Microsoft Developing Linux Policy, Plan of Attack
Lil' Bobby Gortician writes "This new MSNBC article talks about Microsoft's developing strategy to deal with Linux. They are actually getting some of their sales people certified as Linux experts, and say 1/10th of their test servers now run Linux. My favorite quote? "There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness"."
In January Taylor poached one of IBM's former Linux technical leaders, William Hilf, to test 20 versions of open-source software in Redmond. Hilf two years ago was in front of audiences touting the cost effectiveness, reliability and performance of open-source software. Nowadays he's working the Microsoft spiel: "There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness," and "the devil is in the details. This stuff is not easy to run."
How can this fellow's opinion turn on a dime like that? Is he really credible to a corporate audience? I don't think people are quite that stupid or so easily manipulated.
Another strategy is to fund studies that are purported to be neutral regarding Microsoft vs. Open Source. Once again, from the article:
Microsoft has funded 13 studies over the past year comparing Linux with its own products. Guess what: All of them come out in favor of Microsoft. The studies are generously referenced in an advertising campaign dubbed "Get the Facts." Can Linux really handle crucial areas such as security and e-mail?
Here is a skeptical customer:
"I'm not sure how relevant this stuff is," says PCMS Datafit's Matt S. Scherocman. One Microsoft customer, ADC Chief Information Officer Jamey S. Anderson, agrees: "You don't know who's paying the bills. You can't trust the surveys."
Of course, if all else fails, try an "SCO" and claim property as yours and sue the hell out of everybody:
At a recent gathering of venture capitalists Ballmer went so far as to suggest Microsoft might own intellectual property in Linux and assured the audience that Microsoft would pursue any violation of its own patents. Before he spoke, a fire alarm went off. "It was eerily symbolic," says a venture capitalist in attendance. "We all scattered." Microsoft denies this, and says it will not litigate.
Once again, I don't think corporate IT staff and managment can be so easily manipulated. I believe that the very health growth in Open Source is proof.
Cheers,
Erick
http://www.busyweather.com/
*sigh* There's another new field, fresh for 'sploits. Nice one, Microsoft. Keep up with the .. errm .. 'innovation! :-/
Alison
"It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein
"There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness" -Microsoft
I can see it now...
Wheel of Time: Book by Book and Sumview (summary review) Bigdady92 style: http://bigdady92.blogspot.com/
There plan of attack should include attempting to make a superior product. It will get harder and harder for them with an inferior product as they are now finding out.
He's been at Microsoft since college and rattles off techie jargon like value proposition and customer sat (short for satisfaction) like any seasoned Microsoftie.
Techie jargon? I think I've found Microsoft's problem.
Sure.
;-)
And this should be written on all boxes of Windows:
Abandon all hope, ye who are about to open this.
WinXP SP2, anyone?
The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
It's nice to know they actually have a "Microsoft's top Linux strategist".
And he has realized that "Linux is a different kind of opponent. It's not a company to bash, but a software movement with the backing of the entire tech industry.".
And this is why the Linux community is winning. We are more developers in the Linux scene, we are better skilled and higher motivated.
Understanding this, Microsoft should turn around and start providing Linux support and services as part of their portifolio. There is nothing wrong with selling both Linux and Windows! Software is all about support, not the product, today anyways.
9/11: Never forget it was a false-flag operation
I think I'm going to run around high-fiving everyone here, because to me this shows they still don't get it. You can kill SuSE, you can kill Novell, IBM, and Red Hat and you still wouldn't kill Linux.
Microsoft, if you are reading this, you screwed me over once with OS/2. There is no way you will ever take Linux away from me. :)
The more you know, the less you understand.
I can imagine the cackling laughter now ....
MMMMWWWAAHHHH HA HA HA HA
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
You mean like OLE? DDE? The Printer Driver interface where everything is standardized, but nothing prints the same?!
No no... all roads lead to madness on Windows programming. I assure you. (Of course, if you HAVE the roadmap...)
Yeah, there's a really startling lack of self-awareness in the statement that there's no set architecture to Linux and that all roads lead to madness.
All roads lead to madness with Linux?
Tell that to the companies brought down by the slammer worm, either of the nachi worms or the effort trying to keep MS boxes patched in a large enterprise.... that is the road to hell not madness. Although madness is thrown in at no cost.
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
I think Microsoft is setting an excellent example that happy customers (and fans) of Microsoft should imitate: learn everything that you can about Linux. Install it on your PC. Intentionally break your configuration just to practice fixing it. Install new hardware and figure out how to get it working no matter how much it seems like torture. Find free equivalents to software that you would normally run under Windows, and live with them for a while even if it means sacrificing features or quality. Absorb as much of this knowledge as you can, and share it with your other Microsoft-loving buddies. And once you all are as conversant in Linux as are those people who are choosing it over Windows, you'll be able to more effectively lobby against it...beacuse you'll be armed with knowledge. Never mind that you'll be helping the Linux culture to spread. Hey, look over there...it's an angel, and she's giving away free bacon!
The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...
...windowsupdate.com.
Linux has a real stability and consistency problem when it comes to competing distros and running binary applications that you do not have the source code to.
Add to that the proprietary modifications and vastly inflated prices of the dominant Linux vendor and you have a confused customer base that is more comfortable with the consistent Microsoft product lines.
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
You can't just buy Gentoo Linux, debian or many other distributions for that matter. So even if you buy (out) RedHat, Novell and other (stock listed) companies you simply can not destroy those non-profit organisations.
How would you go about to bring GNU down, even if you were founded by the millions?
9/11: Never forget it was a false-flag operation
...IS A BAD THING? That's one more thing to offer my clients.... Let's see, now you can have the same DAMN system across your entire infrastructure, one easy to understand, free and completely customizable desktop.... don't got Linux for this chip.... go compile a kernel... nothing to stop you! It's free! No contracts or legal agreements! Free good software that will run once again on all your systems... open office is FSCKING AWSOME! No viruses, better security... and damned if it isn't more stable!!! HOW 'BOUT THEM APPLES...
||| I still can't believe Parkay's not butter.
"First they kill you, then they mummify you, then they put you on display in the Smithsonian, then you win."
<pedant>
> 1st they laugh at you
> 2nd they fight you
> then you win
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win."
</pedant>
This is where the serious fun begins.
So now the whole world is out to get Microsoft. Isn't such paranoia a classic schizophrenic symptom?
...because Linux is not about to go away and the most important thing is that it is not profit oriented. But as the GPL implies, you can take the code and use it for what ever you want, even controlling a nuclear reactor. Yes, M$ should live with it.
First they laugh at you.
Then they fight you.
Then you win.
I think Microsoft just went from step 1 to step 2. They are acknowledging that Linux is a danger (again). Slowly people will start to realize that Microsoft is fighting Linux. These people will then start to wonder why.
Where people thought that a computer ran Windows 97 and had no idea what an OS was, the marketing machine from Microsoft is now spreading the name Linux. It will cause people to take a closer look.
The rest is up to the Linux community and companies.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
A publicly traded company exists solely to make profits for shareholders. This is accomplished by crushing competition (ideally). If you can't crush 'em though, you don't sell their products! This isn't a sound business model.
Curb CO2 emissions: Kill yourself today!
Heh, here's a good "new feature"
Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off
My dear lord they are innovating at an exponential rate! Quite possibly next they will unleash "a pointer device cabable of interacting with the screen."
http://www.rustyrazorblade.com
Now I have played with many distributions and it seems to me that what they all lack are some form of central administration(not just user adm). Novell have eDirectory and Microsoft has Active Directory(which I haven't tried). ..... which ....", but if you are buying a server distribution anyway, one would expect to have a some sort of centralized administration without having to code all kinds of scripts.
I know there are different solutions available for this that does some of it. But I think it needs to be integrated more.
I know that part of running Linux servers are the joy of making scripts to automate thing and most Linux people will quickly answer that "you just make a
Resistance is not futile. This is just a sign that Microsoft has recognized it's biggest threat, itself!
Why itself? Realizing it's API is fragmented, it's kernel is a weak message passing non-pre-emptive kernel knows Linux blows Windows away in cost, performance and reliability.
Ya, I too would be worried if I had to sell a dog like Windows against Linux.
But bet this dude got alot of dollars and stock options to jump.
Why do Microsoft always have to be so aggressive? Why can't they let people do what they want to do? If I want to run Linux, just let me run Linux... or Mac OS X. Do Microsoft need more money? Do they need to take over the world? Why not just take a chill pill and concentrate on core business? No one likes bullies. Best thing Microsoft can do? Back down. Not only back down, but actively support and develop Open Source products. OpenMicrosoft for the developing countries anyone? What makes Christmas so great? Its the giving. Come on Microsoft - give a little.
Microsoft are just going to hire about 20 high-class escort girls and covertly target them at the most important open source developers. The costs involved in this strategy will be peanuts compared with the total devastation it will bring upon the open source community, which will be left completely defenseless.
They have already started a trial program. You have been warned.
Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated up.
The problem with attacking Linux with lies:
:D
...Yes, linux is not a competitive company, is not a competitive product.. too: Its simply a tool. A giant corporation fighting a tool is somewhat ridiculous. But is real for historical reasons.
- Linux as real problems
This updated strategy will fix this.
And will actually HELP open source, because FEEDBACK is CODING FUEL!
Feedback ist most valuable coding resource. If Microsoft provice feedback about what is wrong with linux, will be easy to fix that and habing a much better tool.
Anyway Windows is a product, and Linux is a tool. Most Linux coders dont really need to sell anithing, but code a usefull tool. So its something different,
imHo
-Woof woof woof!
- A complete GNU/Linux (henceforth: Linux) distribution provides me with source for free (or at a reasonable cost if you buy cds from the distributor), Microsoft does not.
- Most linux distributions provide multiple choices for window managers/desktop environments, Microsoft gives me explorer (though Litestep and BB4Win are available to download).
- In general, with Linux, I have more choices than I need for many things
Granted, some will argue too much choice is bad for the getting Linux on the desktop. That may be, but Microsoft, specifically Mr. Taylor, asked a question, I provided my answer, which does not necessarily represent the views/opinions of others.If Microsoft can provide a reasonably priced, reasonably secure, distribution/version of Windows that comes with such choices, or if a 3rd party vendor started creating Windows distributions along these lines, I would go with what I felt to be a better value, just as I am right now. And for me, a poor, fresh out of college, person, the better value is Linux.
I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this margin is too small to contain.
Does this sound strange to anyone else:
Or how about this?
It just sounds so petty and even a little childish. Microsoft would do better to take the high road - and steer clear of lowering themselves in some kind of attempt at a smear campaign. It only makes them look weaker than they are.
...the power of greed. If you can get away with it for free*, it's amazing what great lengths people go to.
*even when said "free" costs you more to achieve than you saved.
SCO has created a lot of negative press, but once eradicated it will turn to positive press "claims found groundless". A lot of huge companies are backing it. And don't pretend MS will be able to use patents at will. They're kinda like nukes - if MS decides to "nuke" IBMs Linux plans, trust me, IBM can "nuke" Windows as well.
Kjella
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness
To the newbie this perception is immediately apparent.
First question: Which of the hundreds of distros do I use? Hundreds of different answers.
Second question: If they are all Linux, why will this application run on one but not the other? Development geek speak.
Third question: Of the hundreds of choices of this particular application, which is best? Hundreds of naswers and then a massive flame war.
Microsoft's quote may sound pathetic to you but, when they tell a neophyte to check for themselves, they are "proven" correct. The uninitiated are confused and intimidated by the vast number of choices, incompatibilities and varied advice from a pleathora of zealots. Just ask a technical question about a mail program like Postfix or Sendmail. Half the responses will be to change distributions. Change the OS because of an issue with the MTA???
Aside from that crappy bit of rhyme, I find it interesting that MS's entire ad campaign for getting the facts has the feeling of a parent talking down to a child, "Dont be silly Billy-the-IT-professional! Windows is the only proffesional choice!" That, combined with Microsoft's inability to understand the fact that just becuase Linux is now grounded with corporate association it dosent mean that they cant bully unix out of existance really urks me. High fiving everyone my ass...
It sounds like this Taylor guy should become CEO. As fond of MS as we all are around here, at least somebody there is thinking through strategy and figuring out how to compete. IMO, that was IBM's downfall in the late 80's...they just didn't care because they were on top.
Mind you, that still doesn't mean MS's got it all down. RedHat or SUSE could still obliterate them due to MS's size alone; e.g., it's going to take them till 2007 to get longhorn out...that says to me they're getting too big.
--pete
Or do you mean by "plan" paing for more studies?
Microsoft tried a lot against Linux already (calling it a cancer, letting SCO claim it's IP is illegal, making TCO-studies and even lowering prices)
So far nothing (including lowering the prices) has stopped Linux. Linux is growing in all branches of IT.
And it is not like SP2 is doing anything radical, it is just increasing security, so MS'es product was so badly put together that just to add a tiny level of extra security it had to replace so much code and spend so much time.
This can only be the result of extremely bad management and directionless developement of their software.
No this claim by MS shows that somewhere at the top something is really really wrong. They just don't get linux. The weird thing about linux is not that it is by nature that much more secure, I could easily make a linux install that would make Windows 95 look good. I think the real succes behind Linux is that it is not actively trying to stop you from making a secure system.
Plenty on /. talk about how hard linux is to use. They forget that the world has plenty of techies for whom this is merely a challenge.
A formule 1 car is a nightmare to drive and most people with a license wouldn't even be able to complete one lap in it if they even get manage to not stall or crash at the start. That is because the wheels on a normal car are turned slightly in wich causes the car the want to drive straight forward but a race car got them neutral so that it is easier to steer but hell to keep straight.
Linux is harder to drive but once you learned it you are in control, not some marketing weirdo at redmond. That is why I like linux. I can figure it out, I am in control, it is my OS.
MS real enemy is MS. To many people now have a stake in MS being reduced. Who are MS allies? Only those it can buy. Mercenaries are not known for their loyaltie.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
Strategists and Paychecks won't fix your corporate competition problem. Nor will billions of features that no one will use and only bloat your product. Quality and Control. Thats what I look for in a product. Is it high quality? Does it stay stable after and install or require to reboot? Do I the user have as much or as little control as I want? Will the system configure itsself if I don't want to, but allow me to tweak later? Can I get in and mess with the nitty gritty, but have a nice abstraction layer? All roads point to Unix or Linux in this case. Almost apple. Almost.
To any and all CIOs and CEOs that might be reading this:
Before you listen to anybody's suggestions (maybe even mine here), get a copy of *nix, throw it on a machine or three and beat them up with some sample data. You *will* be impressed. Look at YOUR costs for microsoft CALs and look at YOUR costs for support. Then look at the performance and do the math for yourself. If you're uneasy with the tempest currently swirling around Linux and/or the GPL then use one of the BSDs.
In any event, do it. Your responsibility to the company, its investors and its customers mandates you do this; whatever your ultimate decision.
One could be forgiven for thinking that was intended to describe Active Directory.
I run a mixed network, though mostly Linux these days, for work. I frequently hear about juicy new technologies for MS (I read several of the pro Windows mags) and some sound really good. Mostly, however, as I read the article I quickly find myself thinking "that's nice if you're a company big enough to pay someone to learn this one technology, and you'll really need the myriad options it provides. But for most people who could use that functionality, this is ridiculously complex and over-engineered."
There are also times I curse Linux, often in ways that'd make your hair curl. MTA + spam filter + virus scanner(s) + IMAP/POP server + webmail is all well enough, but give me standard interfaces on each of them or I'll go insane very soon. Then I tried to set up an Exchange demo and, well, suddenly it didn't seem so bad anymore. It's still quite bad, but Exchange also failed to work sensibly by default, was hard to integrate with multiple plug-ins, and generally reassured me that in fact all mail server software is crap (though each may in isolation be quite good).
MS needs to get a handle on the complexity of its own systems before they can talk too loudly about the multiplicity of configurations under Linux and the fact that every admin almost has to be a developer. At least with Linux, I can admin my hideously complex configurations via a collection of individual config files in a consistent place that don't change for no reason, vanish, get corrupted, or get bored and go for a smoke
If Linux distros could offer a consistent config file format (Pick one. Seriously.), some form of config inheritance (eg load
If I could get consistent open and save dialog boxes for my Linux terminal server, I think I'd be in heaven.
Overall, I must say that I see a serious case of the pot calling the kettle black here. They're both awful.
This is just begging for a Ren and Stimpy parody...
"Oh, my beautiful GNOME taskbar!"
"Will he press the reset button? Can he resist the bright, candy-colored reset button?"
"NO, I CAN'T!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Anyone who has had to really use Windows XP knows that the current versions of Linux distributions have fallen down miserably in terms of performance and "shininess" in the GUI. Both of those are important if you want a credible, OSS challenge from Linux. For those that question the latter, I would remind them that the "shininess" of a GUI is one of the biggest things that consumers use to gadge as "modern." It's not a good metric by any means, but it is one that must be taken into serious consideration.
A lot of work on Syllable would go a long way toward hurting Longhorn. If enough Linux guys would get involved with the underpinnings so that Vanders and the rest of the team could take a break to work on the GUI system, it'd be a damn good OSS desktop by the time Longhorn gets here. As it stands right now, their labor is too divided to get its hardware support good enough to boot on many systems. Come on people, it'd be a quick investment of time that'd pay large dividends later.
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
Completely
.. On the other hand it makes good toast
Heterogenus
Architecturally
Open
System
there's so much stupidity quoted in this article that it hurts... "don't tell us you're deploying linux just because you can" - but what if i am? what if i am running it just because i can? not to mention the 13 studies paid for by microsoft that all showed *gasp* that microsoft is better in every concievable way, shape and form than $OPPOSITION. who would have guessed that a microsoft study would put microsoft on top?
Second to the last paragraph:
Taylor thinks Novell poses the biggest threat to Microsoft. "They have the best opportunity," he says. Through two acquisitions Novell has amassed a hefty stack of Linux-based software that includes a server operating system, desktop and management software. Novell gives resellers up to 15% commissions on top of the usual commission on first-time Linux customer deals.
What is wrong with this statement? I think it's pretty clear. I think what they really acquired when Novell bought SuSE is a bunch of really smart people who can develop the stuff they want under Linux. From my perspective, Apple is to PC as Microsoft is to Linux. That's something Microsoft has got to get a grip on. They can attack Linux vending companies 'til there are no more Linux vending companies any more, but will that stop anything? It might slow things down... some things might need ot reborn, but basically, since no one OWNs Linux, there will always be someone willing to pick up where others left off.
Microsoft? Are you listening? You'd better start writing applications that run on Linux and make your own distro. That's the only way to shut out the competition. They could actually pull it off once they got over their stupid pride issues.
Sounds like a good idea. Have them find are weak spots for us, then we just have to fix them.
Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off
It's a 5m long pointy stick for jabbing at theon/off button - yay!!!
----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
So at least they will be expert in *something*. Some day these very skills may bail them out.
Smart move then! Less down time, less security hassles...
So they accept there are architectures in Linux? Conversely, they acknowledge Linux is smart enough to have different architectures for different components/modules, and understands that an OS is not a straight-jacket one-size fits-all thing?
Which is why they are embracing that madness and studying it?
(aah, this feels good!)
http://efil.blogspot.com/
3) their excutives cries
Nothing costs nothing
How would you go about to bring GNU down, even if you were founded by the millions?
Patents.
Until governments realise how harmful and overreaching software patents are, even non-profit distros like Gentoo and Debian or F/OSS promoters like the FSF aren't safe.
If IBM, HP, and Novell decided today to drop all their Linux support, what would stop Microsoft from raising hundreds of software patent claims against F/OSS? Even if as much as 90% of them were invalid, we don't have the army of lawyers that MS has on their side.
"Linux at some point could be good enough to run home PCs"
It astonishes me how deeply entrenched MS is with reporters and the general public. Linux has been good enough to run home PCs for years, as we all know. Why can't the article make a more accurate statement, such as:
"Linux at some point may acquire the universal third-party support from hardware and software companies that Windows currently enjoys, and thereby encourage large numbers of home users to select it over Windows".
Widespread availability of preinstalled Linux systems is the whole ball of wax. "Regular users" _never_ install operating systems, and most people don't even install applications, they just use whatever came with the machine. I would guess that 80% of people using computers fall into this category. Put these people in front of a well-configured Linux box, and they will find it every bit as easy to use as Windows. One could even tell them it is a new version of Windows and most people wouldn't realize the difference.
Microsoft will eventually find some unexpected way to counter Linux, if you keep paying attention to them. The best thing to do is just let Microsoft continue to make money hand over first for the next ten years or so, wait for Gates and Balmer to retire, and *still* Microsoft will be around for 50 more years, being all important -- but they'll just fade into the woodwork. Best to keep your mind focused on your work.
... is to build their own Distro, brand it with the Microsoft logo, and get it into distribution channels as far and as wide as possible.
...
It makes no sense for Microsoft to 'resist' Linux at all. Microsoft are just as capable of doing a kernel.tar.gz and stage1.tar.gz style release as anyone else. Why don't they just do it?
If there were a "Microsoft Linux", then Novell wouldn't stand a chance. Any existing MS-only shop looking to upgrade to Linux would definitely consider an "MS Linux" package over any other option, at least at first.
Seems to me, this article, and a few of the other ones recently from Microsoft on the subject of "Linux", is all a big prep-job to open the doors for a Microsoft-sourced Linux distro.
It could happen. I'd like to see it happen, personally. It'd be good to give people like these guys, and heck, even these guys a bit of competition from Microsoft
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
Scripting becomes a whole new learning experience if you're moving from *nix scripting. You can do SO much more, but ad-hoc scripting is a screaming f**ing nightmare, so it's often just easier to do it manually, or not automate that task that could maybe be automated.
Then there's handling software that doesn't like to live together on the same server.
I'm very far from deluded enough to believe that Linux is perfect, or even particularly good, and the MS systems do have some serious advantages. On the other hand, I think they have as much of a problem with overconfigurability as Linux, just in different ways. With Linux, I feel like I'm forced to do a lot of the OS engineer's job. With windows, I feel trapped as soon as I try to go outside the bounds of the pre-designed capabilities of the system.
Let's call them both broken and pick whichever is least excruciatingly broken for the task at hand.
The difference being, of course, that the service that's listening for connections for clients is easily exploited, the client less so.
Perhaps you mean the RDP service that Windows provides?
Linux will never make it to the desktop unless the major distributors agree on a standard package format.
./configure prefix=, make && make install is too archaic and relies on a good understanding of directory structure. Getting the software off can be impossible, and if you have to type in your root password... how long before that social engineering is exploited by virus writers.
Once that hill has been climbed, then developers only need to create and test one type of package to distribute their software on any Linux distribution.
The old
Also, I find it too lengthy a process to edit all those configuration files... most Mac/Windows programs just run. Sygate is a good example of a useable firewall... it requires no instructions to use.
I think this is more important than improving KDE/Gnome etc.
Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
quit crying about it. linux doesn't like microsoft either. If they switched places, you'd be complaining about linux picking on microsoft.
Linux at some point could be good enough to run home PCs.
Oh, we can hope, right? Holy cow that's nonsense.
Can Linux really handle crucial areas such as security and e-mail?
Yeah, email is tough. Maybe if we study OutLook really hard, we can make something so great . . . sigh.
"I just want the decision to be based on facts, not religion," says Taylor. "People are saying, 'It's not Microsoft, so it must be great.' Tell us what Linux does that we can't do. Don't tell us you're deploying Linux just because you can."
Well, one of the answers is one of the "crucial areas" mentioned above. I bet you can guess which one.
Microsoft is actively sowing uncertainty and doubt among potential Linux customers over who, if anyone, owns the intellectual property behind open-source software.
What, no Fear?
At a recent gathering of venture capitalists Ballmer went so far as to suggest Microsoft might own intellectual property in Linux and assured the audience that Microsoft would pursue any violation of its own patents. Before he spoke, a fire alarm went off. "It was eerily symbolic," says a venture capitalist in attendance. "We all scattered." Microsoft denies this, and says it will not litigate.
Ruh roh.
Windows group chief James Allchin accuses Linux of being a cheap knockoff: "There's no innovation. Linux is still in the business of cloning existing technology." Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off, with programs still running. Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says.
Undeserving of a reply.
everything in moderation
"There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness".
The penguins alone could not have saved us, but in conjunction with the mist they seem to have done so.
H.P. Lovecraft
"At the Mountains of Madness"
First off, I did *not* RTFA. This is just how I would approach the issue if I were Microsoft.
....at least that's the strategy I would employ.
I think they should start making Linux applications, providing Linux support, even making thier own distribution or at least a "Windows for Linux" desktop.
Remember when Netscape was the dominant browser and I.E. first came out?. It took a while but eventually I.E. became dominant. They just have a huge financial pool to draw upon. Makes them well suited to corporate "siege warfare".
You want to migrate to Linux, let us make it easy for you. Here is MS Office ported to Linux so you know your old docs will not only work, but be supported by us as well. Worried about migration? No problem, use the Windows for Linux desktop environment.
With their resources, they can shred Linux from the inside and slowly undermine the GPL.
A goal is a dream with a deadline
Then also asks what linux can deliver that MS can't. I think the short answer to that would be that linux has a social conscience of infinite magnitude in comparison to the 'black hearted' MS corp.
MS offer plenty of stuff, patent lawsuits after agreements that read something like 'we can steal your patents, but don't touch ours'. Also MS can give you all the security updates you need.. 3 weeks after the internet slows to a crawl with Windows worm traffic.
MS can also give you a hefty priced lock in cycle.
MS's fear seems to come from the fact that you can get equal functionality and better quality from something that is free.(With acknowledgment that alot of users aren't interested in buying new hardware, with that, old hardware does exist.)
Why pay excessive amounts of money to fund a company running it's own agenda? Or using that money to unfairly, and with questionable ethics, nail out competition?
MS don't seem interested in developing a better product+service package that compels users to pay for it, rather they look for each companies funny bone and strike at it with lawyers and/or software contamination.
So combining these business 'values' that MS have(in contrast to social values), it becomes clear to me that users would still run linux even if it ran at a fraction of the speed of MS software. The real world difference, (even in MS funded benchmarking) shows minimal difference between the speed of both platforms. This leaving the user to make an ethical choice. This is why MS miss out on future opportunities from the user bases of companies they've assassinated over the years. Note MS's failure to recognise that when they kill a company, it angers that companies user base(creating them more work plus a costly turn over program), who in return will endeavour to not use MS products.)
First Ghandi makes a memorable, quotable statement
Then people over use it and beat it till it's hackneyed and cliche
Then you STFU
I've got to say though, there is a sort of Mickey Thomson sense of fun and accomplishment on these roads to madness. Like taking a trophy truck across dusty unpredictable roads with many obstacles.
And don't get me wrong Windows is it's own road to madness. But it is for the most part large boring paved highway with no exits (just offramps that say "no exit"), and you are travelling in a very large Buick that seems to only go straight ahead. And while the road seems solid enough the bridges are rickety at every upgrade and fellow drivers seem to pull over randomly to restart their cars all the time.
Yes, I'm serious. We should all give M$ a big hug for taking the time and effort to give the Linux developers some feedback.
"No set architecture"... thanks, if only all feedback was this detailed but it's well intentioned feedback anyway, where in the bugtracker can I review this feedback?
It may take a bit of time to get this fixed but it should be finished around say, oh... 2007, right before Longhorn?
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
I read the article, until I found Laura DiDio, or whatever her name is, referenced as a source. Then I just closed the window. If they are quoting her as an authority, then the entire piece has lost credibility and I don't waste my time reading any further. I then realized this is the third time in as many days that I have done that to an article.
So, how many of you read an article until they quote some person as an authority (could be Laura or anyone else) that you feel lacks any credibility, and then stop reading any further? I'm curious.
I was reading something the other day, when someone was quoted spouting some nonesense that I firmly believe is untrue, and then they referred to the name and the "group" she represents. It seems she gets quoted a lot, especially anything remotely anti-Linux related. I would rather read an author's opinions than have that "group's" opinions quoted as facts. Articles carry more credibility with me when the author stands up him or herself, and doesn't resort to pointing fingers, "see, she said it".
. 62,400 repetitions make one truth -- Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
A book called "Life in a crystal palace" describes the way this works in Corps.
Free Unix? Free Windows. http://www.reactos.com
There are lots of nice things about AD. I don't work with it overly much myself, but some of what I've seen really impressed me.
I also know one person who accidentally took down an entire corporate network (an Australian construction company with a name beginning with B) by promoting a domain controller in the wrong way. IIRC they failed to do some required prep first, or promoted it when it shouldn't have been or something. I recall talk about AD schema having been "upgraded" and it being impossible to roll the change back.
Also, AD is _incredibly_ complex. Think of a giant, company wide registry jungle. It's scary, and it's really hard to track, version, and roll back changes. The latest Windows for Professionals (Australia) has an interesting article on using a server or small set of servers dedicated to delayed AD replication as a tricky workaround for some forms of change rollback.
I'd like to see better centralised administration in Linux, but I'd like to see it stick to KISS. Do the job, do it as simply as possible, and do just that job. The AD design is not the way.
So... MS is spending millions of dollars on finding faults with Linux and explaining why MS is better than Linux.
So, people all over the world who think that Windows is the only OS there is will be finding out that there's a convincing alternative.
Coders who think their software works fine will be reading MS's reports about what bugs it's got.
So MS is, in fact, spending millions on giving Linux free publicity and debugging its software.
This is supposed to kill Linux... how, exactly?
So.. it has come to this
1. Ignore Linux
2. Laugh at Linux
3. Lose to Linux
4. ???
5. Profit!
If IBM, HP, and Novell decided today to drop all their Linux support, what would stop Microsoft from raising hundreds of software patent claims against F/OSS? Even if as much as 90% of them were invalid, we don't have the army of lawyers that MS has on their side.
Probably nothing. But what would stop F/OSS from moving their packages to a country where a US patent is as worthless as the paper it isn't printed on?
As compared to new technology like window/mouse interfaces (never mind Xerox, Apple), IP connectivity (never mind *n*x), web browsers (never mind Mosaic, Netscape), web servers (never mind NCSA, Apache), long filenames (never mind Apple, *n*x), that Microsoft "innovated" with Windows.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
you forgot the ????? step
Yay Roger Waters :o)
So.. it has come to this
While no company would like to have to do it, Microsoft really need a back-up plan and need a strategy of how to deal with a vastly shrinking market share in OSes and office software.
They simply can't grow their PC based business any longer and users are less likely to want to cough up hundreds of dollars for Office and Windows.
Their problem is they've been so focussed on boring office applications for so long that they're not exactly that good at other market areas. Buying other companies is the quickest way to gain expertise but when you look at the purchases they have made, they have hardly captitalised on their gains.
Microsoft is devoting a lot of internal resources to figure out Linux and how to fight it. The problem is: Linux isn't their enemy. Their true enemy is Open Source. (I've mentioned this several times before)
When they almost missed the Internet boat, it was only because of Gates' annual Summer sabbatical (so it is said) which made him realize they were on the brink of being left behind. The 'net, and more specifically, the web, were not quite on the fast track for bringing in the dough. And this is part of what caused Microsoft to wait. They'll either invest heavily in something which they know will make money in the future (and they can lock it down now (or soon); or they'll hop on the bandwagon and start making money now, even if the software quality isn't there. When the "Information Superhighway" was the vogue term, Gates said, "I don't care what the Information Superhighway looks like as long as I have a tollbooth on it." (we know they've wanted more than that for some time: why rule desktops when you can rule the Internet?)
Back to the topic at hand. Microsoft understands money and they know how to fight it and with it. What they don't understand is how to fight something which doesn't show up on their financial slide rule. '$ofties put in massive hours because they think it's cool and they like to do what they do. Open Source people tend to spend a lot of time doing what they like to do. (and make a lot of money, although they're restructuring^killing their stock system, that may change. 8-10 years ago, you could put five years in, cash out, and leave a millionaire. Not any more!) And [not by default], the bug count seems to be much less because there's the issue of oversight of code by anyone who wants to. This doesn't exist at Microsoft and never will.
Microsoft is trying to brainwash itself internally. They need to hire some people who either know & believe in Open Source or some who don't eat, drink, and sleep it, but are young enough they haven't been indoctrinated by Microsoft's corporate culture. I don't think Linux has anything to worry about.
no serious system is easy to operate at a server level. some are easier than others but you can't just become a sysadmin overnight and expect to get good results. MS's server products are just as complex as a linux system, and have just as many ways of being exploited and potentially fucked up as a linux or BSD or Solaris or Mac OS X box. The difference being that while the number of exploits against both types of systems is likely the same (have you SEEN the number of exploits available for *nixes?) the ease of pulling them off is heavily skewed to Windows because it's a) more likely to be unsecured and b) more ubiquitous. As more people install and run linux, the numbers will likely balance out. Put a windows box behind a secured firewall and kill all ports except those necessary and you'll cut down risk -- but MS requires a LOT more ports open for basic stuff (how many "ms ports" -- eg 135, 137 -- are hitting your firewall as infected or attacks?).
Linux can be made more secure, all the way down to the software level where you can check source for yourself and see if the software is secure enough for you, and if you want to, you can run a particular piece of software in it's own jail, for added security. MS can't do that.
FreeBSD for the impatient.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
From the article:
"Linux at some point could be good enough to run home PCs."
I'm sitting here with my fingers crossed, biting my lip, hoping for that day!
Oh, this message written on Debian Sarge, current uptime: 31 days, 12 hours, 35 minutes.
HA!
Like Digital Freedoms? Then donate to EFF before they're gone.
Windows, where there's a one true way; and it's an expressway to madness?
Honestly, I use both Windows and Linux. There are things I use one for and not the other, because Windows is really good at some things that Linux is not, and vice versa.
You'd THINK that if Microsoft wanted to keep Linux from growing, they'd identify the things that Linux does well and Windows does not, and work on that.
I think they have this idea that Windows is really the best at everything, and people are just using Linux because it's free. Sorry, wrong. I pick my operating systems based on which one does the job the best.
The horror! The horror!
Sounds like Microsoft needs Mr. Kurtz.
Linux has benifits over Windows and the converse is also true. Despite the things that all of us like about Linux, we represent a very small population of the computing community. That is why Microsoft's largest source of revenue; the home PC user, will never really be threatened by Linux. 90% of the people out there are looking for convience in a home PC system and although Linux offers more flexiblity, it doesn't really offer convience. Linux will chip away at Microsoft in other areas, but any dream for Linux to become as 'employed' as Windows is a pipe dream.
I think, though, that Microsoft is evading the point. The biggest difference between Microsoft and its open source competition is ...
... drum roll ...
The license.
Every time the decision is made to use a Microsoft product, the person making that decision to (a) solve a problem and(b) enter into or modify a legal and financial relationship with Microsoft. Every time somebody makes the decision to use an open source product, that person is making the decision that to (a) solve a problem. Period. So, it really takes more care and concern to choose a Microsoft product over an open source one. It takes a huge commitment to build an initiative around Microsoft.
That is why Microsoft is fond of terms like "architecture" and "road map". Of course there is architecture and a road map for Linux and other major open source projects; however that is not what they are talking about. What they are really saying is that Microsoft's business model fits naturally with the paradigm of top down management and planning, since it makes individual initiative very difficult. Every organization in fact needs some top down management and planning.
Open source fits much more with autonomous and indvidual decision making, where people close to a problem decide to fix it. Well, it turns out that organizations need that kind of problem solving to.
So, the value proposition of open source is that enables greater individual and small group initiative to solve problems that occur on a day to day basis.
There are two ways to learn about things. You can read and research about them, or you can learn by doing. People tend to over-rely on one or the other strategy. Organizations are no different. I don't think open source is a at a disadvantage in the strategic planning arena, except to the degree that organizations that are highly biased towards top down control (which may be a valid style depending on the business ) may find the forbidding aspect of proprietary licenses an attractive way to limit individual initiative.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
I love mail servers under Linux. Honest. Really. Like cleaning a boil under my big toe.
... unpleasant.
Admittedly, I honestly do love it once it's all set up and running and the pain is gone, you can just forget it's there and it keeps on working, but the process of getting it there is
Given n MTAs, o spam filters, p virus scanners, q IMAP/POP servers, and r webmail systems, how many different combinations do you think is possible - assuming (naievely and oversimplisticly) that you can only have one of each? Just going by the software I know of in each category, I'm counting hundreds of combinations - and that's with a reasonably common set of software. The worst thing is that many of those combinations require totally different ways of hooking everything together - often badly documented ways.
We really need standardised interfaces between the MTA, webmail (OK, so that's mostly there with IMAP + LDAP), IMAP/POP server, and any filters such as virus scanners and spam checkers. At least that way we'd have a massive variety of software to learn how to configure, but wouldn't have to do battle with figuring how the f**k postfix plugged into Cyrus and and mailscanner with spamassassin and clamav (daemon mode).
I don't mind (no, I like) variety, I just wish the variety would learn to read the same configuration for common options, and try to talk the same language where possible.
How many times does this damn quote have to be mindlessly thrown around on Slashdot discussions about Microsoft? I seem to recall it being posted on every single discussion on this topic for the past couple of years and always giving the "insight" on how MS has just now entered step two.
Gandhi is not god so what he says does not necessarily hold true. I wouldn't advise anyone to unconditionally trust something that he has once said on a different topic.
I seriously think these kind of posts should be moderated redundant already. I think I've seen the same quote for about 200 times already.
I've been working with UNIX/Linux for 10 years and was recently sucked into a Windows 95 to Windows XP upgrade/deployment.
... Try to remove some of the newer Spyware from an XP box. You won't get a sense for how much you don't know and can't see on an XP box until you've tried to kill spyware. In most cases it's faster to reload XP than to try and track it down.
:) I can work anywhere and even have access to compilers, it's a beautiful thing :) However, for the population at large Windows XP in CLASSIC VIEW is still the way to go for the massess
In my opinion, Windows XP is a DISORGANIZED MESS! The XP software process works like this.... image a three sided hand-grendade. On one side you have DLL's, on another side you have Registry entries, and on another side you have executables and datafiles. Pull the pin and that is basic method of windows software installation. Also, there is no standard way to install software and people use everything from custom Java installers, Microsoft Installer, Install Shield which makes creating SILENT installations lots of fun. To get an MSCE you should have to package 20 different applications all using different installers to do silent installs under XP. If you still have your sanity at the end, you get the MSCE.
What if something doesn't work? What if the installer fails? What if you have a piece of software that no one can locate the media for, how can you move it from one XP box to another? What if you have old software the requires a CUSTOM environment that conflicts with newer software?
I imagine XP is a great product if you stick to using all brand new Microsoft products and don't try to run your business with older applications from 3rd parties.
Moving on to security.. policies are an overly complex joke. Anyone with even moderate technical skill and intelligence can defeat domain or group policies.
Now let's take UNIX/Linux. It definately has some sharp edges especially if you are trying to run with new or non-standard hardware. However, Linux has some great strengths...
1. I know what package installed what file. (rpm -qf
2. I can move applications EASILY from one system to another without going through the install process.
3. I can backup and restore a Linux/UNIX box from a centralized tape backup system MUCH easier than a Windows server with custom RAID. You haven't experienced IT to the fullest until you tried to recover an older server class Windows NT/2000 box.
4. I can run multiple version of the SAME software by creating custom environments. Trying installing two versions of an application like MS Office on the same Windows XP. The later install typically uninstalls the previous install. Running it under VMWARE doesn't count.
5. Remote adminstration can be done EASILY from the command line under Linux. In XP I've installed Cygwin SSH on XP and have written some VBS scripts. Windows is definately catching up in the area of remote administration, but is still hard to use and books are scarce.
6. Patching for security flaws is a breeze under Linux/UNIX. With Microsoft, install a SUS server and maybe, just maybe if the planets align the patch will saunter down to the PC. I had to write some scripts to slam patches in and reboot. Seems like every critical patch requires a reboot. 7. Figuring out what's going on under Linux/UNIX is pretty simple. You can clearly see what launches applications, what files they have open, what resources they are using etc
I've been using both Linux/XP Servers and Linux/XP Desktops. Handsdown, I prefer running Linux servers over XP or 2003. If I must run XP or 2003 servers, I feel it's best to stick them into VMWARE ESX or GSX so that they are neatly contained and can be easily recovered, moved, and backed up. I know you take a slight performance hit, but the ability to manage the server and keep it up far outweighs it.
For the desktop I prefer Knoppix and a thumbdrive.
...his real job is to better understand Linux so Microsoft can do a better job of crushing it. In 2001 Microsoft Chief Steve Ballmer likened Linux to "cancer." Now, says Taylor, "Linux is going to be around forever. We've got to understand it.
After all the marketing people have gone home...
After all the white papers have been published...
The fact is, there are and have been people at Microsoft, dedicated to truly understanding Linux. Taylor gets it. Linux IS going to be around forever because anyone with a computer and a decent internet connection (or lots of patience) can get their hands on it. Difficulty of mastery is neglegable when entry is free. For the first time, in a long time, I think they're being forced to think outside of their box.
Microsoft has crushed it's competition in the past with superior marketing (not necessarily something to be proud of...) and ease of use (at the expense of security). The MS corporate cultures biggest achilles heel (besides the IDIOTS that go through the Win2K Server install wizard and think they're done) has been it's overconfidence and sincere belief that it knows what's best. This attitude has allowed them to justify their questionable and litigatable tactics and ignore for far too long true innovation from it's competitors.
MS will improve in product strengh, quality, and reliability. They have the money and now the motivation, so it's only a matter of time, but it will not be free. The greatest strength of Linux is the community. I look forward to increased ease of use from the Linux platform, allowing increased growth of that community, but not at the expense of the quality and stability of the platform. The quality and dedication of the individuals in the community shuold not be sacrificed for greater numbers.
Michalangelo Progr
There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness
And That's Beautiful !
Maybe we deserve this world ?
Free Software has one major benefit which non-free (Microsoft etc.) hasn't: freedom. If we teach people to value their freedom to their software, no functionality enhancements will get them back to M$ from GNU/Linux. M$ speaks about "Open Source" and says that the GPL is an "Open Source" license because they don't want people to think in terms of software freedom.
it's TOTALLY legal to represent yourself in any court of law. You have to learn a bit of legal procedure, but it's doable and a lot easier than learning how to program or play the latest complex videogame. If you think you always have to use a 200$ an hour lawyer, you have defeated yourself in advance.
And yes, been there, done that, won both times, once against literally a flown in expert lawyer hired by a consortium of rich dudes. I won't go into specifics, I will say it was hard,scary at times, even to the point of getting death threats from people I know had already murdered people in an arson for profit scam, but I started from scratch, got some good free advice and ran with it and kicked boot-tay. The main thing is, you got to KNOW you are in the right, if you are, then it's just procedure, lining your ducks up, and going for it. It's doable, even moreso now that you can use the internet for research. Thousands of people out there are working their own cases now,websites exist for the purpose of helping, the monopoly guild just doesn't like it and would like to make it illegal, but so far it's still *legal* to do so.
Microsoft is accustomed to beating competition by undercutting the competitor's price. In the past this was possible because Microsoft:
Now that Microsoft's stock price is stagnant, they can't print money. With the company under close scrutiny for anti-trust violations, they've had to reign in the leveraging of their monopoly status, and PC OEM's will gladly sell you a system preloaded with Linux if you prefer (at least for servers - desktops following soon). Additionally, Open Source software is less expensive to develop, and generally more robust.
Now Microsoft finds themselves in the same position that their competitors used to be in - they must justify a higher price because of better "value", which is intangible.
Because Microsoft's proprietary business model excludes them from participating in the Open Source software development process, they will likely end up with a niche market much like Apple now has.
"Don't tell us you're deploying Linux just because you can."
And what kind of corporate arrogance assumes "because I can" is an insufficient reason for not choosing their products?
Tell us what Linux does that we can't do
Allow me to see, modify, and distribute the source code *for free*.
I'm sure MS will get right on that.
>Isn't Kerry the one who voted for war, then voted against paying for it?
/. leftists don't have the balls to do....), but the second he returned from his grand total of four months in Vietnam he became a fervent anti-war activist, hanging out with Hanoi Jane et al.
Actually he voted against dropping that much money with so little accounting oversight and accountability. Seems to make sense to me.
>Or in his acceptence speech said he was against "unilateral" US action
Something relatively sane to say.
>but he also said that he would not allow anyone to veto any US actions? Well, which is it?
Which could also mean that he's willing to do a lot of hard diplomatic work. It is also political suicide for an elected official to say he would allow the decisions he makes to be overridden by someone outside his constituency. Doesn't seem like a flip-flop to me.
>And it's not like he doesn't have a history of epic flip flops. He volunteered to go to Vietnam (something I do respect - and something damn near all knee-jerk
Hm, Someone who is patriotic goes to war, gets shot up, decides war in general sucks, he doesn't want any more of his fellow soldiers back in Viet Nam to be shot up for a war he thinks is pointless, and acts on that? Sounds like learning from experience. Something like Bush declaring the UN irrelevant before the invasion of Iraq, and now busting his buns to do everything he can to get the UN involved in the occupation/changeover/whatever.
Which is slightly more excuseable than the multitude of reasons we kept being handed for the invasion of Iraq, almost every one being shot down as fast as it came up, when Bush had been wanting to invade Iraq all along (but couldn't say that because it would be TELLING THE TRUTH).
*COUGHS* Sorry, inside voice got out.
Searching for Truth, Justice, and the Guy Who Boosted My Wallet a Few Weeks Back....
Because, as we all know, one should vote for funding something they believe in, even if they disagree with some major parts of the rest of the omnibus spending bill their voting on. After all, voting against something that will be implemented if it passes means voting against the concept rather than the implementation. It's not like defeated funding bills are re-worked and re-introduced or anything...
And, of course, it's not like one can believe that they should serve their country (and enlist) and then try to correct the phenomenal screwup they witnessed.
Quick question: can you see the sarcasm here?
The i386 folder on the Windows XP SP1 Corporate CD is 504,563,416 bytes. Windows XP SP2 is 278,927,592 bytes. Fifty-five percent is being replaced.
Microsoft is focusing on Linux, thinking that's the competition. It's Open Source. Microsoft doesn't understand this because they only understand battles involving money, or power involving money. Open Source doesn't necessarily map into that philosophy so Microsoft overlooks it and focuses upon the end product(s).
It's no different than the Internet. They almost missed the boat (until Gates' infamous Summer sabbaticals where he isolates himself for two weeks and thinks. The reason Microsoft didn't hop onto the Internet were twofold: 1)the Internet was "The World's Biggest Secret Club" where the only way to know about it is if you were on it. I know some (or more) at MS knew about it, but why weren't they pushing it internally? 2) No one at Microsoft saw a way to turn a profit using it. Once the light bulb lit up and the business opportunities presented themselves, Gates' was quoted (and I heard it in person), "I don't care what the Information Superhighway[1] looks like as long as I have a tollboth on it."
Again, Microsoft doesn't understand OS and until they do, they're chasing their tails. The best part is they're devoting resources to chasing smoke. The next question is: How much more money are they going to invest in SCO to keep the fight alive?
[1] "Information Superhighway" was the vogue term at that time, just as Gore claimed to have invented it.
For Microsoft's new product, which removes your soul, and replaces it with a MS Soul(tm).
I totally get the impression that microsoft is now hiring these Linux advocates for a job that looks something like a scene out of Clockwork Orange, where they just watch pictures of Linux applications crashing, and Mr. Gates handing out candy to children.
The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
He's right. I have been using Microsoft products, in a business environment, since Microsoft Basic for the CP/M operating system.
"Windows group chief James Allchin accuses Linux of being a cheap knockoff: "There's no innovation. Linux is still in the business of cloning existing technology." ... Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says."
Sounds eerily like a "cheap knockoff" of Dashboard to me.....
I've never been a strong Linux user. I use Windows at home and at work. I'm a developer for the Microsoft platform. But I love to see Microsoft competing. Not because I have some religious problem with them, or because I hate their business practices. I just know that competition from Linux is only going to make Microsoft products stronger (and vice versa).
Honestly, with this kind of competition, everybody wins.
Forget the whales - save the babies.
"Just as Microsoft has gone through a wrenching transformation from a combative bully to a mature corporate citizen"
I guess MS is just one of those bullies who never grows up - and ends up in jail as an adult. Not that I would shed any tears if that happened.
"Insanity in individuals is something rare, but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule." - Nietzsche
Taylor was handed a just-finished study that found Microsoft too emotionally biased against open-source code and blind to customer distrust in its own brand.
That cuts both ways.
All right, so we are living the dream. FOSS is competing toe-to-toe with the world's largest software companies across many, many markets.
So compete. Make FOSS better in terms of what customers want. Acknowledge that our competitors are legitimate organizations with legitimate products.
Microsoft is rapidly growing out of the mentality that everything they do must be perfect, and that FOSS can't possibly be serious competition. I'd like to see the free software community and open source communities do likewise.
there: a location other than here; that place; "you can take it from there"
their: of or relating to them or themselves especially as possessors, agents, or objects of an action
Microsoft are making quite a big show out of learning linux. He has Microsoft's salesfolk taking exams to qualify for certification as Linux experts. How many linux users and developers would consider themselves quite expert at microsoft products? I'm sure there are alot of certified microsoft engineers that favour linux.
"just as Microsoft has gone through a wrenching transformation from a combative bully to a mature corporate citizen "
When did this happen? I must not have been reading slashdot on that day.
What they really need is a Republican strategist to come up with talking points:
-Linux is a flip-flopper (is it command line or GUI? Could they make up their minds already?!)
-Eclipse sounds French. VisualStudio is a good, strong American sounding name.
-Linux starts with the same letters as liberal.
-These damned hippies always want a free ride (and they keep talking about 'free as in beer' - are they alcoholics?).
Of course, we at Faux News are only reporting on what other people are saying about the leftist-pinko-commie operating system. We're totally fair and balanced on the issue of non-patriotic, foreign-made, non-capitalist operating systems.
Small problem for that strategy: IBM sees Open Source as a strategic tool of some importance, and they have, shall we say, rather a lot of money to purue that strategy with. It will be hard to categorize Linux as a hobbyist OS with IBM giving it the kind of support they are currently providing.
The software-patent side is more problematic, but IBM can be of some help there as well, and it's likely they will do so.
"My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
It's funny, as I was reading the article I couldn't shake off my head the idea that the strategy employed by Microsoft here is somewhat the same that Apple use against them; "it's complicated", "it's unfinished"... and Apple lost the consummer market...
Plus, Apple coulnd't compete with "cheap" and Microsoft will loose to "free"...
on a side note:
Ease of use is a very bad argument, it doesn't seem to attract people for a very simple reason, if it's complicated or buggy it gives them a socialy acceptable reason "not to" (finnish a report, complete a homework, do something). The entire IT industry is based around this concept, without bad products ITs wouldn't be that many (conspiracies aside this is still a fact). Apple want to succedd they should start making their OS buggy, virus prone and badly designed, IT's would switch in droves...
"There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness" -Microsoft
The article is full of meaningless statements about Linux, words used for effect and without any attempt at reason or logic. The poetic "All roads lead to madness" really highlights how they've pretty much abandoned technical arguments and are now invoking defensive political rhetoric.
That statement is pretty funny though when you think about it. Linux and the BSDs all have the architecture of Unix, and that's by far the most elegant and powerful O/S architecture available outside of academia at the present time. The fact that they can say something as laughable as "no set architecture in Linux" just shows how divorced from reality they really are.
"The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
the "cloud" is still there, my friend - and it's that that you're competing against; not IBM or Novell.
pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
When i used to work with MS guys for some of the projects i've done, always the same thing was worth noting: most of the time, the sales people, and sometimes tech guys (consultants mostly) don't know much about alternative technologies. When discussing something with these guys, they usually come up with an applied pattern, built on MS technology. In this case, try to talk about an alternative, Linux, java whatever.. You'll see that most of the time any remark you make will be answered with : "is it so ?". Some of the guys were my friends and i told them, look i know there are things you are obliged to do as a MS employee, but how can you sell something successfully, if you can't compare it to alternatives, from different aspects ? Just learn about the things, and you'll know the cases where MS is good (i'm sorry but there are cases like this), and you'll know when to shut up, so that you don't look like a pure marketing idiot, and instead give the impression of a pro working for MS .
Now MS is doing this. It's really interesting to see that they have waited for so long. Most of the linux guys will know about what sucks about a particular subject in MS world. The same must work for MS too, or they can't fight with some memorized words (total cost of ownership, open source not secure, bla bla).
"Microsoft Windows: One Road To Madness"
"There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness."
There are no clean solutions in Windows. All roads lead to madness.
If Microsoft is really wanting to learn from it's 'competitors' it should take a good look at OpenBSD. Clean interfaces, extremely well documented, and safe.
"Survival of the fittest Max, and we've got the fucking gun!" - Pi
Of course, anyone with half a brain thinks that already, which is why Microsoft is so damn desperate about Linux (yes, all you MCSE's better start working on your RedHat certs...)
Allow everyone to download and tinker with the sources... ?
The funny thing about all this is that most people see thru this sort of thing.
:P
I mean people that were pro-MS will be pro-MS after this propaganda. And people that were pro-linux will be pro linux after this, too. (except those that get fat paychecks from MS)
What it goes to prove is that Linux is a legitament competator with MS. After all if Linux was a bunch of Loonies then why MS would go thru the trouble of funding dozen or so "independant" studies to prove that MS is superior? Why all this effort?
Wouldn't the superior worth of Microsoft be self evident as businesses that use Linux collapse under the strain of their IT infrastucture, getting replaced and bought out by company after company running Windows?
The fact that MS can't dismiss Linux anymore is proof that Linux has come of age.
After all, Linux is displacing the old Unix strongholds. Places that MS couldn't touch because of the reliability, scalability, and usability of their offerings. People that wouldn't touch W2k and wouldn't trust their data to anything less then the most expensive IBM or Solaris hardware are now turning to "white boxes" running Linux instead of w2k3.
In many people's minds Windows is fine, and it's easy to find cheap workers to support it since everybody and their mom is forced to work with it. But Windows is cheap and it can only take you so far. If you want to play with the big boys you are just going to have to run a real computer OS: Unix and.. er... Linux.
Before Windows was used because it was just plain cheaper. That's why. Unix was nice but expensive.
Now with Linux you can have your cake and eat it too!
And the legions of MS followers chant: "Wayward soldiers marching on! We are cheaper, know the fud!"
Microsoft already has a Linux version: MSLinux
Very telling that the pro-Bush comment was modded down to -1 and the pro-Kerry comment (including a sophisticated attack implying that Republicans don't read books) was modded to +2.
"Only a republican could use the learning process against someone. Although, seeing who's in charge, that starts to make sense."
I think most people can see that this argument lacks sophistication. Instead of broad-brush name-calling of people that disagree with you, what about a discussion of the issues?
The question you have to ask yourself is this: What are the positions of the candidates with respect to issues that are important to you? Does your candidate regularly vote to increase defense and intelligent spending? Does your candidate vote to lower taxes? Does your candidate vote against partial-birth abortion?
The quality of political discourse in public forums such as Slashdot is embarrasing. It amounts to nothing more than a grade-school playground name-calling contest.
The way to fix that is to educate yourself on the issues, look at Kerry's voting record, look at Bush's executive record, and decide which falls in line with your core beliefs.
What is Slashdot's Microsoft icon? Is that supposed to be a cyborGates, or is a planet smashing into his head?
No contracts or legal agreements!
Mostly true-- but remember that in order to get the benefits of an Open Source license you must comply with the terms of that license. You don't sign a contract, but you do have obligations. Very, very light obligations -- easy to keep -- but obligations nonetheless.
Ballmer griped that Microsoft's profits have more than doubled in the past six years, but the stock, at $29, is right where it was then. "Linux creates a cloud of uncertainty over Microsoft. Every time Red Hat reports earnings, Microsoft seems to take a hit," says Goldman Sachs software analyst Richard Sherlund.
Hmmm, let's see - it's a 300 billion dollar company with a P/E ratio of 36.19. To get to the point where they are bringing home a 10% return on that market cap (the traditional good rate of return), they would have to more than triple their earnings. They already have the entire market in their primary fields, which means they've got nowhere to go but lateral markets. Looking at XBox, MSN, WMA, and the like, it doesn't look like Microsoft is going to be able to pull a Microsoft in any other market.
Frankly, Steve, if I were you I'd be real grateful for the 36.19 P/E. It doesn't look like you deserve it.
Stop-Prism.org: Opt Out of Surveillance
Linux will never make it to the desktop unless the major distributors agree on a standard package format.
The major distributors already have agreed on a standard package format. Mandrake, RedHat and SuSE all use RPMs. You did say "major". The rest are "minor" distros. Regardless of what distrowatch claims... these are the three major ones in actual corporate/govt/edu installed production use outside of the hobbiest user base.
However, his name doesn't seem to appear in either the apache httpd or mod-perl credits file, and I can't dig up any evidence of him having participated in any other mailing list. He's never posted to the kernel mailing list, the perl mailing lists (on the basis that somebody using mod-perl might also be interested in Perl more generally), or anything much else.
I don't know what the guy was up to at IBM, but to describe him as a technical leader of the Linux community would appear to be a considerable exaggeration. Somebody who actively adopted Linux for business use, perhaps, but he's hardly Robinson Crusoe there.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
"At a recent gathering of venture capitalists Ballmer went so far as to suggest Microsoft might own intellectual property in Linux and assured the audience that Microsoft would pursue any violation of its own patents. Before he spoke, a fire alarm went off."
Firstly it might be true the other way round, that Windows contains code from Linux but we have no way of telling. We know they got the ftp program from BSD.
Windows group chief James Allchin accuses Linux of being a cheap knockoff: "There's no innovation. Linux is still in the business of cloning existing technology."
Isn't this the primary business of microsoft these days. Don't innovate clone (Attack of the M$ clone :) ). The search engine, blog and the list goes on and on.
Einstein said once: "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." And I'm afraid he's right...
He claims to have shed a tear the first time he saw Microsoft's most recent TV spots featuring kids dreaming of being future astronauts and painters.
"Two gin-scented tears trickled down the sides of his nose. But it was all right, everything was all right, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother." - 1984
In 5, 4, 3, 2, 1...
And Microsoft has already blinked in their attempt to use patents against Linux (remember what IBM said about that?)
a beowulf cluster of ... windows boxes ???
... Aventis has tied together groups of computers running not Microsoft's operating system but the freely available Linux. These high-performance clusters can analyze proteins at blazing speeds. "That's great for Linux," Taylor said cheerily, at the time ... [ blah blah ] ...
That same week -- by coincidence, the company say s-- Microsoft announced plans for a new version of Windows software to handle exactly the kind of high-performance computing Aventis had set up.
Is this out yet?
I think we should call these "Grendel Clusters".
Pretty easy to do when most of the US news media is 0wn3d. Unfortunately, today's media, at least broadcast media, is at the forefront of corporatism, and they Stick Together. (Try searching /. for Ted Turner, if your memory is short. I don't even have to get into coverage and non-coverage of the political season.)
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
From the article:
Linux at some point could be good enough to run home PCs.
Yes, but he forgets that Linux could be ready for the home PC as early as 1998. What will Microsoft do then?
No, we're not just a little biased, are we? I've been running RedHat on my home machine since 1998. I've had non-computer-genius friends and family running Linux on their desktops since 1999. If this guy had a brain, he'd be dangerous...
Can Linux really handle crucial areas such as security and e-mail? The Microsoft people are ready with answers...
And those answers would be... "install this patch and reboot..."? Can Linux handle email and security? I mean, really?! Gosh, I just don't know... Of course, to Microsofties, one Linux hole per year makes the OS insecure, but 100 security vulnerabilities a month make Windows "The choice for reliability throughout the enterprise..." As if MS even understood the term "Enterprise computing".
"I just want the decision to be based on facts, not religion," says Taylor. "People are saying, 'It's not Microsoft, so it must be great.'
No, actually, you don't want a decision ... based on facts... - because it wouldn't be favorably to Microsoft. People are looking to leave Microsoft for Linux because of the facts, not in spite of them:
Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off, with programs still running. Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says.
I turn off my machine with programs still running all the time - it's called FreeDOS. But yes, you are creating things - more security vulnerabilities. Why on earth would a home user want to power off their machine from a remote location? What - in your hurry to get out the door you forgot to shut down the computer, and at work you now have the sudden urge to turn it off?
Tell us what Linux does that we can't do. Don't tell us you're deploying Linux just because you can."
Linux can be installed without any risk of violating licensing provisions and incurring unseen financial liability on my employer. But also, the number one reason why I deploy Linux:
- Microsoft doesn't understand Enterprise Computing.
I could go on for hours on this, but I'll spare you. Suffice to say, Microsoft can't build a secure or stable Windows because they lack the mindset to do so.The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
Being a windows server admin is not all that bad, provided you have the budget to purchase all the 3rd party tools and extra windows licenses and server hardware you'll need to get the job done.
MS has intentionally left out all the cool tools to do advanced admin stuff on windows servers because it's good for business to create an environment whereby all the third party admin tools software vendors can make some money too. If you buy the aftermarket backup software(BackupExec, ARCServe, etc), aftermarket task automation software ( Opalis Robot, etc), and so forth and so on, you can run a huge amount of servers and workstations with few tech staff.
Oh, and a key element of maintaining a stable set of Windows servers... never EVER run more than one app per server. Have a separate server for email, separate one for web, separate one for database, separate one for shared executables for the desktops, separate one for user's shared network files, separate one for primary domain controller, separate one for backup domain controller, etc. Never pile multiple apps on the same windows box and you'll do just fine and they'll run for weeks without needing a reboot. Also do not place a windows box directly on a routable Internet segment, always keep it behind a firewall and it'll be fairly safe from hackers.
I really felt very reassured when I read this one statement by Mr Taylor because I now realise that this is nothing more than Microsoft settling some old playground dispute with Novell (and IBM no doubt) rather than actually developing a proper strategy to deal with the competition.
Emperor Billy didn't manage to trash the Novell rebellion with his Death Star first time around - now he's really sore and is sending out Darth Taylor in Death Star II to finish the job...
Sounds to me like a few MS CEOs need to get some maturity, forget about "revenge attacks" and just deal with it in a mature business-like fashion.
Maybe then they'll start to realise that Novell (IBM, Red Hat, etc.) are competent allies for Linux to have but are nothing more than the customer-facing front-end of the FOSS movement.
Destroy one of those and, like the hydras tentacles, another will just grow in its place.
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
This is kinda off-topic (?), but I have this urge to start a debate.
/. response, I really want to see what some *nix gurus can come up with here. More or less, provide me with ways that I can setup a linux server that..
I'll say that for large networks of computers, a microsoft solution is the best solution out there. Why? Because it enables me to provide secure network logins, and each login carries all user prefrences/data with it. In addition, group policy enables me to update all software on several hundred computers within minutes. A distributed file system (DFS) with File Replication Somethingiforget (FRS) provides the ability to have several file servers all accessed on a single load-balanced location. This also provides fallover support, in case one server goes down, a client will switch to the next automagically without issues, without the client noticing.
Now I don't want a typical
A) Provides logins, universal across a network, and that carries user data with it. An added plus would be that all user data is kept on a DFS root and synced with the client computer, meaning that the files are on the local client for speeds, and kept in sync with those on the server.
B) A way to update (or remove, or install new) a specific piece of software on many many computers at once, limited only by the physical data transfer limits
C) The method described above, with the DFS/FRS system and total transparent fallover support.
Now, see, this is where I see that linux isn't "up to par" with windows yet. Also, these are some serious selling points for microsoft.
Hopefully, thought...someone can come along and do the same with linux....;)
"In my opinion, Windows XP is a DISORGANIZED MESS!"
The i386 folder on the Windows XP SP1 Corporate version CD is 504,563,416 bytes. Windows XP SP2 is 278,927,592 bytes. Fifty-five percent of the disorganized mess just got replaced.
What amazes me is that there is plenty of evidence of just plain sloppy programming in Windows XP. There have been 102 vulnerabilities and 1,777 viruses affecting Internet Explorer.
The imbecile nature and ulterior motive in this article (or should I say PR) is obvious. Microsoft has no intention of playing friendly with Linux. They have every intention of crushing it. Becuase Linux is so popular, it's bad PR to attack it so they act friendly while they quietly plan an intellectual property search and destroy mission. By the way the MS in MSNBC stands for Microsoft -- get it?
Microsoft would have never reached the level of penetration they have to date. Keep in mind that everything that was done in personal computing in the mid- to late-80s was easier on a Mac than on a WinTel platform - hands down, no argument.
The same arguments used against Microsoft's platform are now wielded as a weapon against their enemies. I remember the constant flame-fests between Mac and DOS users and how each of their respective platforms were "the best". Unfortunately for Microsoft, there are still things that are easier to do on a Mac than on WinTel PC - hands down. This is true despite hundreds of millions of dollars of investment by Microsoft.
So the usability argument has proven to be an historically inaccurate guide to whether a particular operating system will gain prevalence.
Microsoft proved it.
"Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
Yes, they still don't get it. Microsoft is dying.
All this talk about "competing". Linux and FOSS isn't about competition. Linux and FOSS are about cooperation. This is about win-win approaches where developers help each other along. Everybody measures their progress not by how many wrecks they pass or whether there is anybody between them and some imaginary finish line, but simply by how many miles they've travelled so far. Cooperative people spend more time looking around at the scenery than staring at the ass of whoever happens to be in front of them at the moment. Coperative people pick the fruits of their labors as they move along.
Competition is too engrained in Microsoft's corporate culture for them to change. They can't even talk about cooperative development efforts without using competitive terms, and those terms just don't fit. So those few at Microsoft who do get it don't have any way of telling the others about it. They either learn to shut up or they become ostracized and shunned beccause their funny ideas make their coworkers uncomfortable. Or they leave.
Microsoft is dead. It just doesn't get it. Like some multi-ton dinosaur that can't adjust to changing conditions, it is going to stagger around for a while. Watch it's tail; it still packs a wallop.
Microsoft will continue to compete with Linux and FOSS until it exhausts all the fat it has hoarded up over the years. But it will never win, because Linux and FOSS don't do competitions. Open source is all about cooperation, and those who do get it are simply going to move over, let Microsoft rampage off into the distance, and get on with picking the ripe fruit and helping each other along. The closest thing to competition that Microsoft is going to evoke from them are complaints about the messes it makes and the fruit trees it damages. And Microsft, in its tunnel vision focus on the ass end of whoever it thinks is ahead of it at the moment is not even aware of the nature of these complaints. For it is already mostly brain dead.
Microsoft is dead. It just doesn't know it yet, and it takes quite a while for a big old dinosaur to finally keel over.
Microsoft is dead. Mind its tail; those dirt encrusted barbs still pack a wallop.
But it's always under construction with lane restrictions.
"Can Linux really handle crucial areas such as security and e-mail?"
:)
pffffffffffft........... One word. Windows?
"Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off, with programs still running"
Blaster!
"In some number of years my job shouldn't exist"
Well yes, we can hope. Probably not with the same outcome you're talking about though
Gamers Europe - Gaming News. Reviews.
I can't decide what nauseated me more, the article or the banner ad above it: Walt Disney World offering a free vacation kit. With a real CD and stuff!
I'm sure the folks at Disney think they're really being helpful. Just as helpful as young Martin Taylor who's known nothing but Microsoft, yet thinks he can counter Linux by competing with Novell.
But more sickening was Rob Enderle's SCOforum keynote address
insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
Does this give anyone else a feeling of Deja Vu? Remember when there was a browser company called Netscape, that owned a significant portion of the market? Bill Gates stood up and made beating Netscape the main priority of the company, just as they had earlier with Wordperfect, Jazz, and 1-2-3. I can think of very few cases when, once the dinosaur finally awoke, it didn't trample the competition (with the possible exception of IIS).
This particular competitive conflict might be different in that we're talking not about an application, but a platform. Microsoft eliminated the previously mentioned examples by coming out with their own alternative apps, which they made attractive to businesses and leveraged with the Office suite, or integrated into the OS.
In the case of Linux, they've already got an alternative (Windows 2000 Server, Windows Server 2003). It's not doing too bad either - the problem for Microsoft seems not to be lost business to Linux (though there is some), but rather that they cannot consume and obliterate the *nix market. The continuation of a real, viable alternative stands in the way of their maximizing the profit potential of related applications, such as Exchange, Biztalk, Sharepoint, SQL Server, etc.
In short,the analogy I see is that the don't just want the printer market, the want the cable, toner, and paper markets as well. Linux interferes stands in the way of that goal.
At a recent gathering of venture capitalists Ballmer went so far as to suggest Microsoft might own intellectual property in Linux and assured the audience that Microsoft would pursue any violation of its own patents. Before he spoke, a fire alarm went off. "It was eerily symbolic," says a venture capitalist in attendance. "We all scattered."Microsoft denies this, and says it will not litigate.
that's the scary part. i am sure this is by far the most convincing attempt, and what microsoft believes needs to be done to get at linux. in another section taylor mentions "linux is going to be around forever", and that would mean, every other compititor around doesnt matter.
methinks, its equally important for everyone in the open source to start an anti-FUD, cleaning up missions to check if the shoelaces are untied. groklaw's already begun it...but i'm afraid that's not enough to stop the economic might of the MS.
Please, keep the prez out of this.
Infuriate left and right
I know it's hard to believe. I'm not sure I still believe it'll happen. But we know that the only way for Microsoft to compete now is to ACTUALLY innovate, something they haven't done in a LONG TIME... since the early 80's in fact. They're very rusty. Looks like some parts of Microsoft are starting to try to scrape off some of the rust.
:)
Microsoft may be evil, but they're the industry leader, and this is good for everyone.
Of course, I'm never going to like two legacy aspects of Windows filesystem: drive letters and backslashes.
It's Gates in a BORG outfit. You know, "resistance is futile" and all that Star Trek jazz.
http://www.paulsjusticepage.com/images/cyborg.jpg for a better image.
Required reading for internet skeptics
i think we should be thanking microsoft for beginning their migration to the GNU/Linux platform. i'm sure when they see the lower TCO, stability, and security of their GNU/Linux test servers, they'll move the rest of them over too!
is it unfair to have a headline: Microsoft migrates to Linux?
We misunderestimate him at our peril!
From TFA:
Windows group chief James Allchin accuses Linux of being a cheap knockoff: "There's no innovation. Linux is still in the business of cloning existing technology." Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off, with programs still running. Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says.
This has yet to be the biggest crap of all time. Linux (or technically, the distribution) has always had remote shutting down, # shutdown now, once logged in. So, who's cloning existing technology now? In fact, one can remotely suspend a machine as well.
Infact, there are not many things that Microsoft has actually innovated, most of the time they use thier financial position to break existing markets (or duplicate technology). Does anyone know of a good product that Microsoft innovated, i.e. one that was a first-timer in the market?
I bet that at home the guy runs Linux.
Whoring for the Man, that's what we're all doing. Telling lies to amuse others who tell us lies back.
This was my experience, too! I ran Linux in the early days, and stopped because I couldn't get the performance I needed for high-end network tasks.
Then I went to FreeBSD. I was pretty satisfied (there's a standard distribution, and the networking code is a lot better), but there wasn't enough desktop support.
When Windows XP came out, I discovered I could run nearly all of the Unix stuff I used to with cygwin, and that the Windows API had everything I needed. I really like the way Windows Update works (no kidding!); it's much easire than applying patches and recompiling. And, of course, there are tons of applications available.
But what really did it for me was the .NET architecture. Microsoft's C# and .NET, combined with Visual Studio are by far the best programming environment I've ever used.
In the 23 years since I graduated from college with a CS/Math degree, I've programmed in just about everything.(And, yes, I've programmed on NexTStep and Mac OS-X with that cruddy Objective-C and crashy development environment). And NOTHING beats C#/.NET for general application programming.
Linux isn't even in the running!
Best Buy can have you arrested
After reading linuxtelephony's post, I googled Laura Didio. One of the first and most embarrassing things to appear was an article from July 28, 2003, rambling on about the importance of SCO and the pitifulness of the Linux community. Here's a quote:
"There are strong indications that the industry at large takes SCO's claims seriously.
"Wall Street sees it that way. SCO's stock soared nearly 15 percent on the news. It jumped $2.82 and was trading at $14.77 early on July 24, its highest level since February 2001. Since SCO filed the suit in March 2003, the stock has quintupled."
I did not see any "one year after" stories from her saying "Gee, with SCO trading at $4.50, it seems Wall Street has more faith in the penguin!"
I read the article, which was fine until the MS droids started claiming they are as flexible in their pricing as they always have been.
*Snort*! Ask vendors like Dell, Micron, Gateway, and IBM if Microsoft was EVER flexible with their licensing policies. No, actually, MS would aggressively PUNISH any vendor who sold alternate operating systems on their hardware by increasing the per-box fee.
Anyway, the FUD from MS is just so much fart gas. My real life practical experience with XP is that if I connect it to the internet, I can't keep viruses off it. I waste more time trying to slap a condom over my system with XP. This OS is leakier than a Saudi terrorist holding cell.
Fedora: I haven't had to delouse it once. I haven't had to reboot or reinstall. It just works.
They lie. Period.
Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says.
l
http://www.apple.com/macosx/tiger/spotlight.htm
Tiger due this year. Microsoft due 2007. I hate you, Microsoft.
Just as Microsoft has gone through a wrenching transformation from a combative bully to a mature corporate citizen --
...
You have got to love MSNBC's wording !
Nick
Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
"Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off "
Its a 10-foot wooden pole.
(Like all good MS products, expect a (wood)worm to exploit this feature and cause havoc.)
Linux is Microsoft's Vietnam.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
hihi, then wars won't be started for control of oil fields, or stopping political expansions, wars will be started for only for "hosting terrorist software". I hope I will not live these days...
I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
Please, keep the prez out of this.
Kerry hasn't been elected yet.
He's 20 times as rich as Bush and can't figure out whether he supports our troops or not.
But Microsoft would have to understand Open Source. Not from a marketing point of view, but in their gut, kidney's & toes. And to make a 180 degree turn, they'd have to totally change their company culture, views, and convince their own customers. And that is the hard thing.
So Microsoft's real enemy is the one within: themselves.
My favorite quote? [from Microsoft] "There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness"."
Tag lost or not installed.
Active Directory does nothing that NIS doesn't do, and NIS ships as standard with any good linux server offering and has (I believe) been around longer than AD.
"The dew has clearly fallen with a particularly sickening thud this morning"
Of course not. It's a movement to ksh.
-- MarkusQ
of beating Microsoft. Linux is like a Chevette trying to catch a supercharged Corvette. Linux needs to go for the Ultra-COOL factor. Make it really cool looking, kinda like what Jaguar did for Apple. Hell, put some "twinkies" on that old Chevette, and I'd say "fsck that gas waisting, piece 'o' shit, Corvette".
Holla
Oh, I think he has figured it out; he's voted against every military expenditure in recent memory, even though he voted for and supported the war in Iraq.
Bush is no jewel, but I fear for this country if Kerry gets elected.
I suspect that, other than techies, nobody cares much for what OS they run, Windows or anything else. They want the applications that use the OS services. MS now does a better job on the desktop with applications.
For servers it's a different matter. Once, long ago, I was with a company that ran overnight builds from MS client machines with source on an NT server (Pentium 100, 6G IDE, 10Mbit/sec). For a test we put together a Samba server (you don't care about the OS, remember) with (386/25, 4G IDE, 10Mbit/sec) and the builds against it completed in 2/3 the time. Samba is very good.
Linux, or any flavor Unix or look-alike)succeeds in the server market because the server applications tend to do a better job with the added benefit of much lower cost. That's true of file services, print services, database services, and so on. The glaring exception at this point in time is an open-source MS Exchange server killer. Build that and MS seriously loses in the server market.
The ease-of-install argument is not appropriate for servers. Techies (mostly) install servers. For them, open is good, closed is bad, and the gui may get in the way. Install of Linux or whatever Unix is no big deal, maybe easier than MS, with better diagnostic tools to get at problems. Though MS's knowledge base and tools are outstanding, the collective community for open source is arguably better.
Client systems are a kettle of fish of a different color.
Heard of FreeNet? http://freenet.sourceforge.net/
From http://www.docuverse.com/blog/donpark/EntryViewPag e.aspx?guid=145b9d07-3e65-42de-8116-2704c8ce1a83 (Don Park's daily habit)
BTW, binaries available via BitTorrent and direct download are about three times bigger (270MB) than what you would have gotten via Automatic Updates (AU) because AU downloads only the components your system need.
"Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off " Sorry but this is already a standard feature in MS OS's. The BSOD service runs out of the box.
Another choice quote from Gandhi:
"Hitler killed five million [sic] Jews. It is the greatest crime of our time. But the Jews should have offered themselves to the butcher's knife. They should have thrown themselves into the sea from cliffs."
nice role model
This is all assuming that instead of buying Windows Server 2003 you slap on a copy of Slackware linux. This is not what any open source advocate with half a brain would suggest to any company. No, you replace Windows Server 2003 with a copy of SuSE Linux Open Exchange, or Novell Groupwise or any of the other fine products in this area that are well documented and do exactly what you've just said they don't do, and all that without having to dick around with a single configuration file.
Or, you know what? You buy a few days of ME, or one of my esteemed colleagues in the field, and we deal with all those pesky config files instead.
Either of those options will still generally work out less that the Microsoft option, and even if they don't, you end up with more control than what you would have over a Microsoft solution.
"The dew has clearly fallen with a particularly sickening thud this morning"
I might be persuaded to use Windohs also.
The Truth About Slashdot
"Microsoft's strategy so far is to find people who used to be proponents of Linux and other open source products and get them to do a 180, possibly as a result of a very fat paycheck though who knows."
Doesn't need to be. Just pull from the pool of people who's Linux installation failed. Couldn't get hardware working. Runs too slow. We hate X. We hate Gnome. Trash-talkers are a dime a dozen.
Microsoft
FACTS 3.0 (tm)
New msf3.0(tm) awfully much looks like real truths even better then before.
Powered by Extreme Muckup Lies. XML
-- forget
You are in a maze of twisty tunnels, all alike
Note that the article is written with MSNBC partner /. and
Forbes. That's the same Forbes that's the home
to David Lyons, who has written several other
unfavorable to Linux articles, as noted at
groklaw.
Yeah, I know what you mean about multiple apps. Our NT4 server now only handles file serving (well, it also runs Sybase 5.1 DB server but that's near zero load and barely counts). It runs for months and months without even being looked at. Eventually it goes a bit funny and has to be rebooted, but it usually ends up beating the Linux servers' uptimes.
... well, it really doesn't work. I can't speak for newer Windows servers, as I haven't spent enough time working with them in production to really have the knowledge.
On the other hand, our core Linux server runs 12 LTSP thin client users, our mail hub (inc Cyrus IMAPd for IMAP/POP), increasing amounts of our Windows and mac file services, several intranet web applications, DHCP, DNS, two databases (mostly used by said intranet web apps), and probably more that I can't remember right now. Would I like to split out some of the functionality - hell yes, downtime on that box gives the horrible cold shivers. On the other hand, it runs very reliably and reasonably fast (given it's slow disk subsystem) and hasn't tried to nosedive yet.
The fact that I have off-site disk snapshots, nightly tape backups, critical data mirrored on other machines, and a cold spare helps the sanity, too.
From experience, I know that doing that many things on NT4
Any day, hands down.
There's simply no comparison.
Not everyone is greedy, not everyone can be greedy, even willfully. But the wisest of the wisest has its moment of foolishness.
There's a reason it is said "a fool soon loses his gold" instead of "a smart guy gets a fool's money".
Microsoft wasn't ignoring Linux...
They were simply too busy dancing on OS/2's grave to notice.
-- The universe began. Life started on a billion worlds...
-- Except on one where stupidity was there first.
It was completely recompiled with a new compiler you dolt! It's only been mentioned about a hundred times. Do you read NOTHING before commenting?
Linux has a temporary advantage in the early phases, just as Microsoft did in the early 1980s.
The enthusiastic, the technically adept, the patient, the intelligent people are adopting Linux, using it, showing their prowess by bringing up umpteen zillion servers with fantastic uptimes and remote ssh serviceability over slow intercontinental networks.
Some of that advantage is due to Linux, but some of it, too, must be attributed to the people currently using it.
As the distro makers start encroaching into Microsoft's territory, BrainSurgeryMadeEasy.com, then there will be tougher slogging.
I hope that FOSS programmers are up to the challenge of keeping true to principles of security and technical excellence and we don't start seeing kernel modules and browser plug-ins that sacrifice principles for WhizBang features that marketing advocates.
"Provided by the management for your protection."
Have you ever sat in #linuxhelp on efnet for about three hours? I tried to help a guy get his wireless ethernet driver working last night and he was so stupid, he couldn't grasp the simplest of concepts. There is nothing so perfect as windows for people like that... And you'll notice that is the direction linux desktops are going. Simple to set up, easy to use.
"What the superior man seeks is in himself; what the small man seeks is in others."
- Confucius
When was the last time you compiled something with an entirely new compiler, and the output was the same for some files? That idea does not explain why 45% of the files would be the same.
No, golly gee. But now that I have, I will give up my own totally different idea that solves somewhat different problems. Thank you. ;-)
So it appears that Microsoft realized its initial approach was not going to work so well. And this resulted in them changing their approach. Is anyone else not suprised?
Microsoft may have gotten to where they are though questionable means, but they are not stupid. Far from it. If they were stupid, they would just stick their head in the sand and pretend that Linux was not a competitor worthy of notice.
END COMMUNICATION
I don't don't where you got you pricing structure, but you ain't buying all those M$ products for LESS the $1000.00. I haven't checked the prices in awhile, but the last time I bought W2K server it was $11280.00 with ONLY 10 client licenses. That was just for the server software. Last I checked MSSQL was around $3200.00 with ONLY 10 client licenses. Lets say you have just 20 people in an office and they all need a connection the to DB well then there is more money invloved. My MySQL DB doesn't care how many connections and it is faster and more reliable. My files server doesn't care how many connections ti has either.
We are a mixed shop here. Both Windows and Linux servers. With the Windows servers getting less and less in here. Yes Linux and most of its is for the most part harder to set up. It takes about 2.5 hours to set up a W2K box. It takes me about 4 hours to set up a RedHat box. This means that I have spent 1.5 hours longer on the set up. now if I pay $1280.00 for W2K and either got Fedora for free or paid (I think) $150.00 for RedHat Enterprize. Haven't I saved money? Maybe took a bit longer. Then comes the license issue? RedHat doesn't care how many clients I have hanging on my server M$ does! Then we have the security issues (Oh yea I forgot my 34 item security check list for basic server configuration on W2K another 2 hours) A basic Rehat Load everything is turned off. Yes it takes longer to turn on what I need, but isn't this easier and better than with MS going and turning OFF everything I DON'T need or even want? Hell somethings you don't want that comes with M$ you CAN"T TURN OFF!
It isn't that I'm a zelot about any system. I am a Systems Engineer I use what works and is reliable, and cost isn't that big of a factor. If I could find a reason to pay M$ prices for a BETTER OS I would. The reason I don't pay and use Linux is that it is better, more reliable, and more secure. If Windows was better I would pay the price and run it. As an engineer what I know is I spend more time working on the M$ boxes that the Linux boxes. This is what my customers look at too. They like to pay me as little as possible. Time sheets don't lie. Some may say "Oh you spend more time on the Windows platform because you don't know it." WRONG!!!! I have work with NT since 3.51. I have that worthless piece of plastic too. I am the first to admit it that yes I do know Linux as well not near the knowledge that I have on Winders. Yes Linux does take me longer sometimes because of my lack of knowledge on it but this isn't the fault of the OS. It is a matter of my training. Once whatever it is to learn is learned it is simple the next time. I don't bloat the time sheet because of my lack of skill and blame it on the OS. Hey we can't know everything, but I can learn.
Yes single signon is "tightly intergrated" into the Windows OS, but it is right there in the Linux CD too! You just have to load it and turn it on! NIS works quiet well
Is Linux read for Joe User? NO! One day it will be.
First, I think a patent counterattack is our last line of defence against a MS patent war. This is what you do if everything else fails. IANAL, but I don't think that failure to include such claims in a countersuit would prevent you from pursuing them later.
A better strategy would, upon any announcement by Microsoft, begin a distributed search for prior art. The SCO suit has been particularly informative regarding how much community participation can be leveraged, and I think such would also be heavily leveraged in a patent suit as well. Perhaps moreso.
Failing that, one might be able to force Microsoft to license patents under antitrust laws. Such licenses would have to be compatible with the GPL.
Either of these strategies could be successful at mitigating any risk of a patent and would seriously weaken Microsoft's general position. Furthermore there is a good chance, I think, that both these strategies could be successful for any given patent.
The final strategy I see that of a distributed patent counterattack where various parties begin to launch patent suits against Microsoft in an attempt to force them to substantially re-engineer Windows and pay damages. IBM could try to nuke Windows, but it woudl be more effective if you have 10 or 20 suits such as Eolas as well.
The final strategy should I think be employed with the re-engineering of the open source software in question to avoid these specific patent restrictions. I personally do not think that there are likely to be defensible patents in Linux that cannot be easily worked around. Samba is a different story of course, but Samba could be replaced in corporate settings using CUPS, OpenLDAP, MIT Kerberos, and OpenAFS.
As a final thought, such a litigation campaign by Microsoft would be very bad for them. It would destroy the reasonable goodwill they still have from many customers as they would probably be suing their customers (not generally recommended) given the ubiquity of Microsoft products. Furthermore the possibility of having the courts overturn patents or force them to license them to open source projects free of charge may indeed cause them many serious problems. I don't think that they will... Yet....
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
I have run both Windows and Linux desktops and servers, and I KNOW that I spent at least 3x as long getting linux to work right, and 10 minutes worth of maintainance on windows took an hour on linux. I never calculated TCO, but I bet they weren't THAT far off.
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
Competition is good sometimes, however, sometimes it's better for people to collaborate and find a best way of doing things.
Imagine a world where every province/country/state uses different train guages...
Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
RPM is a package management staple. Apt-get is great, and in many ways superiour. Urpmi is an excellent wrapper on RPM. All of these things are staples, but not standards.
.deb and half a dozen .rpm files as well as a .tar.gz file when I distribute my latest killer app.
If they were standard, then I wouldn't need to distribute a
That's just too much effort to make sure that it works on all those systems. It's simpler on windows, even with the clunky package management interface.
If there was a real standard... people could still make different front ends and distributors could still distribute different versions of the same packages, and end users could just double click and install any linux package, that they get form rpmfind, tucows or whatever.
That would be ideal.
Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
Dear friends,
jus why cant linux come in a Single Cd where running a set up file will install it in 30 minutes,jus like windows 98? ( dont say knoppix )
iam sure linux will be even more popular,if installation was easy....
Why should it be default "difficult"?
Why does yahoo do this
Is exactly what you get in an organization when the problem is dictating the solution.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
Allchin points to new features in the version of Windows due in 2007 that will allow users to remotely turn PCs on or off, with programs still running. Searches will extend across all data like e-mail, photos, Word. "We're creating things," he says.
wasn't that somewhere...oh I remember, apple- Tiger. So that's what they call "we create things".
I completely agree. And it goes deeper than perhaps the parent post implies.
Microsoft's ability to call the shots in the IT industry is strongly anchored in their dominance of the commodity desktop. Microsoft can leverage this dominance to introduce de-facto standards and create demand for proprietary infrastructure. There is certainly a financial motive to this. But it also makes it a lot easier to simply get your ideas adopted if you get to drive the standards rather than compete with everyone else for adoption.
Keep in mind that a huge part of Microsoft's success is the emergence of commodity hardware. This process created a market effect that almost swamped proprietary hardware leaders like Apple and IBM. But Microsoft rode that wave, taking a payment on each device sold no matter who sold it. And at the same time, it helped give them a presence in the majority of businesses and, in turn, homes with a computer.
Linux threatens this whole process. Linux is the digital embodiment of the next phase in the IT Industry; the commodity OS. What happened to IBM could be about to happen to Microsoft. Sure - IBM is still around. They're a major player. But they no longer set de-facto standards like they used to.
If Microsoft adopts or supports Linux, it risks strengthening Linux and the associated meme that the OS is a commodity. This erodes Microsoft's influence in the market. And that will quickly lead to a more difficult path for both its business strategy and its ability to implement its technical vision (if one can separate one from the other).
In relation to the value of M$ stock and its bank ballance, I am reminded of a line from Poldark (British TV series from the 70's):
"I disapprove of one man owning so much, it puts all others at a disadvantage."
I have subscribed to that maxim for many years. M$ just proves how truthfully it speaks.
Shure sounds like a paid shill.
False false false!
Where the hell do you get your information. This is all a matter of public record. He has voted *for* nearly every military expenditure in recent memory *and* voted for pay raises for our troops *and* to improve their health benefits!
Treatment of Iraqi Prisoners - Adoption, Bill Number: SRes 356, Issue: Military Issues , Date: 05/10/2004, Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Senator Frist, R-TN
Roll Call Number: 0086, Bill Adopted, Senator John Forbes Kerry did not vote.
Use of Force-Passage, Bill Number: H.J.RES.114, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 10/10/2002 , Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Hastert,R-IL
Roll Call Number: 237, Bill passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
FY 2001 Defense Auth.-Military Retiree Health Benefits, Bill Number: S 2549, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 06/07/2000 , Sponsor: Motion sponsored by Johnson, D-SD, Point of order sponsored by Gramm, R-TX, Amendment sponsored by Johnson, D-SD, Bill sponsored by Warner, R-VA
Roll Call Number: 0118, Motion rejected, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Military Pay Increase - Passage, Bill Number: S 4, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 02/24/1999 , Sponsor: Bill introduced by Warner, R-VA.
Roll Call Number: 0026, Bill passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
National Missile Defense - Cloture [Sept. 1998], Bill Number: S 1873, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 09/09/1998 , Sponsor: Cloture motion introduced by Lott, R-MS; bill introduced by Cochran, R-MS.
Roll Call Number: 0262, Cloture motion rejected; 3/5th vote required, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted NO.
Gays in the Military - Presidential Determination, Bill Number: S 1298, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 09/09/1993 , Sponsor: Boxer, D-CA
Roll Call Number: 0250, Rejected, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Presidential Notification of Covert Operations-Passage, Bill Number: S 1721, Issue: Military Issues, Date: 03/15/1988 , Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Cohen
Roll Call Number: 0052, Bill passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Terrorism Insurance - Conference Report, Bill Number: HR 3210, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 11/19/2002 , Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Oxley, R-OH
Roll Call Number: 252, Conference Report adopted, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Anti-Terrorism Authority-Passage, Bill Number: HR 3162, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 10/25/2001, Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Sensenbrenner R-WI
Roll Call Number: 0313, Passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Aviation Security-Passage, Bill Number: S1447, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 10/11/2001, Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Hollings D-SC
Roll Call Number: 0295, Passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Anti-Terrorism-Passage, Bill Number: S1510, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 10/11/2001, Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Daschle D-SD
Roll Call Number: 0302, Passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Anti-Terrorism Authority-Roving Wiretapping, Bill Number: S1510, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 10/11/2001, Sponsor: Tabling motion sponsored by Dascle D-SD, Amendment sponsored by Feingold D-WI, Bill sponsored by Daschle D-SD
Roll Call Number: 0300, Motion agreed to, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Airline Relief-Passage, Bill Number: S1450, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 09/21/2001 , Sponsor: Bill sponsored by Daschle, D-SD
Roll Call Number: 0284, Passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Use of Force Authorization-Passage, Bill Number: SJRES 23, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 09/14/2001, Sponsor: Joint resolution sponsored by Daschle, D-SD
Roll Call Number: 0281, Joint resolution passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
Terrorist Attacks-Passage, Bill Number: SJRES 22, Issue: National Security Issues, Date: 09/12/2001 , Sponsor: Resolution sponsored by Daschle, S-SD
Roll Call Number: 277, Joint Resolution passed, Senator John Forbes Kerry voted YES.
FY 2001 Defense Authorization-Nu
I believe MS did have the wrong focus can or will not accept that "linux" is only one bright color of the open source community but the are much more. The only realy important thing for a company is get payed from his customers and not doing some work for fun. my 2 cent H9000
I wish. Unemployed at the moment. Besides, I'm sure you won't understand this anyway but, as I said, for me the person/team/whatever I want to win isn't necessarily the person/team/whatever I think will win. Try thinking a bit, instead of reacting, I know it's painful. Has there ever been a conflict/competition/war where you wanted one side to win, even though you know they couldn't? That's what this feels like to me. I don't go into "gee, that guy will win mode" as soon as I decide I like him.
Linux deserves to win. It is legally justified in winning. It is the technically superior (well not just that, practically so, too) product. More people should use it.
All that said, I'm hardly optimistic when it comes to the looming war that Microsoft will make of this. You'd think there'd be more people who would appreciate my perspective...how helpful will all the "rah! rah! rah! linux is great, it's unbeatable!!!" people be when you're in the thick of it?
Here's what Gandhi actually thought about the situtation. Notice that, while 'violently' anti-violence, he conceeded that, if there ever was a just war, WWII was it, simply because of the genocide attempted by the Nazis.
And, duh, his quote is exactly what he did, against the English. He dared them to shoot him. That was the entire base of his passive resistence movement. He wasn't advocating mass suidcide because he disliked Jews, he was advocating it it was the logical extension of his non-violence policy: Allow your enemy to kill you while you do absolutely nothing wrong, and let the world watch.
If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
Which Bush is he twenty times as rich as? George CIA who is actually running the country or George Numb-Nuts who is taking the orders?
As for supporting troops, George Numb-Nuts has retrograded every pay increase, benefit increase, and US military support function there is. These fucks wouldn't even increase the death benefits to families of US troops killed in combat from a lousy 6K to a lousy 12K.
Not to mention getting a thousand of them killed in Iraq for NOTHING - and threatening to send them to North Korea where FIFTY THOUSAND of them will get killed for NOTHING.
Not that Kerry plans to do any better, I agree. So I suppose in that sense you're correct.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
Easy, huh?
I am NaN
The name of the shoe store in those ads is Grimoldi.
"Microsoft running Linux on 10% of its servers!" That alone blows me away. Sure, they need to run it to see what they're up against. But 10%? Sounds like it's working for them too!!! :-)
Seems like a good idea. Too bad for Microsoft that most linux admins already know windoze inside and out and can already speak to the benefits of one system over the other. Microsoft, once again, a follower and not a leader.
because during his campaign he said, "I will not engage in nation building." And if he had intended to attack Iraq all along, given that Iran helped the 9/11 hijackers into the United States, and cover their tracks, and *is* developing nuclear weapons, well that would make him evil, and a traitor to our country. As opposed to a moron.
Given n MTAs, o spam filters, p virus scanners, q IMAP/POP servers, and r webmail systems, how many different combinations do you think is possible - assuming (naievely and oversimplisticly) that you can only have one of each?
And this is different on MS how?
Oh yeah - with MS, the more components you add, the lower your chance of anything working.
Don't insult our intelligence please.
If you are going to deploy a technology you are not familiar with you hire an expert. Period.
If you don't you are the one to blame, lets not go rounds pretending otherwise.
Linux is truly usable in many levels above Windows that is not funny.
The command line, that many astroturfers like yourself attack so vehemently, is perhaps the most important tool in Linux: you can create reproducible results that you can document and automatize. YOu have no idea how important this is becoming in today's enterprise. Windows does not provide facilities for this, Linux does and does so free of charge.
That is impossible with a point and click interface, be that Windows or any other, since you, as an user, are tied of hands constrained only to the options presented by the manufacturer nad can't script the results to replicate them elsewhere.
A simple directory search in Windows is an absolute pain, with the Linux command line you can be as expresive as you need to be to solve a problem.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
Dammit, wish I still had mod points. And hadn't contributed to the discussion.
Yes, we know that almost all devices "work" with windows - as in, you can plug them in, and load drivers for them. But I've found that this is irrelevant; I could care less whether Big Buy's Bargain Basement Webcam "works" with Linux. Cheap hardware is cheap for a reason. What good is having a Windows driver for your cheap hardware if the driver crashes your machine?. Yes, I've had this happen on more than one occasion. The reason why I use Linux is because I can be reasonably certain that if there aren't Linux drivers written for the hardware, it's probably crap. I don't have to worry about some shoddily written driver crashing my machine so much with Linux as I do with Windows.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
"Tell us what Linux does that we can't do. Don't tell us you're deploying Linux just because you can."
Linux gives the BSA/SPA the finger. Linux immunizes us from external gestapo-style license audits/raids. Linux frees us from total dead-weight, lost-effort, pure-cost license tracking.
How many businesses buy licenses for pc's that came with them? More than a few. It takes less time to just cut a PO covering the number of seats than to collect all the little printed EULAs (which turn out to be useless in an audit anyway!).
Plus - the terms of the MS licenses have gotten absolutely draconian and, to me, unacceptable. They sum up as "All your base..."
I don't care if Windows could match the security and features of Linux, much less the value proposition - the license provisions are a non-starter.
Anything worth doing is worth doing right...
If don't have time to do it right the first time, you'll make time the second...
I understand that configuring Linux is, quite frankly, a chore. However, it only needs to be done once.
The "Just Works" argument runs both ways - I've had more problems getting some hardware to work under Windows than under Linux. And then, there's the quarterly, preventive maintainance of backing up and reinstalling Windows. Yes, I suppose I could let them go for longer, but experience has taught me that when it comes to Windows, it's often easier just to reinstall at regular intervals than attempt to recover from the inevitable crash. Win2k is a little better, but not by much.
And in spite of this, I can't just plug and play with a Windows machine. I've had numerous pieces of hardware which, at first "appeared" to work with Windows, only to have drivers which later "disappeared", or refused to work entirely. Hence the growing collection of "Windows only" hardware gathering dust in the closet. Granted, it isn't Microsoft's fault that shoddy hardware vendors can't write stable drivers, but then, when I want something that Just Works:
Simply put, there's no easy way out. You're either going to spend a lot of time or a lot of money, or a little bit of both getting a good system these days.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
Let's see - the "killer apps" for home computer use:
web and email. MS both had dick to do with the development of either. The heritage of Linux is much more closely tied.
Instant messaging. IRC was a command-line Unix phenomenon before AOL took over.
Word processing - MS Word was a(n inferior) clone until the advent of Windows. In any event, they didn't pioneer anything.
spreadsheet - they invented this, gotta admit. (*cough* Visicalc *cough*)
GUI operating system - nope.
Network operating systems - oh, wait. Nah, they haven't contributed jack shit here, either.
Directory based network management - nope. AD is a cheap ripoff of NDS, which is itself an evolution of Banyon Vines, which was the result of some deep thinking by standards bodies.
What the hell have they created besides virus vectors? I can't think of a single thing they pioneered in software. Business practices and licensing terms, sure. But actual inventions? Significant departures? I come up empty.
The history of humankind is the triumph of the unworthy (and perhaps its progress in spite of that triumph).
Microsoft doesn't understand why people are turning to Linux. I migrated to Linux because of the crappy way MS Windows ran my machine. When running MS Windows, I didn't have the source code so I never knew what the OS was really doing in the background. Was it sending my personal/private information to someone or tracking my every move and recording my every email while I was on the internet? Without the source code, you never know. And what about security? MS Windows operating systems have the worst security track record of any other OS. And, without the source code, I can't change anything in the OS around to suit me. I am stuck with what someone else feels is best for me. Best for me? No one in this universe, besides myself, knows what is best for me.
:)
Most Linux distributions leave everything up to the user and I like that. I can change the look and feel of the entire operating system to suit me.
I know that I will never stop using a Linux distribution and I will never use a Microsoft operating system again. There is not enought money or treasure in this universe to change my mind and there is no one big enough or powerful enough to stop me from using a Linux distro.
Now I know Microsoft will never have 100% of the desktop/PC market
Long Live Linux!!!
You've listed their revenue for the most recent quarter vs IBM's ANNUAL revenue. So the true difference in revenue is a factor of THREE not a factor of TEN.
Pain is merely failure leaving the body
Why does everyone assume that brain surgery is difficult? You give local anaesthetic, displace a bit of their skull & dura, make sure the bits you want to cut out don't do anything really useful (ask the patient) and then cut & sew.
Rocket science OTOH - wouldn't have a clue.
The answer: there are none.
Originally published March 26, 2001
gewg_
Every time some story about Microsoft vs Linux comes up some fucktard spews this quote out. Well, how about this:
The OSS community ignored SCO's claims.
The OSS community laughed at SCO's claims.
The OSS community is fighting SCO's claims.
Therefore, SCO will win.
Does this mean that M$ has true AI, but only linux is stable enough to run it? ;)
The main point regarding TCO is the people who will USE the platform, and, in my experience at least, the phantom 'cost' which supposedly increases TCO is people needing retraining/tooling for the switch to the new apps/os environment. However , as most users I experience are equally incompetent, windows or $osName, there is no difference between them using a desktop environment built on OSS, or proprietary. If you're going to specifically train people to use the os properly anyway, so that they are able to use the everyday apps that they need to use to the best of their abilities, wheres the difference in TCO? specific END USER applications/ standard computing task (email, web browsing) are a moot point here, all require training unless you like the monkeys with typewriters effect in your business.
My other OS is also FreeBSD
So much for all the vaunted "Linux is beating Microsoft" talk.
c le ID=5867i cle.jhtml ?articleID=26806718
"Despite all the buzz about open source, Microsoft is dominating the server market for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and is in on the right side of market dynamics for now. No less than 86 percent of SMBs use Microsoft's Small Business Server (SBS) 2003, said a survey that looked at 500 SMBs, while 11 percent use or plan to use a Linux-based offering and the remainder leaning on Novell.
The reason for Microsoft's dominance here is pretty simple. "SMBs don't have as many in-house developers, and it's for those people that Linux is a religious experience," says analyst Laura DiDio of Yankee Group, which conducted the survey. "
http://www.line56.com/articles/default.asp?Arti
http://informationweek.com/story/showArt
That's exactly the point I have been making all these past few years.
Small businessmen are not Microsoft hating geeks. In fact most small businessmen have great admiration for Bill Gates and Microsoft.
Plus most small businessmen are simply NOT techies. They want the software that will help them run their business, that they can configure, set up and run as easily as possible by themselves, without going out to hire some acne ridden, arrogant, condescending , overpriced Linux geek, who has little interest in the bottom line of the business, but is solely concerned in carrying out his "I hate Microsoft" agenda, no matter the cost to the small businessman!
Microsoft wins yet again!
Hail the conquering horoes!
The major problem (that I see) with freenet is speed and I think your grid layout will have the same high latency between widely seperated nodes.
Newsforge has been putting up some nice articles.
This article was not a comparison of Linux versus Windows. It was just an insight into the mind of a Windows salesman from the heart of Microsoft. The guy cries for Microsoft ads on TV.
My favorite quote was where they asked what Linux could do that Microsoft couldnt. Another good quote was where he high-fived everyone when Novell bought SuSE. A few comments:
Linux can do things Microsoft cant. Try configuring the Linux kernel's networking part, and try the same on Windows2000 Server. Compare VPN solutions. Last but not least, check out the drivers in Linux. My Arcnet (ancient pre-ethernet) cards worked well on Linux, had issues on Windows. Next check out the security options in Linux. Enough said.
Novell did lose to Microsoft, but even in the Windows95 days we were installing Netware 4.x clients on Windows to keep them working with the Netware servers. Look at all Ethernet drivers, they still have Novell parts in them. Novell pretty much gave birth to consumer networking as we know it, Microsoft didnt. Novell just made a few bad mistakes along the way, and learned lessons. However it now has a piece of Linux. Just one distro.. a good one mind you. Kill Novell and RedHat, Linux will still be getting patches from various groups around. Someone else will getup and start some company to provide support.
Theres a great push for Linux everywhere. I dont think Taylor has realized that yet. We run 6 Windows servers at work, and all the IT people we've had, the president and vice president all have shown interest in moving everything to Linux. Our ERP system, and lotus notes are both Windows-only, which is whats holding us back. Notes is IBM, so we are expecting good Linux clients, and the ERP software has a few beta parts made in wxwindows for Linux/X11 already. Engineering runs Autocad, I expect that to run on Linux in a few years too. If not, we will move to a CAD system that will.
So while Microsoft has more than 90% of the market share, 90% of their sysadmins are looking for reasons and ways to get to Linux. That means 90% of the market has already been SOLD, but there are obstacles that will almost certainly go away. I'd be cashing my MS stocks if I were Taylor.
Its amazing theyre running 50 servers testing Linux, and certifying salesreps on it. Hotmail must be running on one of those servers. How does it feel to work at a company with good pay selling bad products. How can you face customers asking you about the superiority of Linux you tested in your labs, and lie to their faces? Hard to have any pride in your work. Hard to have passion in technology if youre supposed to hate free software.
For this reason I think selling Windows costs Microsoft much more than selling Linux. Anyone skeptical of Linux imagines it as a collection of companies or a text-based UNIX copycat. "Linux" in these articles increasingly means Linux + GNU software + other sourceforce software / *BSD. They can damage the Linux kernel group, but its free and someone else will pick up the pieces and continue. They will have to go after every single group of GNU and the sourceforge collection. What can you do to a kid in a basement using free compilers on his own computers making programs and giving it away for free? Buy him out? Or get more of your $80,000 per year 40 hours per week programmers to do a better job than a million eyeballs? Linux is here to stay, and in my opinion will be around 10 years from now, 50 and 100 years. Free software like samba, gaim, winex, firefox, thunderbird, will be able to cover Microsofts functionality in days of the release of the software, and improve upon it by leaps and bounds. Its a different beast than good ol Novell.
"Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they laugh at you, then they laugh at you."
Speed will always be an issue, but I'm hoping the same forces that took the regular public networks from 300 baud to cable modems over 20 years might do the same for my own.
We don't have it big enough at the moment, to get anything more than a guess at what latency will look like for the most distant hosts. On our 3-6 hop expanses, we're seeing sub 500ms pings most of the time. Anyone that is interested is welcome to check it out...
Redmond has been scheming to destroy linux for how many years? I truly don't know if they have any intelligent coders, but their lawyers on the other hand... I keep wanting to say "intelligent like the raptors in Jurassic Park" but it's probably more like "queen alien from Aliens" intelligence. In all those years, you don't think they have came up with something already? You don't think that preparations have been made? I don't watch Cspan or anything, but somewhere in the millions of pages of useless laws that they create, there is a rider somewhere that tweaks "patent reform". To those suspicious of it, it's probably described as "fixing software patent absurdities" or maybe "a law designed to keep large companies from abusing smaller ones seeking relief for patent infringement". And this is just my dumb example, it's likely more insidious than that.
And if I make it sound like a single item, then forgive me. Because I should be pointing out that they're attacking this from all angles in Washington, among the congressmen, and even among their fellow weasel/lobbyists. Can't just bribe the senator, have to make sure Disney's man is onboard... didn't we help him out with that copyright extension thing?
IBM will never get an injunction against windows installations everywhere... don't you think Microsoft has a slightly better shot at getting injunctions against IBM linux installations?
I just hope I'm wrong. Maybe Microsoft is full of mouth-breathing, slobbering morons who can't sell food to a starving man without resorting to thuggish threats.
Microsoft have never had to fight a competitor like FOSS before, which metaphorically plays its poker with all of their cards face-up on the table and wins anyway. Having half of the cards in play faced up makes it very difficult to cheat in the traditional ways, and the elimination of half of the bluff radically alters the game.
The other terrifying aspect is that in order to play poker at this table, Microsoft needs to face not one or two other players, but countless thousands. Their pin-striped suit and expensive jewelry isn't impressing the other players as much as it ought to, and it's hard to keep track of all of those other hands despite their all being faced up.
There are a few "enemy concentrations" which they can focus on and kind of play against as a collective, like Samba (they've been seriously down about the mouth on Samba for the last year or two), Linux (the FOSS poster child) and OpenOffice ("they wrote what?!"), which between them attack most of the profit avenues represented by the two cash cows, MS-Windows and MS-Office.
However, MS had kind of saturated those two markets, and needs to break into new markets - and guess what? Wherever they turn, FOSS is already there. So Microsoft have turned to peripheral areas, hardware and patents and social/political stuff that's difficult for FOSS to directly compete on.
Hardware is not much of a problem for FOSS, Microsoft has conventional competitors there to keep them in line as long as they can't leverage a Palladium-like monopoly.
Patents are a problem, but I think the whole patent arena is sliding out from under the cover of being merely sublime, and even conservative lawmakers are going to have to take notice of that soon.
This leaves the more nebulous area of social/political manipulation. Traditionally, Microsoft has used its massive presence, advertising and schmoozing budgets to leverage its core markets, together with the implied access to a lot more back doors (and we're not talking BackOrifice here). If they find a more direct way to turn all of that power into a cash-flow, the world is in trouble.
Good old "oops, we forgot to renew the domain - and the other domain" Passport is gradually jamming a foot into that kind of door, in the same way as constantly waving MSIE and MSN in people's faces has saved those items from the total obscurity they deserve. Watch out for Microsoft jamming levers in elsewhere.
Nevertheless, the FOSS community in general refuses to take Microsoft as seriously as MS'd like, and they often react in unpredictable was and predictable ways at the same time, which must cause endless ulcers in Redmond because they can never be sure that the predictable responses from the FOSS crowd aren't masking the launch of unpredictable responses (such as handing out FOSS CDs at Microsoft conventions, a tactic which Microsoft seems to be reciprocating by flooding FOSS_friendly websites with their ads).
</ramble>
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
...the GP really, really did walk into that one! (-:
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
This is called process migration. It's a common feature of distributed systems. A Beowulf cluster can do this.
What this guy means is that in 2007, Windows might be able to do something that has been done on Linux for years. Damned if I know why he chose to use this for an argument against Linux.
May we never see th
Take a typical Mandrake Linux install. You select "PostFix" as one of the packages to install, from the servers section under "Mail and News" - after the installer has asked you for a hostname, and the obvious one is mail.grimaldi.com.ar.
The PostFix service is started by default if it's installed, and it figures out from the hostname that it's doing mail for grimaldi.com.ar. You'd have to turn it off by hand to stop it from working at this point. Morons!
If you go to www.grimaldi.com.ar and look at the source for that placeholder, I think it tells you all you need to know about the competence of Grimaldi's IT section. The page is one centred line of plain text on a plain background, but it is delivered through a frameset (and those are referring to a fixed IP address). Surprisingly, they do actually have a <noframes> clause, and it's more informative than the main page.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
MSFT has 50 billion in short term investments and cash. IBM's market cap is 140B. They're a little short and would need a little leverage to buy IBM.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
FOAF living in the US (we live in Oz) kept getting bats infiltrating their garage, and they also keep their meat freezer in the same garage. One day, wife (who loathes bats) asks husband to do something about them, "and while you're out there, can you grab a couple of steaks?" Husband responds, "to drive through their little hearts, dear?" (-:
I agree that MS-Windows zealots will continue to do their thing until some years after Microsoft implodes and running their software ceases to be an option.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
That's like noticing that Fred seems to be doing fine at shuttling stuff around for the company with his ute, so it's OK to seat him in a semi-trailer (without training), load it up with sixty or seventy tonnes of gear, and send him out the gate.
At the first tight corner, your mistake will become obvious from the sounds of street furniture being destroyed, and when Fred gets to the highway your mistake will be backgrounded with the wail of accumulating sirens as the emergency vehicles arrive to free the survivors and cart away the dead.
Getting computer services right can be a lot more complex than piloting a long, heavy, unresponsive vehicle - although getting PostFix right for a single domain is usually a matter of selecting the right hostname and doing the occasional update.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
It's worth adding that if the Linux guy is twice as expensive as the MS-Windows guy, it's because they have less than half as much work to do. Linux admins, in the case of small shops, actually get to leave again, where an MS-Windows admin will almost always be back every week or two.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
PostFix uses databases by default (for efficiency reasons) for some of its config (like mapping email addresses to mailboxes) but these change very rarely (typically months to days between changes) and almost never after hours when backups are typically done. Even so, you could use flat files for the job and it would work fine. Everything else is just a file. Queues, spools, mailboxes etc are all just flat files.
This also means that access control etc is universal and consistent. MS had to write separate access controls for MS-Exchange (have a look at the origins of that one day, you'll be amazed that it works at all), and again for the Registry. Each set is different and complex, each set required work to set up, and work to maintain, and offers a separate opportunity to screw things up. Exchange has never been KISSed. (-:
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
If I seriously wanted to upgrade software that old, I'd cross-grade to Mandrake Linux 6.0, then upgrade by x.0's from there. You might get away with upgrading in one jump, but your odds are not good either way.
IRL, I'd copy off the config and any databases, do a fresh install of a recent distro, then feather the config changes back in by hand.
Once you get up to Mandrake 9.0, a distro upgrade is a matter of destroying your old URPMI sources, defining new ones, updating the bits needed for RPM and URPMI, updating everything else, updating your kernel and you're done. I've done this on live (non-critical) servers.
Debian and APT is also that good, only you're not going to have as much luck with that first upgrade step (packaging system is completely different, filesystem structure is significantly different).
An equivalent question is "What would you upgrade Windows 3.1 to?"
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Man, that hits the nail on the head. Having suffered with programming to Windows APIs through most of the '90s, I can only say that coding in FLOSS-land is like flying. I picked up one of my old MFC reference books recently, and it just took a couple page flips to make so glad, so glad to be out of that world.
>If Microsoft would jump on the Free/OS train today, make a 180 degree turn, pour billions into Free/OS projects, they'd be welcome to.
NOT! I don't want ANY of MS code in a free system.
That is EXACTLY what MS wants; Their code in FOSS. They released code thus far, so that later, like SCO, they can play ignorant to the release of this code, or worse, that it was meant only for their platform, and some dink-head added it somehow to the kernel; Yes, I trust Linus better than this, but I wouldn't touch a single piece of MS source-code, at the risk of tainting myself.
Sound paranoid? Think of what Balmer said about IP, and believe it at its face value.
And not one person clicked on my URL. I may need to rethink this marketing strategy.
It is nice of Microsoft to give Linux so much publicity, though. I wish I could travel five years into the future and see what the OS market looks like then. With three more years before the next Windows, Linux should have them fully destroyed by then.
If that rebuild-from-source allowed you to do something difficult-or-impossible-or-expensive in MS-Windows land, it would be well worth it.
.src.rpm fetch and "rpm -bb" of clamav would be a top investment even if you had to sit and watch it instead of going about your other business when you look at the cost of (for example) Sophos or Norton for 200 seats.
Recent case-in-point, if you want email virus scanning for 200 users, a
Another one, hunting down dependencies for AMaViS is worthwhile (my preferred distro, Mandrake Linux, has them all and it's just "urpmi amavisd" but this customer's site was running Red Hat) if you can discard mail containing semi-broken ZIP files (as sent by mutating MS-Windows viruses) where the commercial packages' attitude seems to universally be "can't read it, therefore it's not really a ZIP, therefore it's safe". Having this crap cut out at the gateway meant that the customer's internal MS-Exchange server could then handle the remaining load. Usually.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
MS-Windows packages generally wrap everything that they're likely to need, which can make for DLL hell, and can result in you running multiple copies of a facility, some of which are easy to upgrade and some of which are not; Linux package managers are much more granular, typically relying on the PM to find any needed dependencies and so getting them all from one place. This gives the administrator much more control over the app, particular quality control WRT dependent libraries, but until the Linux PMs all learned to resolve their own dependencies it had meant that the admin had to chase down other RPMs to bridge any gaps. Hooray for the march of progress. I'd expect the next generation of Linux package managers to be even more ambitious about hunting for dependencies, and to be intelligent enough to be able to find dependencies for and build from a
Generally true. There is, however, a growing degree of consistency in where apps look for those files; in the case of a service it's usually
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"now you can turn you computer on and off remotely"
Uhh - isn't the idea to leave it on to provide services.
But I think I understand because now with longhorn you have to actually shut your computer off when longhorn crashes. so now you can do our servers remotely - cool - that's innovation our os is part of the bios now and we can make your machine even less stable and we will create even better lockin for our customers - innovation $$$.
I guess he will say the widgets on longhorn desktop are innovation too and that the open source community never thought of that.
why don't they just shut up and make their product better instead of mudslinging with open source.
this is all getting so old and yet all they have is a two year old os.
Wrong, wrong (just), wrong!. (-:
Most of the useful Linux packages can be found (albeit sometimes a bit crippled) for MS-Windows (or nicely packaged for the Mac). What you don't usually get is smooth integration, full-throttle performance or regular updates. OTOH, very few attackers expect to find, for example, EXIM on MS-Windows, so attempts to priv-escalate to root don't work all that well. (-:
The advantages of Linux which my cutomers see (all of my customer sites are either Linux or planning to be Linux soon) are that I can quickly and cheaply set it up and then more or less forget it for a couple of years until a fan or hard disk fails (and yes, I do have and have had systems with years of continuous uptime on them); it's flexible enough to readily do a lot of stuff which is difficult-to-impossible (and usually clumsy) under MS-Windows; you don't need to worry about licensing; and it's never had a CodeRed or MSBlast equivalent. Different customers have additional different reasons for liking it, but that's all pretty much common ground. Cheap, reliable and flexible.
I don't see how the GP can price MS-Windows and and Linux systems at about the same on the same hardware, since the sites I share with MS-Windows all (bar one, who is ultra-careful about everything he does and visits the 40-seat site maybe every fortnight) have the MS techs constantly visiting to fix stuff up that should never break.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
Liberals call everyone Nazis yet they are the closest thing to it.
You probably mean either MS-Windows 2003 Server, or MS-Windows XP Pro running somethign as a service. And you probably wonder why you have trouble understanding what the fellas from "the Linux shop" tell you.
Turkey. (-:
Well, hey, something like that worked for Bill, why not for you? (-:
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
My book-keepers installed a driver for a digital camera, and Windows ME stopped booting until they booted the machine from an install CD instead, hit F3 and used COMMAND to rename a system file. No reinstall, at least, but unquestionably outside the expertise of a typical computer user to fix.
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...what with the required OCR and all that. Your search would work if you were searching for EXIF tags rather than pixels, which is what I expect MS to be doing, probably in a grossly inefficient and resource-intensive way.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
I am worried that Microsoft may actually yet keep Linux from spreading everywhere. I think that Linux's growth relies on credibility and the fundamentals of its proven design. My biggest fear for Linux is that Microsoft will understand why Linux is a threat to them, but not the ideals behind it. This article suggests that Taylor has done this. With this understanding Microsoft, could develop tactics to combat Linux without improving its products or answering for its software's severe flaws.
I use Linux because Microsoft have done some very bad things to the IT industry and the people that are involved in it, thats not to say they havn't done anything good. Microsoft only exists for the $, not to improve the IT industry.
I would really like Microsoft to know that there are plenty of people like me that will always be here to demonstrate why Linux is the better choice for IT and almost everyone in it, and to try to ensure that Microsoft cannot harm the IT industry again.
Dude linux and java rules and you know it.
Just from my experience developing software for 15 years linux and java rules.
And they're doing that by getting certified as Linux engineers? Yea, right, this is all bluff and bluster to diffuse the perception that they're running scared.
"I was high-fiving everyone I could find when Novell bought [German Linux distributor] SuSe. We already won once against Novell."
They are deluding themselves if they think the battle against linux is familiar just because it involves Novell again.
Take the two quotes above plus the claim that Taylor "shed a tear" at the stupid new commercials and it's pretty clear this guy is a real nitwit, corporate style. What will they try next?
They don't even need to go OSS.
Buy out the SCO nightmare, spend some of that cash reserve, and have the existing Windows kernel engineers turn the SVR code into something that scales and performs.
Don't try and cobble the Windows APIs on the kernel -- stick with Windows.net and other "clean" APIs. Let the crud die -- no more untyped pointers, multifunction entry points, etc. Those are the crux of the Windows security problem, and the only way to clean it up is get rid of those APIs.
Port DX if you insist, but leave it a Ring 1 or outer service.
Microsoft has a lot of good UI work in Windows that can easily be carried over via the Windows.net or whatever proper class-based APIs they've been working on for Longhorn.
But it's time to stop pretending Windows is "secure". It's not. Hundreds of thousands of regular infections costing literal millions of dollars in lost staff time, tech time, restore time, and overtime to catch up from the latest Windows security breach for hundreds of corporations is too much to expect society to tolerate.
99% of the data center servers in North America run a full or close to full POSIX stack that handles real-time pthreads, system resources, etc. Coupled with ANSI C/C++ it's the standard for data center systems. Even AS400, OpenVMS, and mainframes can deal with POSIX.
It's time for Microsoft to face up to the fact that they lost the war. Windows will not be running corporate infrastructures, and until Microsoft accepts that they will be forever relegated to the "security jail" of firewalled desktops and departmental servers.
Microsoft could just as easily do it with OSS, such as a Linux kernel.
Microsoft's biggest enemy is Microsoft and their asinine refusal to support industry programming standards beyond the minimal level required to slap a sticker on their box and claim compliance for government project bids. It's Microsoft that refuses to abandon a security nightmare of spaghetti code, even though they can't maintain it properly any more and have to keep pushing back service packs farther and farther while they try to get it re-stabilized for shipment.
Bad for industry, bad for Microsoft, bad for everyone. Let the Windows kernel die already.
I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
A survey with a smaller sample size (200) and conducted in UK in Sept 2003 "shows 26% - or one in four - SMB respondents currently use Linux. Of those not yet using Linux, 15% said they are likely to use it in the future while a further 26% remain undecided".
:) I assume the research done done by Yankee Group was done in the US... so maybe US SMB is just different?
"The main reasons for moving to Linux given were:
* Lower costs (38%)
* Performance (23%)
* Security (23%)
* Reliability (23%)"
Don't see hating Microsoft there...
How's this "insightful"
its actually "wishful"
Damn often, it's:
first they ignore you
then they laugh at you
then they fight you
then they pound your head.
We all know that getting rid of MS software is a doable thing in most 'corporate' environments. Large scale desktop deployment, remote management, security, backups etc. is all easier or saner under some form of *NIX.
The real issues are:
- Moronic set-in-stone corporate IT-policies introduced by the recently fired 'MIS Manager' (pun intended) after he came back from some 4 day Microsoft training seminar.
- Fear of making a mistake with large financial reprecussions that will make you look silly at the friday beer-bash, which in turn will cause you to lose your job as an overpaid MIS Manager.
I have yet to see somebody that knows his/her stuff f*ck up a *NIX installation. All the people that I know and who understand their stuff get the job done quicker and smarter and have more fun doing it.
Beyond these two items the main threat to Free Software is the ever looming threat of Software Patents, but that's another story.
- It took western civilisation 2000 years to ensure popular literacy, and now we work with icon driven GUI's. Go figure.
Evidently, Trey now wants the industry at a complete standstill.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
Given that the alternative is MS-Exchange or some block-box guiltware from TuCows, I'd be delighted to run EXIM if it had to be on MS-Windows.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
Standard/classic microsoft strategy:
1. get compatible,
2. get most of users by ads and rumours
3. get less compatible, causing problems around
4. get everyone on their proprietary crap, by the magic for FUD
5. get uncompatible with everybody else, so everybody will use ms stuff, to be able to interact and exchange with programs and data with others.
c'mon -- it worked on everything, including os2 file formats, C, JAVA, Basic, HTML, RTF, Dos, e.t.c (and even text DOCs). Why shouldn't it work on OS like linux? creating mess in opensource will create demand for preoprietary, but unified and all-compatible-with-everyone solutions.
All those around You are droids. They do what ads in magazines tells them to.
nt
No sweat. But most admins prefer a stable system and so will rely on upgrading with the distro to stay moderately current.
.spec file or similar, and build the package to suit the distribution. As long as the application's maintainer (Mozilla Org in this case) keeps the meta information correct, the process could in principle be totally automated. App provider announces new revision, distro build hosts bustle in and pick up source, a rebuild happens and is announced, then the finished RPM is picked up by the app provider and integrated into their download page. It would be a trivial matter for an incoming downloader to identify their distribution, version number and architecture in the User-Agent header.
Sure, you could do a one-size-fits-all Linux package for FireFox, but it's better to let the distros add their own touches, like Mandrake and its menuing system, Gentoo and its optimisation. The end result will have better fit and finish.
The only reason Microsoft gets to be so externally consistent (and, my goodness, isn't there some frantic pedalling going on behind the scenes to make it so despite some immense internalised differences?) across "distributions" is because they're not really distributions. Win32s is kind of like a cut-down LSB, and MS-Windows developers target it. As more Linux developers and distributors target LSB, so will their efforts better integrate. LSB hasn't been around for anything like as long as win32s. Linux developers are generally less willing (and rightly so, IMESHO) to bundle libraries and link things statically because it erodes Linux's native ability to manage shared objects better than MS-Windows.
The bottom line is that the convenience of one-size-fits-all is nice, but I think we should target it differently to the way Microsoft has done. In actual practice, this is what's happening, and perhaps what we really need is talking heads from the half-dozen most popular distros to sit down and agree on some authoring and packaging standards. I don't mean forcing everything to RPM, but including common meta-information from which various styles of RPMs, DEBs and other packages can be conveniently and automatically built.
Most distributors already run build hosts, and MVP-equivalent external (not in-house) developers are often granted access to them. All that's really needed is meta-information that can be tossed into the pot with the application proper, from which the build host can construct a
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
A very fat paycheck, you say? Where do I sign up?!
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
That's a great idea. I know, let's call it Slashdot! It would be great to finally have such a site.
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
I think you lost me with your analogy... Maniac is a Mac, right? And Gee, what, GNU?
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
This is completely irelevant. The point is that Gates and Ballmer with they're billions in the bank are atacking Linux right now. We should of already been prepared for that, but no, we waste our time on stupid nickpicking and grammer NSDAP bullshit. Don't you care about Linux and it's future at all?
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
They already have. (In November 2003.)
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
Possibly, but nevertheless I admire the robot/reboot pun. Trully brilliant.
Sincerely,
Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
"Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
Because I don't spend hours on end trying to fix something that isn't going to work in the first place.... Sometimes its easier to live without a soundcard driver, etc..., than suffer the annoyances of constant lock-ups.
I've said it before and I'll say it again. The only way I can see Linux actually beating Microsoft in the desktop market is if some major corp takes control of the reigns and develops "useful" utilities and development tools for the system. Tools like vi, gcc, automake and ddd just don't cut the mustard anymore when it comes to developing serious, graphically complex user interfaces. The current Linux development environment as it stands only discourages new developers from migrating to system. Linux needs a SERIOUS development IDE!
The other problem is that of a GUI library. QT, GTK+, wxWindows, Lesstif, etc. Pick one already! These incompatible and often incomplete (minus QT) toolkits create a barrage of incompatible, third rate applications. Concepts everyday Windows users take for granted like cut & paste, object embedding, drag & drop, automation and binary compatible controls become impossible to implement when applications can't communicate because they were all written by a different library.
This is why I don't think open source is the answer. "Too many cooks in the kitchen". Eventually 3 or 4 big companies will take control of Linux and the cottage industry you see now will diminish. Thats the only way Linux will be taken seriously enough to hurt Microsoft. But then what are you left with? An Ologopoly consisting of a few companies insisting their Linux is the best and purposely making their system incompatible with the others, until finally one wins and what are you left with? Another Microsoft.
Not in real life they don't!
Wake up and smell the coffee dude
You forgot Daniel Lyons of Forbes.
Other than that, yes, I do tend to evaluate the source of the claims. But I also validate them against those things I can readily establish (e.g. if Lyons is talking about SCO's legal claims, I compare what he says to SCO's actual legal filings).
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day. Sadly, Enderle, Lyons & co. have a somewhat worse track record...
PLEASE don't use -ing \ where you mean /
It brings back the bad old days of programming in C and using abortions like "C:\\\\\\\\MSDOS\\\\\\\\COMMAND.COM" to make sure it survived enough layers of C, MS library and command-line parsing to actually work. If Microsoft hadn't made that -ing stupid choice just to be different and broken what would otherwise be a de facto standard, nobody except programmers would know that \ existed, and users wouldn't inevitably stop and ask, "do you mean the question-mark slash or the other one?" multiple times in the simplest instruction sequence.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
Usually, the justification for it is the calendaring features - which then sit around essentially unused forever. Many times, I have seen MS-Exchange-based sites using a different calendaring system. Size can't be the issue, there are heaps of MTAs which are at least as scalable and reliable, much less demanding on hardware, and considerably cheaper to roll out.
The reason you see PostFix et al on so many gateways is in large part due to MS-Exchange's vulnerability and/or processing demands. I have put in several PostFix-based mail gateways which were explicitly emplaced to either defend an MS-Exchange server from external attack, or pre-process out the viruses and spam to reduce the MS-Exchange server's workload, and maintain another two sites at which QMail was already installed and providing both of those functions.
As to MS-Exchange's gross (as in obvious) features like calendaring and group contact lists, Kolab and a few other different FOSS MTA systems are already providing those. What has not yet happened is the awakening of decision-makers to this fact. If MS-Exchange does have some new killer features just around the corner (and by "killer features" I don't just mean Yet Another Obfuscated Authentication Method designed to put a stick through competitors' spokes - or some frobnule that MS bolted on just because they could - but genuinely useful features), then well and good, for it will spur innovation in the whole market as its competitors have been doing for so long.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing