Bob Cringely's Predictions For 2005
An anonymous reader writes "Bob Cringley publishes his predictions for developments in the world of IT every year. His latest column contains his predictions for 2005 and a brief look back at his predictions for 2004."
easy, read about him on his site.
In his own words
Pete Carr Owner Chatmag.com
Like this?
If he was predicting the passage of the CAN-SPAM act in his first column of 2004, then it would have been pretty funny if he couldn't have been specific. It had alread passed.
It took effect on January 1, 2004.
what is he talking about?
He was probably remembering the old IBM PowerPC roadmap from 2001 which clearly discusses the G3, the G4, the G5, the G6, and makes fuzzies about the G7.
He was probably talking about THAT G6. The one that was due in 2003 (DOH!).
cheers,
RS
Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
You, like many people confuse the terms "wireless" with "mobile". Both terms make you think of a laptop, tablet, or car computer. Wireless means just that, no wires. Even if it sits still, it's wireless.
The new version of the bar golf video game Golden Tee is sponsored by Sprint and uses thier data network to transmit game info. The previous version dialed in with a phone line and the bar operators didn't like messing with it.
Yeah, this is my second reply. I had more to say.
cringely claims a lot of things, but you shouldn't always believe him.
This was bound to happen anyway, and was more a factor of hardware getting faster, more capable, and cheaper.
Microsoft's software hasn't got any cheaper, while PC's have. It's been the driving down of the TCO which has brought PC's into the average home. Microsoft was around back when I bought my first XT clone (with no modem, networking, or even a hard drive, and only CGA graphics) for about $2500 (CDN) -- and this was at a time when Compaq was releasing their first 80386-based machine. Now you can get machines that absolutely nuke this machine out of the water for $500 or less. They do more and cost less. No amount of software wizardry would have brought the PC to everyone's home if the hardware hadn't advanced as well as it has, and if not for for Internet and audio and video improvements.
There is no definnable benefit to this. Besides which, it's quite likely that without Microsoft Windows, the PC would have mostly consolodated around OS/2 a long, long time ago.
When? Sorry, but that title goes to Apple, which made computing easy 11 years before Microsoft even started to get close.
They did no such thing. Business demand for faster spreadsheet processing was the initial impetus. Hardware costs were being driven down for decades before Microsoft ever came along. Just look at the simple calculator, and what one would have cost you in the late 60's versus now.
No, IBM's OS/2 WARP v3 beat them to that title a year before Windows 95 was released. It had a built-in web browser, e-mail client, news reader, gopher client, decent telnet client (something the base Windows distros still don't have...) and other useful Internet tools. When Windows 95 was released in August of 1995, it didn't even have a decent web browser.
Sorry, but Microsoft didn't so any of the things you've claimed, and all of them would have happened without Microsoft. It's called "progress", and it would have driven on ahead with or without Microsoft. If anything, Microsoft has stifled tech growth through their monopolistic practices. Operating systems like Mac OS X show us where we all could be if there wasn't a single dominant software company running the show.
Yaz.
The reason hardware vendors don't want to release the source code is they (rightly or wrongly) think that with the source code, their chip can be reverse engineered and some fly-by-night company is going to copycat their product and cause them to lose sales. Same reason Nvidia and ATI only release binary drivers for their video cards.
I can't say that I disagree with you, but I think the reason behind Nvidia or Ati not releasing is not just the fear of reverse engineering. They both have a lot innovation and expertise there. 3D drivers are a bit more complex than just simple wireless nic hw interfaces. Nvidia improving performance by mere driver upgrades by tens of percents on occasions is something they sure as hell don't want Ati to know the details about.
I don't the linux market for 3D cards has jack to do with it either. They both most likely have the almost exact code in their windows drivers and that's the source they don't to release.
1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
Thank you for bringing a little reason to the discussion. I'd just like to add that in some cases (such as NVidia's, at least according to NVidia), the problem isn't the vendor, but rather the people they buy components from, who make them sign various sorts of NDAs. In other words, it's not just customers that have to deal with encumbered hardware and software; it's the people who build stuff, too.
;)
But that doesn't mean you shouldn't hold the vendors accountable; if they feel enough pressure, one can hope that they push it upstream, too, and someone emerges as a leader in "open components". Well, it could happen, anyway
NO NO NO NO
... those useless assholes at redmond have changed the standard and tried to implment their own new form factor >:(
bold[NO]bold
They don't _anymore_
As an Aussie growing up with a UK k/b it took me about 6 months to adapt to the US format which I now like.
Now MS are single handedly trying to change it (have a look at the ms.com/hardware page) - they've piddled about with function keys, function lock, the keys above the cursors.
It's an abomination >:(
I hope this MS internet keyboard pro never breaks down - because it's a great peice of hardware.
It's Official!
.
John Edward IS the Biggest Douche in The Universe!
And if the boys from South Park aren't authoritative enough for you, Penn & Teller say the same thing
Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
Sorry, but it's true: they didn't design it.
They hired Ziba to do that.
Already done. Ralink already offer Linux drivers for their 802.11 chipsets from their official website. The last time I looked, these used the nVidia/ATI-style 'closed binary blob plus glue code' approach for their drivers, but that doesn't seem to be the case any longer.
ASUS are even declaring official 'Linux support' on the boxes of their Ralink-based cards. I don't know how good the drivers are yet, let alone the hardware, but at a current retail price of 17GBP in the UK, I might give one a punt shortly.