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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."

32 of 440 comments (clear)

  1. Some of these predictions are -1 redundant by MrRTFM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    - Microsoft sues
    - SPAM increases
    - RIAA sues users

    Even my Aunt Nellie predicted these to happen!

    I'd be interested in what major software is going to take off - spam filters, chat, music?

    --
    You can't expect to wield supreme executive power, just because some watery tart threw a sword at you
    1. Re:Some of these predictions are -1 redundant by uberdave · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You can no more prove or disprove the existence of God than Spock could prove or disprove the existence of Gene Roddenberry. Your statement, like mine, is a statement of faith.

  2. Perfect for Idea Futures Exchange by Baldrson · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder why guys like Cringley never put their predictions up on Idea Futures Exchange? Maybe its because their predictions aren't that surprising?

  3. Who's Bob Cringely anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Someone care to explain why we should be so interested in this?

    1. Re:Who's Bob Cringely anyway? by Chatmag · · Score: 4, Informative

      In his own words

      --
      Pete Carr Owner Chatmag.com
  4. Duh... by sugapablo · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Microsoft's entry into the anti-virus and anti-spyware businesses will be a disaster for users."

    What does Microsoft do that ISN'T a disaster for its users?

    1. Re:Duh... by roseblood · · Score: 5, Insightful

      YOUR CLAIM: Bring the PC to nearly everyone's home.

      Credit: IMB PC/AT and it's clones

      YOUR CLAIM: Give them a platform that is virtually universal in the industry.

      Credit: uhm...yeah... I've got 5 diffrent platforms here on 5 diffrent processors (only 1 machine is a x86)

      YOUR CLAIM: Make computing easy

      Credit: Those boys over at Apple

      YOUR CLAIM: Make computing cheap via making it everywhere and driving down the cost of hardware.

      Credit: All the makers of PC clones

      YOUR CLAIM: Managing to get on the internet truck late and yet still be the driving force that brought it to home users via making it so easy to get on and use.

      Credit: They didn't get on late, but AOL did all this.

      --
      There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    2. Re:Duh... by Yaztromo · · Score: 5, Informative
      Bring the PC to nearly everyone's home.

      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.

      Give them a platform that is virtually universal in the industry.

      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.

      Make computing easy

      When? Sorry, but that title goes to Apple, which made computing easy 11 years before Microsoft even started to get close.

      Make computing cheap via making it everywhere and driving down the cost of hardware.

      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.

      Managing to get on the internet truck late and yet still be the driving force that brought it to home users via making it so easy to get on and use.

      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.

  5. Crossing Over by kajoob · · Score: 5, Insightful


    "I wrote that spam would get worse"

    "Microsoft would propose proprietary technologies"

    "Apple will take a big risk in 2005...though I am at a loss right now for what that might be."


    Well at least he goes out on a limb and his predictions aren't vague or anything. If John Edward stops hosting Crossing Over, I know where they can get a new host. ;)

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur
    1. Re:Crossing Over by eric76 · · Score: 4, Informative
      Well at least he goes out on a limb and his predictions aren't vague or anything.

      Like this?

      I wrote that spam would get worse, that there would be useless laws passed to stop it (Can-Spam, anyone?)

      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.

    2. Re:Crossing Over by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Funny
      It took effect on January 1, 2004.

      Bah, if this were an Infocom game or Hack, we would have got a message like "You cast CAN-SPAM. You feel sad for a moment, but then it passes."

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  6. Well that was a waste of time by Stevyn · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nothing earth shattering here. The same old Microsoft and RIAA will perish while desktop linux will make inroads. Then a few other vague things like apple will do something big and voip will become more popular.

    I could have just easily said that in north east america, the year will start out cold, get warmer, get hot, get cold, and then finally get really cold. I just wish advertisers would pay me for that.

  7. My prediction for 2005 by mcc · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slashdot will continue posting Cringely articles two to three times a month whether or not he has anything worthwhile, interesting or surprising to say, just because it's Cringely.

  8. Affiliate programs by Eric+Giguere · · Score: 5, Interesting

    4) The Recording Industries Association of America will continue to sue customers while their business slowly dissolves. The big threat here isn't file swapping, but affiliate programs like Apple's iTunes Affiliate Program that I am sure will be shortly copied by all the online music stores. These affiliate programs turn bloggers into shills and blogs into record stores, with the result that record company's last source of power -- marketing clout -- is taken away. This will take time, but it is the beginning of the end for old-style record companies.

    I didn't realize iTunes had an affiliate program, but it seems like a logical step. Amazon's been doing this for a long time with music CDs, of course, as have other vendors. While viral marketing is definitely a good way to promote things, I don't see it reducing the record companies' marketing clout. I've posted before about how they used viral marketing to promote Christina Aguilera when she was new. This is just another marketing avenue for them. But really, you still need to reach people who don't read blogs. People still watch TV. Still listen to the radio. Still read magazines and newspapers.

    Eric
    Why is William Shatner's face on my All-Bran?
  9. Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar by Draconix · · Score: 4, Funny

    You mean like Firefox.exe?

    --
    By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
  10. Crossing Over Must Die by handy_vandal · · Score: 4, Funny

    If John Edward stops hosting Crossing Over, I know where they can get a new host.

    Please God -- let there never be another John Edward.

    Crossing Over must die, and never again be channeled to the living!

    -kgj

    --
    -kgj
  11. eh? by ikea5 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    FTA:"I predicted that all kinds of software companies would abandon support for older products, thus forcing us to upgrade to new operating systems and new hardware. Bingo." This is a prediction? why?

  12. VOIP: by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 5, Interesting
    6) VoIP will continue to shatter the telephone industry with the arrival of WiFi phones, which might finally be the killer app for hotspots. Eventually, all the backbone suppliers will figure out that VoIP is their salvation and will either start their own VoIP companies or ally with big VoIP players.
    Won't happen. Local telephone providers, being required by law to provide universal service, will convince authorities that they need the phone revenue VOIP is cutting-off from them.

    Expect some big hobbling of VOIP, at least for John. Q. Public.

  13. C'mon Bob, give some examples by jlleblanc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I predicted that all kinds of software companies would abandon support for older products, thus forcing us to upgrade to new operating systems and new hardware. Bingo.

    We've all grown accustomed to Bob's vagueness in these predictions, but here he doesn't even list any examples to support the veracity of his already vague (and super-obvious) prediction. -Joe

  14. Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar by Bill+Currie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    and how many MS beta releases have not had feature removals and other de-improvements before final release?

    --

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --
    Leave others their otherness. -- Aratak

  15. Re:Apple G6 by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 4, Informative
    Spud asked, in regard to the G6:

    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.
  16. Re:Microsoft Antispyware prediction is off the mar by technos · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Giant spyware application nukes stuff the other vendors decided was benign. For example, there are a bunch of tool-bar and assistants that are on their own safe, but can and will install other applications if not instructed otherwise by the user. AdAware won't nuke those; It nukes the spyware they can install, however.

    This is where the majority of the "Wow, I found spyware!" factor comes from.

    It also makes a bigger deal out of wiping files after the spyware has been nuked. AdAware and SpyBot leave the odd DLL, the odd this, the odd that lying about from time to time. The spyware is gone (It neither runs nor is capable of running) but Giant will claim this as an infection and bitch at the user that they have SPYWARE, when in fact they have an unusable dll stub in their windows directory.

    --
    .sig: Now legally binding!
  17. This one too: by mtrisk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    - Linux on the Desktop

    Been predicted over and over again, but "major inroads"? Linux will grow gradually, but I can't see how he missed a glaring hole: Linux wireless support. My prediction for 2005 would have been wireless drivers for Linux that work just as easily as the built in networking drivers we have now. THEN you can start talking about major inroads, especially on laptops (which I think Linux is more suitable for than the Desktop).

    Just my 2 cents.

    --

    Without a proper flamewar, Anonymous was undecided on what shell to run.
  18. I like the ergonomic keyboard by tallbill · · Score: 5, Funny

    They have a nice keyboard design.
    I use one on my Linux box. It works great.
    I don't have carpel tunnel now.

    I just want to give credit where credit is due.

    Someone will probably post that they didn't design it.

    It is still a good keyboard.

    1. Re:I like the ergonomic keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sorry, but it's true: they didn't design it.

      They hired Ziba to do that.

  19. A $249 Mac? by Fortunato_NC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Although I doubt we'll see it, whether we see it or not, I'm going to make the bold prediction that in 2005, Slashdot users will continue to complain that Apple hardware is too expensive.

    --
    Blogging Weight Loss, Distance Education, and more at verlin.com
  20. What? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Wait a second, just hold everything... Microsoft release buggy, flawed software in a hurry to get the first to market advantage, and then the unscrupulous use those flaws to hijack the computers of hundreds of thousands world wide... then Microsoft PURCHASES THIRD PARTY SOFTWARE to apply band aids to their seeping wounds?

    Maybe I'm going mad here, but since they wrote the damned OS in the first place, wouldn't they know best where to apply system patches etc., and wouldn't it be better and faster to get the people that originally developed the OS to fix it up?

    But why would they when they can actually charge people for their patches now? Sure its free for now, but not for long, as the EULA states. Not to mention their OS authentication services (which you can turn off, if you buy that line), which their patches ostensibly never mentioned.

    I can't speak for anyone else, but I know when someone is trying to pass off horse manure as honey...

  21. What MS apps? by the_rajah · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Appearantly you've not tried it yourself. There are no MS apps that come with it. While I understand what you are saying about some security issues relating to root access, I have installed Linspire 4.5, on multiple machines and found it to be easy to install, easy to add/remove applications to and found it to be quite serviceable. You can easily add users so as to avoid running as root.

    I've really got to give Michael Roberts a lot of credit for his attempt to get the average user away from the grips of Microsoft, spam, viruses and malware. When my son's P4 HP Pavilion ground to a halt with malware, I loaned him an old PII-266 running Linspire 4.5 while I roto-rootered his Windows machine. He and his wife were able to start using it for surfing and e-mail with about 2 minutes training. It worked just fine with winmodem for dialup access, too. Now I'm having trouble getting it back from him.

    I'm currently running SuSE 9.2 myself and have experience with RedHat, Fedora, Mandrake, Knoppix and Xandros as well as Linspire. No Linspire doesn't have as much geek appeal, but it's a reasonably good product IMHO. Oh, and no, I have no affiliation with Linspire in any way other than as someone who's tried it.

    "Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain

    --


    "Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain
  22. 2005 prediction: cringely still won't get his ph.d by bani · · Score: 4, Informative

    cringely claims a lot of things, but you shouldn't always believe him.

  23. Re:making predictions is hard... by fiftyfly · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Worthless punting by Cringely - obvious predictions about obvious things, useless predictions about useless things. Just like a "Best of year X", everybody needs to do a "Predictions for year X+1" - and Cringely's predictions are as good as anyone else's (i.e. worthless).

    Except, of course, that they aren't - they're just obvious. Actually they're only obvious to those already informed and following developments in the industry. What makes them usefull is the fact that Cringly has exposure outside of the industry and, therefor, significantly more influence upon the mindshare of the general population. Something I can't (and assume you can't) claim.

    --
    "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
  24. Re:Different issue by tylernt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Someone so inclined, and with the source, go out and jam police and fire communication systems."

    There are a lot easier ways of doing this than hacking WiFi cards, such as buying $20 worth of parts from Radio Shack.

    Transmitting on a certain frequency isn't as easy as sending a command to the hardware "transmit these bits on frequency X". The hardware only has a limited range of frequencies it can transmit on, and the antenna has to be matched to the frequency as well. Police, fire, etc use VHF (150MHz-ish), UHF (400MHz-ish), and 800MHz bands. Getting a 2.4GHz radio down to those frequencies may be possible but it would be a whole lot more work than building a radio from scratch. And at 200mW of transmit power, you're going to cause interference for what, a whole block and a half? I think not.

    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.

    --
    DRM 'manages access' in the same way that a prison 'manages freedom'
  25. Re:Different issue by Kynde · · Score: 4, Informative

    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