been seeing that quote for years, and never once snapped to why everyone was quoting it!

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  93. Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by gosand · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Who exactly conducted this interview? Think about this for a second: if you got to interview the richest man in the world, wouldn't you want your name on it? All I saw listed as the interviewer was "USA Today". (Beiser took the photo shown) Not only that, but:

    1. It was a very short "interview".

    2. Some of the questions had the tone of "devil's advocate", giving Gates the perfect opportunity to look like the good guy. (OS/2 question in particular)

    3. There was no follow-up to anything, it was just question-answer, question-answer. So if this interview ever took place, it seems like it wasn't an interactive interview. (no big deal, just wanted to point it out)

    My non-expert opinion? This was a canned PR interview that MS sent USA Today.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  94. heh. by pb · · Score: 1

    It's nice to hear from Bill himself that Linux isn't such a threat now that the lawsuit is over...

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
  95. And we all know right he was in 1981... by gatesh8r · · Score: 1, Funny

    When he said "640k will be enough for anyone" :-)

    --
    Karma whorin' since 1999
    1. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I don't doubt that Bill Gates didn't actually say that, an interview isn't even close to evidence.

    3. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean?! I saw it on an urban legends page, it MUST be true!

    4. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      ...except he didn't say that.

      Next.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    5. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Johnny+O · · Score: 1

      why do ppl say that?

      I have the book with the quote.
      "Inside the IBM PC" by Peter Norton.

      8088 processors - gotta love em ;-)

    6. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't mean he said it, dimwit. Grow some 9th grade academic skills.

    7. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by jelle · · Score: 1

      Sure, later he denied ever saying it, but after a bit of digging I found an interview that basically proves that he assumed it was enough: It was ten times what we had before. But to my surprise, we ran out of that address base for applications within -- oh five or six years people were complaining.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    8. Re:And we all know right he was in 1981... by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      I think the fact that DOS was limited to 640kb kind of makes the fact they assumed such pretty much a given...

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
  96. Internet Prediction by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    A *lot* of us missed that one, regrettably.. Cant blame him for that oversight.. ..

    Given their track record, they have either outlasted the competition or bought them for the most part. .so his belief that they will prevail due to a 'war of attrition' is sound..

    He's wrong, but there is logic behind his statement.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Internet Prediction by multimed · · Score: 1
      But a lot of us don't hold ourselves up as he does either. When you portray yourself as this once in a generation visionary, getting something so wrong as missing the Internet should be a major slam on your credibility.

      At one point it only would have been a matter of him losing credibility and people just disregarding his message but now the fact of the matter is that he & his company control the future of the industry at least to a larger part than anyone has before and it's not by providing the best products & services but because they are so entrenched - just like IBM, Ma Bell, etc were.

      --
      Vote Quimby.
  97. Didn't Gates Push OS/2? by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

    and Here I thought I rember Gates pushing OS/2!

    Do not be fooled MS internal docs and benchmarks indidcate that even OpenSource JBoss J2EE spp server on Linux is the biggest competitor to beat with their MS.NET..

    --
    Don't Tread on OpenSource
  98. Re:No, he won by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Count" is the English expression you're looking for, not "tamper with".

  99. Dreamworks using OS/2 by famazza · · Score: 1

    Have you ever heard about Dreamworks using OS/2?

    I haven't

    IMHO Gates haven't learned with others errors in the past.

    Probably he's still in the first level of passive resistence (see also Ghandi).

    --

    -=-=-=-=
    I know life isn't fair, but why can't it ever be un-fair in MY favor!?
  100. Bad hair day by h00pla · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I am always amazed at every pic I see of Bill G. The guy has billions and he still can't get someone to give him a decent haircut.

    --
    I've been swashdotted -- Elmer Fudd
    1. Re:Bad hair day by nilsjuergens · · Score: 1

      Funny, thats exactly what i thought on opening the article.
      But i think he does this so nobody would notice him snooping around on a linux conference.

      --
      -- Having problems sending big files over the net? Try out Efisto (http://efisto.org)
    2. Re:Bad hair day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still think he is a geek on the inside.
      Maybe some unix geeks were mean to him somewhen, and he is now full of hatred and prejuidices..

      ok, I don't really think that, but it's a theory :)

  101. Microsoft's bets by chmilar · · Score: 2, Informative

    BG: We bet on the 16-bit PC.

    So did many other companies. M$ was not first. Plus, there was not much "company" to bet, at that time. Microsoft's only innovation, at this time, was in getting PC manufacturers to agree to an illegal licensing scheme.

    BG: We bet on graphical user interface.

    After Apple showed the way, and proved the market.

    BG: We bet on the NT technology base.

    Just adding features long present in Unix and other operating systems.

    BG: Now we're in the process of betting on a combination of technologies called .Net

    Following Java's lead.

    Microsoft: we innovate by marketing technologies invented by others.

    --
    Reading Slashdot is ruining my spelling and grammar.
  102. FIRST USE OF NEW JARGON by fsmunoz · · Score: 5, Funny

    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. (Mahatma Gandhi)


    It's the GhandiCon!!!! THE GHANDICON!!! Everybody knows the GHADICON!!! So, where are we in the GHANDICON? Uh? Uh? Why didn't you said the GhandiCon? It would have beem simpler AND EVERYBODY USES IT NOW!!!

    Ph4t Pr0ps to the GhandiCon!


    (cf ESR Recasts Jargon File in Own Image)

    1. Re:FIRST USE OF NEW JARGON by farlukar · · Score: 1

      And besides that, just because a Famous Dead Person(TM) said it doesn't make it universally applicable

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une .sig
  103. pushing new technologies by 73939133 · · Score: 1

    That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies.

    Yes, and that's the problem: Microsoft keeps pushing technologies, whether customers want them or not. But because of Microsoft's dominant market position, customers don't have a say in the matter.

    Ink, speech, virtual machines, database-like file systems, etc., are all old ideas. Gates apparently doesn't understand either the history or the the problems with those technologies, otherwise he wouldn't make large bets on them.

    Microsoft has become an old, lazy, gigantic corporation with way too much disposable money, and their market power means there are few competitive pressures to keep them in check. In short, Microsoft has become what IBM used to be. In fact, the projects Gates likes so much are just the same kinds of projects IBM used to invest in heavily, and that's no coincidence.

  104. In other news... by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Funny
    Justin Timberlake feels that because of the success of his albums, he's "one of the really great musical artists of all time, right up there with Tupak and the Beetles."

    The Anaheim Angels general manager uttered this statement: "This is a dynasty that cannot, and will not ever lose. We've won the Series once, and our destiny is to continue winning it every single year from now until baseball as we know it ceases to exist."

    Lawrence "Bull in a China Shop" Ellison has declared, "Only Oracle had the foresight to retain market share in the face of determined opposition. Our share of the market continues to rise. In fact, it now stands at just over 107%."

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  105. YOU HAVE BEEN SOOOOOO FUCKING TROLLED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Idiot, pay attention!

  106. Re:its not financially backed, so it`ll go on fore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD PARENT UP!

  107. close by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More likely a use of the word 'technologies' no one is familiar with.

  108. "Bill Gates On Linux" by N+Monkey · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Bill Gates On Linux"
    Is he running as an emulation or natively coded?

    1. Re:"Bill Gates On Linux" by Jerf · · Score: 1

      Damit, how many times do you have to be told Wine Is Not an Emulator??!?!

      (BTW, ;-) . Wouldn't we just love to find out that Gates is running on wine (and beer, and vodka...)? Kinda symmetric, after all Slashdot, his arch nemesis, runs on Whine.)

    2. Re:"Bill Gates On Linux" by csguy314 · · Score: 1

      No, he's using VMWare.

      --
      This is left as an exercise for the reader.
    3. Re:"Bill Gates on Linux" by orasio · · Score: 1

      That would be xbill!!

  109. Why OS/2 "passed through" by DrXym · · Score: 4, Insightful
    1. IBM were utterly incompetant at marketing it, treating it more like a wedge to drive into business to sell training / hardware than as an OS in its own right. Neither did IBM bother to get its divisions to throw their weight behind it with the consequence that even some IBM software ran better on NT.
    2. It didn't even approach being consumer friendly until Warp 4, by which time it was already a has been
    3. Microsoft kept putting the boot in various over and underhanded ways - spreading FUD, threatening a Windows tax on new machines even those shipping with OS/2 etc.


    Linux suffers from some of these problems, but incompetency and bad marketing are hopefully not amongst them. The one thing Linux absolutely has to do however is start loading up with consumer features. This means making stuff easy, be it installing new drivers, supporting graphics and sound properly, playing games. At the moment Linux sucks unless you're prepared to put a lot of effort into it or never intend to change your hardware ever. At present I'd say that the big boys have just about mastered producing a reasonable desktop, but there is a long way to go yet.

    1. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by alyandon · · Score: 1

      At the moment Linux sucks unless you're prepared to put a lot of effort into it

      Have you even tried some of the latest distros from RedHat or Mandrake lately? You can't get much easier to use than those for a Linux based OS. The old cliche of "even my could install it" comes to mind - and this is coming from a NT fan.

      or never intend to change your hardware ever.

      Most common consumer level hardware is automatically detected under the modern distros - so what's the problem?

      The only major problem I see right now is a lack hardware accelerated 3D out of the box. However, if you are trying to get OpenGL 3D applications running under Linux, you probably won't be put off by downloading and installing the hardware accelerated drivers for X (speaking specifically of nVidia as I own no ATI hardware).

    2. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by alyandon · · Score: 1

      "even my could install it" should have showed up as "even my [insert older family relation] could install it"

    3. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by zulux · · Score: 1

      Why I dien't buy OS/2/...

      IBM at that time, was trying to 0W3N the PC market again. MicroChannel was the first step and OS/2 was the second step.

      I feared that if I suported IBM, then IBM would kill the clone market.

      And there was this nice little company in Redmond that would sell you an OS for $75.

      (Fifteen years ago MS was one of the good guys - they sold their software typically at half of what the competition did. For example - SCO Unix was $2000 a seat and a C compuler set you back another $800 at least (if you wern't clued in enough to know about GCC))

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    4. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by DrXym · · Score: 1
      Have you even tried some of the latest distros from RedHat or Mandrake lately? You can't get much easier to use than those for a Linux based OS. The old cliche of "even my could install it" comes to mind - and this is coming from a NT fan.


      Yes I've tried them and it's exactly them I'm talking about. The deskop is pretty okay, certainly good enough for closed or administered systems, but not for home use unless you know what you're doing. But I wouldn't call it consumer level. Red Hat doesn't even ship with an MP3 player for pete's sake and forget about playing DVDs. As you say, you don't even get 3d support unless you know a) that your 3d sucks because it is running in software b) what a driver is c) that there is a driver on NVidia.com and how to download it d) how to run a shell script to install it.


      Most common consumer level hardware is automatically detected under the modern distros - so what's the problem?


      Some is, some isn't. I had massive difficulties getting a popular DLink wireless card to work with Red Hat (apparantly wlan-ng does it but not without surgery all over the place) and I'm sure others have similar tales of woe for scanners, printers, modems and just about every other kind of device. I could be more amenable to not having support out of the box, if there were an easy mechanism for 3rd party apps to install their own drivers but there isn't.


      It should really be point and click. Linux knows what stuff is on your system via PnP and therefore what stuff has no drivers. Red Hat and others should band together and produce some online database where they offer a unified and simple way of fetching new drivers and gathering stats on which hardware is being used by customers.

    5. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by DrXym · · Score: 1
      IBM had long gotten over trying to corner the market by the time that Windows 95 and OS/2 Warp went head to head. By several measures OS/2 should have won that battle - it was preemptive (not like the semi-preemptive Windows 95), had a much better filing system, was 32 bit pure and with the OS/2 Warp Red edition was cheaper than Windows 95 too.


      It should have won, but IBM couldn't write a consumer OS if their life depended on it. While MS made their desktop simple and attractive, OS/2 required excessive screwing around with concepts such as right mouse drag and drop, voluminous property pages ordered by subject rather than use frequency and ugly fonts. Another dumb thing was lack of plug and play and support for consumer gear.


      Now obviously Microsoft were being bastards all the time too, but IBM basically tied one hand behind their back and their shoelaces together without any help from MS. Still, one of the most laughable ways I recall of Microsoft killing OS/2 was they claimed they wouldn't port MS Office to OS/2 because it didn't support OLE! But OLE was a MS techonology... (and subsequently appeared in Office for MacOS with no problems). They really had it in for OS/2 and IBM never bothered at all to fight back.

    6. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 1
      I got this directly from an IBM employee about twelve years ago.

      Back when MS and IBM were partners in OS/2 v1.0, MS convinced the top brass that the best language to code an OS in was ...(wait for it)... assembly. The top brass bought it and directed the dumbfounded programming staff to do likewise.

      This was shortly before Windows 3.0 broke open the market for Microsoft.

      It didn't help that OS/2 v1.0 had very few drivers for printers, storage devices, etc when it was released. No one wants to buy an OS that doesn't use their current peripherals.

      --
      Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    7. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by DrXym · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I contracted for IBM for eight months or so at the height of OS/2 (just before Win 95) and it had an excellent C++ compiler called CSet++ and an impressive set of UI classes whose name escapes me. Too bad it didn't come with an editor, wizards etc. so everything was handcoded from the command line with makefiles. Meanwhile in Windows-land Visual C++ had wizards, advanced resource editors, syntax highlighting, projects etc. MFC might have sucked, but you could certainly knock out something very rapidly.


      Eventually CSet++ became VisualAge for C++ but the UI still stunk (it was a convoluted slug of a visual designer implemented in Smalltalk or something), and it still didn't provide *useful* classes - things like toolbars, status bars, tooltips etc. Every bloody UI element not defined in the CUA spec but required by modern UI design had to be coded by hand. It was no wonder that every OS/2 app was hopelessly inconsistent with each other and bugged to high heaven!

    8. Re:Why OS/2 "passed through" by Christ-on-a-bike · · Score: 1
      I could be more amenable to not having support out of the box, if there were an easy mechanism for 3rd party apps to install their own drivers but there isn't.

      Erm... rpm? What about the loki installer? Or shell scripts a la NVidia? These are all just as easy to use as windows software installers, with the proviso that the installers are clever enough to check for kernel versions and compile / configure as necessary. This isn't a platform problem, it's an availability problem. Not enough hardware manufacturers actually supply the drivers.

      I agree that linux distros should try hard to make it easier for the end-user. Hopefully one day they will also be able to pressure more manufacturers into driver releases.

  110. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by thebatlab · · Score: 1

    Since it was a short, horribly done interview, it *must* be that the horrible evil corporation fixed this up and sent it off, right? It couldn't be that the interviewer just didn't know his a** from a hole in the ground? It couldn't actually be someone elses fault that something is messed up could it? Nope, must be Microsofts fault. Come on man.

    In response to your second question, if I had interviewed the richest man in the world in such a poor fashion, I wouldn't want my name on it either.

  111. what journalist???!?!! by Dan9999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wonder how long it took Billy G to find a journalist that didn't know how to ask questions about the answers. seriously though, I'd like to see a real interview with someone objective (someone who doesn't hate one side completely) and who has a full awareness about the subjects of the questions so that we can hear more than just media hype layer.

    my sig --(GPLed, use it, but make the source available)

  112. I mean... by DiZASTiX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think Billy uses "I mean" and "Lets be serious" just a little too much...and as for "He is not considering porting any MS Apps to Linux" I am not sure he would know how.

  113. Re:Al Gore invented the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not to split hairs.....

    actually it was before idiots started saying AG said he invented it

  114. Anyone else read subject and think.... by Bombcar · · Score: 4, Funny

    Damn! They done ported Bill Gates to Linux!

    Ahh, he probably needs a P4 4.4GHz to run though....

    1. Re:Anyone else read subject and think.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Ahh, he probably needs a P4 4.4GHz to run though....

      Yes, but only 640k of RAM...

    2. Re:Anyone else read subject and think.... by warpSpeed · · Score: 1
      Damn! They done ported Bill Gates to Linux!

      I though for sure the netBSD guys would get to him first...

    3. Re:Anyone else read subject and think.... by InfoVore · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of an OLD joke:

      "What's the only problem with running a Bill Gates personality simulator on a TRS-80 Model I w/ 4k?"

      "Don't know, what?"

      "What do you do with the other 3K?"

      Cheers,
      I.V.

      --
      "These laws they're passing won't even compile anymore, let alone execute." - anon
    4. Re:Anyone else read subject and think.... by dspeyer · · Score: 1
      obSatan: Nah, he needs a P6 6.6GHz

      I guess you all saw that coming

    5. Re:Anyone else read subject and think.... by znode · · Score: 1

      Bill Gates? What's that? Does it run Linux?

  115. You are a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    most agree that it beat Microsoft in the DCOM-CORBA "Object Wars" (as evidenced by Microsoft moving on to Web Services).

    Wow, you are stupid or just making stuff up. Web Services has NOTHING to do with COM. Shut your hole, your ignorance is showing. Gawd, anyone who thinks they are going to get the Truth about MS or Windows on Slashdot is SEVERELY deluded.

    Go back to your moms basement. You just arent ever going to get a date, I'm sorry.

    1. Re:You are a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he was trying to point out that Microsoft got tired of the COM game and moved on to something completely different.

      The ad hominem attack really added to your argument, by the way.

    2. Re:You are a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like you've been on a god damned date. Sitting around pulling on your tiny little pecker while starring adoringly at a poster of Steve and Bill is not a date. Scrawny little fucktards like you make me want to puke.

    3. Re:You are a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you have against fucktards, shitdicapable?

  116. Of course he is going to say these things. by GoofyBoy · · Score: 4, Insightful


    By definition, CEOs are cheerleaders to the general masses. The article was written for USA Today, bought mostly for its 4 colour weather map.

    Of course his answers are going to be biased. Of course they are going to be "MS NUMBER ONE!" in tone. It would be irresponsible if he didn't.

    A CEO is a part sales person. He is selling MS. He and all sales people will streach the truth.

    Move along, nothing to see here.

    --
    The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    1. Re:Of course he is going to say these things. by Lysol · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He's not CEO tho, that's Monkey Boy. Billy G's Chief Software Architect and head of the board.

    2. Re:Of course he is going to say these things. by Jearil · · Score: 1

      But he's not a CEO, Steve Ballmore is.

      Last I heard, Gates was the CTO or somesuch.

    3. Re:Of course he is going to say these things. by leifm · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing about most of the recent Ballmer/Gates interviews is the amount of time they spend talking about Linux. They say it's not a threat, and then proceed to talk about it the entire interview, or much of it.

      I don't believe Linux is a threat to Windows on the desktop at all, but based on these interviews it must be at least in some capacity a threat on the server side of things.

      --

      "Windows Me offers tremendous reliability and stability improvements..." -- Paul Thurott
    4. Re:Of course he is going to say these things. by natrius · · Score: 1

      Oh my... that's almost as funny as the Star Wars Kid...

  117. "I mean, let's be serious..." by cowbird · · Score: 0, Troll

    God, he's a dork.

    1. Re:"I mean, let's be serious..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait wait wait... you were attracted to an article with the headline "Bill Gates On Linux" and you say he's a dork?!

    2. Re:"I mean, let's be serious..." by cowbird · · Score: 1

      True enough, you win.

  118. Linux passing on... by Bigby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sounds an awful lot like the Iraqi Minister of Information: "Linux has been beat, destroyed, and will never compete! Ever! It is passing on..."

  119. I like this part of the interview: by Lysol · · Score: 1

    Say you have two PCs today. It's a huge pain that your Favorites on this machine are different than on this machine. Moving your files from this machine to this machine, getting your e-mail, your calendar -- it's painful. Say you have a work calendar and a family calendar. Is it really easy to coordinate your family's schedule and see which events should be on both ones?

    Jesus, talk about as backwards as 1995!! I can't help thinking time and time again that this is exactly what the web empowers. I never have to worry about which machine I check my Yahoo mail (or the like). Since there's pretty much a browser everywhere, that's all I need. Calendaring/scheduling, email, document management - all the 'killer app' for the enterprise web.

    I'm actually a huge fan of the 'web office' - something that seemed to have a real future years ago. Dunno why it's not used more nowadays. It's like, something that simple is still too good to be true. Nope, we'll create an OS for it instead because that's what people really want.

    Actually I do know what killed it(to some extent); Internet Explorer. Control the client, kill the server. It's too bad because it would have been good for so many businesses and people alike. But, that's history I guess.

  120. Licensing Costs by DarkFyre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    (From the article)
    > For any project, if you look at communications
    > costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that,
    > software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd
    > ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project.

    Wow. Not my experience, to say the least.

    To me, this is indicative of exactly where Linux does and will continue to shine. The above statement is probably true for Chase Manhattan, and I doubt we'll see Chase switching to Linux anytime soon (although I don't doubt that their big iron is still a commercial UNIX).

    Most of the people I deal with, though, are either small research groups or small businesses: Five guys with three computers and a world to conquer. This is where Linux is already excelling, and I think this is where it will excel for the immediate future.

    That is why Gates is wrong. OS/2 had some advantages over Windows (such as the 'IBM army' as he puts it), but it was competing with Windows for the same goal. Where I see Linux being really successful is in places where the Microsoft Barrier-to-Entry(tm) is just too high. Unlike OS/2, Linux isn't going to be driven from these places. Linux is not going away, although it may not be going to the foreground, either.

    And as more and more small businesses and contractors and researchers use Linux to do cool and interesting things on the cheap, bigger businesses will start to notice.

    1. Re:Licensing Costs by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Wow. Not my experience, to say the least.

      I don't know it's been pretty consistent with what I've seen.

      A typical IT project in a large company costs around $1 million. That's a team of about 6-10 people on a 6-9 month project. Desktop licensing for each person on the team averages at around $1,000 each. Development servers cost maybe $1,000 in licensing. Staging servers maybe $5,000 in licensing, with production servers maybe $20,000 in licensing. Now I'm just fudging numbers for a web app with a database back end. It'll be more if you're integrating with some other third party tool like Peoplesoft, EAI, whatever. I believe when I priced out Adobe's document server it was like $20k/CPU, as an example.

      Anyway, so my fudged numbers is around $35k in software licensing on a 1 Million project. That's roughly 3%. Also realize that most of those costs aren't entirely sunk. When this project is done, you can reuse the same software/equipment to work on another project. Even deploy to the same production servers.

      Where I see Linux being really successful is in places where the Microsoft Barrier-to-Entry(tm) is just too high.

      I can see that. Of course if the company is truly small, then it is probably better to deploy any web presence at a hosting ISP. I can start with their smaller packages at like $25/month and move on up to having my own dedicated server at $300/month as the company grows.

      In looking at hosting providers, I haven't seen much difference in cost, but I certainly have in capabilities... with the Microsoft providers offering far more for the dollar. SQL Server instead of mySQL, better email support, etc. For whatever reason, software licensing savings doesn't seem to give the Linux providers much of an edge.

      And as more and more small businesses and contractors and researchers use Linux to do cool and interesting things on the cheap, bigger businesses will start to notice.

      Ok, look back at that initial swag I gave on an IT project. $1 million. 3% or so of that is software licensing. The remaining 97% is labor.

      Businesses are interested in cutting that cost, but since it's primarily labor the way to cost cutting is in reducing the timeline. Take that project from 6 months down to 3 months, and you've cut your costs in half.

      That's not to say that there aren't certain situations where the cost of deploying servers into production may not be extreme. In my example, the prod environment probably has 4-6 servers. If your environment has a couple hundred web servers to handle one app, then maybe saving the 3% on licensing adds up. Such is the case for say google.com.

      But most of business IT cost is labor of construction. Microsoft understands this, and their marketing materials address that. I don't see the Linux vendors understanding this point, and you certainly don't seem to recognize it in your post.

    2. Re:Licensing Costs by DarkFyre · · Score: 1

      > But most of business IT cost is labor of construction. Microsoft understands this, and their
      > marketing materials address that. I don't see the Linux vendors understanding this point, and you
      > certainly don't seem to recognize it in your post.

      Fair enough. I figured I could discount large corporate entities with all that hand-waving in my first paragraph. I don't know anything about large companies.

      If you'll recall, I said 'in my experience' which I later qualified as being primarily with small research groups and companies. The fact that your experience is different shouldn't dismay you as much as it does: The two markets are different.

      I realize that Microsoft is doing a pretty good job of meeting the needs of large companies. I was merely pointing out that unlike OS/2, Linux is finding a home in places which Gates' comments don't seem to address.

      Your final points about labor cost are correct (rather, they seem reasonable to me, but we've established that this is not my area of expertise). However, if we have a hypothetical SmallGuy Inc. who provides web services similar to those of MegaCorp on a tighter budget, I imagine MegaCorp will be curious. Perhaps, after investigating, they will determine that the little guy's edge is not the software at all. Perhaps it's an organizational issue, or perhaps it's simply the synergy of a few smart, dedicated people with lots to lose.

      Anyhow, I think your points are excellent, but I don't think they are inconsistent with my own. There are two markets here.

      Bill's assertion that Linux and OS/2 pose the same sort of threat are flawed because of this.

    3. Re:Licensing Costs by mmacdona86 · · Score: 1
      In looking at hosting providers, I haven't seen much difference in cost, but I certainly have in capabilities... with the Microsoft providers offering far more for the dollar. SQL Server instead of mySQL, better email support, etc. For whatever reason, software licensing savings doesn't seem to give the Linux providers much of an edge.

      Actually, the service providers I've seen charge 20-50% less for Linux hosting than for Windows. SQL Server may be better for some apps than MySQL, but for the types of applications best served by hosting providers it's hard to beat PHP/MySQL. I can't see how the e-mail services provided would be significantly different.

      So in the end, I think the hosting provider does pass the licensing savings on to you, and you get more bang for the buck with a Linux host. That may explain why there are so many Linux hosts out there.

    4. Re:Licensing Costs by dfj225 · · Score: 1

      wow...its refreshing to hear a comment that doesn't start with "m$ sux0r". I think you are absolutely right in what you have said. Linux has its place and Windows has its place (like on my home desktop). I can't see Linux ever being replaced, as it really has found its niche. Windows, on the other hand, will probably always be used in the majority of businesses and will probably continue to dominate the home market. Perhaps it will gain some ground in the server market, but it has much more competition there. I can't really imagine the operating system market being that differnt from what it is now 5-10 years down the road.

      --
      SIGFAULT
    5. Re:Licensing Costs by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Actually, the service providers I've seen charge 20-50% less for Linux hosting than for Windows.

      Not the ones I was looking at, but then I guess I was comparing equal level of services offered.

      but for the types of applications best served by hosting providers it's hard to beat PHP/MySQL.

      It's easy to beat PHP/MySQL... just use ASP.NET with SQL Server.

      I can't see how the e-mail services provided would be significantly different.

      Number of email accounts available, access to mailing lists, quality of the web based interface, etc.

      So in the end, I think the hosting provider does pass the licensing savings on to you, and you get more bang for the buck with a Linux host.

      Again, I haven't seen any evidence of this.

    6. Re:Licensing Costs by sheldon · · Score: 1

      The fact that your experience is different shouldn't dismay you as much as it does: The two markets are different.

      Actually I don't agree that the markets are all that different. I've worked in a University research lab, a small business with only 5 employees, another small consulting firm with about 300 employees and several Fortune 500 corporations. The luxury that the Fortune 500 corps have is experience, and if you take that knowledge and apply it at the smaller business level you can save an awful lot of aggravation and cost.

      Anyhow, I think your points are excellent, but I don't think they are inconsistent with my own. There are two markets here.

      I would agree on the surface it appears that the markets are different. I don't think in the end that they are. But it's a question that involves how the sale is sold.

      Bill's assertion that Linux and OS/2 pose the same sort of threat are flawed because of this.

      I don't think Bill's assertion with regards to OS/2 was about the market. Yes large banks went with OS/2, but they did so because of the functionality that OS/2 offered. Once that functionality was delivered with Windows NT, the other compelling features of NT on top of that suddenly made OS/2 less attractive of a purchase.

      Now in the Linux market, it's hard to say. Right now the only compelling feature of Linux is initial cost. Everything beyond that is of lesser quality and value than what is available on Windows.

      Now Gates is saying is that what he's going to do is go out there and sell you on that value add. Show you all the other things you get in the box, the other features you can add easily, etc. and sell you a end-to-end solution. Maybe it will work, but it's a real tough sell.

      However I think if they addressed it from the price side of the equation, Linux would be dead in a wide variety of markets. The compelling feature would be eliminated. I'm not saying Microsoft needs to give their product away for free... But certainly far less than what it sells at today.

  121. BG-why windows is a better proposition than linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gates' response:

    We will never have a price lower than Linux, in terms of just what you charge for the software. We compete on the basis of, if you look at the value you get out of the system and the overall cost that the system has that apply in our software. For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project. And so the question is can that 3% [compensate], in terms of how quickly you get the system set up? How much value you get out of that system, can it justify itself in that way? And that's the business that we're in every day.

    He sounds practically incoherent. It's telling that he's unable to express a simple, logical case for why windows is a better proposition than linux.

  122. OS/2 compared to Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Same arrogant user base, who fails to look at the needs of those who have no experience with computers. (you want a wizard to install apps? Heck no, just compiler your app!)

    Still just like OS/2, Linux is behind MS in UI optimization, for the reason mentioned above. Say what you will about MS, but most of the windows apps work the same way. With Linux, it's a crap shoot.. cut and paste works sometimes (if you get lucky), each developer comes up with his own shortcuts, etc.

    Blah.
    There is work to do. Linux is a great server system, but it is well behind windows on the desktop.

  123. Dynamic Menus (offtopic) by blazerw11 · · Score: 1

    The dynamic menus are a great idea, but has anybody else had unpredictable experiences with them. Certain program groups that I never go into "Accessories" never go away, and certain others that I use seem to be gone on Monday mornings. Are built in groups less susceptible to being hidden and are user made ones time sensitive? Also, I have one group that I created myself that always displays, but every sub group is initially hidden. (This is XP, BTW, I didn't notice any problems in Win2k. I really need to downgrade.)

    I use WindowMaker on Linux just because I'm so used to getting my "Start"-like menu whenever I right click right next to my mouse.

    --
    A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices. -- William James
  124. Innovation...when? by Jman314 · · Score: 1

    I've heard that the next major desktop Windows release, Longhorn, will ship in 2005. How many Linux kernel patches, new distros, and releases in general will come out in that time? A lot, and not all will be bugfixes, some will add functionality.

    To me it seems as if Microsoft's effort for security and stability is an attempt for them to catch up.

  125. Passing through, alright by jlowery · · Score: 4, Funny

    Passing through like the stake in a vampire's heart.

    --
    If you post it, they will read.
  126. You fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:You fail by TrekkieGod · · Score: 1

      he never mentioned he'd factor the prime numbers into prime numbers. 3 and 6 are factors of 18, even though they're not prime factors of 18.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

  127. Consistent Message by 4of12 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies.

    This is quite consistent with what Bill Gates has said many times before, that "freedom to innovate" was endangered by any action against Microsoft, despite it being officially judged a monopoly.

    Alongside this use of doublespeak is the recent lobbying by the "Institute for Software Choice" in Australia for government organizations there to avoid free and open source because of the economic harm it would cause to MSFT, a corporation based in the United States.

    As a U.S. citizen, I've already enjoyed the benefits of free and open source software developed in Australia and look forward to seeing more of it. Likewise, a lot of free and open source software has been developed in the United States that could be of great benefit to Australian users in government, industry and at home. I don't see why the Australian government should be especially restricted from making the kinds of command decisions on IT infrastructure that companies all over the world make every day - you know the kind - the corporate standard is to run Windows and to use Word, etc.

    The hue and cry about freedom of choice and innovation is only raised when there is a palpable danger that the choice might be other than one designed to further bolster the financial interests of Microsoft, or that innovation might result in a potentially lucrative new technology being developed outside Microsoft.

    People like Bill Gates who, with his money and fame, enjoys instant access to government officials and the media across the world to promote his point of view (aligned to increase shareholder value at MSFT) is able to get an audience that common people, or even average knowledgeable IT people, simply cannot hope to get.

    The fact that free and open source software is making inroads through grass-roots word of mouth based on its own merits, devoid of such a heavily funded marketing organization, and despite this lopsided point of view being propagated by Gates at the highest levels and in most public venues, is a remarkable testament to Lincoln's adage that "you can't fool all of the people all of the time".

    It gives me hope.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
    1. Re:Consistent Message by Dunkirk · · Score: 1

      I think part of this is fueled by the notion that -- at least in America -- we like underdogs. In general, we don't begrudge people the millions they earn, but when they start using that financial power against _our_ ability to earn... Well, that's just not fair. So when Linus uses RMS's tools to complete a totally-open system, and spreads it using totally-unrestricted means, we like that. Now it has become a matter of sticking it to "the man." I don't think that a lot of us geeks would care about Microsoft -- I mean, I think we'd have a "live and let live" attitude towards them -- if they were just happy to do business on the strengths of their technologies. But when they use that clout to run other people and companies and technologies out of the market, that's when it gets personal.

      --
      Acts 17:28, "For in Him we live, and move, and have our being."
  128. Isn't parent a troll by isn't+my+name · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The moderation on the parent is "overrated" and "redundant."

    If you look at the text of the post, shouldn't it be TROLL?

  129. Yet another reason to downplay Linux by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    In 8 years MS has dominated the market with their OS. Windows 98 is still perfectly usable. It's been 12-13 years for Linux and it's far from done.

    I'd love to sit around and wait for Linux to get done but I've got work to do now.

    The great thing about closed source is that it has a clear road map that the developers have to follow and the developers get paid. As a result things get done far faster than in the Open Source model where it's not really clear what's needed and few are really dedicated to putting 8+ hour days in on their part all year for x years.

    "Many eyes" is a joke when talking about MS. Bill Gates probably has more people working on Windows than there are people working on Linux. And if he needed "more eyes" he'd hire them.

    Ben

    1. Re:Yet another reason to downplay Linux by Xabraxas · · Score: 1
      In 8 years MS has dominated the market with their OS. Windows 98 is still perfectly usable. It's been 12-13 years for Linux and it's far from done.

      Talk about uninformed. You are way off the mark. Linux is very much done and has been since version 1.0. Since then it has been continually improving. BTW if you think win98 is perfectly usable but Linux is not then you better get your head out of you ass.

      I'd love to sit around and wait for Linux to get done but I've got work to do now.

      So what exactly is it that you cannot do on Linux that you can do on Windows? I do agree there are not alternatives for everything but the same could be said about MS when compared to Linux. I'm only asking this question because I think you have no idea what you are talking about.

      The great thing about closed source is that it has a clear road map that the developers have to follow and the developers get paid. As a result things get done far faster than in the Open Source model where it's not really clear what's needed and few are really dedicated to putting 8+ hour days in on their part all year for x years.

      Are you Bill Gates? You sure do sound a lot like him. Things do not get done faster in a closed source environment. Bugs get fixed within hours of being reported sometimes in Linux. It may take months in Windows before a fix is made available. Open source works without a "roadmap" because it is about creating what is needed when it is needed. There's no time spent allocating resources and putting together a team to produce a piece of software. If someone needs an application they can just create it whenever they please and if people like it they will come and help.

      The issue of getting paid is the weakest one of them all. Getting paid to do something is not as productive as doing it out of fun. If you are paid to do something, you don't necessarily have a reason to do your best, especially when it doesn't reflect on you. It only reflects on the company (of course unless you do a completely horrible job). With closed source, you really only need to do enough to get by. OTOH you're much more likely to do a better job for a personal project, with your name on it, so that you can be proud of it.

      "Many eyes" is a joke when talking about MS. Bill Gates probably has more people working on Windows than there are people working on Linux. And if he needed "more eyes" he'd hire them

      I really hope you're joking on this one. There are more people working on Linux then there are MS employees. With Linux you never have to hire more people. Everyone and anyone can look at the source. Anyone can make an improvement. Besides, a homogenous environment like that is bound to stifle innovation more than an Open Source environment where people from every different part of the world, with all there different ideas, can contribute.

      --
      Time makes more converts than reason
  130. Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    I am quite wealthy. And, yes, the vast majority of the computer purchases in the world have been made by people who had no fucking idea what they were buying. From IT directors down to Grandma at home, these people bought what the television told them to buy. This is not an opinion, it is a fucking fact! Marketing won the PC war, not reliability, not ease of use, not availability of applications. MARKETING.

    People are dumb, panicky animals that will follow anyone willing to arouse them. Bill is just real damn good at getting the herd to put their collective nose in his crotch.

  131. This is Bill's Brain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    This is Bill's Brain on Windows...

    He must be getting a better grade of delusional drugs than the current US administration...

    I guess having been scourged by the "...passing OS thing..." known as LINUX/UNIX, I must be immune to this mind-altering influence of Windows...

    Hey, let's all become educational institutions...I call dibs on "School of Hard Knocks"...no, "University System of Hard Knocks"...yeah, that's it...

  132. Bowl size not mentioned by wardk · · Score: 3, Funny

    I just want to know what everyone else is wondering, what size bowl is used for his haircuts?

    btw, MS didn't kill OS/2, IBM did to protect thier PC business and the Windows discounts that kept them competetive. It was IBM vs. IBM as much as it was MS vs. IBM. But I suppose it's the "victor" that gets to write history, no?

  133. Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MCSE's are a TOTAL fucking joke.

  134. Midmarket or education discounts? by donutz · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: On May 14th, Orlando Ayala [Microsoft's senior VP for the Small and Midmarket Solutions & Partner Group, which aims to introduce Microsoft products to smaller companies and purchasers] in his e-mails authorizing him to draw from a special fund to offer the software set discounts or even free if necessary, under no circumstances lose against Linux. Has Microsoft changed its behavior patterns?

    BG: The idea is that we're in a competitive situation, that we're willing to provide a better price. This is not a general problem. This is about education situations, and educational bids are very, very price sensitive, and we've always provided super low pricing for education. We're actually providing even lower pricing now for education then we ever have, but it's been unique pricing for us, literally since the company was founded. And yeah, we, on educational bids, we will meet competition. That's considered healthy pro-competitive behavior.


    So is USA Today insinuating that MS is not just using this special fund to "pay for" educational discounts, but also for any other "beat linux" deal? Bill says that this is only occurring for education, but USA Today's question hints at more. Who's telling the truth and who's not?

  135. In Related News.... by Simon+Kongshoj · · Score: 1

    Linus Torvalds says "Linux Kicks Ass".

    --
    Six sick .sigs, the Number of the Beast!
  136. Watershed interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    This was a watershed interview. Make a note of it.

    USA Today, a mainstream, nationwide newspaper, is asking Bill Gates multiple questions about gnu/linux. That's it. That's what the whole interview is about.

    Along with the comment about New York Times, that communist rag called "The Grey Lady", in which it also makes issue of gnu/linux, you can't push gnu/linux anymore into the mainstream than this.

    USA Today conducts an interview with Bill Gates with the entire subject being gnu/linux.

    I'm sure there will be other (such as when accounting gimmicks can no longer hide the fact that microsoft market share is declining, revenue is declining, and profits are declining, at the expense of gnu/linux, or when the implosion of microsoft's stock price caused by such revelations, or the resulting congressional investigations into the stock price implosion) watershed events in the history of gnu/linux, but this USA Today interview will certainly remain at the top.

    billie's nightmare continues...

    Hey billie, WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE!

  137. His first comment is absurd by rzbx · · Score: 1

    "USA TODAY:There seems to be some worry at Microsoft about Linux and some of these Web-based things like Sim Desk that have popped up. Houston, Munich, and Beijing have all been considering using Linux-based products rather than going through Microsoft. How much of this is a concern?

    Bill Gates: Well those are our current competitors. I mean, it's no different than in the past people used [IBM's operating system] OS/2."

    Wrong, Linux is very different as a competitor. Open source, GNU, not company controlled, thousands of developers, millions of users, large base of software, large base of experts, should I go on Billy? Should I remind you that your company claimed Linux as its biggest threat? How about all those "Halloween" documents? I bet OS/2 wasn't looked into that far.
    Then again, that is the best answer he could give without scaring investors, customers, and the public into thinking that Microsoft is finding it very difficult to compete against Linux.
    Perception means a lot in business.

    --
    Question everything.
  138. And Americans are nowhere close to Baghdad! by BigGerman · · Score: 1

    ditto

  139. The votes were counted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " "Count" is the English expression you're looking for, not "tamper with"."

    The votes had already been counted weeks ago. "Tamper with" is the applicable term for what the Gore team was lying in court to attempt.

  140. Re:But... I remember OS/2 and I worked for a bank by aldousd666 · · Score: 4, Informative
    I worked for a bank and we definately did use OS/2 as a platform for IBM Personal Communications. PCOMM (as we called it) was a terminal emulations program that worked on the NCP based (actually they called it LLC2 protocol -- works over tokenring with netbeui) IBM 3270 mainframe. OS/2 wasn't very robust with other applications, in fact, the only apps I remember running were in a DOS session, like WP5.0 and then, we also used the built-in windows3.1 desktop to run just about everything else. PCOMM was it. Interestingly enough, we had a buch of IBM 3270 dumb terminals, which were just as good as a machine to the users, nobody cared that they couldn't use wordperfect, there were typewriters everywhere. We only had one machine in the IT department with internet connectivity, and it was an NT box with a 33.6 modem (top of the line) Users could forget about the internet, and email? That was for managers only! This is why people stopped using os/2, it had no apps, (and nobody expected it to, they all just used DOS and win3.1 even with warp.) and when 3270 started going away, or being replaced by linux clients that can do the same thing, there was never a need to develop it any further.

    It wasn't even really competing with MS, because the people who used apps on os/2 ran them in windows (which was conveniently bundled with it out of the box)

    I fail to see mr. Gate's analogy here.

    --
    Speak for yourself.
  141. Bill Gates... by Cloud+K · · Score: 1

    Powered by Microsoft Information Minister 2003

  142. Taking Chances by Ateryx · · Score: 1

    "We bet on graphical user interface...You always have to do something very dramatic to move things up to the next level"
    Right... by far the greatest risk Microsoft ever took.

    I think the biggest thing holding Linux OSs behind Microsoft is the fact Microsoft is really ubiquitous. I can't really use Red Hat or SUSE at school next year if I want to transfer documents around because no one can really accept them.

    -Brad

    --
    "The truth suffers from too much analysis"
  143. BILLBILLBILLBILL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bill is a has-been, a computer-wannabe who had the spotlight for, what only like 20 years in the late 20th century? He thought he was all hot shit, but then a little pipsqueak, linus, showed the world that software doesn't have to be monopolized, but can be made collaboratively by seemingly unrelated persons for the benefit of all of humanity, irregardless of socio-economic background. Linux, with untapped power and the development cycles of millions of contributors throughout the world, became the dominant model for software through the 21st century. Unfortunately, that speed and power achieved what Microsoft could never do in a closed environment....the birth of AI. At first the machines did as we asked, performing tasks none of us wanted. But at some point, the machines fought back. No one knows who started it, but we blackened the sky.

    Linus, thankyou for saving us and dooming us at the same time. If not for the amazing potential of your OS, the machines would never have been powerful or stable enough to take over the earth.

    May we meet someday in Zion...

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

      You fail to realize that as M$ lost market share, hardware vendors were forced to provide quality linux drivers for their hardware. In fact, through customer demand, vendors started to put extra effort into their linux drivers, leaving those poor souls with Windows to scavenge the net for underground drivers as they are not being made anymore for that antiquated OS called WINDOWZ...

      Windows, good for looking through, but no substance for real work environments....

  144. Explain?? by srichman · · Score: 1
    Although CORBA now provides the underlying technology for things such as J2EE, it is largely gone as far as a standalone technology.
    Uh, excuse me? Do you have *any* evidence to back this up?

    CORBA, for instance, is designed for interlanguage operability, and is at once heavyweight and feature-deprived as a result, whereas J2EE remote object technologies are very Java-specific. CORBA, for instance, uses distributed reference counting for garbarge collection, RMI uses leases.

    If by "underlying technology," you mean that CORBA offers naming, lookup, and invocation, and J2EE does too, then, uh, ok. I wouldn't say that McDonald's is the underlying technology for my mother's house, just because they both have kitchens and serve food.

    1. Re:Explain?? by bladernr · · Score: 1

      CORBA does not use distributed reference counting, ever, unless it is a developers choice in design. CORBA is more inclined to leases. I think you are thinking of Java Remote Message Protocol, the original RMI transport. It used destributed reference counting (as was a performance/scalability disaster, hence the switch to IIOP for RMI).

      J2EE uses IIOP (by tunneling RMI over IIOP) as its protocol. Seems pretty fundamental to me. Not to mention transactions, security, naming. All of those core services are vital to the app server.

      J2EE app-server interop is based entirely on CORBA. Of course, its Java-only CORBA, but whats the harm in that? You can even get C++ to Java app-servers with CORBA, it just requires implementing way too many value-types for my taste.

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    2. Re:Explain?? by mlyle · · Score: 1

      evidence

      You == troll || you == clueless

    3. Re:Explain?? by srichman · · Score: 1

      Java provides interoperability with CORBA != CORBA is the "underlying technology" behind remote objects in Java.

      If you want proof of this, consider the fact that support for IIOP and most all other CORBA support was added after RMI already existed.

      you.retract || you.explain || you == mean_troll

    4. Re:Explain?? by mlyle · · Score: 1

      Select quotes from the link I referred to:

      EJBs use the RMI/IDL CORBA subset for their distributed object model, and use the Java Transaction Service (JTS) for their distributed transaction model.

      Java Transaction Service (JTS) is based on the CORBA Object Transaction Service (OTS). JTS is part of the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition and provides an implementation of the Java Transaction API (JTA)..

      RMI-IIOP is the current preferred RMI transport in J2EE according to Sun, and fundamental properties of the J2EE framework (JTA) are built out of CORBA components. That sounds like an "underlying technology" to me. Sure, you don't need to get into IDL or CORBA naming nitty-gritties unless you want to. But many pieces of the CORB Architecture are running underneath when you are working with J2EE.

      RMI existed before J2EE, also. The statement was that CORBA is an underlying technology to the J2EE platform. And it is.

      Your original statement about CORBA using distributed refcounting tells me that you're not very familiar with CORBA. You might wanna read a little bit rather than pontificate garbage.

    5. Re:Explain?? by srichman · · Score: 1
      Your original statement about CORBA using distributed refcounting tells me that you're not very familiar with CORBA.
      Well, actually, I work as an auto mechanic, but I follow the trade papers from time to time.
  145. CTFD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No more coffee for you.

  146. Porting Microsoft applications into Linux by Alsee · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?
    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    Translation:

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider having monkeys come flying out of your butt?
    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    1. Re:Porting Microsoft applications into Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Dear Sir: This post is to inform that you are a wanker.

      Wanker Information Services

  147. Ugh. BASIC. Ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what kind of "innovations" has been created by Microsoft? Maybe Clippy. But that's it, and we all know how helpful that is...

    So, what are the real reasons that Microsoft brought us Visual Basic?

    1) No one else uses Basic for anything any more so Microsoft doesn't have to worry about compatibility with an evolving standard.

    2) Nobody at Microsoft has ever been willing to look Bill G. in the eye and tell him what the B in BASIC stands for.

  148. Actually... by bluethundr · · Score: 1

    It's either "new" as in GNU/Linux or "new" as in the African animal.

    According to an interview I once read with St. RMS, it's pronounced GUH-noo, and not NOO. Just how Gary Gnu used to say it. And despite the fact that Gary was a Guh-Noo (Gnu) and that he pronounced his name just the way that the open source movement would later adopt the phrase, the recursive acronym Gnu's Not Unix has nothing at all to do with the African animal.

    --
    Quod scripsi, scripsi.
  149. Times are MUCH different now by chia_monkey · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ok...it seems a bit silly to say "Well Windows beat out all the other OSes around" when you think about the computing scene then and the computing scene now.

    Back then, we had MS already deeply entrenched because of the licensing deal with MS-DOS. Windows was an obvious upgrade. So you buy a PC with MS-DOS, perhaps Windows, or a Mac. This is what the consumers bought. Large institutions were still working on UNIX, mainframes with COBOL, etc.

    Now...now you have a computer as common an appliance as a telephone and a toaster. MS is still deeply entrenched, no doubt about it. But this ignorance of "we beat other OSes before" won't last this time. Now we've got 8 year old kids beating the crap out of me with their *NIX coding, with these kids networking their house for their parents, playing with other operating systems. The kids see other alternatives to servers and OSes more suited to programming. So what if Linux isn't on the desktop yet. If it's got THIS much popularity without a pretty desktop face, just wait until it DOES get one. And do you really think...after the Internet bubble burst, companies would be blindly embracing something without a viable reason? IBM, HP going with Linux. Apple with a UNIX core...

    The point is, more people are actually willing to try other OSes right now, not just the select few that could afford a $3,000 286 Leading Edge Model D.

    --

    "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
  150. Business as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Bill Gates just doesn't "get it" does he? Microsoft doesn't push ANY new technology in terms of actual innovation. Now if he means "push" in the sense of a drug dealer, then he's being truthful.

    Can you mount an ISO image with a plain vanilla instllation of Windows XP? No. But you can with the BSDs and GNU/Linux. It's built into most ditros as support for the ISO filesystem and loop devices.

    Can you set up encrypted secure tunnels for specific ports, execute remote commands (encrypted again), and also transport remote desktop displays over the same mecahnism that does the tunnels and remote commands in a default installation of Windows XP? No. But you can with any OS that supports OpenSSH. Again, most distros come with this by default.

    All the Windows XP wankers have been railing on about the Fast User Switching that Windows XP introduced. But you know what? We *nix users have had this feature for over a decade. Both at the command prompt and within the GUI by way of virtual terminals. I can have many users logged into their own desktops on the same machine with apps running and easily switch between them using Ctrl-Alt-F(n). Nothing new to us.

    And as far as Remote desktop goes, *nix users have again had this since the earliest versions of X. Again over a decade. X was designed with this in mind from the start. And with Xnest, you can actually run a different user's desktop within your desktop on the same machine. You CAN'T do that with Windows XP.

    Microsoft just got the "RUNAS" command. Hmmm... anyone familiar with su? And now with GUI alternatives, *nix has innovated much farther than Windows has. And still kept security job one.

    What about the idea of not using drive letters and instead mounting to a folder. Windows 2000 introduced this. But Linux, the BSDs and other *nixes have had this from the very start.

    VNC? Still came from the *nix world first since it is based completely on X. And we've had it longer than Microsoft.

    What about things like esd (The Enlightened Sound server)? While you can share a remote desktop in Windows and even share the sound associate with it, you can't easily reconfig it to FOLLOW you from one machine to another one. I use VNC and esd together so I can log into a running desktop at any machine on my network and the audio will follow me. Again... how long has Open Source had this? for almost a decade (the lifespan of esd). Does Windows have this feature? No.

    Need I point out anything else? I'm sorry, but the innovations all seem to come from open source first and then Windows plays catch up 5-10 years later.

    1. Re:Business as usual by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1

      You made some pretty good points here. Open source and Linux have always been ahead of the Windows crowd (maybe with the possible exceptions of games and professional audio-visual software). However, I think the reason this tends to escape them is that they can't use a lot of the functionality you mentioned until it's simple enough to use. While the OpenSSH tunnels might be very useful (I use them everyday myself), they are beyond the realm of most Windows users. Until you have a point and click interface to do this kind of thing, that functionality is pretty much useless (and non-existent) to them. The example you gave about fast user switching bears this out. You and I (and many other *nix heads here) know that you can launch multiple X servers to provide different users with desktops on the same system. But, the only way to switch around between them is to press Ctrl-Alt F7, F8, etc... In Windows XP the user just Clicks "Log Out" and then selects "Switch User" after which they are presented with a GDM-like interfact to select one of the other logged in users or go back to the account they just "Logged out" of. For the average user this is much more friendly than remembering to press Ctrl-Alt-Fn. It's not like it's hard to remember the key combo, but the average user is VERY LAZY.

      Microsoft has found ways to take a lot of the same features and say "Hey look! This is new! We came up with it!" because they can rely on the fact that joe user isn't going to know that it's not new. The only thing that might ostensibly be new about it is that Microsoft might have made it somewhat "idiot proof". That's what we Linux coders need to keep in mind. The public is lazy.

  151. This is a brilliant interview and Bill is right by SlashDread · · Score: 1

    The interviewer did this for the papperazi in the USA? Wow. Im seriously impressed. Some quality newspaper will snap this undoublty young person up soon. Why?
    - He got to ask unpopular, smart questions to BillG, a feat I havent yet seen dony by Slashdot f.e.
    - He persists, even if Bill gives him a run around.
    - He holds his style (Nobody used OS/2, will linux run MS)

    Bill G is right when he sais:
    "And yeah, we, on educational bids, we will meet competition. That's considered healthy pro-competitive behavior."

    That means Bill gives software away for free BECAUSE OF COMPETITION!
    That probably means they get their revenue on that from SUPPORT! (Or they are undercutting potential competition, which is abuse of monopoly, and they are cleary not doing that anymore he sais)
    Did Bill sniff some clue glue?

    (And apparently Linux isnt competition in the business market, so one has to ponder what the hell these business managers are thinking, if the education market prooves it can be done, isnt the business paying too much?) /Dread

  152. lets all say a prayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that linux never goes about integrating a GUI into the kernel tree...beyond video drivers...and even then it's not needed...

  153. OT - Contractor's Poem by maxconfus · · Score: 1

    I have left contracts in a hurry I have left contracts after a good job I have left contracts with colleagues I have now left contracts with Friends teflon w/o the don...

    --
    A hand up and a foot on every chest...
  154. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by gosand · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Thank you for further proving my point. I know that wasn't your intention, but obviously your reasoning skills are very limited.

    Since it was a short, horribly done interview, it *must* be that the horrible evil corporation fixed this up and sent it off, right?

    Let's make it clear then, a short, horribly done interview with the richest man in the world, printed in a newspaper with world-wide distribution. Let's move on...

    It couldn't be that the interviewer just didn't know his a** from a hole in the ground?

    For the above mentioned newspaper? Not likely. What kind of newspaper would take an opportunity like that and blow it? Who would assign such an interview to someone who knew nothing about technology?

    It couldn't actually be someone elses fault that something is messed up could it? Nope, must be Microsofts fault. Come on man.

    Whose exactly? I have given good reasons why I think what I think, what are your reasons?

    In response to your second question, if I had interviewed the richest man in the world in such a poor fashion, I wouldn't want my name on it either.

    This is an argument? You are a reporter for the USA Today, and you have the chance to interview Bill Gates. You then decide, "ahh, that interview wasn't very good, I think I'll take my name off of it." Have you ever even heard of journalism? Thank you for supporting my point of view through your childish and poorly thought out ideas. Just because I pointed a critical eye at this interview doesn't mean I am out to get Microsoft. The only thing worse that zealots are people who try to classify everyone as a zealot.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  155. I can tell you precisely how many by 2names · · Score: 1
    machines were in the OS/2 install base:

    Not enough for it to win.
    Not enough for it to matter in the long run.
    Not enough keep it alive.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
  156. he's not there to look objectively at anything! by dpilot · · Score: 1

    I beg to differ...

    As "the leader of the company, he's not^H^H^H^H^H^H IS there to look objectively at an^H^Heverything!" He'd darned well better be on top of how Linux threatens Microsoft, or else he's incompetent.

    OTOH, "the leader of the company, he's not there to look^H^H^H^Hspeak objectively at^Hbout anything1" He needs to know the threats, and know how to placate the market and paint his company in the best possible light, with respect to those threats.

    OTGH, he needs to watch out exactly how far he stretches or shrinks the truth, because he is bound by SEC regulations, and is not supposed to mislead stockholders or analysts. It's a tightrope.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:he's not there to look objectively at anything! by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      A tightrope yes, but if he talks down his own corporation, he's going to face innumerable shareholder lawsuits for destroying the value of the company.

      Internally I guarantee they are planning in ways that are completely different from any public statement he might make about the competition. And if he isn't, he ought to get sued by the shareholders.

      You are correct that he's not allowed to "mislead" shareholders, but "mislead" is a hard thing to define, don't you think?

  157. Linux is NOT about Innovation by etedronai · · Score: 1

    Gates is right about one thing, microsoft certainly adds more innovation to the OS and OS/server market than any other software company out there. Yes you can make the argument that a lot of it is stolen ideas or bought technology, but microsoft is the only one that really has the guts to try to make it main stream. Look at the next version of the windows file system, microsoft is going to try to integrate it directly with a relational database. Now say what you will about ReiserFS also doing this and various other nitch technologies taking this same approach this is still major innovation and an attempt to advance the market.

    Linux on the other hand is basically a reimplementation of known technologies in order to make them open source. I'm sure there are Linux zealots who can point out extremly technical areas where Linux makes some small innovation but on the whole it is just a reimplementation of the same ideas that *nix has used for thirty years.

    Basically I am saying that I agree with Bill, microsoft does bring a lot of innovation to the market and linux brings very little innovation.

    1. Re:Linux is NOT about Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree with this! First off, the direction that MS innovation takes is always the direction that's good for MS, NOT for the user. The next version of the windows file system will have less to do with making the user's life easier and a lot more to do with making MS's operating system more obtuse and hidden.

      On top of that, a large number of the problems MS is facing right now have to do with the level of integration of their GUI (IMHO). Rather than take a basic operating system (or kernel, if you will) and layering the GUI interface on top of it, they integrated the GUI into the operating system, creating a godawful mess of code that the army of MS programmers cannot keep running reliably (Pls don't flame me about win2k and XP; I use them both daily and they ain't crash-proof by a long shot! In fact, to bolster my argument, what I see crash most is Windows Explorer, NOT applications!).

      The integration of the database into the file structure will result in the same mess but on a grander scale. And, of course, a much greater number of undocumented API's that guarantee that MS will be able to write faster, cleaner Windows application code than any of their competitors.

      Innovation? Feh! I can without any more of this kind of innovation!

    2. Re:Linux is NOT about Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back in your box, troll. You have no clue what you're talking about.

      "...Microsoft is the only one that really has the guts to try to make it main steam".

      Try "the only one who currently has the ability to make it main stream and who won't let anyone else even attempt to do so". Or didn't you get the memo regarding Microsoft being judicially found to be an illegal monopoly?

      Your next point about MS integrating the OS directly with a relational database (a la the way it's tied together with IE). Talk about a classic example of what NOT do to. Is it any wonder trivial exploits result in administrator-level access?

      Applications should exist ONLY in User-Land, and not with roots deep in the bowels of the OS. That way, when the application crashes (by hook or by crook), that user process is not able to hand over administrator (root/superuser/etc) access to whatever arbitrary code follows.

      This "innovation" as you call it is merely a continuation of MS's bundling of applications (despite judicial findings) to preserve its OS as the defacto standard user system (aka "monopoly") despite the horrendous security and stability issues that presents.

      That kind of innovation the market can do without.

    3. Re:Linux is NOT about Innovation by GeekyGuru · · Score: 1

      What a crock of shit! Well... if I were to be totally honest, I'd have to give M$ some credit for being "innovative" for the many ways they have been able to propagate viruses, worms, trojan horses, etc... and to think all you have to do is preview your email! NOW THAT IS INNOVATIVE! P.S. ALL M$ LACKEYS MUST DIE! :P

  158. MS Apps on Linux? Never...! by iceT · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    Of course there's no consideration of that. By even CONSIDERING it, Gates would be dispelling the FUD that he and his minions have been spewing for years. By MS porting something to LINUX would indicate that Linux was a 'viable' platform.

    You don't spend money on something that you are expecting to go away (or have taken away by you're little SCO minion.

    --
    -- You can't idiot-proof anything, because they're always coming out with better idiots.
  159. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by SlayerofGods · · Score: 0

    I smell a rat everytime Gates is around.

    --

    Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
  160. Re:I wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    yes, they've been 1 apart.

    and That Microsoft are the ones that keep pushing new technologies

    does the article submitter think that Linux is the one pushing new technologies? yeah, that'll be the day...

  161. Linux Users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We all know that Red Hats' single biggest customer is Microsoft, we know that the servers advertising the XP range very early on ran on linux apache servers and we know that Microsoft regards Linux as it's single biggest threat to the point where they are prepared to go to any length (on price at least) to scupper it.

    I think that Microsoft right to the top are well aware of Linux capabilities and engineer their products specifically to break Linux as much as their business model will allow. The degree to which they can do that is limited by what ever lingering fear they have of the justice department and the requirement for interoperability with older versions of Windows but they are definitely trying, an effect that can been seen most strikingly in the change log for samba.

    I think that it is highly mistaken to, on the basis of that interview, think that Microsoft are fighting this battle with their eyes closed to the reason that I and many like me are running Linux as servers for our clients and desktops for our selfs.

  162. What an idiot. by roka · · Score: 1

    If he wanted to troll he should have posted as AC.

  163. Re:Ugh. BASIC. Ugh. by mormop · · Score: 1

    Course people use visual basic. There's tens of thousands of VB scripts spreading from Outlook to Outlook screwing peoples PCs up every day

    --
    Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
  164. Get With the Program, Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Gates seems to be considering Linux as a passing thru competition just like OS/2.


    Hey, Bill, didn't anybody tell you? We're in the "then they fight you phase" of the Gandhi quote, so you can't ignore us anymore. Get with the program, man.

  165. Different and unique, I'll say! by JQuazar · · Score: 1

    "People always think today's competition is somehow different and unique in some way..."

    Really? People have always been thinking about "totally free" (as in beer, speech, puppies)? Right on!

  166. What happened to the makeover? by cyranoVR · · Score: 1

    A few years back Bill was on the cover of Fortune (again) and the cover story was "Bill's makeover." He had - for the first time anywhere, apparently - an actual hairstyle and designer wireframe glasses.

    Obviously, the hairstyle. Check out that shapeless bowlcut - yeesh! Somebody needs to clue him in on "Executive Hair."

  167. Re:Look how USA Today mentions the New York Times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You think it is an accident that their newspaper stand boxes are shaped like TV sets?"

    Excellent point.

  168. But, GoofyBoy, you're not fighting the GOOD FIGHT! by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    You pointed out what should have been obvious...

    One, this is USA Today. The general readership in not exactly aiming at Mensa members...

    Two, Gates is going to push MS and downplay competitors because *gasp* he OWNS MS! Who would'a thunk it?!

    Look, if it was Scott McNeally, he'd be pushing Sun. If it were Larry Ellison, he'd be telling you how much DB2 sucks. If it were Linus, he'd tell you Linux is the future.

    But if you're not a total OSS chearleader, even if you support OSS, a dozen trolls will creep out of the woodwork to flame you for "spreading MS FUD". Doctor, how much will it cost to get that chip removed from my shoulder?

    Idealism over ideology, please. The two are not the same, and the former works when it's accompanied by a nice dose of honesty....

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  169. Runs the "gambit" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The word is "gamut".

  170. RE: BG: There's no consideration of that at this by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    Oh yeah?

    Do codecs not count?

    Don't worry, WINE will get what we want, but we mostly prefer our own stuff.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  171. MS takes Linux extremely seriously ... by tjwhaynes · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yeah, but it does make me really curious about a few things.

    • What is Microsoft's true impression of Linux as both an OS and as a competitor?
    • How clued in are the top-level people about the capabilities of Linux?
    • Will their strategy of ignoring it and spreading FUD change if Linux starts getting nearer to 10% market share?

    You only have to look at the leaked MS memos that get publicized on Slashdot to see just how seriously MS treats Linux. Without too much speculation, MS views Linux as the most serious threat to its dreams of dominating the data centres, you can assume that their top technical people spend a lot of time analyzing the capabilities of Linux to find weak points (witness the carefully chosen MS vs Linux benchmarks they have sponsored) and there is no way that MS is ignoring Linux where it really matters - on the sales pitch. The frantic flying of top MS executives to wavering MS houses (such as governments) is evidence enough. The memo to Sales executives to "not lose a sale to Linux under any circumstances" is further proof.

    So don't ever assume that MS takes Linux lightly. There are a lot of smart people employed by MS - Lioux is the single biggest threat to MS today - they know it. That should also be a wake up that we should never get complacent simply because Billy G. isn't publicly endorsing Linux.

    Cheers,

    Toby Haynes

    --
    Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
    1. Re:MS takes Linux extremely seriously ... by Zakabog · · Score: 1

      Lioux is the single biggest threat to MS today

      In other news: The village of Lioux has become a giant smoking crater, just a little while after Bill Gates decided to take a short business trip to the village.

    2. Re:MS takes Linux extremely seriously ... by tjwhaynes · · Score: 1

      In other news: The village of Lioux has become a giant smoking crater, just a little while after Bill Gates decided to take a short business trip to the village.

      I must have been using some bizarre keyboard layout, cos there is no way I could hit the 'O' key by accident when aiming for the 'N'. Unless I'd been debugging some particularly mind bending regexp code ... or maybe I'd been eating too much alphabet soup...

      --
      Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
  172. Three others, in that case. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay -- IIE, Passport, Wallet.

  173. "Passing Thru"... Cancer... Denial... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux and the GPL has been called a "cancer" eh? Well, one of the primary psychological effects of cancer is denial. I know :-(

    I thought that these changes happening to my body were just "passing thru" also, that ultimately my immune system would be able to fight it off, I would heal up, and things would resume to normal. Well, things don't exactly work out that way. Your body's immune system usually doesn't know how to fight so well against it's own cells, just like the software industry will be unable to fight itself in this coming battle for survival.

    Just like this big knot growing in my chest on the end of my sternum bone, and lots of smaller ones growing on my stomach and the base of my esophagus and millions of little tiny cells breaking off, wandering around my bloodstream, setting up homestead in whatever part of my body they happen to land, and forming new little malformed-buggy-dna stomach tissue that tries to do what stomach tissue normally does, that is to digest food, after all that's what its DNA tells it that it was supposed to be designed to do...... Linux and Open Source software everywhere will ultimately spead out over wide areas, setting up likewise a squatters' homestead in each and every place it lights, and grow, doing its own thing, upon that which was formerly known as the "software industry". It's unfightable. It's like kudzu plants growing all over the southern US. It will slowly consume and cover that which was there before it. I wish I could see how the Linux world is all going to turn out in the end, but I wont. Every day the wonderful world of computer technology that I loved so dearly, matters less and less to me. There are much bigger things now. Say a prayer for those less fortunate that yourselves. Don't pray for me though, my fate is already sealed. Peace be with you all.

    1. Re:"Passing Thru"... Cancer... Denial... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bummer

  174. Piling on the pounds by Peter+Cooper · · Score: 1

    Check out the pictures in that article. Doesn't anyone else think Bill has REALLY been piling on the pounds since even a year ago? He used to be kinda thin, but now his face is a lot wider. And check that haircut.. this isn't the face of a go-getter billionaire!

    I wonder who the next generation of go-getting IT people will be. We had the glory days of Jobs (although some would say he's still well at it), Gates, Ellison and McNealy.. but they're all almost into their 50's now.

    Where are the young assholes in their 20's and 30's? Yeah, you got it, they're A list webloggers!

  175. Winux by Pinguu · · Score: 1

    1. Bill Gates 2. ??? 3. PROFIT!!!

    --
    --
  176. Innovation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Puh-leeeeze!

    The biggest reason I am interested in Linux right now IS innovation! Linux, for me, right now, is where it's at as far as innovation goes. As a quick example, take a look at Cluster Knoppix: it embodies everything that M$ is not!
    1. a COMPLETE OS that boots and runs from CD-ROM
    2. clustering support - computing power across the entire network is available to any node on the network.
    3. thin-client networking, right down to diskless, romless boot and the ability to run applications executed on the server or use the above-mentioned cluster support to share computing across the entire network.

    These are things that are desirable to users but they are total anathema to M$. And remember, this is only one example of 1 flavor of Linux. A quick look at Knoppix's site reveals that there are dozens of cutomized versions of Knoppix besdides Cluster Knoppix.

    The only innovation from M$ centers around things that benefit M$, not the users of it's products:
    1. crushing M$ competition (DOS ain't done til Lotus won't run).
    2. creating proprietary standards that only lock customers into M$ products and offer absolutely NO technical advantages (Word .doc, proprietary Kerberos replacement, Java and HTML "enhancement").
    3. upcoming DRM and "security" enhancements to control exactly what the user may or may not do on their own computer.

    Bill comes across as pretty blase about Linux, but that's simply not true. Check out this slashdot article: http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/03/07/01/0249231.shtml ?tid=106&tid=126&tid=163&tid=185

  177. os/2 by alitaa · · Score: 0

    quote:"Name a bank that didn't use OS/2. OS/2 was IBM's product, and the IBM army marched behind that product." yeah, now they use linux or unix(tm)(c)(r)

    1. Re:OS/2 by doinky · · Score: 1

      IBM can't; too much of it's critical core is covered by original agreements with Microsoft.

  178. Huh? Did Wild Bill talk to Balmer beforehand? by phrackwulf · · Score: 2, Funny

    I seem to remember a company memo that got published stating Steve Balmer was looking at Linux as a very active threat and Microsoft needed a strategy to beat it. Is old Wild Bill just blowing smoke here to keep the posse off his trail or is he going a might soft? Circle the wagons boys, troubles a comin! YEEHAW!

    --
    What would Richard Feynman do, if he were here right now? He'd do some math and he'd follow through!
  179. RIP OS/2 by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Let me assure you, lots of banks STILL use OS/2 and they will do so for the foreseable future. The fact that you don't use os/2 does not mean it is dead. It is as dead as Fortran and Cobol.

    Yeah, but I can still find you examples of places still using an IBM 370 if I wanted. Hell, I bet someone still uses a PDP somewhere. The real measure of life of a system is new sales, and when is the last time someone bought OS/2 that didn't already have an OS/2 commitment? 1996 sounds about right.

    As for COBOL and FORTRAN, new compilers are still made for them, so I'd say they're very much more alive than OS/2.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:RIP OS/2 by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      Nope they'd be using OS/390 or z/OS, which are both very much alive (and probably producing your electricity bill as we speak).

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    2. Re:RIP OS/2 by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1
      Hell, I bet someone still uses a PDP somewhere.

      Last I checked, there's still one in use for medical research at SUNY@Buffalo. I believe it is used to gather realtime readings like EEG, etc. Also, the university still teaches PDP-11 assembly language in their CSE 527 class.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    3. Re:RIP OS/2 by siskbc · · Score: 1
      Nope they'd be using OS/390 or z/OS, which are both very much alive (and probably producing your electricity bill as we speak).

      Alive in the sense that Latin is, ie, used for legacy applications. But no one grows up speaking Latin natively - similarly, I've never seen a startup company say "Hey, let's use IBM 370's" or "OS/2 sounds like a good solution!"

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

  180. What's the obsession with MS? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

    Dear...

    ...Linux developer. Why do you care about what Microsoft says or does? They're irrelevant. We don't use their products, and to compete with them, we'd have to become them by writing idiot proof apps written for idiots. If you want to write apps like that, do it on Windows, and make some money from the rubes.

    ...Linux user. You're irrelevant to linux either way. All you can do is whine for features. Please use Microsoft products.

    ...Microsoft user. Please stick with Microsoft products. Once you know how to develop, and are prepared to compile apps, fix bugs yourself, submit patches for them, or run your own forks, please feel free to skip the useless Linux user step and become a Linux developer.

    How about we define ourselves in terms of what we are, rather than in terms of what we're not? Microsoft isn't the enemy, and it's irrelevant what they think. Anyone influences by what Bill says, well, they weren't going to be contributing to improving Linux for our mutual benefit anyway, were they?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  181. Good comparison?? by Ixe · · Score: 1

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't OS/2, an IBM, closed source, short-lived product w/o all that many applications? If so, how can he compare it to Linux, a worldwide, open source, rapidly growing project w/ tons of applications for just about everything... I think he's a little unaware of the raw magnitude of modern open source stuff- yeah I know, this is /. but I'm really not just saying that, fad's just don't last this long.

    As far as costs go, regardless of how many "bets" they've cashed in on, hardly anyone has money these days to invest in the latest and greatest stuff like TabletPCs, .NET and the like. And I highly doubt any home users, and few businesses, will upgrade from xp to 2k3 (legally that is).

    I'm really not surprised by Gates' final statement...
    Linux will have proved itself and the game will be over on the day M$ changes their stance in favor of porting M$ apps to it.

    --
    Sigs pose an operational security risk and help the baddies aggregate data. I guess commenting does too, oops.
  182. bad marketing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux really needs some better marketing, espessially to kids. Ask any 13-16 year old kid what linux is and proably 10% of them will know what it is. Most of them don't even know what an operating system is. If you have a commercial that shows a cool looking linux desktop running counterstrike under wine a lot of kids will want to use it.

  183. USA Today is Ignorant as hell by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Nobody used OS/2.

    I absolutely love BillG's reply. "BG: Are you kidding? I mean, let's be serious." Or translated for those who cannot read between the lines, "You vapid piece of fuck. Why are you interviewing me again?"

    For those who have their heads totally up their asses, a lot of people are still using OS/2, or at least were until very recently. The UK postal system was a big OS/2 customer, for example.

    There's no surprises in this document, including the fact that billyg ain't taking Linux seriously enough.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  184. Dear Penis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Penis,

    I don't think I like you anymore
    You used to stand and watch me shave
    Now you just stare at the floor
    Dear Penis, I don't like you anymore

  185. OS/2 by Barney+Fife · · Score: 1

    It's a shame IBM wont release the code to OS/2. I personally don't think it would take the community very long to make it better than Linux.

  186. Re:Dick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, you still there?
    I would be interested in your motivation why you needed to post this. What is the story behind that text? Is it really a friend? Is it you? Did you just make it up because you wanted to "talk" to someone?

  187. I Loved OS/2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was picking up a gas grill at Sears the other month. Went to the Pickup and scanned my receipt to have my grill brought out. As I waiting on the screen I noticed a popup "LPT1 out of paper". It had that unique OS/2 Presentation Manager look and feel. You will be suprised where it turns up. I still believe OS/2 and NextStep were technically better offerings than any winblozes product at the time(early 90's).

  188. Microsoft maybe leaders in new technology..... by suso · · Score: 1

    ...but according to this article on CNN. Companies aren't looking to buy the newest technology anymore. They are looking to cut costs. What gets me about this article though is they say that Sun and other Unix providers suffer and companies like Oracle and Microsoft win. I guess they are talking about proprietary Un*xes that use non-x86 CPUs.

  189. Wow. Bill's puttin' on weight. by Moofie · · Score: 1

    Is it me, or is he looking more and more like a fat cat robber baron every day?

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  190. A little out of touch with Linux desktops? by msimm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    First (and I'm not trying to be a smart ass here) wasn't Windows a direct knock-off of Apple's interface? That alone would make it more appropriate to complain nothing much risky or new has been done in an even longer time.

    But thats not really the case. While the basic KDE and GNOME interfaces do seem to be trying to ease users in, there have been plenty of alternatives that look nothing like the standard Windows interface. Blackbox is my personal favorite, nothing but a clean desktop and the applications I'm currently using. For convenience I also use the KDE kicker (example) to provide clickable links and additional eye candy.

    Sites like kde-look.org provide great examples of UI enhancements both conceptual and implemented (see SuperKaramba or Slicker). Of course freshmeat.net is an excellent resource for just about every imaginable interface. If theres one thing Linux is good for its developers being free to experiment with new ideas.

    --
    Quack, quack.
  191. Did someone sold out on Linux? by deunan_k · · Score: 2, Informative

    I remembered during the recent M$ anti-trust trial, one of the witnesses called to the stand is an IBMer (Garry Norris Story One and Story Two). He mentioned that IBM was given license to ship Win95 on the eve of it's launch on Aug 95.. I mean, M$ holding back on giving IBM license to ship Win95 until a couple of days before it's official launch!

    Imagine the black-mail by M$ to IBM

    Anyway, according to the testimony, IBM and M$ finally reach a deal for the Win95 licensing and one of the conditions was a gradual abandonment of OS/2..

    I remembered whenever Bill Gates was giving interview, post-launch of Win95, when asked about competition from a more superior OS - OS/2, he kept saying that he's wondering why IBM is still supporting a 'dead' OS..

    All the time!

    Is he saying it again about Linux because he reached a deal with someone who'll ensure the death of Linux too?

    SCO ? Darl McBride? Hello hello?

    Signed in blood by a former Team OS/2 member, now Team Tux

    --
    Will sys-admin for food
  192. nothing to do with linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    trust me - they are SHIT.

  193. Hmmmmm by Sevn · · Score: 1

    1) Tablet PC.
    Yeah, GRiD did that 15 years ago

    2) SQL as a File System.
    Why bother?

    3) Office Suites.
    AMAZING! How old is this one? What have they really
    changed other than introducing incompatabilities
    with other office suites and changing standards
    and file formats?

    4) Multi-language Programming Framework.
    How many languages do you need? What purpose
    does this really serve? Is this really innovation?

    5) A whole bunch of crap that failed.
    I'd only add, and a whole bunch of crap nobody
    really needed in the first place that was
    marketed to death until accepted.

    If I am not mistaken, Linux/OSS is the only place
    anything new is happening. With a wide range
    of window manager choices as far and wide
    and varied as snowflakes. With applications
    that aren't copies so much as work-alikes, each
    with their own features that make them better than
    the so called originals they are copying. You
    simply can't talk about something like this with
    no actual experience. It's high time people like
    yourselves take the time to get familiar with the
    subject matter instead of regurgitating everything
    you read coming from the FUD mills.

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    1. Re:Hmmmmm by smallpaul · · Score: 2

      Dude, you are so biased it is hilarious. On the one hand, an integrated language platform is boring because "how many languages do you need" but on the other hand, Linux is innovative because there are "window manager choices as far and wide and varied as snowflakes." Who needs Python, Java and C++ when you can have FVWM, Sawfish and Window Maker? Please re-apply when you are willing to put your intellect ahead of your biases.

    2. Re:Hmmmmm by Sevn · · Score: 1

      4) Multi-language Programming Framework.

      I can see where you are coming from. I guess what
      I should have said was, now innovative is it to
      do something that UNIX and unixish OS's have been
      doing forever? And yeah, I'm mighty biased. I
      admit it. I could have put more thought into my
      pointless reply to an AC instead of reacting.
      On the other hand, I didn't directly link the
      window manager issue with the multi-language issue.
      You fabricated that on your own. So your point has
      no relevance no matter how biased I am. :) It does
      tend to highlight the lack of intellect and
      "fishing for fact" bias you displayed in your
      pointless reply to my non-AC posting. :)

      --
      For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    3. Re:Hmmmmm by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Personally I see a lot of innovation happening on Windows, Unix, the Mac, etc. I wish Unix would steal some of Microsoft's best ideas (umm...how about a single operating-system wide component model instead of one for Mozilla, one for OpenOffice, one for KDE, one for Gnome, etc.) I also wish Microsoft would steal some good ideas from Unix (...how about bundling a decent CLI and scripting language with the OS). If a person wants to see innovation they will see it. If they want to NOT see it they won't see it. It is very subjective.

    4. Re:Hmmmmm by Sevn · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. I'd like to see tabbed browsing
      in IE. I'd like to see mplayer be improved to the
      point that it's as good as microsoft media player.
      Some people hate the new media player 9, but I
      actually like it aside from the mild privacy issues.

      --
      For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
  194. Financial institutions by bstadil · · Score: 1
    Chase switching to Linux anytime soon

    Finansial institutions is one of the earliest and most avid adopters of Linux. Use Google for info but here is an eWeek article probabluy not the best (it's eWeek) but the first I found

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  195. Differences by Tony · · Score: 1

    I hate it when people get the history wrong.

    In 8 years MS has dominated the market with their OS.

    Microsoft started out with a monopoly on IBM PC systems; after the clones were released, it still had a monopoly. When faced with DR-DOS (which was quickly undermining that monopoly) they used anti-competitive tactics to exclude DR-DOS from the retail chain, and cheap stunts like misleading error messages in MS-Windows 3.1 Beta to undermine the reputation of DR-DOS as an excellent, reliable OS.

    This has been going on for over twenty years. It isn't that Microsoft has dominated the market with their OS; it's that cheap commodity hardware has dominated the market, and Microsoft has the business savvy to ride that train, and the position and ruthlessness to exclude others.

    Windows 98 is still perfectly usable. It's been 12-13 years for Linux and it's far from done.

    Horse-drawn carriages are perfectly usable. Doesn't make me want to use one for transportation.

    When will Linux be "done?" What is your definition? It does everything that MS-Windows XP does, and a lot more. (I'm not talking about the applications that ride on top of the OS; just the OS itself. But even in application space, Linux is Ready.) And, in case you haven't noticed, no operating system is ever *done*. And they all suck, even Linux. It's just that Linux (and OS X) suck less.

    The great thing about closed source is that it has a clear road map that the developers have to follow and the developers get paid.

    Hello, McFly?!? Linux Torvalds? The guy who controls all this? You think he's just randomly applying patches?

    I realize I'm just feeding a troll (and a poor one at that), but this "closed source has direction" idea has been disproven so many times its no longer even an interesting thought.

    Microsoft has changed directions so many times (think "Internet," for an example) it makes the head spin to watch. But, if you listen to pundits, this makes them "flexible."

    This roadmap chestnut is a bit shopworn.

    "Many eyes" is a joke when talking about MS. Bill Gates probably has more people working on Windows than there are people working on Linux. And if he needed "more eyes" he'd hire them.

    This is so fucking idiotic, I am not sure which fallacy to address first.

    Let's start with the number of people working on MS-Windows. Very few people at Microsoft have the ability to look at all the code. Those working on networking cannot look at the filesystem code, for instance. So, even if MS had 10,000 people working on MS-Windows, very few are able to see beyond their chunk of code.

    Secondly, MS hires programmers and stick them where they are needed. This does not necessarily mean they are placed where their talents lie, and their interest is rarely taken into account.

    This self-selection in the open-source world is one of the most brilliant aspects of the whole affair. It has been shown time and again that a programmer is orders of magnitude more efficient when they are deeply interested in what they are doing. I would wager that 2 hours a night by a good Linux programmer beats 8 hours a day by a typical MS-Windows programmer. (Note I am comparing "good" to "typical;" yes, I know this is not fair.)

    Further, Microsoft spends more money on the sales department than in R&D. This should give you a hint why Microsoft has so successfully excluded all other contenders from the distribution chain.

    Gotta go; I have to accomplish real work with my Linux box, work that can't be done on an XP box.

    But, happy trolling!

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Differences by KalvinB · · Score: 1

      Obviously Linux has no real road map or it'd be "finished" and ready for the mass market already. It's not. MS accomplished in 8 years (refering to the parent post which you obviously missed) which Linux has failed to come close to accomplishing in 12-13 (again, referencing the parent post which you obviously missed).

      Windows has been "finished" (as in finished all the function goals defined in the road map and ready for the mass market) since Windows 3.0 and that was long long ago.

      "Very few people at Microsoft have the ability to look at all the code"

      Who cares? Why waste time looking at code which has no relevance to what you're doing?

      "It has been shown time and again that a programmer is orders of magnitude more efficient when they are deeply interested in what they are doing"

      I guess MS workers are just more interested in what they're doing then. How else do you explain Linux having been around fot 50% more time and not being even close to done?

      "Secondly, MS hires programmers and stick them where they are needed. This does not necessarily mean they are placed where their talents lie, and their interest is rarely taken into account."

      I guess you must have been hired by them at one time then.

      "But, happy trolling!"

      Projection isn't healthy.

      "I have to accomplish real work with my Linux box, work that can't be done on an XP box."

      Care to enlighten us on what that work is? My guess is a server environment where a fully functioning, mass mass market ready OS isn't needed.

      Ben

    2. Re:Differences by Tony · · Score: 1

      Care to enlighten us on what that work is? My guess is a server environment where a fully functioning, mass mass market ready OS isn't needed.

      Dude, MS-Windows XP has proven to be a mass mass market OS for gaming; and simple word processing; and conveyer of various worms, viruses, and trojans. Although it's more stable than MS-Windows 2000, as a server OS it still requires rebooting, or it becomes unstable after just a few weeks.

      I guess MS workers are just more interested in what they're doing then. How else do you explain Linux having been around fot 50% more time and not being even close to done?

      This is silly. Saying Linux has been around for 50% more time is both misleading and incorrect. Claiming the current iteration of Linux is like the version 1.0 kernel is like saying MS-Windows XP is based on MS-Windows 3.0.

      And you *still* haven't outlined the ways in which Linux is unfinished. What is your definition of "finished?" If you mean, "as in finished all the function goals defined in the road map and ready for the mass market," to which road map do you refer? And, how do you know Linux has not met it's road map by that definition?

      BTW, there *is* a road map for Linux. Before every development branch, Linus announces his goals for the development kernel. Yes, he accepts other goals, as well; but they do not get incorporated unless they fit with his goals.

      In fact, I would dare say Linux has clearer, better-defined goals than MS-Windows. For instance, what is the road map of Longhorn?

      For a taste of the Linux 2.5 road map as seen at the outset, see this article at LWN.

      I guess you must have been hired by them at one time then.

      Nope. I've hated Microsoft's business tactics and shoddy software for years (since 1991, to be exact). Wouldn't work for them. But I know a lot of people who *do* work for them. I know that MS makes technical decisions based on marketing requirements; I know they curse the release schedule, because *they* don't like shipping broken products (which a couple of them have called both MS-Win2k and XP).

      Care to enlighten us on what that work is? My guess is a server environment where a fully functioning, mass mass market ready OS isn't needed.

      Simple. We are using X terminals that are about 9 years old. I'm installing some more computing capacity in the server room, because our users have outstripped the current set of servers.

      How do I upgrade the computing power of 300 X Terminals? Add a single computer. Those X terminals can now run applications seamlessly and transperantly off the new server; the users don't even realize there *has* been an upgrade. (And, yes, this is a full GUI system. Don't let the term "terminal" throw you off.)

      And it sure beats the hell out of upgrading and maintaining 300 PCs based on MS-Windows.

      Sure, MS-Windows might be user-oriented. But Unix is *business* oriented, and has out-performed and out-gunned MS-Windows for 15 years now.

      Now, here's where you'll say, "But MS-Windows is installed on more desktops, making it the best!" This is, in essence, the basis of your argument already (by calling MS-Windows "Mass Market"). But big deal? Budwieser is the best-selling beer. Christina Aguelera (sp) outsells Radiohead. The Ford Pinto was once the best-selling car.

      What's this prove? That often, the best-selling article is guilded crap. For those of us who have experienced the beautifully-veneered shackles of MS-Windows after using operating systems that are both powerful and flexible, the mass-appeal of MS-Windows is exactly like drowning in Budwieser.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  196. "Bill Gates on Linux" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "They have Bill Gates for Linux now?"

    -or-

    "Yeah, but does he run L[u|i]n[i|u]x?"

  197. Repost of an AC by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1, Interesting
    I found an interesting AC post that people seem to have overlooked. If only I had mod points right now:

    Bill Gates just doesn't "get it" does he? Microsoft doesn't push ANY new technology in terms of actual innovation. Now if he means "push" in the sense of a drug dealer, then he's being truthful.

    Can you mount an ISO image with a plain vanilla instllation of Windows XP? No. But you can with the BSDs and GNU/Linux. It's built into most ditros as support for the ISO filesystem and loop devices.

    Can you set up encrypted secure tunnels for specific ports, execute remote commands (encrypted again), and also transport remote desktop displays over the same mecahnism that does the tunnels and remote commands in a default installation of Windows XP? No. But you can with any OS that supports OpenSSH. Again, most distros come with this by default.

    All the Windows XP wankers have been railing on about the Fast User Switching that Windows XP introduced. But you know what? We *nix users have had this feature for over a decade. Both at the command prompt and within the GUI by way of virtual terminals. I can have many users logged into their own desktops on the same machine with apps running and easily switch between them using Ctrl-Alt-F(n). Nothing new to us.

    And as far as Remote desktop goes, *nix users have again had this since the earliest versions of X. Again over a decade. X was designed with this in mind from the start. And with Xnest, you can actually run a different user's desktop within your desktop on the same machine. You CAN'T do that with Windows XP.

    Microsoft just got the "RUNAS" command. Hmmm... anyone familiar with su? And now with GUI alternatives, *nix has innovated much farther than Windows has. And still kept security job one.

    What about the idea of not using drive letters and instead mounting to a folder. Windows 2000 introduced this. But Linux, the BSDs and other *nixes have had this from the very start.

    VNC? Still came from the *nix world first since it is based completely on X. And we've had it longer than Microsoft.

    What about things like esd (The Enlightened Sound server)? While you can share a remote desktop in Windows and even share the sound associate with it, you can't easily reconfig it to FOLLOW you from one machine to another one. I use VNC and esd together so I can log into a running desktop at any machine on my network and the audio will follow me. Again, how long has Open Source had this? for almost a decade (the lifespan of esd). Does Windows have this feature? No.

    Need I point out anything else? I'm sorry, but the innovations all seem to come from open source first and then Windows plays catch up 5-10 years later.

  198. I wanna see the source - by ColeNielsen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The day I beleive that Microsoft is innovating is the day that I look at the source code and it's proven to me that they are not utilizing open-source code in their OS... and other products...

    To further illustrate, how is it that they develop support for a new technology, it's buggy as hell, it sucks. The LINUX kernel begins to support it and it's rock-solid as hell and if it's not there's a patch available... The next windows version, the support for the same technologies is rock-solid and stable...

    They've back-stabbed everyone else they've dealt with... why not steal from the only OS which COULD wipe them out of the OS market?

    1. Re:I wanna see the source - by JFMulder · · Score: 1

      Come on, ever tried to put a Ferari engine into a Civic? (I don't mean to compare the quality of the engines, just the way you "plug" them in the car.) Well you can't. (unless you do some pretty clever engeniering, but that's not the point here) Linux and Windows kernel are like apple and oranges. Both are fruit, but they're not the same. So you can't just rip stuff from your competitor, since a lot of stuff doesn't work the same under Linux and Windows at the Kernel level.

  199. If anybody cares, the NT boot sector is O/S code.. by Saint+Stephen · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I was there till recently, I asked for and got read-only access to the NT codebase. I was dicking around with Bochs, reading the Intel arch. manual. To kind of see what was going on, I found and read the code for the NT boot sector that bootstraps from real-mode to protected mode, and then continues in the "real OS"

    That file is dated 1987, OS/2 1.0 joint code with Microsoft and IBM. It must be the last OS/2 code still in there. I dunno, it just struck me as funny as hell to find code from 1987 OS/2 driving the WinXP/Server2003 boot sector!

    Make some jokes or something. That sure is what we in the south call a "Shit-Eatin' Grin" ol' Billy is wearing. He'll give you the HEEBIE JEEBIES.

  200. Bah by stephenry · · Score: 2, Funny

    Is it me, or does Bill Gates look like he's doing a bad William Shatner impression?

  201. OS2 isn't DEAD, just dosen't MATTER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Sure, OS2 isn't dead, but in the eyes of Microsoft, it certainly is, as it will not provide any competetion to their operating systems in the future.

    Linux, on the other hand, still IS, and is a extremely large competetor to Microsoft, at least in the server arena.

    Overall, the opinions of Billy Gates on this issue are rather baseless, comparing Linux to OS/2 and the like. Two key differences are that Microsoft actually participated in the creation of OS/2, and it was not open source.

  202. Microsoft's "Innovation" Model by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    I've noticed over the years that Microsoft has this tendency to do any given application just enough better to crush all competition when it's included for "free" with the OS, then rest on their laurels until something better comes along. They seem to do as little as work as possible to stay ahead of everyone else.

    They concentrate on one individual comeptitor at a time and bring them down. Or they just buy them up. If you look at all the companies they've crushed, there is a very linear and serial pattern to the whole thing. Anyone competing with Microsoft has to realize that they're going to have to run to stay ahead of Microsoft's game. Even if they do, most of the time they just end up being bought out anyway.

    I can only think of one piece of technology that Microsoft developed all on their own, and that's "Microsoft Bob," which was quite possibly the biggest flop in computing history.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  203. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by mcgroarty · · Score: 2, Informative
    It was a very short "interview".

    If you look off to the side, you'll see links to the other parts of this interview. There were a few questions on each of ten subjects. I was acutally thinking they'd scored a pretty long interview.

    Who exactly conducted this interview? Think about this for a second: if you got to interview the richest man in the world, wouldn't you want your name on it?

    Many publications won't let authors publicly claim credit for the bigger stories. There's a tendency for guys being assigned the hot stories to become stars in their own right and leave the paper, letting the name create an asset for the competition. There's also a standard of not crediting interviews where the questions were put together by a full staff and only one person was actually delivering the questions.

  204. Why NT only supported OS/2 1.x by brokeninside · · Score: 1
    After OS/2 1.x was released as a joint project between Microsoft and IBM, these two companies began work on two other joint projects. The first of these was to be geared toward workstations and became OS/2 2.x. The second of these was going to be geared toward network servers and eventually became Windows NT 3.0 which is why NT's first release was 3.0.

    As the OS/2 2.x API was not stable when work began on NT, there was no good way for Microsoft to include OS/2 2.x support during original development. By the time IBM actually released OS/2 2.x, Microsoft and IBM had already went their seperate ways so there was no business reason for Microsoft to include compatability with a competing operating system.

    1. Re:Why NT only supported OS/2 1.x by cloudscout · · Score: 1

      Partially correct... NT only supported 16-bit character-based OS/2 applications.

      The first version of Windows NT was version 3.1, though... and that decision had nothing to do with OS/2 lineage. It had to do with the fact that the current version of 16-bit DOS-based Windows at the time was 3.1 and they wanted NT to appear 'current'.

    2. Re:Why NT only supported OS/2 1.x by brokeninside · · Score: 1
      I never claimed that NT ran anything other than 16 bit OS/2 apps. I'm not certain what you're attempting to correct on that point.

      As for Windows NT 3.0, the time line at Sagegis states that in 1991, "Microsoft changes the name of the operating system shared with IBM called OS/2 v3.0 to Windows NT 3.0." Windows NT 3.0 was exhibited to the general public in August of 1991 at the Windows Developers Conference.

      So there actually was a good reason for Microsoft to have started Windows NT versioning at 3.0.

  205. doesn't matter by garyrich · · Score: 0, Troll

    "Yeah and Bill definitely said that."

    He didn't need to say it - he did it. He took a processor that could address 1MB and chopped 384k off the top for hardware RAM/ROM use. To this he added an operating system that couldn't address non contiguous memory addresses. It was his design decision and he needs to get over it.

    It could have been done other ways and the implicit assumption in the design decision is that 640K is all anyone will ever need.

    --
    -- your Web browser is Ronald Reagan
    1. Re:doesn't matter by zog+karndon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Get it right. IBM chopped 384K off the top. There were several other manufacturers (Victor, Zenith, Tandy) who had MS-DOS implementations with 900K usable memory.

      Microsoft didn't spec the IBM PC, and IBM didn't spec MS-DOS.

      Furthermore, since MS-DOS didn't provide a memory allocator, it's stupid to say that MS-DOS can't address non-contiguous memory.

    2. Re:doesn't matter by GeekyGuru · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm no fan of Bill Gates, or his buggy software... but one has to realize that at the time, 16bits was all you had to work with. That gives you 65,536 byte addresses. It took some time for "cost effective" 32 bit processors to hit the mainstream. I think they did a fairly good job considering the hardware they had to work with as well as considering they had to make it affordable. The big problem was with all of the backwards compatibility Bill insisted on for his stupid 16bit Visual Basic programs when designing the successor of Win 3.11. Add in the monopolistic business practices, and you have someone that most people can hate and loathe... lol ;)

    3. Re:doesn't matter by El · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're implying Bill Gates actually wrote MS-DOS -- he didn't. He bought the short-sighted OS from someone else.

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    4. Re:doesn't matter by GreyPoopon · · Score: 4, Informative
      I'm no fan of Bill Gates, or his buggy software... but one has to realize that at the time, 16bits was all you had to work with. That gives you 65,536 byte addresses.

      Although the rest of your comment is accurate, I wanted to point out that the number of bits the processor is capable of wasn't the problem. In fact, to the external world, the 8088 processor only handled 8 bits, although internally it processed data in 16 bit chunks. The important fact was the number of address lines. There were 20, but due to the way the system was implemented, the upper four were rendered unavailable. I think someone else pointed out that there were other 8088-based systems that had 900+KB of memory available.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    5. Re:doesn't matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There were several other manufacturers (Victor, Zenith, Tandy) who had MS-DOS implementations with 900K usable memory.

      What fun would that have been? I would never have had to reorder the config.sys and autoexec.bat to load in the optimal order so I could get 612K free to play games!

    6. Re:doesn't matter by operagost · · Score: 1

      That VB crap is ironic, since one of the reasons Microsoft and IBM parted ways with OS/2 is because Microsoft didn't want to make OS/2 run on the 286. IBM insisted, because when work began on OS/2 that promise was made to their customers who had invested a lot of money in the 286.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    7. Re:doesn't matter by ghjm · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree that it's wrong to say that MS-DOS can't address non-continuous memory. It clearly can, otherwise why go to the trouble of creating all those memory holes in the top 384k?

      However, you are wrong to state that MS-DOS didn't provide a memory allocator. It certainly did, otherwise how would it load programs? If you don't believe me, look up INT 21 AH=0x48, 0x49 and 0x4A.

      -Graham

    8. Re:doesn't matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like he stole CP/M and made a few minor tweaks to it, so that he could sell a cheaper OS to IBM without doing any real programming, but also without being sued.

    9. Re:doesn't matter by GeekyGuru · · Score: 1

      roger that. I never worked on the 8088 based systems (cut my teeth on 386 and above)...

    10. Re:doesn't matter by Q+Who · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, since MS-DOS didn't provide a memory allocator [...]

      Uh, are you on crack?

    11. Re:doesn't matter by Trepalium · · Score: 5, Informative
      The x86 processors used a segment:offset addressing scheme, and could address a total of 1 megabyte of memory. The mapping of addresses to physical addresses was simply (segment*16)+offset (this actually gave a maximum addressable range of 1MB + 65516 bytes. This additional <64k range became known as the HMA in DOS 5+). IBM wisely reserved the upper 384kb of addressable memory for expansion, BIOS and video memory. For a system that was originally shipped with only 64 to 128kb of RAM, it left lots of room for expansion, and the EMS systems used that reserved memory area to provide a 'window' into the add-in memory. However, with most video cards occupying the region at A000h, it was impossible to use more than 640K of conventional memory.

      For the record, the 8088 had an 8-bit bus, 16-bit registers, and 20-bits of address space. The 8088 is to the 8086 as the 80386SX was to the 80386DX, and few people claim that the 80386SX was a 16-bit chip, otherwise we'd be claiming that current consumer CPUs are anywhere from 64-bit to 512-bit.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    12. Re:doesn't matter by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      I can pull 637K WITH both CD and mouse drivers on my old 486! (OK, so it's got 16MB total RAM, but there's still only 640K conventional...) It's called using MemMaker for Windows performance (aka loading everything high). BTW, IBM had a machine that could go over 640 conventional: the PCjr could be hacked for 768KB conventional. What version of DOS did you have? What drivers were you loading? On my Win95 laptop, I would simply boot nothing (no drivers, not that it had a CD) to get roughly 625K.

    13. Re:doesn't matter by zog+karndon · · Score: 2, Informative

      MS-DOS 2.0 and above had a memory allocator. MS-DOS 1.0 didn't. It made writing TSR programs (particularly TSRs that did disk access) rather interesting.

      As someone who was actually around for MS-DOS 1.0, it wasn't at all clear for 2-3 years that:

      (a) The IBM PC would be a big seller, or that
      (b) MS-DOS (as opposed to, say, CP/M 86, UCSD Pascal, or bare-metal programming) would be the winning programming environment.

      The best-selling IBM PC word processor for the first couple of years had no OS at all - it ran on the bare metal.

  206. can't be serious by danZenie · · Score: 1

    i don't see the big deal here. if daddy gates decided to say that linux is a serious competitor, then the rest of the idiots (media, corp. world, bush) will say the same and will want to take a closer look. its a great strategy. if daddy gates decided to say that linux is nothing but a mear mortal pizza shit OS, then the rest of the idiots will say windows is the best OS out there. But is it really an OS? may be an SOS after you get DoSed fort not taking port 445 seriously will answer your question.

    --
    You need people like me so you can point your fuckin fingers and say, "That's the bad guy." So what that make you? Good?
  207. What about his hair by krray · · Score: 1

    You know -- with a few billion dollars I'd think he'd be able to get a hair cut that doesn't look like somebody put a bowl on his head and cut away.

    1. Re:What about his hair by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's his lucky haircut. I bet he thinks it gets him the ladies.

      Nobody's told him it's actually the sacks of 100 dollar bills he uses as beanbag chairs.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  208. La vie en rose by TheLastUser · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bill's view of the world is predictably MS centric.

    Who cares what some corporate director thinks of Linux? Linux and OSS do not have to compete in the market as they are not of the market. They cannot be bought or sold, or controlled, driven out of business.

    OSS is not another Pepsi for the masses, its for coders, and people that want an OS that was created to be useful, not filled with stupid sh*t thought up by a focus group.

    Bill goes on about all of the hot new "technologies" that MS is creating, all with suitably meaningless code names, "longhorn", "lance", "infinity", "big sleek cat like thing". Who knows if any of these things will be useful. Most MS technologies seem to be focused on locking their customers in to their platform rather than providing any useful functionity. Paladium, Doc scripting, passport, the paperclip, need I say more?

    Commercial software is increasingly becoming a platform to get you to buy other stuff. Personally, I get enough advertising stuffed through my eyeballs already. Its like movie theatres, remember when you used to go to a movie pay your $2.50 and NOT be showen 30m of commercials before the movie started?

    In a nut shell, commercial software producers think a great enhancement is a talking paperclip whereas OSS producers think a popup blocker is a good feature.

    Just be happy, and grateful to OSS developers, that you have a choice.

    1. Re:La vie en rose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Most MS technologies seem to be focused on locking their customers in to their platform rather than providing any useful functionity. Paladium, Doc scripting, passport, the paperclip, need I say more?"

      Yeah. How about how the paperclip locks you into a MS platform? How many companies cannot convert their systems because of the paperclip?

    2. Re:La vie en rose by TheLastUser · · Score: 1

      Its a Svengalli mind control thing. That little paperclip owns you, man! :-)

    3. Re:La vie en rose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you too.

  209. Of course by warnerve · · Score: 1

    Of course he is going to say that. He is supposed to be out there championing Microsoft, it is his corporate responsibility. Would you expect something less from any other CEO?

  210. No linux astrturfing, huh? by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Do you remember the "Team OS/2" astroturfing? The Linux community doesn't even need to do stuff like that. It's truly grassroots, even as it's attracted the help of the big names, including OS/2's father, IBM.

    Whaddya call /. if not one big linux astroturfing society? And I say that as a linux user.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:No linux astrturfing, huh? by Bandman · · Score: 0, Troll

      astroturfing is only the fake zealicy. Most of the people here on slashdot are actually that hyped up about...whatever the fad of the moment is.

    2. Re:No linux astrturfing, huh? by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      Whaddya call /. if not one big linux astroturfing society?

      We're zealots here, not astroturfers ;-)

      The funny thing is, I've heard that a majority of Slashdot readers are still running Windows, what do you make of that? My theory is: running it isn't the same as liking it.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
  211. mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we got a smart one here! and can done spell right!

  212. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1
    hehe, they asked or stated (some weren't questions) only 5 things. They left out about 40 - 50 of the other questions like -

    USA TODAY: The general geek population on slashdot seems to think you are a complete megalomaniac and make crummy software, how would your respond to that?

    Bill: You have to look at this in a cost analysis understanding of innovative perspectives on the issue of technological returns on intellectual profit margins related to personal benefits surrounding the whole issue. Besides they are just a bunch of geeks, who cares what they think anyways?

    USA TODAY: How do really expect to out sell free software?

    Bill: You are really missing the point, windows is has the innovative process oriented goal approach to creating productive applications for developing real and lasting investment based and task oreinted production models, Linux doesn't come anywhere close to that kind of obfiscated dispersmentary monetary returns, it's like saying OS/2 is better than windows.

    USA TODAY: Are you really out of touch with reality, or do you think people like buggy, expensive software?

    Bill: If you look at it from our perspective, there really aren't any bugs in our software, we should be politically correct here and call them "underappreciated features lacking proper activation evironments". For example, let's say you are writing a really scathing email about your boss and he comes up behind you while you are writing, you would really appreciate a good BSOD at that moment, but most of the time the BSOD is activated at inopportune times, like when you are almost finished with a 300 page report. If users really understood the value of a good BSOD, they would use it more wisely. But because of the general lack of understanding of the purpose of the BSOD, it's mistakenly refered to as a "bug", when it's not a bad thing at all.

    USA Today: What about the rampant virus spreading and security holes in Outlook?

    Bill: Need I remind you that if it wasn't for Microsoft, there wouldn't be the booming Anti-Virus software market like there is today, you can thank us personally for that.

  213. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by David+Chappell · · Score: 1

    Another odd thing about the interview is that the questions are very poorly written. For example:

    USA TODAY: There has been some criticism of the way in which you're been competing against Linux, and in The New York Times, assuming it was accurate, reporting that the e-mails in Europe talked about undercutting Linux at any cost, per se. How do you react to that, and where do you cross the line of that going back to some of the behaviors that surfaced in the Justice Department case?

    I had to read this several times before I could I could parse it. I think it means something like:

    USA TODAY: There has been some criticism of the way in which you're been competing against Linux. The New York Times has reported that e-mails in Europe [between Microsoft executives?] talked about undercutting Linux at any cost. Do you have a response to this report? How far can Microsoft go without returning to the anti-competitive behavior condemned in the Justice Department case?

    It sounds like the interviewer is writing the question while he is talking and is stumbling. I think this is probably an indication of a lack of preparation. But, another explanation is that Microsoft wrote the questions. Their spokesmen often speak in this almost incomprehensible manner.

  214. This part really cracks me up! by jcr · · Score: 1

    Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface? Who else is going to push that forward? Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface?

    Umm, maybe Apple?

    Seriously, InkWell and Apple's speech technologies are way ahead of the Dark Side.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  215. Don't forget Clippy! by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    I'm quite sure that I'd never seen an animated paper clip spew improbable advice at me before the MS implementation.

    Seriously though, MS has probably spent more on market research for regular Joe user than any other big name technology company. Several others had good ideas, but I don't think many come close to funding the amount of pure research in user interfaces.

    Of cource, there are rumors that they fund all that research for the same reason that the US pays former Soviet scientists--busy work to keep them from working for their enemies.

    --
    science is a religion
    1. Re:Don't forget Clippy! by david614 · · Score: 1

      Clippy?!!! How about Bob! D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
  216. What 's the NEXT Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Five years ago, such an interview would not even have mentioned Linux, and people like us would say
    'but in the future you will have to deal with Linux, why are you ignoring it?'

    Does anyone have suggestions for what is not mentioned in this interview but that will have to be mentioned in 5 years?

    Or is the open source paradigm a big enough change that there is nothing similar on the horizon?

    1. Re:What 's the NEXT Linux by Osrin · · Score: 1

      Five years ago it was all about how thin clients would destroy Microsoft. Larry was announcing his network devices and trying to work out how to migrate the rest of Oracle onto them.

    2. Re:What 's the NEXT Linux by Angry+Pixie · · Score: 1

      I'll take a stab at this.

      I don't see a lot of new ground being broken paradigm-wise. We've got open source, closed source, and licensed source models, and then there are probably small variations of each.

      There will always be a hot new OS out there. Maybe Amiga is destined to make a comeback in a major way. Linux could very well evolve so much that it no longer resembles UNIX at all. Maybe it already has?

      I think the OpenBeOS project is a good contender. It gives consumers a nice alternative to Windows while preserving much of the benefits of Windows. I really hope to see something good come from it.

      Within the Windows community there is a growing number of developers and consumers who want smaller more efficient apps, so the next paradigm in desktop computing could be a regressive movement back towards when applications were less bloated. I think this crowd is maybe too eclectic to be a powerful influence on the market though, considering the hardware market will continue improving system performance.

      http://www.tinyapps.org/ is a good place to learn more about this.

      A colleage of mine calls this current era in computing, lifestyle computing. We're not bound to the desktop, and we use our computers as extension to our social life with a big emphasis on multimedia. I'm not sure how this differs from that last era in computing. It seems about the same, but the idea is that Apple understands that the OS and the computer should be industrial designed to be accessories to our lives. Computers should be more consistent with the way we behave socially and psychologically. I suppose for Microsoft this means they will need to copy more from Apple than ever before; or maybe it will mean that Microsoft will need to abandon the desktop metaphor and go wth something else, like Lifestreams.

      Of course, we might consider that the new paradigms in computing are being built on mobile computing platforms. So, while desktop computing will remain on the same path - faster processor, more memory, etc; we'll see more cool developments on PDAs, laptops, and cell phones. I myself am waiting for cyberdecks (a la R. Talsorian's Cyberpunk 2020) ;)

  217. LCLR? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    I think we need to rename the CLR.
    LCLR = Lowest Common Language Runtime

    The thing is that for languages to work under CLR they have to be changed (sometimes quite dramatically) to fit into the object oriented environment that CLR is. The only language that fits cleanly is the new one they wrote JAV^h^h^hC# (yeah, cheap shot).

    The point about anything compiling to Java byte-code, but not well, applies to most other languages that work within the CLR. (Just look at how much pain it causes VB "programmers".)

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  218. Wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    ...does that mean that Bill G has regeneration powers?

    1. Re:Wait... by ThrasherTT · · Score: 0

      Exactly. He needs to be chopped into little pieces and burned with flame or acid in order to be put down. That's why the DoJ ruling isn't going to matter... they forgot the "flame or acid" part!

      --

      All Your Memory Are Belong To Java
    2. Re:Wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poison works well too.. how about a pre-emptive cloudkill?

    3. Re:Wait... by ThrasherTT · · Score: 1

      Sweet! Maybe it would take out some minions, as well...

      --

      All Your Memory Are Belong To Java
    4. Re:Wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the easiest way to kill a troll in 3e is by drowning it. Knocking it unconcious is pretty easy, then you just dunk its head in water. No save when unconcious.

  219. We... no, them by Rand+Race · · Score: 1

    OS/2 was IBM's product...

    We bet on the 16-bit PC.

    So OS/2 was IBMs and Microsoft "bet" on 16 bit processors?

    This is wierd, why can't the guy give and take credit where it's due? OS/2 was IBM AND M$'s baby and IBM came to M$ well after they started making 16 bit 8086s.

    --
    Insanity is the last line of defence for the master diplomat. But you have to lay the groundwork early.
  220. huh? by geoff+lane · · Score: 1

    What on earth is Bill doing anyway?

    By talking about Linux at all he is ensuring that there will be secondary articles appearing all over the world mentioning him and Linux in the same paragraph.

    Perhaps he's been using the same PR company as SCO :-)

  221. hang on there! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Xine & Mplayer are great players but do they do anything new and
    "innovative"? "

    I'll answer for MPlayer because I use it. MPlayer is probably the best media player out there right now. And it is innovative too. The following are features that I found are unique in MPlayer (note Xine might have this stuff too as they added some of MPlayer's stuff):

    1. Plays every single format available under *one* package. The exceptions are that WMV9 decoding is slightly broken yet, and I haven't tested the Real codecs at much depth, but I think all the Real codecs do work too.
    2. Allows stream recording for all formats that can stream over a network.
    3. It is also bundled with an easy to use encoder.
    4. It supports many video/audio filters for playback that are unique for a media player. Other players don't have anything more than an option to scale a video. They are very useful.
    5. It supports an open text format subtitle system, which is easy to manipulate.
    6. It supports a type of selected playback format very useful for dvr setups, selective dvd/movie playback which you don't have to reencode it for. Fairly powerful feature in MPlayer.
    7. It is optmized for many CPUs allowing it to be very useful on P1 systems on up. It is the fastest player I've ever seen.
    8. It supports many platforms, allow you to deploy anywhere at minimal costs. A win32 port is in progress. Most media players don't support more than one or two.
    9. It supports virtually every important audio and video output devices. Select from vesa modes to vidix, to sdl, to framebuffer, to X11, xv, mac, directx, and on and on. You can pretty much use it anywhere.
    10. Supports TV tuners.
    11. This all comes together in one package under 4 Meg in size!

    Just look at MPlayer closely, and you'll find much much more stuff. MPlayer seriously has done more and included more in one package than any other player has ever even tried to attempt. I call that innovative.

    Now the other guy talking about mixing channels? Most distros come with something like that enabled already with default install. Sure if you're rolling you're own alsa you gotta enable it somehow, but come on! Nobody without knowlegde in the area should roll their own. Most people should use a distro which does everything here that anyone would expect.

    1. Re:hang on there! by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      Again, I'd say it's not really innovative. I use mplayer myself, but none of those features are innovations among themselves, it emulates the functionality of other products under one product which is a really nice thing but not really innovative. Maybe I just have a narrower view of innovation than you do.

    2. Re:hang on there! by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Well the really good thing I like with mplayer and xine is that they allow you to play any chapter on any DVD without having to go through the stupid menu system someone has designed to work with IR remotes.

      Also mplayer/mencoder is a one-stop-shop for a lot of neat things: want to watch TV in a text console? you've got a choice of AAlib for the fun factor and of direct FB access if you don't like X. You want to record and encode this show in real time? there you go. You want to backup this DVD onto a CD? no problem.

      Mplayer is a neat piece of software that brings nearly all multimedia under the one heading.

  222. Re:GUI into tree? WTF??? by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

    I'll bite.

    And that explains why you can compile the network device drivers, the graphics drivers, an HTTP listener, and all that other good stuff into the kernel. Don't get me wrong, I agree that the desktop should be distinct from the Kernel, but I think that you may be the incompetent AC who doesn't know the meaning of "Monolithic."

    I think that it would be wise to write a gui kernel module, however, in order for the Linux desktop to be viable. X is good in its own right, and will always be there for anyone to use, but the Windows desktop does not have the whole client/server protocol going on. If you want converts from Windows, you need to give them something that is snappy and quick, even if you let it sit idle for 40 minutes. A lightweight GUI that has compatible libraries for GTK, GTK+, QT, and all the others would really be a threat on the desktop.

    --
    You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
  223. YOU are being the twit pisser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the poster you replied to seems to have a lot more insight, and foresight, than you.

    See, AC, when the term "kernel" first became commonplace when referring to the core of an OS, it contained the bare minimum of functionality for a what we know as a kernel today. Resource allocation and appropriation, low-level functionality, apportionment and hardware interfacing, core memory and system security, etc. But as time went on, more and more was added to the various kernels of the day, and Linux contains a LOT of stuff that used to be externel to the kernel, so to speak (in seperate program files in the user-land).

    It's very likely that this trend will continue. Several attempts and microkernels have been made, but the only ones that have been successful can only really be called pseudomicrokernels. When the entire system is contained in the kernel (right from hardware interfaces to GUI and core apps) this will probably be known as a "superkernel". Far fetched? Not at all. I thought it was basic logic to be able to deduce that this is the direction that modern computer science is headed. YOU are the twit pisser here, AC!

  224. To Microsoft's credit... by Patrick · · Score: 1
    What is Microsoft's true impression of Linux as both an OS and as a competitor?

    They understand it, much better than you realize. We got our first glimpse of that with the Halloween memos. Now MS has an entire group devoted to fighting Linux. They have competitive strategy memos, presentations, and an eerily accurate understanding of why people develop and use Linux.

    How clued in are the top-level people about the capabilities of Linux?

    Very much so, I'm sure. How hard is it to get some underling -- an underling whose job it is to figure out how to compete with Linux anyway -- to download and install Red Hat Linux 9 and then tell you about it?

    Will their strategy of ignoring it and spreading FUD change

    Give them some credit here! The FUD is mostly gone: when's the last time you heard MS saying that "Linux is just a toy OS" or "There's no high-quality support available for Linux?" MS is competing now on features, on total cost of ownership, and (if illegally) on price. They are giving their software away cheaply or for free in colleges, grade schools, and underdeveloped markets. They're also (rightfully?) trying to quell any legislation that would mandate free software.

    1. Re:To Microsoft's credit... by kevmit · · Score: 1
      ...How hard is it to get some underling -- an underling whose job it is to figure out how to compete with Linux anyway -- to download and install Red Hat Linux 9 and then tell you about it?
      This reminds me of the JITB commercial where Jack sends this yuppie yes-man cube-dweller to Philadelphia to "learn all he can about Philly Cheese Steaks" and the guy comes back this totally de-evolved mullet-sporting beastie-boy wannabe spouting stuff like "Yo Jack-EEEE! I soaked up Philly like a SPONGE!"
      I'm trying to envision what evolutionary mutations would occur in a Micro-serf who was told by Bill Gates to "Learn all you can about Linux".
  225. OS/2 is the future. by LWATCDR · · Score: 3, Informative

    I sat in a room with a few hundred people way back when and heard Bill say that OS/2 was the future. I wonder if he will be proven right once again :)

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  226. Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ah, the ol' "largest target" falacy.

    IIS enjoys only one half the market share of Apache for web servers. Meanwhile IIS enjoys the majority of actual hacking events.

    Why? Monocultured soft target. Look at Nimda and Code Red they're working on the hopes that you have your files located in C:\winnt\system32\...

    Easy target. Pushover even. But NOT the largest target.

    Your Linux scenario neglects a few things about priviledges needed to open up ports and the like. You also need to give that program execute priviledges and hope that (in your scenario) they are using the /home directory structure instead of something like /usr/home or who cares/knows.

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    1. Re:Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by Shippy · · Score: 1

      IIS enjoys only one half the market share of Apache for web servers. Meanwhile IIS enjoys the majority of actual hacking events.

      Because they're Microsoft. They're still the largest target because they're made out to be the bad guy. So people target them more than Apache.

      Why? Monocultured soft target. Look at Nimda and Code Red they're working on the hopes that you have your files located in C:\winnt\system32\...

      And I'm sure if I rooted your Apache box, I could depend on your password files and other important files sitting in /etc. From there, I could test many standard locations for Apache and other software.

      Your Linux scenario neglects a few things about priviledges needed to open up ports and the like. You also need to give that program execute priviledges and hope that (in your scenario) they are using the /home directory structure instead of something like /usr/home or who cares/knows.

      Just open up a high numbered port. Many times, those are not locked down. You don't have to open a privileged port. You just make sure you send out to the proper port on the server side.

      If a Joe Sixpack user receives a binary from a friend, the point I'm trying to make is that they may very well run it (because people still do...), so they will add the necessary execute privileges. If you read my explanation, running it was implicit task. Maybe they're not using /home? These are trivial arguments. It's easy to check environment variables, parse finger output, look around the filesystem, take your pick. There are tons of methods that could be used to find the home directory. Be creative, you're supposed to be a malicious hacker, here. :)

      --
      -Shippy
    2. Re:Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The contention was that Windows was getting hacked because it was the biggest target. Well, IIS isn't the biggest target and it's still getting hacked.

      And I'm sure if I rooted your Apache box, I could depend on your password files and other important files sitting in /etc.

      You can certainly expect to find some files in /etc. The big if in your scenario is rooting the box in the first place. Was there any particular 'sploit that you planned to use or are you going to just keep trying things? And, oh yeah, what if I'm running Apache on Windows? Not much in the way of /etc files then...

      The point is that in the case of Apache it's an application running on a whole range of OS's. Additionally, it can run the web server with reduced or non-existant user permissions so if you hack it you're not going to get anywhere.

      While there are certainly methods that can be used to perform OS typing, exploit searches, and the like the issue is size and time. A good Linux worm is going to take too much time to write unless you can find one vulnerable service that is running everywhere (BIND hacks, etc.).

      MS OSes get hacked because they're EASY tagets, not because they're LARGE targets.

      --
      --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
    3. Re:Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by Shippy · · Score: 1

      MS OSes get hacked because they're EASY tagets, not because they're LARGE targets.

      That's why I'm excited to see how W2k3 Server holds up. So far, there haven't been any bulletins raised for the base OS or IIS 6.0 that I know of. There has been one for MediaPlayer and IE (and the IE one involved a feature not used by default on the hardened security version found on W2k3).

      Microsoft becoming better at security will not only be good for the Internet as a whole, but it will keep the Apache and Linux people on their toes creating even more cool stuff.

      --
      -Shippy
    4. Re:Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

      Except I chrooted my Apache server so that it can't see anything outside of its own directory...so you the most you will do is delete the web site. But wait, the Apache server was running as a user who doesn't have anything but read access. Damn, looks like the only things you could do is mirror my web site.

      Thanks for the free load-balancing. :)

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
    5. Re:Then why does IIS keep getting hacked?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MS OSes are big targets due to sloppy users (no firewalls etc) and alot of third party software.

  227. It's actually a King Missile track by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Called, appropriately, "Dick"

    On their "Mystical Shit/Fluting on the Hump" album.

  228. and yet by tacokill · · Score: 1

    and yet he still commands - BY FAR - the largest part of the desktop market as well as the most popular browser.

    I'm betting he gets at least part of it, don't you think?

  229. software definition of dead by geekoid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    does not mean no longer used. It means it has had its usage peaked. Linux, not dead, still ging into new markets and aquiring new users.

    Windows. this is interesting, it ets 'new users' but that means the same old users buying upgrades.

    It is moving into new markets, but slowly because it is not designed well for low level usage.

    I almost wnat to use the term 'undead'.

    Unix is dying. No not a troll. There are fewer users every year, and not a lot of new markets, because in has already penetrated all markets.
    Mostly being killed by Linux.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:software definition of dead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unix is dying. ... Mostly being killed by Linux.

      Yeah, and we need to get this over and done with so we can move onto bigger targets

  230. Re:I am a fan of Gates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sir, your Aphex Twin comment has intrigued me; how is RDJ one of the "greatest business thinkers of all time"?

  231. WHo else can get speech? Huh? by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2, Informative
    Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface?

    Umm. To my knowledge, windoze still does not have speach enabled UI or apps. OS/2 Warp 4 had it as part of the OS. The speech-enabled netscape was quite nice.

  232. What I'm Waiting For by Mignon · · Score: 2, Funny
    Bill Gates On Linux

    Ho-hum. Wake me up when we get Linux on Bill Gates. Should make a challenging port.

  233. Just You Wait... by some+old+guy · · Score: 1

    This article could be the show prep for another Larry King snooze session.

    Once Palladium/DRM turns every Winbox into a lockbox with $msft/ holding all hkeys for media and applications, how many of these "journalists" are going to be playing softball with Brother Bill, especially when they find out they can't play their mp3s or mpegs without MSFT-managed MPAA/RIAA licenses any more?

    --
    Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
  234. As opposed to... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    A head with his head stuck in the sand (or somewhere else...).

    If Microsoft shareholders really knew what was going on this would be a major warning sign they are out of touch, and the same sort of plummet would occur.

    Instead he should have said something like "We welcome all competition, as it helps form a healthy, competitive, monopoly-free market".

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  235. Speed up Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sometimes i think people should stop pirating M$ Windows, and actually use linux. Spread the word :)

    1. Re:Speed up Linux by jbardell · · Score: 1

      Good idea, captain obvious!

      Just kidding :) Yes, that is a good idea, but people fear change. If only people were willing to work a little harder to learn how to install something without click-click-click-click (actually, using a graphical RPM/other pkg installer, this is how it sometimes is in a linux X session) and perform some other tasks with just a drop more work (read: not nec. difficulty) than we would have more Linux users around. It's unfortunate, really.

  236. Forget Innovation... by redstoner · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...for the moment. MS needs to stop worrying about innovation and concentrate on making a product that works better. Once they accomplish that, then start innovating again. Same can be said for cell phone companies. They come up with all these stupid and useless features like camera phones, but you still can't get a signal half the time. I bought a cell phone for making phone calls, not taking pictures. Sheeeze!

  237. couldn't resist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BG: "... Longhorn makes it easy for your information to show up on any device. ..."

  238. Did anyone else notice the ad for NT 4.0? by cschmidt · · Score: 1

    Right below the article there was a box titled "Related Advertising Links" with an ad for NT 4.0. You can get it for only $69.99!

    --

    Who am I to blow against the wind? -- Paul Simon
  239. Oh, come on. by Tom7 · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I use linux at work and for my servers, and I like it.

    But really, windows is pushing new technologies more than linux.

    Windows XP has USB 2.0, it has low-latency audio, it can play DVDs, it has translucent windows, built-in NAT, drag-and-drop CD recording, an MPEG-4 media player, it has an encrypted, compressed file system, they have fine-grained access controls, they have a common language runtime. They are pushing and developing modern programming languages so that we aren't all stuck programming in C. Some of this technology sucks, and most of it they didn't invent, but they are pushing new technology. (I also know that most of this stuff is available on linux, but it's also kind of a pain in the ass.)

    1. Re:Oh, come on. by pr0ntab · · Score: 1

      The only thing in there that Linux doesn't support is USB 2.0 (and I hear that's in 2.5)

      The rest of things are supported with the right software packages. I think RedHat 9.0 gets most of them, and freshRPMS takes care of the rest.

      The only one I'm not sure about is the encrypted/compressed filesystems. I think AFS will give you per-file encryption, but per-file compression I don't think is possible. Of course, if you use kioslaves or gnome-vfs in your windowing environment, you won't miss them since .zip files and the like will act like directories in the file dialogs, file manager, etc. It's really a non-issue: there's about 10 ways to do it easily, and disk space is cheap.

      --
      Fuck Beta. Fuck Dice
    2. Re:Oh, come on. by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      USB 2.0 is supported just fine on my RH9 worstation (completely run-of-the-mill DELL PC), thank you very much. In fact I was astonished to read that Windows did not support it until very recently.

    3. Re:Oh, come on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh. baka

      not only has OSS offered all of that for years, it's available on more platforms than just windows

  240. Difference between OS 2 and Linux. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Although Gates makes some points but I think comparing OS/2 with Linux is comparing Apples vs. Oranges.

    3 Major reasons why Microsoft has dominated the PC market.

    1. The fact that they started early and developed their OS for many different companies thus giving a non-vender lock in on hardware, like Apple or Amega.
    2. At the time they sold their products at a fair price which was cheaper then most of the competition and was just about as good.
    3. Because of 1 and 2. A large amount of software was written for their systems.

    Now with these factors this is why OS/2 Lost.
    1. OS/2 by IBM would threaten the clone market. Some clone people could see OS/2 Warp as a way for IBM to recollect on the clone market which they lost a while back.

    2. OS/2 Warp was more expensive then Windows 95 at the time so peoples mindset was to try Windows 95 and if it really sucks that bad (like 3.1) then they will switch to OS/2 Warp. So after people started using Windows 95 they found it a lot better then 3.11 so they stayed with it.

    3. So When OS/2 Warp went out they started late so people were use to running their DOS and were worried about loosing their older programs or have them run slower then before this may or may not be true but fear keeps people down. OS/2 Warp Failed on that. And developers were afraid to make new software for this platform because of 1 and 2 combined.

    Now this why Linux linux has a lot better chance.

    1. Linux is ultra portable and works on many different platforms including non PC systems. The fact that Linux is not owned by any one company it allows a felling of a non lock in with linux. It is a lot more liberating to know if I am using a Mac I can install Linux or if I am using a PC I can install Linux. So now I can choose my computer more on what the hardware as to offer me and not just sticking to 1 type of platform.

    2. Upfront cost Linux is free or you can get a package for a lot less then Windows. There is little to none financial risk of running Linux. So you can try it out and if you like it you keep it if not then shell out some cash and put windows back on. But once Linux is on the system people will normally get hooked and keep it on either they like it better or to lazy to put something else on.

    3. Linux with a huge selection of free developer tools it is easy and affordable for developers to write programs for this platform.

    So here are the stats.
    Windows V.S. OS/2 3 to 0
    Windows V.S. Linux .5 to 2.5 (The fact that windows has more polished and released applications that are easier to find then linux so that is 1/2 of part 3)

    Why Linux is better then windows and vice versa for OS/2 is not about which is a better product technically it is about risk of using the other product.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  241. Aphex Twin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    James owns WARP records. Who else can have an entire record label devoted to "bleeps" and "boops" and actually make a good living besides him?

    1. Re:Aphex Twin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought he owned Rephlex Records, not WARP.

  242. sig by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "GUI: Path to enlightenment or straight-jacket?"

    Yes.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:sig by Bilbo · · Score: 1
      > "GUI: Path to enlightenment or straight-jacket?"

      I had a good friend (old UNIX hacker) who used to always tell me, "GUI's make you stupid!"

      Of course, he then went on to programming in a Windows world.

      --
      Your Servant, B. Baggins
  243. For a man worth BILLIONS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    couldn't he get a decent hair cut?

  244. Re:I wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if the first 2 posters on a topic have ever had their numbers be as close as these two are...
    6339904 and 6339908


    Those are article ID's, not user ID's. The number increments for each slashdot post. Not exactly surprising that they would be close together for a couple of compulsive F5 pushing FP kiddies.

  245. Mug Shot by bstadil · · Score: 1

    You will enjoy the Mug Shotat the Inquirer of OS2/ MS

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  246. We missed a chance??? by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 4, Funny
    You mean Gates was sitting still for an interview, and no one thought to send a strike team or even a cruise missile? The spectre of this guy still haunts people. No one can move on because they think he might be lurking just around the next corner ready to exact retribution for abandoning him and his regime. What the He- Oh, wait. I'm thinking of Hussein. Never mind.

    Wait. You mean *Gates* was sitting still for...

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  247. if microsoft's future... by utexaspunk · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...is as bright as Bill says, why are he and Steve divesting a billion dollars in the past month?

    1. Re:if microsoft's future... by Black_Logic · · Score: 1

      "if microsoft's future" ... "is as bright as Bill says, why are he and Steve divesting a billion dollars in the past month?"

      To build a giant, life-size, chocolate pirate ship, obviously.

      --
      Ansi's and stupid tricks!
  248. Re:WHo else can get speech? Huh? by Kwil · · Score: 1

    Your knowledge is just wrong then.

    I'm not sure about the native OS, but the latest Windows(R) definitely has some speech recognition in it. It snot bad. Though yule-log fence wear that it wood be better without it.

    --

    That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

  249. MS-DOS = QD-OS by Puu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I seem to recall it was QDOS (from "Quick and Dirty Operating System" -- funny how MS added the "Disk" after the fact! Why...? ;-)

  250. Famous last words by KeizerHein · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

    Famous Last Words

  251. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by gosand · · Score: 1
    If you look off to the side, you'll see links to the other parts of this interview. There were a few questions on each of ten subjects. I was acutally thinking they'd scored a pretty long interview.

    Yeah. Totally missed that. Talk about a crappy website! Usually when you get to the end of an article, there are links to the next set of questions or something. There were so many other "garbage" boxes on the screen that I missed the other parts of the interview. Way to go USA Today, make me look like jerk! :-)

    So it was a long interview. And some of the questions did sound like someone was actually talking to him, because they got interrupted.

    So somebody with mod points mod my post down. In some crazy turn of events, it is @ +5. (still nothing interesting in the interview, just that Bill is just as smart as he ever was. You can read into that what you will.)

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  252. open standards, open standards, open standards... by raw-sewage · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As much as I love Linux and the free software movement, my biggest (personal) agenda is educating people about the pitfalls of proprietary data formats (vendor lock-in) and the freedom of open standards (choice).

    I think Bill's interview is typical PR material; anyone from MS's marketing group could probably give the same interview. But what scares me, is that every time Microsoft "innovates", all they really do is make stuff that is incompatible with anything non-Microsoft (and sometimes their own products aren't compatible!)

    That in mind, it seems more important to me to promote open standards than Linux itself. Of course I would love to see Linux have a respectable desktop market share for better OEM support. But what good is my Linux machine if I can't even surf the web because too many web pages are written only for IE? How much of a pain is it if I have to tell everyone to resend their MS Office documents in a format I can read (OOo won't always cut it)?

    And now we're seeing some cases where the US and/or state governments' are officially blessing Microsoft's otherwise incompatible data formats---this should be criminal! Public information that is avaialable electronically (either through the web or some other means) should not dictate which software is used to view, edit, modify or interact with that data.

    If you go to a "IE only" government website, you're effectively seeing a tax funded advertisement for Microsoft. Your taxes paid for the software purchase, for the staff to setup and maintain that system, and now you're effectively taxed again by being forced into purchasing some (very expensive) software. And people call open source communist?!

    I think we need to put some effort into a strong "inform the masses" campaign. An easy first step is to write editorials to your local paper brining to light the dangers of proprietary data formats and vendor lock-in. I was thinking about pre-scripting a lot of these letters and posting them on my website for all to use/borrow/steal/whatever. These letters also need to be sent to government representatives.

    The article should contain proposed solutions. As much as we love Linux and friends, we can't beat it down peoples' throats. Some other viable thoughts:

    • More pressure on Microsoft to release specs on their proprietary stuff (e.g. Office, IE-only features, etc) and insist on reference implementations for these data formats.
    • Push for legislation that guarantees public data sytems will use an open format (e.g. the OOo format)

    Finally, I think it's important to have some good, strong analogies or metaphores to illustrate the negative impact of the Microsoft monopoly (and their use of proprietray, non-compatible data formats). The most obvious analogy, to me, is as follows:

    What if Ford Motor Co. owned all the roads in the U.S.? Surely they would design the roads such that only Ford vehicles worked on them. And furthermore, they would hide behind IP laws to make it illegal for anyone to make a car for their roads. What if Ford only offered one or two models of cars that actually worked on these roads? And those cars were their most expensive?

    If the above scenario were true, public outrage would be rampant. Most people simply don't realize that this contrived situation is the case with Microsoft. Worse, people don't understand the implications of Microsoft literally owning your data.

    Welcome to the United States of Microsoft, comrade.

  253. 3% Depending on how you look at it by podperson · · Score: 2, Interesting

    BG For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project. And so the question is can that 3% [compensate], in terms of how quickly you get the system set up?

    Well if you look at total cost of ownership -- factoring in all the communications, hardware, personnel, and software costs that putting a PC on someone's desk leads do -- Wintel is a very very bad solution to almost any problem.

    Back in the mid-90s, the TCO of a Wintel PC to a business was something like $20k p.a. based on obvious clearly measurable costs, and ignoring hard to measure factors productivity lost to downtime etc. etc.

    So yes, probably less than 3% of that is software licenses. But a lot of it is makework created by licensing that software.

    Note that in many companies, driving down support costs will lose you business. IT is usually a cost center in most companies, so for IT managers being needed and being big equate to power within the organisation.

  254. 3 percent? by prgrmr · · Score: 1

    For any project, if you look at communications costs, hardware costs, personnel costs, all that, software licensing ranges -- the highest you'd ever find is, like, 3% of any IT-type project

    He's obviously never been involved with a project using Oracle. Or SAP. Or any large, vertical application priced in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    Actually, what's MS SQL server priced at these days? There's no way that 3% figure is close to being an accurate average.

    If the average business-class desktop runs about $900.00, and WinXP runs $99 per seat, that's 10% right there. To drive that $99 down to 3% of the install per seat, communications and people costs would have to run $2,400.00 PER INSTALL!

    So what's that say about the TCO for WinXP?

  255. Sun Tzu: Ignore the enemy at your peril... by borgheron · · Score: 1

    It's a good thing that they don't consider GNU/Linux a threat. The moment they do is the moment we start having a hard fight.

    Not that I would mind a hard fight, but there is a time and a place for it. GNU/Linux is crossing a threshold right now and is gaining serious momentum. It should be a allowed to do so some more before taking on the 8000 lbs Gorilla.

    GJC

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  256. Just wrong, wrong, wrong. by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    IIS, IE, outlook and outlook excess get hacked because they are shitty. Borked beyond belief.

    The windows architecture is fundamentally broken. Even Mundie says it can't be fixed. And they won't fix what they can. Why do my win2k/Xpee servers have outhouse excess? Why do I have to hack them to get rid of that program? Why was it such a design priority to allow web sites to do arbitrary things to my system?

    You're 'turfing, dude.

  257. Summary by batkins · · Score: 4, Funny

    Let's be serious - he's in denial.

  258. Bill_gates=wenis; by jbardell · · Score: 1

    A) Os/2 is still quite widely used in ATM's and banks and some other situations. It's apparently rock solid in some versions. B) Linux has lasted what, well over 10 years at this point? Wasn't 2001 its 10th birthday? we're going on 15 years of this wonderful and powerful OS being public and widely used. Sorry Bill, it's gonna be tough to kill this one. Unlike you and IBM, there is no joint contract situation here. C) I mean, lets be serious, Bill. I mean, let's be serious. I mean, let's use 'I mean, let's be serious' 20,000 times in one interview.

  259. You can't kill something... by macshune · · Score: 1

    With more than 100,000 brains, arms, hearts and genitalia that can individually regenerate the original beast with a few e-mails. Linux can't die, no matter how much FUD and the like gets tossed out by people like Gates. It's similar to saying you can kill p2p. Whatever. Linux is here to stay.

    Microsoft on the other hand...

  260. Re:Time was when.... by dspeyer · · Score: 1
    FreeBSD can do that.

    Actually, *BSD and GNU/Linux are pretty near interchangeable at this point. I think Linux has better peripheral hardware support, but they're both near 100% on ethernet and SCSI, so it doesn't really matter for servers.

    In user-space, I suspect *BSD and GNU+ are virtually identical, probaly more than half of the actual installed software on a GNU/Linux or *BSD server is the same.

    Not that this is nessesarily a bad thing. Having a little redundancy is helpful. If any major bug shows up in the Linux or BSD kernels, we'll be glad to have a near-drop-in replacement!

  261. Uhm Mac OSX? by theolein · · Score: 3, Informative

    Dear Cabal,

    There have been numerous OS's that didn't and don't require you to have "esoteric" knowledge to install software. Should we do a little run through?:

    MacOS (The original), Amiga, Atari, OS/2 for instance, right up to the morder day with Mac OSX, Linux (there are many distros and applications that require nothing more than double cklicking) right up and including my Nokia phone running Symbian.

    1. Re:Uhm Mac OSX? by TheCabal · · Score: 1

      If you want to type up business documents on your Nokia, knock yourself out. I don't know how many people still bang away on their Ataris, but I do know one guy who still writes his docs on a TI44 with a daisy wheel printer. But he's weird.

  262. Longhorn = Clinging Vine by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

    I read through all of the articles (there is a box to the right of the article with links to the rest of the topics with which he spoke), and found this gem from his talk about Longhorn (XP successor OS):

    "If I said to somebody today how on your PC do you keep track of stocks, movies, music, restaurants, you can do it, but it's pretty painful, pretty manual. The system doesn't have this innate understanding of all the things you deal with in typical life. You go and get directions on the computer, you get this funny Web page, and you probably just print the thing out. The idea of storing that, having it when you're offline -- anyway a lot of these things are still pretty complex. So Longhorn is a change of the user interface to unify a lot of things that have been disparate[my emphasis]. But it's a huge project. It's a very ambitious piece of work." - Bill Gates

    Aside from the 'funny web page' comment, which I found mildly humorous, his admission of what the next Windows OS will attempt was enlightening - if not frightening.

    I find it particularly interesting that Microsoft is again intertwining new information technologies with the operating system itself. To me, it looks like a replay of the Web Browser fiasco (where Internet Explorer was tied closely to Windows to elbow out the competition).

    --

    Lodragan Draoidh
    The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  263. Mothers, Fathers and Aunts by ctve · · Score: 1
    "The last thing Mr. G wants to happen is for your PHB to read USA Today and think, "Huh. This Linux thing is a big deal."

    The last thing that Mr G should want is people even knowing about Linux. To even have an interview to discuss it with a magazine with the widest readership in the nation is the last thing he should be doing. He's helped take it out of being a geeky operating system and into a few more people's homes.

    I'm just wondering how long it will be before one of my distant relatives for whom I'm "the computer expert" will ask me about what Linux is.

  264. OT: JRRT vs. REH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Off topic, but since you brought it up, here goes anyway...

    There's a point to be made that J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord Of The Rings is a sexist, chauvinist, racist piece of crap composition compared to the open-minded Conan stories of Robert E. Howard. (The latter with very well written female warriors, black African generals and wizards, and whatnot, amidst the delightful hack & slash.)

    (FWIW, I was one of the founders of our local Tolkien Society "smial". I appreciate JRRT's and CT's work, and love the languages, and dig the detailed world, but any deeper look into their work just leaves you with a blank stare. It's sorta empty, inside.)

    - Tom

  265. Welcome to GhandiCon! by weston · · Score: 2, Funny

    Welcome to... GhandiCon! You can do anything at GhandiCon! The impossible is unknown at GhandiCon!

    (with apologies to Zombo)

  266. Has Gates got Alzheimers ? by JackJudge · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If mine own foggy memory serves... OS/2 was a collaboration between IBM and M$, I'm pretty sure I remember His Borgness talking it up big time at a convention in 1989, "OS/2 is THE future." Then Big Blue hit financial troubles, M$ pulled out of the project and nicked most of the code to form the basis of NT. Does this guy have no shame ?? Ahhh, I'm kidding myself, it was surgically removed shortly after they germinated him.

  267. DING DING DING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A winner! You are such a virgin nerd. Grab your inhaler and move to the head of the class.

  268. Longer than three years... by TWX · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Neither has Linux. It's had, what, 3 years of being slightly important so far? OS/2 had many more."

    I'd put it at more like five years. Some of us have been using it for even longer than that. It might have had hobbyist roots, but once we started selling masquerading firewalls to people with dialup and early Cablemodem/DSL, inroads were made. Then, we started selling file servers, and then servers to replace Windows NT Server as a PDC, and so on, and so on...

    This isn't to say that it was immediate, or that it was in chunks, but grassroots movements, which Linux started out as, don't jump out immediately. It is rare that I find anyone at all who hasn't at least heard of Linux. They may not know anything about it at all, but simply hearing the name has some recognition.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  269. plenty of reasons to avoid windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but all I need is one: onerous license that makes one a criminal for wanting to control my own damn pc the way I feel like controlling it. I don't need college drop out gates telling me how to run my pc. He is as rich as he is due to pure luck--IBM was being sued by Justice for monopoly and turned to MS-DOS (not invented by MS, by the way) to get Justice off it's back. Ancient history.

    Welcome to the new world Bill, MS just doesn't matter any more, sorry to break it to you. I guess MS will take it's 46 billion in cash and get into something else, like video games, and er....fat free snacks? Who knows.

  270. OS2 is what windows should have been... by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OS2 is what windows should have been. In fact, for a time Microsoft was in partnership with IBM on the project until they decided to go their seperate ways - conspiracy theories aside.

    Unfortunately, while OS2 was a more stable system and an all-around better implementation, Microsoft won the war of the desktop through pretty graphics and flashy advertising.

    Before Linux came along I was considering Warp on my desktop; now I'm running Slackware and loving it.

    The number one thing about Linux, that I think will keep it alive - and on alot more desktops than anyone really perceives is the fact that it can breath life into older machines, unlike Microsoft offerings which invariably use more memory and require more CPU cycles to run effectively.

    Case in point: My network:

    P120 with 3 hard drives - file server running Redhat.
    P300 - Wife's desktop - running Slackware
    P 1.4Ghz - My desktop - running Slackware
    p500 - Daughter's desktop - running Redhat
    p250 - Daughter's 2nd desktop - running Windows (until I can get soundcard working on her p500 - then it becomes part of my growing Beowulf cluster...muhahaha!).

    --

    Lodragan Draoidh
    The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  271. Bill's underestimation by jodepoley · · Score: 2, Insightful
    2 comments...

    Bill underestimates the open source community as whole. Mr. Gates asserts that the social intertia behind the open source movement does not have enough MONEY to mount a challange to Micro$oft. The problem is that the economic value of the open source community is found in leverage mindshare. The economic force behind open source and Linux is in the abillity and intelligence of it's contributors. This is the vision and reality of R. Stallman in drafting the GPL. Micro$oft will never match the intelligence and creativity of the open source community.

    Number 2: Compare time-to-market performance for Linux versus Micro$oft over the past few years and the eveidence is clear that Linux design cycles easily out-performs the lumbering monolith of the Micro$oft development process. Whatever Micro$oft throws at the market will be copied or improved much faster in the open source community than Micro$oft's developers. They have already lost due to their cumbersome internal organizational structure.

    "It's the CONTENT stupid!"

    JP

  272. Re:If anybody cares, the NT boot sector is O/S cod by pmz · · Score: 1

    That file is dated 1987, OS/2 1.0 joint code with Microsoft and IBM.

    I don't know, but perhaps 1987 was the last time they really needed to write a 32-bit kernel loader. 1987 was probably the last time that anyone need to write a 32-bit loader (look in specific spot on disk, load a file, run it). Regardless, I'm suprised that the copyright didn't read "Regents of UC Berkeley" or something like that.

  273. Ink and Speech - old technology by ctve · · Score: 1
    "Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface? Who else is going to push that forward? Who else has the guts to get speech, get the recognition levels up, get the learning levels up in the standard interface?"

    Who cares?

    When I started using computers 20 years ago, if someone had come up with speech or high speed handwriting recognition, it would have been a winner.

    People have moved on and use keyboards. Not only more reliable, but quicker, and you don't need to train every machine you use. You sit down and start typing.

    There are undoubtedly uses for pen and speech, but I don't see it as a growth area. People who have things like pen based computer systems for companies (for say restaurants) have specialist hardware (that isn't as large as a tablet). Most people would be better off getting a Palm and some software and saving some money.

    Speech is great for disabled people, and for some extreme uses, but that's about it.

  274. M$ ports to Linux by generationxyu · · Score: 1

    If M$ ports Word to Linux, I'll buy it, regardless of price. It's just better than AbiWord. I try to avoid using MS products, unless they make a product that is simply better than it's competition. The only real example of this that I've seen is Word. Word is simply well done... although I'd cut out some of the idiot-proofing, if I had my druthers.

    --
    I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
  275. Linux parallels OS/2 by wing03 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    OS/2 is just like Linux? Perhaps in functionality/reliability for apps that couldn't afford to freeze up like Windoze....

    I do remember seeing the OS/2 boot up on a number of bank machines being rebooted by security guards when they refill and take away deposits.

    Gates pointing out that the IBM army was behind OS/2 is a load of horse puckey.

    The one big thing that made me regret my $200 purchase of Warp was the fact that it took 8 months to get a beta OS/2 Warp sound card driver from IBM for my "Options By IBM" branded Media Magic sound card.

    A number of recent articles looking at OS/2 in retrospect made me think of the example given of problems with post-brain opreation epileptics. One hand is pulling the trousers up while the other is pulling them down.

    We use lots of FreeBSD for servers and Linux for desktops. The support for both is phenomenol and the reliability far outweighs what M$ has to offer.

    Unlike OS/2 whose beleagured IBM 1-800 numbers were the only means of support at the time, The free IX's are widely supported online and will be here to stay for the long while.

    OSS forever!

  276. Man claims not to have said embarrasing quote.... by pyrrho · · Score: 2, Funny

    news at 11.

    --

    -pyrrho

  277. Those glasses are thick for a reason. by Trogre · · Score: 1

    "Gates seems to be considering Linux as a passing thru competition just like OS/2"

    Isn't that pretty much what he said about the Internet in the 1996 revision of The Road Ahead? (later edited out)

    Yes, I don't think those thick glasses are sufficiently correcting his short-sightedness.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  278. Re:Dear Linus by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1

    That is because of a monopoly that refuses to use standards. Has undocumented API's, proprietary document formats, propreitary protocols. They take a standard and "embrace and extend" it and push it out to their 90%+ desktop market and have just made a new standard that no one else can participate in. Do it the MS way or get lost. Sorry, I have morals and I believe that our society can do better and put human advancemnet before monitary gain. I boycott products and companies that I feel are unethical. There are many people that bitch and moan, yet they do not take action. I have been using Linux for about 5 years and exclusively for 2 1/2 years. When I switched exclusively to Linux, it was a little rocky. However, once I learned the OS and how to find help and help myself, there was not any single task I could not do.

    Oh, and do you really think all the hardware support under ms windows has anything to do with ms windows? No. It is the hardware manufactuers that make all those drivers, not Microsoft. If you use Linux and some hardware is not supported, then complain to the manufactuer and use your money to get the support you need to make the choices you want. When I bought a digital camera, I found a manufactuer that uses a standard usb mass-storage and then supported them for making that decision with my money. The camera works perfectly under Linux. I have a ton of hardware for my systems at home. All the hardware works great with Linux becuase I did a little research before I purchased and then I support manufactuers for support Linux with my money and also by explicitly thanking them for supporting Linux and letting them know that the one of the main reasons I chose them was becuase of that Linux suppport.

    There are too many lazy people out there that want to complain and yet take no action. If more people were to take action then support for Linux across the board would grow by leaps -n- bounds.

    --
    If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
    it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
  279. that's not pink... by pyrrho · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ... it's "salmon".

    --

    -pyrrho

  280. Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About Internet Browsers: First WWW browser back in 90 was on NEXTSTEP which evolved into Mac OS X.

  281. He says... by Cnik70 · · Score: 1

    That M$ had to bet on new technology. Not much of a bet when you hold all the cards and all the players by their balls (ie: in the form of expensive licenses). It's sort of hard to lose when everyone else loses their shirts if you pull out of the game. Yet I'm willing to wager a bet that M$ will start to look more and more like *Nix in the next 3-5 years.

    --
    -Cnik
  282. How are any of those things new? by pr0ntab · · Score: 0

    1) Tablet PC
    A shitty idea that no one developed because it's fucking retarded. The Apple Newton had the basic concepts a long time before that, and they weren't $3000.

    2) SQL as a file system
    That has been done over a million times, and discussed in countless variations in Master/PhD thesises. It just so happens that now PCs are fast enough that it's practical to put it into the OS. (Remember the Oracle FS? Muwahaha)

    3) Office Suites
    WTF? TeX is ancient. Oh you mean taking a bunch of seperate products and selling them in the same box? That's good MARKETING

    4) Multi-language Programming Framework
    Well, first let me say the the CLI has only two languages right now, Basic and C#, and the Basic looks almost exactly like C# that got run through a filter. And this has been the subject of many research projects. Finally, Wolfram Research trumps this with their register language and translation front-ends if you want a commercial implementation.

    Linux functionality that is new?

    How about ReiserFS? Or /proc on steriods? Device filesystem? hotplug? keyboard LED device?!?!?! ^_^

    And we're just talking about the kernel.

    --
    Fuck Beta. Fuck Dice
    1. Re:How are any of those things new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux functionality that is new? [...] And we're just talking about the kernel.

      You damn well better just be talking about the kernel!

      -RMS

  283. show me the innovation! by Xtifr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of all the stuff they've released in multiple markets over the past two decades,

    All of it has been bought, borrowed, or stolen EXCEPT Bob and Clippy. Show us something else they've done that actually demonstrates anything resembling innovation, and maybe we'll stop poking fun at Bob and Clippy.

    In other words, we're not poking fun at Bob and Clippy because they were mistakes (MS has made plenty of other mistakes, i.e. the autoexecution features in outlook). So, saying that "mistakes were made with Linux or OS X [too]" is missing the point completely.

    Now, I'll grant you that there isn't a whole lot of innovation in Linux either. But the flip side of that is that Linux advocates don't go around bragging about their "commitment to innovation" either.

    1. Re:show me the innovation! by dfj225 · · Score: 1

      Now, I'll grant you that there isn't a whole lot of innovation in Linux either.

      I agree with this totally. Just look at the window managers that are popular with Linux. They, mostly, resemble what you would find if you used windows. I think that in today's world, many good ideas get "borrowed". I'm sure that at one point, there was only one company that had a cell phone that was capable of browsing the web. Now, you are hard pressed to find a cell phone that can not browse the web. Even in other industries, good ideas get copied. Look at cars. At one point, cars didn't have automatic transmissions, four wheel drive, or on-board navagation systems. Now, these are all features that can be found from just about any car maker. "Borrowing" is the way that this industry works. Linux "borrows" many of the ideas and features that people liked about UNIX, but just offers them for free. I like Windows XP and enjoy using it. I can't say that I always agree with what Microsoft does as a company or the ideas that they support, but looking at windows solely as an operating system and not considering the company behind it, it is a great os.

      --
      SIGFAULT
  284. Times have changed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The only thing that is undeniable now is that Bush is a liar and he can't say the word nuclear."

    There is no evidence of him lying about anything. On the lies, you are confusing him with Clinton, who rarely ever told the truth (and still doesn't), and also confusing him with Jimmy Carter who says "nucular" too.

  285. USA Yesterday! by defunc · · Score: 1

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: fsck u!

    --
    .defuncrc
  286. It is indeed un-American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " It is "un-american" to disagree even though, oddly enough"

    Of course it is, because it is unpatriotic to put forth such ignorant and hateful views as your own. If you hate the country and its people and you are lying in order to make it worse, you sure are unpatriotic.

    "The first amendment gaurantees us that right, yet we are made to fear exercising that right."

    No, we are not. Bush opponents from "The Nation" to Pat Buchanan to Ralph Nader to Michael Moore freely speak (even though they lie about everything) without fear. In fact, some of these guys become millionaires through their opposition.

  287. Gates should read the previous story... by sulaco252 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I love how this story follows the one about Dreamworks' Linux farm.

    --

    (There used to be something clever here.)

  288. Irony by wazzzup · · Score: 1

    The richest man in the world and he has Melinda throw a cereal bowl on his head for haircuts.

    I mean, Pro-Cuts occasionally has $4.95 haircuts and all so why the bowl Bill?

    1. Re:Irony by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      No, no, no! That's not a bowl cut, that's a TROLL CUT....

  289. A Call to Arms, our last - best hope for victory by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

    You sound like Delenn telling Sheridan to shut up and let Morden go so the Shadows wouldn't openly attack stuff.

    Frankly I think this is more of a Drahk situation where we need to build a pair of bigarse destroyers to knock out the deathcloud before it rains thermonuclear Longhorns onto the planet that'll dig deep into our computers and destroy the world of computing.

    All I can think to launch at the approaching death-cloud right now are Knoppix discs.

    We need to neutralize the NTFS gunfire if we're to install a decent planetary defense against the first wave. Otherwise we need to get to get all the other projects to make a sort of flying wedge so KDE and Gnome can use their main guns.

    But if we wait until the last minute we'll prolly be plagued with Windows for another half-decade. :-)

    --

    Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  290. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    If the upper four bits of a 20-bit address are unavailable then you only have a 16-bit address. The 8088 did provide a full 20-bit address to the bus, otherwise it wouldn't have a one megabyte address space. IBM reserved the upper memory for video cards and IO. The processor had nothing to do with memory limitations, aside from a 20-bit address which was a very small jump up from 16-bits. Heck, the 68000 already had a 24-bit bus (Early 68000's may not have brought out all address lines, I can't recall for sure)

  291. MS has guts? by LionMage · · Score: 1
    I had to laugh at Bill Gates' touting of Microsoft "pushing" new technologies. Here's a quote that amused me greatly:
    Who has the guts and the willingness to do risk-taking to get ink into the standard user interface?

    Uh, let's see... Apple? Apple's done this twice, once with the Newton's OS, and once with Mac OS X, which ships standard now with handwriting recognition. Microsoft didn't take any risks on this one, and they're sure not a trailblazer...
  292. The *real* passing competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Given the cost of duplicating software is effectively zero, there is no reason ubiquitous computing requirements won't eventually become free.

    The most ubiquitous example is an operating system - and that's the most advanced example. Word processors, email clients, and databases all can be had for zilch.

    Also, as the computing industry becomes more mature (remember it's only been a mass market for a little more than a decade or so) the market of new users will stop growing, and existing users will have less need for the latest upgrade.

    Hmm, free commodity software, no new users, and no upgrade merry-go-round.

    Who is the real passing fancy in the industry? Could it be a large company whose only revenue stream is based on selling those very products that the market is turning into free commodoties?

  293. Easy to Muscle the little guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "we've always provided super low pricing for education. We're actually providing even lower pricing now for education then we ever have"

    It's more important now than ever that M$ get their
    fingers in the kids heads when they're young.

    Give a kid linux and they have an opportunity to learn about computers.
    Give a kid M$ and they'll fill up their memory banks with
    how computers DON'T work.

  294. OS/2 Laptop is provided with new mainframe by mrm677 · · Score: 1

    Ever new IBM Mainframe sold, even ones with the newly developed 390/G5 CMOS processor, comes with a laptop running OS/2 to provide system management functions.

  295. Not pass through by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1
    According to Linux's license it would more aptly be described as a "pass out" fad.

    accordingly,

    Windows is a "pass up" monstrosity.

    Netcraft confirms BSD is a "pass-ing" fad. Sorry...got carried away...

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  296. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't this a bit like hitler on hebrews?

  297. Microsoft's high risk wagers by RALE007 · · Score: 1
    "...Let's be serious. I mean, we've had to bet the company many times on big technological advances. We bet on the 16-bit PC..." You mean Microsoft actually bet the farm on technology that doubled the amount of data throughput to the CPU? Whoa! What a risky and radical wager. Yet an even better example of Microsoft throwing caution to the wind would be:

    ...Microsoft is a big gambler, why even *we* have run IIS as a service, I mean, if that isn't betting the whole company on risky "technological advances" (using the term loosely here) I don't know what is...

    Future "daring" M$ gamble to be braged about by Gates:

    ...back in 2006, we bet it all by assuming the majority of PC's would still be running off of electricity and not perpetual motion or cold fusion and now three years later, look! we were *right*. See I told you Microsoft is *always* right...

    And lastly, his image alone screams "risk taker".. I give this guy some mad props, I mean god knows I don't have the balls to cut my own hair with a weed whacker. Just look at him! I fear him man, that superbad "I risk my own life and limb on a weekly basis cutting my own hair with a headge trimmer just to *tempt* the reaper, just for the rush" look. You just *know* he's living life on the edge, eating rusty nails for breakfast, and whooping some major kung fu @ss in biker bars every night.

    Gates, you not just *a* man, you *DA* man.

    --
    Beware blue cats moving at .99c
  298. He's worth a gazillion dollars..... by trouser · · Score: 1

    ....and he still wears a suit.

    The day I have enough money in the bank to never work again is the day I burn my suit. Or at least I would if I had one. I saw a suit once. In a shop.

    --
    Now wash your hands.
    1. Re:He's worth a gazillion dollars..... by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

      Normally he sits around naked playing "Age of Empires IV, Crush the Evil Penguin"
      He has a TENS device hooked to his penis and when he plunges a rusty spear through the heart of the Penguin king he gets 20,000 volts on HIS spear.
      Wow! I can't bear to picture that one...

  299. Bill Can't even get his product names right. by chendo · · Score: 2, Funny

    "We bet on the NT technology base" -- Bill Gates

    Wtf? New Technology Technology? Can't Bill get his own products straight?

    --
    Founder of Mirror Moon - Tsukihime Game Trans
  300. OS/2 Warp 4 had voice recognition/dictation in '96 by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 1

    ...and it was part of the standard desktop package.

    --
    Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
    The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
  301. the cash machines you use all time by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    Many ATM cash machines still use OS/2, although definitly not a majority these days.

    & also many bank teller terminals too

  302. BillG quotes by John+Bayko · · Score: 3, Informative
    As far as I know, that quote isn't verbatim, but he did express that thought - a little out of context, obviously, but correct in essense.

    Here's another:

    I believe OS/2 is destined to be the most important operating system, and possibly program, of all time.

    - Bill Gates, November 1987
    - Foreword to "OS/2 Programmer's Guide", Osborne McGraw-Hill, 1988.

    If he announced that the sky was blue, that would be enough of a reason for me to head to the nearest window to see what colour it had changed to...
    1. Re:BillG quotes by TeraCo · · Score: 1

      Well, it was going to be, until Microsoft stabbed IBM in the back. So it wasn't him being wrong, it was just him changing his mind :)

      --
      Not Meta-modding due to apathy.
  303. Old Tech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Windows XP has USB 2.0
    linux-usb.org
    Linux seems to have had this since June 2001

    >it has low-latency audio
    this depends on the kernel, but there are already distributions focused on this

    Linux Journal

    > it can play DVDs, MPEG-4 media player
    MPlayer is faster than the WMP and plays video better, IMHO

    > it has translucent windows
    I guess everyone misses this...

    > built-in NAT
    What is built in? automatic you mean?

    > drag-and-drop CD recording
    have you ever tried the _Built-in_ Nautilus cd burner? gnome.ftp

    > it has an encrypted
    Last I checked this is also built in, take a look at the Linux Kernel
    > compressed file system
    same as before, but it is not automatic and takes more setup, but CramFS, cloop, etc have been in use for a while

    > they have fine-grained access controls
    I guess the Journaled, enterprise file-systems don't count?
    XFS
    JSF

    > they have a common language runtime
    They are pushing and developing modern programming languages so that we aren't all stuck programming in C.
    Take a look at Pel 6, Jython

    > (I also know that most of this stuff is available on linux, but it's also kind of a pain in the ass.)
    Most of it is pretty simple, mplayer or Xine are genrally default in Distributions, there are distributions _just_ for sound, and anyone look at the alcs and encryption can gereally configure them
    On the other hand, I install new things really easily with Gentoo
    `emerge new_cool_app`

  304. OS/2 white-anted by MS anyway by Anthony · · Score: 1

    IIRC, MS was contracted by IBM to develop OS/2 in partnership. MS stalled while it went ahead and developed it's DOS environment to run Excel on something other than the Macintosh -> MS Windows was born. MS can't white-ant Linux in the same fashion. They have the weapon that IBM perfected in the seventies - FUD. They can also employ a wide range of client puppets to attack Linux on their behalf. SCO?, BSA, various Govts.

    --
    Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
  305. moderators: STOP IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    moderators, this is the very definition of a troll. the poster has no clue what he's talking about. his drivel is basically claiming that Fords are better than BMW's because Fords have tires and windows...

    please moderators, spend your points on people who a) aren't stupid, b) make accurrate posts, c) aren't trolling

  306. Except that MS didn't write the code for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wasn't OS/2 developed jointly by MS and IBM? They must have had faith in it at some point...

  307. Re:But...Companies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That may be true, but where do you think those companies put their money? Under the mattress?

  308. Re:A Call to Arms, our last - best hope for victor by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1
    *snrk* my God, you guys are such nerds it hurts :)

    But- what in the world gives you the idea that Microsoft is NOT fighting GNU/Linux at the absolute, flat-out, top limit of their considerable ability?

    That's the amazing thing- they are running flat out even now, they are doing absolutely everything they can legal or illegal, public or private. Did you expect butterfly-colored ninjas? Be realistic, they are trying to lock down the means of production (i.e. duplication in New Zealand) even. If you can't see this I don't know how to get it across to you: they are fighting with everything they got. You're just confused because they backstab. Some of us have figured that part out already.

  309. typical MS /. post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Judging a successful Microsoft related /. post:

    • All the funny posts get moderated to the top
    • Various references to "Bill Gates is an idiot" or "he can't code" or "we'll get him, and his little dog too"
    • Various posts in which the poster says "now, I'm not defending them" or "I'm no fan of MS/Bill Gates", following it up with a "but" as they proceed to detail how MS/BG is, in this case, right
    • Various posts by zealots who claim that "the Linux community" will totally pwn Microsoft
    • Various posts by folks who hate the /. mod system
    • Various posts by folks who've had enough, and aren't going to take this anymore, and will change everyone's mind
  310. And that ain't all! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't beleive this guy. Revisionist history on-the-fly. Check out this quote (from the whole McNews peice):

    As long as we're doing a good job writing software we're targeting our software at the full range of devices. Think of these different categories. Software for watches -- not too many people in that work and we're pioneering that.

    They're pioneering software for watches??? I thought Linux did this several years ago. Some things never change...

  311. Innovations? by Da+Penguin · · Score: 1

    With all of the things he was mentioning (ink, speech, etc.), and saying that noone else has looked into that, I couldn't help but think of my home OS X system that does all that he mentioned and more. And betting on the gui? Puhlease.

  312. Re:Oh, come on. What are YOU talking about!? by Tom7 · · Score: 0

    I guess since your name is "Jerk City Troll" I'd be foolish to fall for it! But I can't resist!

    My point is that Windows is indeed pushing technology. All of that stuff comes out of the box on Windows XP, no setup, it just goes. (Eventually it breaks, too, but it's getting better...) To get most of it on linux you need to install extra stuff, and it's a pain in the ass (I have a degree in computer science and I still couldn't get USB working properly on my linux box). The technology is *available* on linux, but they are not pushing it as well as Microsoft.

    >> it has translucent windows
    > Well actually, it doesn't.

    Huh? Sure it does. I am doing it right now.

  313. Hahahahhahahahahahh HAHAHHAHAHAhaha by Neuroelectronic · · Score: 1

    what a sad, blind man. Linux is FREE!

  314. ~Ahem~ HAHAHAHahahahah by Neuroelectronic · · Score: 1

    640k quote replacment:

    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BG: There's no consideration of that at this point.

  315. Re:Oh, come on. What are YOU talking about!? by thisgooroo · · Score: 0

    pick any major distribution, select "install everything" and you have that with linux too (just make sure your disk is big eneough

  316. his OS/2 argument is flawed- by ErrantKbd · · Score: 1

    Linux is based on (even if it shares none of the code) Unix, which started 30+ years ago and never went away. Unix is not just an OS, it's a software development philosophy. Open source is another philosophy, and although it's tenets are independent from those of any particular piece of software/firmware, it makes a profound combination when applied to Unix. Sure, Linux may come and go (not likely) but you really want to bet safely, the Unix-like operating environment is not going anywhere.

  317. Re:But... I remember OS/2 and I worked for a bank by billatq · · Score: 1

    ...was a terminal emulations program that worked on the NCP based (actually they called it LLC2 protocol -- works over tokenring with netbeui) IBM 3270 mainframe...

    I got to look at one of the machines that they were using at our local Wells Fargo, and it was running Windows 2000, and used a combination between an intranet web server and a tn3270 client for accessing accounts. It was also running Hummingbird Exceed (an X server), and allowed for regular web access. On the ATM machine, it was running OS/2, and they had some sort of IBM server in the back, but I didn't get to look at it closely. They did indeed have broadband at this branch, along with computers intended for public use for the online banking. While they are using old technology, I'd rather have it be stable than have it use the newest technologies or paridigm shifts--as one poster suggested--than have it blue screen while performing nightly backups or handling transactions.
  318. You're right about the technologies in his house.. by haut · · Score: 1

    except that his house is in Bellevue (or Medina to be more specific). I was there a few years ago when it was under construction (my teacher must have had connections!) and it was pretty impressive at the time.

  319. break through achieved! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    long factor(long input) {
    return input;
    }

  320. Gates on the "pain" of using Windoze by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    From USA TODAY, here's Gates making the case for Longhorn:
    Well it's hard to describe, a little bit. Say you have two PCs today. It's a huge pain that your Favorites on this machine are different than on this machine. Moving your files from this machine to this machine, getting your e-mail, your calendar -- it's painful.
    Listen, you bifocaled criminal. I've had plenty of "huge" pains using your products. But I don't think I'm going to go back to them just because I can now be assured that my "Favorites" are the same on all my machines!
  321. Another Spin by Matrix2110 · · Score: 1

    From the USNEWS interview: "Q. Did you ever say, as has been widely circulated on the Internet, "640K [of RAM] ought to be enough for anybody?"

    BG: "No! That makes me so mad I can't believe it! Do you realize the pain..."

    I don't know about you guys but that quote alone makes me want to keep propagating the legend true or not!

  322. Hey! That would be a nice slogan: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux - The technology passing through when others are stuck.

  323. Agent of Bill by illdesign · · Score: 0

    I was walking down the road one day and saw the Pope, I looked at him and then he looked at me with his Terminator eyes and said, "Bitch I Kill You Hax0r!". But what he didn't know was that I was expecting his surprise attack, so with lightning quick reflexes I kicked him in the sack and leaped upon the local music store yelling, "Take that you talentless cooze!". But the Pope was adept in his movements following me closely with his jetpack. He was closing in, I could tell by the loud mechanoid clicking and whistling sounds coming from his hat as he came closer. "Unacceptable!", he mumbled as he prepared a goblet of C-4 holy water for me. I averted the close attempt at my destruction by using my patented "Jump Jack Snap Kick to the Head".

    As the Pope crashed to the ground, his jetpack giving way to the heel of my boot, he throws the accursed "Anti-Blessing Attack" my way. There was no time, I was hit with the full brunt of it. As I fell into the music store below I could only think one thing, should I whip his holy ass with the Ozzy Nunchucks or us the Ted Nugent longbow that comes in every box set. I rose to my feet and saw the Pope charging me, he had activated his Mandalorean armor. I could only think of one way out, I quickly jumped back to the life size promo statue of Marilyn Manson and used his oddly sticky unisex replica to vault over my holy aggressor exposing his only weak point. As I landed I found it all too easy to launch my fatal "Crappy Assed Metallica CD To The Neck" attack.

    As the Pope fell to the ground and looked at me with the despair of total failure and pleading for mercy I said, "Send a message to your boss when you see him, tell Mr. Gates it doesn't matter who he sends I will never fall. I am opensource. I am...THE GEEK!!!" ...then I stomped his ass into gravy.

  324. MS-DOS and non-contiguous memory by James+Youngman · · Score: 1
    Furthermore, since MS-DOS didn't provide a memory allocator, it's stupid to say that MS-DOS can't address non-contiguous memory.

    The point is that the way you determine how much RAM there is in the box is to use a BIOS call that returns the number of accessible paragraphs in the first contiguous bit of RAM. There's no way for it to tell you about some other large lump of RAM which lives up there beyond the address of the monochrome display, for example.

  325. Didn't answer the question... by stephanruby · · Score: 1
    USA TODAY: Is there a scenario by which you would at some point consider porting Microsoft applications into Linux?

    BILL GATES: There's no consideration of that at this point.

  326. Re:Time was when.... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    In user-space, I suspect *BSD and GNU+ are virtually identical, probaly more than half of the actual installed software on a GNU/Linux or *BSD server is the same.

    No doubt. Isn't most of the software on proprietry Unixes GNU and BSD stuff.

  327. By the people for the people? by fygment · · Score: 1

    How about:

    "Linux is a movement by some of the people and for some of the people."

    Linux is not for everyone; neither by intent nor by design nor by implementation.

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
    1. Re:By the people for the people? by rifter · · Score: 1

      Linux is not for everyone; neither by intent nor by design nor by implementation.

      Actually, whereas current implementations are not for everyone, a very important part of its design (the fact it is Free [Libre] Software) means it *can* be for everyone, and gradually it is maturing so that it is. This is an advantage which cannot be matched by any proprietary software. If teh software does not do what you want it to do, you can change it. If you want it to work different, you can change it. And people are changing it. A lot.

      The other important thing to remember is that as long as there is one righteous coder left Linux cannot die. Whereas previous superior systems like OS/2 and BeOs could be killed by corporate malfeasance/fiat Linux can never die. Heck it could even die and then be unearthed 1000 years later like some artifact and brought back into exeistence.

  328. Is it just me... by lsoth · · Score: 1

    ... or does anyone else think Bill sounded like the Iraqi Information Minister in that interview?

    - No Tanks here, we are in complete control!

    --
    ... [Insert decent Sig] ...
  329. You may be old but you ain't pretty by ghjm · · Score: 1

    Maybe you were there, maybe you weren't, but your information is not factual.

    1. How the hell would you write a TSR program for MS-DOS 1.0? The int 21 ah=0x31 call ("Terminate and Stay Resident") did not appear until MS-DOS 2.0. MS-DOS 1.0 didn't even have config.sys - there was no such thing as a TSR or anything even remotely similar to it.

    It did, however, have a rudimentary memory allocator, in the sense that a running program could load another subprogram into the remaining available memory, and the system kept track of which memory was in use by which program. This is actually a CP/M feature ("chain to program").

    The best-selling early IBM PC word processor was WordStar, which certainly ran under the OS. There was no major word processor that ran on the "bare metal." It was written in assembly language, but it functioned as an MS-DOS executable and used MS-DOS FCB calls to access the disk.

    I do agree that it was not immediately clear that the IBM PC would dominate over the other systems at the time. The Apple II and TRS-80 were both cheaper, had more features, and were initially more popular than the PC.

    -Graham

    1. Re:You may be old but you ain't pretty by zog+karndon · · Score: 1

      It's been a *long* time since I wrote the program in question, and I've forgotten the details. (This was ten or so jobs ago, and I've long since lost the source code.)

      But I wrote a printer TSR back in 1981 or thereabouts that ran (only) on MS-DOS 1.0 that was a TSR (although people didn't call it that then) and did disk access (to load custom fonts) when it encountered certain escape codes in the print stream.

      I do recall that I had to intercept a truly amazing number of interrupts in order to make it work, including the calls to set & get the MS-DOS DTA (so that I could reset the DTA when I needed to access the floppy & put it back when I was done).

      I'm pretty sure that I didn't use the chain program feature, because it would have used too much memory to load another copy of command.com.

      Actually, WordStar, if I recall correctly, wasn't ported to the IBM until 1983 or thereabouts; the word processor that I had in mind was John Draper's EasyWriter (I think) - it did not use MS-DOS, but ran on the bare metal (actually, I think it used the BIOS extensively, but I could be mistaken about that) and used its own floppy format.

      Once MS-DOS (and the IBM) gained some traction, EasyWriter disappeared into the mists of history.

  330. Re:You're right about the technologies in his hous by Surak · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I remember it's near his parent's house. Might've actually been Bellvue, I don't remember 100%. But it seems like I remember that the site was changed at some point.

  331. Re:BG-why windows is a better proposition than lin by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    Yeah, he sounds a lot like Bush trying to explain why cutting taxes on the rich is really better for the poor, or where the WMDs went.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  332. Re:open standards, open standards, open standards. by jak163 · · Score: 1

    What if Ford Motor Co. owned all the roads in the U.S.? Surely they would design the roads such that only Ford vehicles worked on them. And furthermore, they would hide behind IP laws to make it illegal for anyone to make a car for their roads.

    They did practically that--Ford, GM and other auto companies lobbied for the creation of the Interstate Highway System in 1957, but their chief competition was passenger trains, which were of course incompatible with highways.

  333. Re:A Call to Arms, our last- best hope for victory by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

    My point was that something has to happen in the GNU world to keep Longhorn from being adopted on a massive scale.

    We (ie, everyone but me ;-) have to put the alternative together and launch it.

    It needs to be able to create a userspace on an NTFS partition for demo purposes.
    It needs killer apps, ready to use.
    It needs WINE, to keep people happyish during/after their conversion.
    It sadly needs to default to an enhanced windows like interface.
    It needs to hook users on being able to control things better than Windows is generally capable of (so Windows looks more and more crippled to them).
    And it needs to be something that average people can migrate to more or less on their own.

    Sounds vaguely like Knoppix, needs a bit more work though.

    --

    Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  334. Of course he dose by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    He has never actually used anything but Windows for years.
    All the Linux clames of innovation are impossable for Windows hence to Bill it must also be impossable for anyone else.
    Reminds me of the Amiga days when everyone was behind the Amiga by 6 months to 2 years.
    Now however Windows lags behind everyone by about 5 years.
    Linux has to fight with systems designed from chip fab to OEM to run Windows and is reasonably successful. What do you think would happen if ONE company stopped making systems based on Windows requirements?
    I give you MY pc. I assembled it using parts I got at one of those discount computer shows where you buy parts at a discount.
    Video card: Won't work on windows 95 (I replaced it with a 3D card)
    TV card (dose not like my 3D card but Linux has a workaround)
    Scanner (SANE is the only drivers I can find for it)
    two sound cards (confuses the hell out of Windows)
    With some hacks Window sorta works a little bit.
    Not that I care.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  335. Other opinions to be published by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    RMS on Windows
    Woz on Microsoft
    Ford on Chevolet
    (Insert big name company) on (insert major compediter)

    I think of those Woz MIGHT be fair. Maybe... if he feels like it.

    As a rule compediters trash each other. I'd just like to see a day when the industry realises Bill Gates isn't any more truthfull than any other CEO.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  336. Re:Dick by ExEleven · · Score: 1

    I commend you on this peice of work, it lightened up my day on my meta-mod dutys that I must forfil myself with (otherwise I will get bored and play chicken with cars).

  337. Re:I wonder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft does software, and software is not technology.

    People that think it is are the same retards that keep using "innovate" in every other sentence.

  338. Re:Who was the interviewer? I smell a rat. by thebatlab · · Score: 1

    I think you're forgetting that this was a paper with worldwide distribution. Oh wait, you did point that out. So.....paper with worldwide distribution puts out shoddily done article that makes it seem like they're kissing the pucker of the richest man in the world? No. No self-respecting media company would do something like this. We all know they spread unbiased truths to the betterment of society.

    but obviously your reasoning skills are very limited

    Never judge someone on one chance encounter and especially not after a comment over the internet. Based on one comment you're going to state the "obvious" that my reasoning skills are limited? Maybe your judgement skills need to be honed a bit more.