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Windows Longhorn Beta for June Release

An Anonymous Reader writes "According to CNET, the Windows Longhorn Beta 1 is supposedly set for release this June. The Register has commentary on the delays the new OS has faced." From the article: "Longhorn was originally supposed to ship in 2004. In May, this year release was pushed back to 2005. This week Longhorn's availability has been delayed even further, with Microsoft execs declining to say when exactly the operating system might ship, eWeek reports."

460 comments

  1. Credibility by fembots · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?

    1. Re:Credibility by Swamii · · Score: 4, Informative

      So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?

      The 4 month beta deadline, maybe? All previous announcements have been almost a year ahead of time.

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
    2. Re:Credibility by Gr8Apes · · Score: 5, Funny
      I believe they'll probably release something - the time line's too short to miss it by 4 years as they've done previously. Besides, they don't want the actual release of Tiger to have the limelight by itself, now, do they?

      Heck, Cairo was announced, what? 14 years ago? Longhorn was the new Cairo, now delayed to Blackcomb, as "Cairo" wasn't getting any more press. After all, "we're writing about Cairo again?

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    3. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Considering the rate Longhorn is shedding features, I don't see why it can't ship on time.

      Simply put, the shipping date approaches zero as the number of new features approaches zero.

    4. Re:Credibility by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Insightful
      > Heck, Cairo was announced, what? 14 years ago? Longhorn was the new Cairo, now delayed to Blackcomb, as "Cairo" wasn't getting any more press. After all, "we're writing about Cairo again?

      Database-driven filesystems are sorta like nuclear fusion.

      Marketing time to release is a constant in the range of 10-15 units of time. Actual time to release is the same -- but you use the next higher unit.

      That is, WinFS has been 6-12 months away for about 15 years, and fusion power has been about 5-10 years away for at least the past 5 decades.

    5. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Codename: Long-long-long-long-horn. Or 'bleached white longhorn'.

    6. Re:Credibility by Monkelectric · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cairo never existed... it was a scare tactic to get people to skip upgrading to novels new netware product. I believe they have pretty much admitted this?

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    7. Re:Credibility by BobPaul · · Score: 1

      I believe they'll probably release something - the time line's too short to miss it by 4 years as they've done previously. Besides, they don't want the actual release of Tiger to have the limelight by itself, now, do they?

      Agreed. I woudln't be surprised if they had the beta out by june. Of couse Windows XP 64 for AMD64 processors has been in beta for how long and we still haven't seen it hit the shelves?

      I'm not really sure it should be news if the beta DOES come out by June... final product still won't come out any sooner then expected. Beta in MS terms doesn't seem to mean feature freeze like it does in other products...

    8. Re:Credibility by Metteyya · · Score: 0, Redundant

      So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?

      They don't announce including Duke Nukem Forever with this LHorn release.

    9. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, sustainable marketable Fusion is and has always been 25 to 30 years away from the day you first seriously dedicate your resources and time to it, since the 1970s. The ITER is only a stepping stone to saleable fusion and should reduce that to 10 to 15 years away once it is constructed and experience gained.
      We know Fusion can work, but politicians are not committed to the longterm economy.

      WinFS on the other hand is a marketting thing and not a science. Its arrival is as late as possible to slow the pace of innovation but not too late to lose control of the monopolistic market.

    10. Re:Credibility by cortana · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey, that also works for Debian! Sarge has been ~1 month away for... 12 months. :(

    11. Re:Credibility by balloonhead · · Score: 1

      I am confused. Does your sig mean you think we need to transition to an economy based no longer on magic fish? Or does it mean you think we need to transition to an economy based on fish with no inherently magical qualities? Thank you in advance for your clarification. PS OT I know.

      --
      This idea was invented by Shampoo.
    12. Re:Credibility by mboverload · · Score: 1

      My friend has been running 64 for months with a full range of apps and has never had a single problem. Microsoft just doens't want to reisk people complaining. By keeping it in "beta" people can still use it, but Microsoft keeps its face.

    13. Re:Credibility by koreaman · · Score: 1

      Somehow this reminds me of Duke Nukem Forever

    14. Re:Credibility by alpha_foobar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      yeah, but sarge has a testing release which has been out for about 12 months... works fine for me... longhorn on the other hand is announcing a beta version in four months?? though i have seen it running... looked pretty... they are probably just waiting for mainstream computers to be powerfull enough to run their algorithms.

    15. Re:Credibility by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      No problems?

      How about no drivers, which means VGA graphics, no network, PIO disk access...

      Find if you're running dos edit on it. Sucks if you want it to do some real work.

      Or maybe you're the lucky one that is running the exact same configuration as the MS developer so thinks it works fine?

    16. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foghorn Longhorn says:

      "Well, ah lissen he'ah boy, ah... ah... ahhh... this time-- Ah said, THIS TIME it's really comin' out."

    17. Re:Credibility by tonyr60 · · Score: 1

      "PS OT I know."

      Now why did you have to ruin a perfectly good reply by trying to introduce a rational comment?

    18. Re:Credibility by BobPaul · · Score: 1

      Ohhh... so it's kind of like Linux?

      No, cause Linux has driver support

    19. Re:Credibility by Monkelectric · · Score: 2, Informative
      There's a GREAT SNL skit from the late 80's I want to say with the phil hartman cast... There's a town meeting describing that the towns economy is based on finding "magic fish" that grant wishes. The townspeople are coplainig that the fish are getting harder and harder to find, and the ones that do the quality of them is rotten. If I remember correctly, someone says, "I caught a magic fish the other day, and I asked him for a golden rocketship with diamond windows to take me to the moon! You know what that fish said? He started talking to me about weight ratios and how gold wasn't any good to build a space ship with! SO I bashed his head in on a rock!!"

      Anyways, at the end of the thing Phil Hartman stands up at the meeting and says, "I think we need to transition to a non magic fish based economy." It's one of the best SNL skits ever (and Im the first one to admit SNL sucks).

      Also, I think the magic fish draws a nice parallel to our currently *debt* financed economy (national debt, CC debt, SS debt, medicare debt, etc). But its mostly just for fun :)

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    20. Re:Credibility by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 1
      and Im the first one to admit SNL sucks

      No, I beat you to it.
      --
      I'd rather be lucky than good.
    21. Re:Credibility by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      Well for one thing, I heard that they will be bundling the beta of Duke Nukem Forever...

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    22. Re:Credibility by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Slashdot should have a poll about when we think the actual beta release will be. I mean beta, it can't be that far away ... as long as it boots, it works. Right? :)

      MS must keep the troops motivated though. So WinFS is always 'real soon now'. Have MS actually delivered anything on time ? Not trolling, honest question.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    23. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    24. Re:Credibility by ajs · · Score: 1

      Well, it comes down to this: we know Revenge of the Sith is slated to be out before then, so the marketing tie-ins are probably going to push MS to go with this release date. The initial boot sound is going to be, "Your upgrade is complete. Arise my apprentice," as spoken by Bill Gates!

    25. Re:Credibility by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Actually, Cairo was invented purely to keep people from migrating to OS/2. OS/2 included about 80% of what Cairo promised, and by the time OS/2 Warp 4 came around, filled in about 90% of those promises.

      Heck, MS is still trying to catch up to any number of OSes from 10 years ago. :)

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    26. Re:Credibility by 808140 · · Score: 1

      Actually, Sarge has been the testing release since Woody was released, which was 2 and half years ago I think.

      Actually, "testing" and "unstable" always exist -- you can always track them. The name of testing changes each time there's a release -- so back when potato was the stable release, woody was the testing release (sarge was not the unstable release -- the unstable release is always called sid). When woody became stable, they started calling testing sarge. When sarge becomes stable, testing will get a new name, and so on ad infinitum.

      So for example, I run testing on my laptop. That means that I run sarge, currently. But the day sarge becomes stable, I will actually be running whatever the new testing is called.

    27. Re:Credibility by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      If they actually get to a beta, vs an alpha, they'll release it as a .0 release.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    28. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft executive more believable than other announcements?

      Because they have to keep people from switching to Mac OS X after they see Tiger running on a $500 Mac mini or a $1000 iBook.

      They don't have to actually release a product, they just have to make sure that people will wait for them to release it. This "it's on the way" strategy has worked well for them in the past, and they're just continuing to use it.

      I'm not saying they're really scared of Mac OS X, but you don't have to be scared of something in order to protect yourself from it.

    29. Re:Credibility by blonde+rser · · Score: 0, Troll

      You sir are a nut

    30. Re:Credibility by Electroly · · Score: 2, Funny

      Find if you're running dos edit on it. Sucks if you want it to do some real work.

      Actually, it doesn't support 16-bit DOS applications. :)

    31. Re:Credibility by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

      No, they'll call it version 11 to show it's better than the latest Mac OS.

    32. Re:Credibility by vought · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Why is it that just after I struggle to find posts to use my Mod points on, I come across one (the parent of this post) that really deserves the points?

    33. Re:Credibility by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      WinFS on the other hand is a marketting thing and not a science. Its arrival is as late as possible to slow the pace of innovation but not too late to lose control of the monopolistic market.

      That presumes that WinFS is actually "innovation", which it isn't.

    34. Re:Credibility by Pofy · · Score: 1

      >So what makes this June Release by one Microsoft
      >executive more believable than other
      >announcements?

      4 months seems appropriate for the legal department to craft this new über EULA. It will be more than double the size of the ones for WinXP. In addition this time they REALY want to find and fix that legal bug were the shift key get stuck every other paragraph.

    35. Re:Credibility by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

      The original Apple Newton (and all of its successors) had a dynamic object oriented database as it's file system.

      Of course it didn't need any backwards compatibility, but that problem shouldn't take 15 years to solve.

    36. Re:Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Introducing Windows Longhorn . . . now with . . . umm . . . fun new graphics and some networking software that isn't compatible with your old software. We also rewrote that bell noise for error messages . . . we like it."

    37. Re:Credibility by mattspammail · · Score: 1

      They used to. They got burned one too many times though. That's why they decided it's best to actually make the product work, then release it. With Windows Update though, they should be working towards improving delivery times though, since they can always mass-patch as soon as they need to.

      --
      Now accepting PayPal donations!
    38. Re:Credibility by mattspammail · · Score: 1

      64 months is a long-ass time to keep running. How many pairs of shoes has he gone through? Thank you, thank you. I'll be here all week. Don't forget to tip your article posters.

      --
      Now accepting PayPal donations!
    39. Re:Credibility by Tinidril · · Score: 1
      Considering the rate Longhorn is shedding features, I don't see why it can't ship on time.

      Because on time would have been in 2004?

      --
      XML is the best data format; unless your data needs to be read or written by a human or a computer.
    40. Re:Credibility by Frumious+Wombat · · Score: 1

      Actually, AS/400s from IBM have implemented that feature quite nicely for over a decade.

      Maybe that's the answer; they're putting a Windows front-end onto OS/400. Your new copy of Windows, now shipping with XEDIT!

      --
      the more accurate the calculations became, the more the concepts tended to vanish into thin air. R. S. Mulliken
    41. Re:Credibility by alpha_foobar · · Score: 1

      yeah... i run sarge in testing on a laptop and on a desktop...

      i find the stable release a little stable for my liking. i mean, it misses all the interesting new stuff.

    42. Re:Credibility by 808140 · · Score: 1

      Sure, stable is a bit behind for desktops. But while you and I may want the latest and the greatest, in a production environment, forced updates suck because breakage is likely to occur. Of course, you must update from time to time, but it makes everyone's life easier if it doesn't happen often. In this context, Debian Stable is perfect.

      When I first started with Debian (around Hamm), the devs generally recommended stable for personal use. Nowadays, they usually don't bother. Stable's focus has shifted, as a result of the slow update cycle that handling so many architectures forces on them. As it turns out, this has been a very good thing.

      Debian testing and even unstable are much more like other distributions, and as we're free to track them, I don't really see what the problem is. It used to be that unstable was pretty much broken most of the time and really an experts-only sort of distribution, but nowadays most of the total breakage is in experimental and even unstable is pretty stable, despite it having the latest and the greatest.

    43. Re:Credibility by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1
      Sort-of. Its also true that the people concerned seriously underestimated how hard it would be, and the scale involved, to get fusion working.

      eg, there have been many projects in the past that intended to provide sustainable fusion but didn't - for technical reasons. Can't blame politicians for that.

    44. Re:Credibility by MaverickUW · · Score: 1

      Um dude, Nvidia has 64 bit drivers for Windows 64-bit (AMD proc version) and Linux 64 bit distros. I don't know if you have ATI or what, but our new Athlon 64 SLI configuration computer has the graphics and other fun drivers that we need to play games and all.

  2. The future of Windows by __aaitqo8496 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "We are at war with Eastasia. We have always been at war with Eastasia."
    "Longhorn will be released next year. It has always been planned to be released next year."

    Much like the war in Orwell's 1984, Windows will never be complete. It's been a long time since the last major overhaul. Maybe they need to just make Windows a perpetual upgrade. Each release will have a major component update.

    Windows XP: Unified Home/Pro editions
    Longhorn: Avalon & Indigo
    Blackcomb: WinFS

    Now that Windows is `for the most part` on a standardized framework (.NET), they should be able to just release updates based on this framework, whether it be for current major release or retroactively. If you need some component installed, just make sure it's prereq's are there. Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

    Yes? No? Who the hell cares?

    1. Re:The future of Windows by Swamii · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you need some component installed, just make sure it's prereq's are there. Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

      We tried that. It was called DLL Hell.

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
    2. Re:The future of Windows by RootsLINUX · · Score: 1

      Perpetual upgrade to Windows? Wait, I thought they already did that with every release? Just take a look at the leaked Windows 2000 source code (don't worry, clean link) ^_~

      --
      Hero of Allacrost, a FOSS RPG for *NIX/*BSD/OS X/Win
    3. Re:The future of Windows by irokitt · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Your thought was the same as mine. Windows machines get a lot of diverse, funky software thrown on them.

      I'll withhold judgement on Longhorn until I get to play with it. Maybe the changes will be worth the money to upgrade, maybe not. Maybe the graphics will look cheesy (a la XP) and maybe not. Either way, my Slackware box will fill the balance. I think an open mind is a good thing here.

      That said, I can foresee (via the Slashdot palantir) a lot of people looking at their screens and wonering if all years of hype and buildup really just produced this. Think Doom 3 here: Yeah, it was entertaining, but it wasn't worth all the years of salivating and my $50.

      --
      If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
    4. Re:The future of Windows by Swamii · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Despite it being modded as funny, my original post was meant to be taken seriously. Using versioned components on Windows has already been attempted and failed quite miserably, something Microsoft has aimed to change with .NET's global assembly cache.

      Irokitt, I like your thinking. You have a suprisingly opened mind, which is something truely refreshing here on Slashdot. I have to agree that with all the hype built up over several years, will it truely be worth it? As a developer coming from a programming standpoint, I've already tried out the Avalon and WinFX APIs, and for me it is worth it. The real question is will it be worth it for the end users and will security finally be a first class feature rather than a footnote. I certainly hope it will on both counts.

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
    5. Re:The future of Windows by mhesseltine · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Windows XP: Unified Home/Pro editions
      Longhorn: Avalon & Indigo
      Blackcomb: WinFS

      Sort of like Debain:

      • Stable
      • Testing
      • Unstable

      I like it. GNU/Debian/Windows

      --
      Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
    6. Re:The future of Windows by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh, for Pete's ...dude, seriously. Can't we get through one damn story without somebody making an Orwell analogy? Especially one as lame-ass as this one?

      We could solve all the world's energy problems if we could just hook Orwell's corpse up to a generator to capture all the rotational energy that's currently being wasted on postmortem outrage.

    7. Re:The future of Windows by thundercatslair · · Score: 0

      " Oh, for Pete's ...dude, seriously. Can't we get through one damn story without somebody making an Orwell analogy? Especially one as lame-ass as this one?" "'You are the last man,' said O'Brien. 'You are the guardian of the human spirit."

    8. Re:The future of Windows by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      It's "plantír," not "palantir." Get your Tolkien right. :)

      (Kisses karma goodbye.)

    9. Re:The future of Windows by irokitt · · Score: 1
      It's "plantír," not "palantir." Get your Tolkien right. :)
      plantír: A tolkien-themed planter box? Perhaps for pipe weed...
      --
      If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
    10. Re:The future of Windows by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Hehe. Make that "palantír" ... And I thought I'd properly checked my post for errors.

    11. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing I'm really worried about, is that from early reports I hear, going from XP to LongHorn Beta, you can be certain that your existing hardware will seem much slower than before.

      So if performance is a concern and you want as low an O/S overhead as possible. It sounds like sticking to XP (of these two choices), is the best thing unless you are forced to upgrade to Longhorn for some reason. I imagine there will be some tuning that can be done to improve LongHorn's performance, but as far as I can tell, just going to WinXP-SP2 makes the system slower.

    12. Re:The future of Windows by mboverload · · Score: 1

      Orwell was a literary genius and a true visionary. His quotes can be applyed in many areas. 1984 is one of the most important books ever written, I don't see a problem with it being quoted.

    13. Re:The future of Windows by Jardine · · Score: 1

      Oh, for Pete's dude, seriously. Can't we get through one damn story without somebody making an Orwell analogy? Especially one as lame-ass as this one?

      That type of thinking is doubleplus ungood. Stay where you are and wait for the Ministry of Love.

    14. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note: For best effect, substitute "Longhorn" for "Ghost Riders."

      An old cowboy went riding out one dark and windy day
      Upon a ridge he rested as he went along his way
      When all at once a mighty herd of red eyed cows he saw
      A-plowing through the ragged sky and up the cloudy draw

      Their brands were still on fire and their hooves were made of steel
      Their horns were black and shiny and their hot breath he could feel
      A bolt of fear went through him as they thundered through the sky
      For he saw the Riders coming hard and he heard their mournful cry

      Yippie yi Ohhhhh
      Yippie yi yaaaaay
      Ghost Riders in the sky

      Their faces gaunt, their eyes were blurred, their shirts all soaked with sweat
      He's riding hard to catch that herd, but he ain't caught 'em yet
      'Cause they've got to ride forever on that range up in the sky
      On horses snorting fire
      As they ride on hear their cry

      As the riders loped on by him he heard one call his name
      If you want to save your soul from Hell a-riding on our range
      Then cowboy change your ways today or with us you will ride
      Trying to catch the Devil's herd, across these endless skies

      Yippie yi Ohhhhh
      Yippie yi Yaaaaay

      Ghost Riders in the sky
      Ghost Riders in the sky
      Ghost Riders in the sky

    15. Re:The future of Windows by Fyre2012 · · Score: 1

      I thought we were at war with Oceania?

      wasn't that just last week?
      *watches helplessly as the door opens,
      Big Brother himself walks in,
      straps me up Clockwork Orange style (prying eylids and all...)

      and feeds me my worst fear...*

      BILL GATES TEEN IDOL!!!!!!!!!

      --
      This is not the greatest .sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
    16. Re:The future of Windows by Xyde · · Score: 1

      No, maybe just Indigo now.

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/08/27/microsof t_ decouples_longhorn/

      and

      http://weblogs.asp.net/donxml/archive/2004/09/22 /2 32795.aspx

    17. Re:The future of Windows by tsotha · · Score: 1
      That's not really fair. The .Net architecture actually keeps all the old dlls around, so you can specify a particular version of the dll and actually get that version instead of one that's supposed to be compatible.

      I don't know if it all works, but that's the theory, anyway.

    18. Re:The future of Windows by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's the frequency with which it's being quoted, and the inappropriateness of the quotes. Think. What did the aforementioned comment have to do with Orwell or with 1984? Nothing at all. It was just a drive-by allusion.

      No, 1984 is not "one of the most important books ever written," unless you expand your list to include tens of thousands of books. It's just that it's a book that's widely assigned to high-school students. It's pop-culture wisdom, a mile wide and an inch deep. It's the beginning of insight, not the end. C.f. Rand, Ayn, for another example of the same phenomenon.

      Too many people point to 1984 as an illustration of the insidiousness of totalitarianism, when what they completely miss is the fact that 1984 is a book about the insidious of totalitarianism. It takes the insidiousness of totalitarianism as a given. The book doesn't contain a discussion about whether the slope is slippery or not; it just assumes that the slope is slippery and tells a story based on that premise.

      To put a point on it, 1984 begs the whole question. Which is fine for a novel. Problem comes when people think of it as more than a novel.

      Somebody who reads 1984 and thinks that he then has something insightful to say about language or society is like somebody who reads Beat to Quarters and thinks that he then can sail a tall ship around Cape Horn.

    19. Re:The future of Windows by westlake · · Score: 2, Funny
      going from XP to LongHorn Beta, you can be certain that your existing hardware will seem much slower than before

      You were expecting a beta release to be fine-tuned for performance?

    20. Re:The future of Windows by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1


      As I've said before, Windows is now so bloated and so complex that even Microsoft can't figure out how to enhance it or even change it anymore.

      That's why WinFS was jettisoned (along with the simple fact that the concept is damn hard to implement.) And I expect much of Avalon to be jettisoned before this year is over.

      End result: an OS which is not significantly better than Windows XP - just as XP was not significantly better than Windows 2000 - which is why it took three years for XP conversion to overtake 2000 and 98.

      And I think Microsoft's purchase of a spyware and now (TWO!) antivirus companies is a tacit acknowledgement that this is true, and their only hope for "improvements" in security is to sell their own security tools to fix the problems created by their original software. Brilliant marketing, too - typical human behavior: make mistakes, then make money making more mistakes to try to cover for the first mistakes...but never, EVER ADMIT you made a mistake...

      I just hope Linux can avoid the same fate.

      Given the higher quality of OSS code, hopefully it will at least take longer for it to happen.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    21. Re:The future of Windows by ajs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You seem to be making several orthoganal points. Some of them I even agree with, but to tie them together I think you'll need a bit more glue.

      First off the correct (IMHO) bits:

      Somebody who reads 1984 and thinks that he then has something insightful to say about language or society is like somebody who reads Beat to Quarters and thinks that he then can sail a tall ship around Cape Horn.

      Well, of course. I'm not sure that you're making a non-obvious point here, but ok. Of course, someone might read 1984 and then have something insightful to say about language or society... but that's no more or less likely than reading it and having something insightful to say about 20th century authors.

      No, 1984 is not "one of the most important books ever written," unless you expand your list to include tens of thousands of books

      Obviously you are just as correct as the grandparent who claimed the opposite. This is purely a matter of opinion, unless you're going to assign a quantitative definition to "most important books".

      Too many people point to 1984 as an illustration of the insidiousness of totalitarianism

      Here you lose me. It's not that this might not be a valid statement, but you place it in the center of a response to a post which makes no such claim. Thus, this can only be catagorized as a strawman.

      However, to take up the challenge, I'll argue that 1984 is not an illustration of the insidiousness of totalitarianism, but rather a illustration of the abstract nature of totalitarianism and the ability for the average member of such a society to lie to themselves about the choices they are making.

      Of course, we see this sort of book all the time, just not always about politics. Books about women who persist in abusive relationships, criminals who look in the mirror and see a hero, and any number of other common themes are all expressions of this. 1984 simply happens to be one example of this sub-genre where the average reader tends to "get it".

      Does 1984 beg the question of the insidiousness of totalitarianism? I don't think so. It shows us what the author thinks people are capable of, lets the readers own sense of the human condition demonstrate its truth. Most of us on reading 1984 come away a bit frightened. Not all of us realize why, but years after reading it, I realized that it was because nothing in the book was terribly difficult to imagine. People DO behave this way, and it's important for us to come to terms with that.

      Now, you can say that 1984 isn't important, but here's why I think it was: it opened up a dialog that we had with each other. Many other books have been written since -- some scholarly, some novels like 1984 -- but all further exploring this theme. Certainly philosophers had beat the idea of man's inhumanity to man around for a long time, but Orwell brought a language in which to frame the discussion to the common man, and in this I think we can rightly say that he was an important and influential author.

      By way of exmample, Asimov and Feynman didn't write the General and Specifc theories of relativity, but each of them produced clear, understandable and engaging information for people outside of the field that gave us the tools to intelligently disucss these complicated matters. This, in many ways, is just as important a step as introducing the concept to the scientific community.

      So, I'll put 1984 somewhere on that list of yours, but I suspect that I'm placing it quite a lot higher than you are.

    22. Re:The future of Windows by westlake · · Score: 1
      End result: an OS which is not significantly better than Windows XP - just as XP was not significantly better than Windows 2000 - which is why it took three years for XP conversion to overtake 2000 and 98

      W2K and Win9x serviced very different markets, a great many markets. Successfully migrating a majority of all Windows users to the XP code base in three years looks pretty damn good from here. OS Platform Stats

    23. Re:The future of Windows by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      It takes the insidiousness of totalitarianism as a given.

      Which was a perfectly reasonable stance since the book was about Stalinism, which in fact was a given.

      The book doesn't contain a discussion about whether the slope is slippery or not; it just assumes that the slope is slippery and tells a story based on that premise.

      There certainly is a slippery slope; a good number of countries slid all the way down during the 20th century. What further discussion does that need?

      Orwell's contribution was to take Stalinism, extrapolate a little bit based what it could become with slightly more advanced IT, and painting a picture that was vivid enough for any idiot, even politicians, to understand. It was a hugely valuable work that has probably helped save millions from life under oppressive regimes. Listening to a few overzealous analogies derived from the book is a small price to pay for that.

    24. Re:The future of Windows by adamfranco · · Score: 1

      Many other books have been written since -- some scholarly, some novels like 1984 -- but all further exploring this theme.

      For those who haven't read it, Edward Herman & Noam Chomsky's Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media is a must-read in this category. In it they describe in detail many, many examples how "the powers that be" in the U.S. of A. have used the structure of the mass media to distort the world view of the citizens of this [USA] country.

      Like 1984, Manufacturing Consent is scary not because it tells you lots of things you've never heard of, but because it takes a closer look at this mass of things that never quite "seemed right" in the way they were portrayed or the reasoning behind them.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    25. Re:The future of Windows by parcifal · · Score: 1

      Not every book has to be a dialog or debate. A book should illustrate a point. 1984 does that, and hence serves its purpose.

    26. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH wow!!!!! You must've actually read the book, because u can make jokes about it!!! holy shit everyone, this guy has ACTUALLY READ IT, and this is cool because ABSOLUTELY no one here has!!!!!!! holy shit man can i have ur autograph???????? u must be a fcking genius

    27. Re:The future of Windows by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      A lot of small businesses used WIndows 98 and didn't upgrade to either 2000 or XP.

      Windows 2K was mostly for corporate use - home users didn't need it over Windows 98 (well, they did, but they didn't know it).

      XP was supposed to be direct corporate upgrade from 2000 (with some eye candy for the home users in "Home" edition - which is irrelevant to my point.) But XP simply wasn't significantly better for CORPORATE use than 2000. That's why it took a long time to get corporations weaned off it. That's why MS came up with their license that guaranteed a new version every three years or so (and then screwed up with Longhorn which is pissing off a lot of corporations who paid for that license).

      XP was released around October 2001. Your stats page shows it had only 30% in March 2004, two and a half years later. I'd say that was a lot slower upgrades than Microsoft wanted.

      Even now, the latest stats show 2000 and 98 still have nearly 30% of the Microsoft installed base.

      Try this interesting article for a perspective.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    28. Re:The future of Windows by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Actually, I would strongly recommend staying away from anything with Chomsky's name on it that isn't a highly technical scholarly work in linguistics.

      Noam Chomsky is the best example of how somebody can be an absolute genius in one area and -- literally! --a raving lunatic with paranoid delusions in another.

      It's incredibly sad. Don't be surprised if somebody someday write a Beautiful Mind-style story about Chomsky ...only at this rate, such a story wouldn't have a happy ending.

    29. Re:The future of Windows by blonde+rser · · Score: 1

      Too many people point to 1984 as an illustration of the insidiousness of totalitarianism

      Most of us on reading 1984 come away a bit frightened. Not all of us realize why, but years after reading it, I realized that it was because nothing in the book was terribly difficult to imagine. People DO behave this way, and it's important for us to come to terms with that.

      And I think this is the grand parents point. The fact that people DO behave this way is because Orwell chose behaviors that resemble real life. But that these behaviors can slide into totalianarism is Orwell's assertion. Orwell showed how these behaviors and comments could fit into a totalianarism society but he never actually shows that they lead to them. The point I'm trying to make is that Orwell specifically picked behaviors and comments that people would recognize. Taking behaviors that people took as innocuous and painting them into a situation where they weren't.

      But what is someone trying to do when they quote 1984 and compare it to a statement a company or a government made? The quoter is taking the comment as evidence that the company resembles a totalitarian outfit.

      So putting it all together the argument is circular. Orwell chooses well used comments that people took as innocuous and illustrated how a totalitarian outfit would use that comment. Someone else then alludes to 1984 and says if a company sounds similar then the company is more likely to be totalitarian.

      It would be similar to a crime novelist who picks out traits for his murderer to be as average as possible. It is reasonable for the reader to conclude that a murderer can in fact appear average. It is not reasonable for the reader to conclude that an average looking person is more likely to be a murderer.

      Orwell had an important point. He taught us that even governments making innocuous comments still need to be watched. But the quoter who links an organization to 1984 because they sound the same is not making a cogent argument. 1984 is designed to sound like everyone.

      As an aside isn't making several orthogonal points a good thing? Sounds like a basis to a spanning argument to me (god I hate linear algebra jokes).

    30. Re:The future of Windows by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      I really did, Dave.

    31. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I agree with that completely. I've read Manufacturing Consent, and there are a number of massive problems with it.

      The first is that Chomsky and his co-author choose to disregard any moral distinction between free societies and totalitarian societies. Fighting for freedom and liberty is considered by the authors to be no different from fighting to enslave and oppress. That's kinda crazy. It's like ignoring the difference between killing out of malice and killing in self-defense.

      Then there are the well documented problems with the assertions of fact Chomsky uses in his book. He provides lots of details that just aren't true. His statistics on the number of people murdered by the communist insurgency in Vietnam versus the number of people who died during the war against that insurgency are completely false ... but that's okay, because his bigger error is denying that totalitarian regimes end up murdering millions of people per decade, on average. One mistake kind of eclipses the other.

      The details have all been thoroughly documented on other Web sites, so I won't bother trying to recite chapter and verse here. Suffice to say that Manufacturing Consent is exactly the opposite of the kind of book you really want to be recommending to people.

    32. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I think you raise a good point, but I also think you overstate the case. While it's certainly true that illustrating the evils of totalitarianism is a good thing, I think it's wrong to say that 1984 "helped save" anybody. I mean, think about it. Who lived under totalitarianism? The Russians, of course, and the people that the USSR subjugated: the East Germans, the Czechoslovakians, the Romanians, the Hungarians, etc., etc. Do you really think those regimes fell because of 1984? I seriously doubt it. Those people were living under totalitarianism. They didn't need a book to tell them that it was bad.

      If the history of the 20th century has taught us anything, it's that totalitarianism doesn't just happen. It's not a natural state. It has to be imposed, either from outside via some kind of overt or covert invasion (think Prague or Budapest), or from inside via some kind of coup (think Baghdad or Tehran or Beijing or countless others). Countries don't just slip into totalitarianism, so it's also bogus, in my opinion, to say that 1984 inspired people to fight against the insidious creep of totalitarianism within the free countries of the world. That kind of process just doesn't happen. In fact, if anything, the opposite tends to occur. Totalitarian states, when sufficiently weakened, tend to collapse on their own into liberal democracies with property rights and free economies. The only problem, naturally, is that it takes decades for that process to occur, and millions die in the meantime.

    33. Re:The future of Windows by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Do you really think those regimes fell because of 1984?

      No. Instead, I think that it very likely prevented at least some non-totalitarian states from moving in that direction.

      Countries don't just slip into totalitarianism

      Sure they do. A leader with dictatorial tendencies gets voted into office, then starts changing the laws to increase his powers and decrease checks and balances. It has happened dozens of times, including Germany in the 1930s.

    34. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evein if windows gets good enough for the money I will be unable to get a legal copy - I cannot agree to the EULA.

      Simple as that.

    35. Re:The future of Windows by Crayon+Kid · · Score: 1

      Countries don't just slip into totalitarianism

      Sure they do. A leader with dictatorial tendencies gets voted into office, then starts changing the laws to increase his powers and decrease checks and balances. It has happened dozens of times, including Germany in the 1930s.

      It takes more than one man, I think that's what the grandparent meant to say. It's not just one superman who suddenly decides to take over the country. That leader you mentioned is supported by a powerful clique, which in turn has been allowed to develop due to certain circumstances. In any case, it's a long term thing, it doesn't "just" happen.

      --
      i ate crayons when i was a kid and now i have two braincells and the blue ones taste nicer
    36. Re:The future of Windows by Payalnik · · Score: 1

      That resembles me the current politics in Russia. I hope I am mistaken. I hope so...

    37. Re:The future of Windows by AaronLawrence · · Score: 1

      on a standardised framework?
      I doubt more than a small fraction of code "in" xp or 2003 is .net. It's still C++.

      --
      For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert. - Arthur C. Clarke
    38. Re:The future of Windows by wild_berry · · Score: 1

      Fighting for freedom and liberty is considered by the authors to be no different from fighting to enslave and oppress.
      May I do a mindjob on you? If we take a step back from what the goals of the institution are, can it not be argued that both the totalitarian system and the liberal (as in 'free as in speech') system both need to get their citizens to follow their goals? When the people running the system that seeks freedom and liberty use methods from totalitarianism to get their goals, does that not make them no different from the people who enslave and oppress? It is in this way that there may be times when those seeking, for example, to bring democracy and peace by means of violence are no better than the totalitarian regimes being opposed. In this case the leadership should be challenged for the sheer incongruence of their action.

      This is why I think it is reasonable to ask if the methods used in contemporary politics follow this poisoned thinking and method.

      (And I hope that the mods don't find me here so far offtopic. We have always been at war with The_Mods...)

    39. Re:The future of Windows by dave420 · · Score: 1
      That's the thing. Windows doesn't make you check you have prerequisites. As a normal user doesn't want to do that, they do it for you.

      Your linux analogy is accurate on face value, but if you think about how both OSes achieve this updatability (Windows Update & the plethora of tools for Linux), you'll see which one most normal people want to use.

      I don't mind people criticising something, just do it objectively. Complaining about Windows' update procedures when you're advocating linux is ridiculous. It doesn't matter how technologically-advanced the linux tools are, or how secure and open-standards-compliant. Your average user doesn't give a flying fart. And joking that Windows is a never-ending product, you seem to ignore the same sentiments can be applied to Linux, except that windows is on most desktops around the world, not linux. Ignoring that makes you look at worst biassed, and at best a bit naive.

      Flame me down. Then your journey to the dark side will be complete. ;)

    40. Re:The future of Windows by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      .Net is new. DLL hell was before that.

      Most applications still don't use .Net.

    41. Re:The future of Windows by loopkin · · Score: 1

      Actually, i think that 1984 isn't as genious as it appears to be. Simply Orwell did for a big part live totalitarianism and the sliding into it, during the spanish civil war.
      1984 is his last book, but in fact it is the result of all his former books (think "animal's farm"), that were all elaborated upon his experience. The part of genious in 1984 stands in the way Orwell uses to have his message delivered, his style, and the idea of placing the story in a world of strong (science-)fiction, thus allowing to explore in very explicit ways a lot of the aspects of totalitarianism.

      Though i guess he's less well-known to american readers, André Malraux followed a path similar to Orwell, and added political involvment to it. Of course his style is very much different (Malraux tend to write more like a journalist, without any SF or so), and he wrote books on a lot of other topics, but his books about the spanish civil war and all the danger of totalitarianism also give a very string insight of it. Of course, you could add a bunch of Russian authors also, such as Soljenitsine. Finally, this time closer to Orwe'lls work, Huxley's "Brave new world" should also be noted.

    42. Re:The future of Windows by yetdog · · Score: 1

      That's why WinFS was jettisoned (along with the simple fact that the concept is damn hard to implement.)

      I don't think the concept itself is THAT hard to implement - it's been done before. It's a matter of cleaning up the mess that they've made for themselves with their current installer system - letting just any app dump its garbage all over the FS. MS' largest strength and weakness is its reliance on backwards compatibility. Break what "works" now - and you'll find people jumping ship, because if they have to start over apps-wise anyway, might as well do it on a platform that isn't so frustratingly riddled with problems.

    43. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      If we take a step back from what the goals of the institution are

      But that's the thing. You can't. You can't separate the thing from the moral context surrounding that thing without rendering the whole discussion meaningless.

      It's like trying to do a physics experiment in which you assume, in order to simplify the math, that the acceleration of gravity is 10 meters per second every second and that objects are unaffected by friction. Your predictions won't be anywhere near your experimental results, because your assumptions were bogus.

      If you assume, for sake of argument, that good and evil are the same thing, then you've assumed your way completely out of reality and into some abstract place that has nothing to do with the real world.

    44. Re:The future of Windows by flacco · · Score: 1
      Actually, I would strongly recommend staying away from anything with Chomsky's name on it that isn't a highly technical scholarly work in linguistics.

      much of chomsky's political work is technically excellent - however, he then goes on to co-mingle with that research premises and personal value judgements that lead to his conclusions.

      you can decide whether the research is relevant to your world view, and whether his value judgements resonate with yours; but it *is* possible to separate them and use the research independently.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    45. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      A leader with dictatorial tendencies gets voted into office, then starts changing the laws to increase his powers and decrease checks and balances. It has happened dozens of times, including Germany in the 1930s.

      That has, in fact, never happened. Never in the history of the world has a stable democracy slipped into totalitarianism.

      Germany in the 1930s was a million miles away from being stable. Due to the Weimar Republic's adoption of the fundamentally flawed parliamentary system -- where entire legislatures can be dismissed at the executive's whim --the German government was already a sham. The German people had no faith in their government, so they has no reason to take the electoral process seriously. Germany in 1933 was essentially a failed state, a state without a sovereign government.

      The Nazis seized power in 1933 after an election that we now know to be so infested with fraud that it makes the recent Palestinian farce look like a Platonic ideal of democracy. They were not elected into office.

      In a stable democracy, the passage of the subsequent "Enabling Act" would have been immediately challenged as unconstitutional. The very first clause subverted the German constitution and gave legislative power to the executive branch. No such law could ever stand in a stable democracy; it was only able to stand in Germany because there was a complete power vacuum there at the time.

      So you see, Germany didn't just slip into totalitarianism. The government, due to a combination of built-in flaws, criminal mismanagement and a coup so insidious it passed itself off as an election, collapsed. The Nazis simply seized power in the resulting vacuum, just as the Baath Party seized power in Iraq in 1979 or the Communist Party seized power in Russia in 1917.

      So no, no country has ever just slipped into totalitarianism, ever. In order for totalitarianism to rise, the existing government has to first collapse for some reason, then some group has to use force to seize power. It never happens gradually or slowly, like 1984 led people to think it could.

    46. Re:The future of Windows by Swamii · · Score: 1

      Gee, what an insightful post. With so many facts backing up your argument, how can I possibly argue against you?

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
    47. Re:The future of Windows by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      In order for totalitarianism to rise, the existing government has to first collapse for some reason

      I.e., slip.

    48. Re:The future of Windows by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      "I don't think the concept itself is THAT hard to implement - it's been done before"

      Where has a metadata file system of the sort envisioned by MS been done before - and successfully - on a PC OS?

      I'm not aware of any such.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    49. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Maybe we're running into a communication problem here. To slip into totalitarianism means to transition gradually. That's what I'm saying has never happened. It's never been a gradual change from stable democracy to totalitarianism. It's always been a sudden, abrupt event punctuated by something like a collapse or a coup or a revolution or an invasion.

      See? Not gradual. Not insidious. Very sudden, very abrupt, very dramatic.

      Too many freshmen come away from 1984 with the idea that it can happen so gradually nobody notices. That's not true. It's never happened that way in all of human history.

    50. Re:The future of Windows by ajs · · Score: 1

      Orwell had an important point. He taught us that even governments making innocuous comments still need to be watched. But the quoter who links an organization to 1984 because they sound the same is not making a cogent argument.

      Well, of course not. However, I do think that there's value in pointing out the (realatively) obvious parallels between fiction and reality. It is the basis for continued discussion, not the discussion itself.

      what is someone trying to do when they quote 1984 and compare it to a statement a company or a government made? The quoter is taking the comment as evidence that the company resembles a totalitarian outfit.

      Hrm... that's not how I read it. First off, I read it as, at least, slightly humorous. Second, I read it as a dig against Microsoft's constant stream of revisionist press-releases. It is true that MS revises history to suit their needs. Of course, that's not shocking, as that is one of the fundamental functions of a PR department in any company.

      Again, we cannot take this parallel as a thesis unto itself, but we can certainly use it to change our perspective and re-examine the way that we view corporate PR for sake of discussion.

      Interesting that people get so focused on the government control aspect of 1984 that they forget so many other attributes of the book....

    51. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      much of chomsky's political work is technically excellent

      Maybe in the sense that he spells all his words correctly and knows how to use punctuation. But, for me at least, his lies and his absurd arguments outweigh the niceties of grammar.

    52. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I do think that there's value in pointing out the (realatively) obvious parallels between fiction and reality.

      There's not, though. Any trained monkey can tell you when two things resemble each other. The more important question is whether the resemblances between two things are substantive or superficial.

      For instance, a tree superficially resembles a telephone pole, in that both stick up out of the ground. But the similarities are not significant compared to the differences. Trees grow, telephone poles are manufactured. Trees are alive, telephone poles are inert. And so on, and so on.

      Pointing out subtantive resemblances can be insightful and worthy, under the right circumstances. But pointing out only superficial resemblances is vapid and tedious.

      First off, I read it as, at least, slightly humorous. Second, I read it as a dig against Microsoft's constant stream of revisionist press-releases.

      Well, that's really it, isn't it? The person who made the comparison had two purposes: To try to be a wise-ass and to try to say something insulting about Microsoft. Hardly a worthy reason to invoke literature.

      But the worst part of all is that the whole thing was just a big lie. The person who made the remark tried to say that Microsoft was like Big Brother; it's not.

      And you, frankly, are just making things worse with your talk of "changing our perspective." The comparison is not sound. An unsound comparison is no reason to change our anything.

    53. Re:The future of Windows by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      It's never been a gradual change from stable democracy to totalitarianism. It's always been a sudden, abrupt event punctuated by something like a collapse or a coup or a revolution or an invasion.

      *Always?* *Never?*

      That's an extremely strong assertion made with absolutely zero evidence to back it up. Why should anybody believe it?

      Of course, you can always play semantic games like "Germany was already 'unstable', ergo abrupt event". What does that mean? If you define any occurrence you want as an "sudden abrupt event", then of course your assertion is a tautology.

    54. Re:The future of Windows by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Why should anybody believe it?

      Um. Because we've all taken history? Because we all know the stories behind the events we're talking about? Because I'm not saying anything that isn't common knowledge? Saying "Why should anybody believe it?" when everybody already knows it's the truth is kind of silly, in my opinion.

      Of course, you can always play semantic games like "Germany was already 'unstable', ergo abrupt event". What does that mean?

      I don't actually know what that means; I'm having trouble figuring out your meaning.

      Look, I'm talking about very simple ideas here. Totalitarian states arise from two circumstances: a seizure of power in a power vacuum, or a seizure of power by force. In Russia in 1917, it was a seizure of power by force. In Germany in 1933 and Iraq in 1979, it was a seizure of power in a power vacuum. These are the only circumstances in which totalitarianism has ever emerged, ever. Everybody knows this because we've all studied history.

      I really don't see what you're complaining about.

    55. Re:The future of Windows by __aaitqo8496 · · Score: 1

      My comment was not a joke or criticism of Windows or Linux. It was merely a mention to the fact that idea of major releases may be defunct. Why worry about major rewites every X years when Windows seems to be more of an evolving thing whereby patches and updates increase it's intrinsic value. Take the .NET Framework for example. This has added value to the Windows line but didn't require a major version revision to implement.

    56. Re:The future of Windows by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      You're not only trying to prove a negative, but your "proof" is that you can't remember any counterexamples off of the top of your head from some classes you took. Whatever.

    57. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um, i thought it was pretty witty, why are you such a troll?

    58. Re:The future of Windows by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      You just need to look around for applications and you will see that most haven't moved to .Net. Indeed, why should they? It's more new stuff to learn and requires a large download by many users.

      As for DLL Hell, well, you know what uninstalling programs that use shared libraries is like. Among other things.

      Please do argue against me. I don't mind.

    59. Re:The future of Windows by nhaines · · Score: 1

      You were expecting a beta release to be fine-tuned for performance?

      Hell, I don't even expect that from the final releases anymore.

    60. Re:The future of Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're expecting a Microsoft product tuned for performance?

  3. June.... by 1010011010 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... to beat "Tiger" to the punch.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    1. Re:June.... by jdwest · · Score: 2, Insightful

      or simply to steal thunder, press, mindshare.

      --

      Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet ...
    2. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Expect Tiger early Q2-05.

    3. Re:June.... by bonch · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not that it will matter. Longhorn won't even be shipping with WinFS, while Tiger already has Spotlight. Let Microsoft release a "developer beta." Apple is still going to get all the positive press.

    4. Re:June.... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      tigers been hyped up for a long time now.. some ms beta at the same timeframe ain't going to do much to it.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tiger is supposed to come out on/around March 31st.

    6. Re:June.... by RickHunter · · Score: 1

      This is the original FUD technique. Announce that you're releasing your product a month before your major competitor, and with better features. Then, a week before the scheduled release date, when everyone has committed to buying your software, you postpone it a month and slash the feature list. Sure, fewer people buy your software... But, strangely enough, even fewer buy your competitor's.

      Guess Microsoft's back to basics, eh?

    7. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Guess Microsoft's back to basics, eh?
      Yeah.. expect this is only a beta, and there's no evidence to suggest the date has anything to do with Tiger...
    8. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Longhorn won't even be shipping with WinFS, while Tiger already has Spotlight.

      WinFS is a file system that will replace NTFS. Spotlight is an indexing system on top of the same filesystem Panther is running. Compare Spotlight to other beta "desktop search" utilities like Google Desktop, MSN Toolbar Suite, or Yahoo Desktop.

    9. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankly, nobody in the real world gives a damn about Tiger. In fact, not even most Macintosh users either know or care about new OS X releases in my experience.

    10. Re:June.... by EddWo · · Score: 1

      WinFS is not a file system, it is a database metadata store and file access API. Actual files will still be created and stored on NTFS underneath but will be indexed, accessed, linked and searched through an thick database layer.

      --
      "Taligent is still pure vapor. Maybe they'll be the last who jumps up on Openstep... "
    11. Re:June.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WinFS isn't going to replace NTFS. It's a database layer on top of NTFS. At the end of the day, your data on those WinFS volumes will still be backed by NTFS structures on disk.

      WinFS isn't anything inovative. Companies like IBM have been doing it on real computers for decades, and even Be had something similiar in both their original FS in the BeOS beta releases and BeFS.

    12. Re:June.... by yetdog · · Score: 1

      Which, really, who cares?

      A new file-system is something that Windows desperately needs. Or at least, a new way of storing data (much like Apple does for its apps). You don't want an app anymore - no more uninstallers ( that don't fully work) - just drop it's folder into the trash. Totally intuitive, and it works. They took a concept that would do well for the OS in WinFS, and watered it down to be nothing more than a search API layer. Big whoop.

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

      So why's it not here yet??

  4. hmm by FinestLittleSpace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I like the 'different ways of distributing throughout large corps' thing... in the way that it's basically code for "we're going to try another convoluted way of stopping corporate editions from being pirated. COUGH"

    1. Re:hmm by DARKFORCE123 · · Score: 1

      Today, mass deployment is done through a process known as "ghosting" an image of the operating system. An improved method will come with Longhorn, Montgomery said.

      The new improvement method will be for fresh PCs to connect directly to MS server's for OS install in a way similar to FreeBSD.

      While its installing you'll see an install screen that says "All Your Computer Are Belong To Us" with other Engrish phrases being let loose during various parts of the installation.

    2. Re:hmm by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with that? Doesn't MS have the right to try to stop freeloaders from gaining unpaid access to their products?

    3. Re:hmm by KwKSilver · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD & debian both use remote installs as a variant. Hmmh...Shouldn't MS turn itself in for innovation-piracy? If Aunt Minnie & Joe Sixpack are going to be expected to do a net install, it could be entertaining. I tried FreeBSD equivalent & crashed, although I had sucessfull installs with CDs. Conversely, I never got a successfull Debian install with CDs, but the net-install was a breeze. On the other hand, I just don't give a frack about where MS's product line is going anymore. However, freedom is what it's all about. If someone wants to use Foghorn that's their business; and, if someone wants to smoke crack, that's their business, too.

      --
      If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
    4. Re:hmm by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Except it never, ever works. Even hl2, where you had to logon to steam to tie your code permanently to your useraccount, download files not on the dvd, authenticate on the net every time steam lost your saved settings AND have the dvd in the drive to play was still available for download in under a week. (and given the steam outages recently, I rather wish I'd nicked it instead)

      Windows XP authentication, especially OEM, is a royal pain in the ass for legitimate customers (try installing 200 workstations with only legal OEM keys!) for the lifetime of the product, and has no effect on 'freeloaders' whatsoever.

      Yay for DRM, making the free dodgy copy far easier to install and maintain than legit ones!

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    5. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, they do. But why do I, a legitimate Windows user, have to be punished because there are pirates in this world?

      You do realize that the reason Corporate edition CDs even exist is because major customers, with hundreds of systems to deploy, simply would NOT put up with the time and resources that MS's piracy stoppers wasted?

  5. Hello? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What's Longhorn? Bill Gates name for his...?

    1. Re:Hello? by savagedome · · Score: 4, Funny

      Wrong. That's micro soft.

    2. Re:Hello? by Sophrosyne · · Score: 4, Informative

      ...favorite butt-plug.
      In actuality it is the name of a bar in British Columbia.
      XP, aka Whistler, is the name of a mountain, as is Blackcomb... the bar longhorn is in the middle of the two.
      Product Cycle:
      XP (Whistler)
      Longhorn
      Blackcomb

    3. Re:Hello? by PureCreditor · · Score: 1

      yeah last week when i was skiing in whistler i actually took a picture of the "Longhorn Saloon", which is conveniently located at the Whistler Village base, within 30 seconds walking from either Whistler or Blackcomb Gondola.

      And u'd be surprised, Whistler Blackcomb, being flagship mountains of Intrawest, would allow Microsoft to use their brand new as a codename for new OSes?

      On an unrelated note, did you know that on Blackcomb Mountain, there's a sign on the "Blackbomg Glacier Road" trail that has the words "SLOW" and "EXCELerator (2km)" on it? What appropriateness =)

    4. Re:Hello? by leerpm · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't notice that sign, as I was going too fast in full tuck mode passing you :)

      Inside joke/pun: If you ask me, I think they need a real 'Express Way' that runs parallel to Glacier road, for the fast skiers.

    5. Re:Hello? by leerpm · · Score: 1

      And appropriately enough, it's an expensive bar even by Whistler standards. At least there's no cover charge.

    6. Re:Hello? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wake me when we get to the 'Boot'

  6. A Hurd of Longhorn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Wonder which happens first GNU/Hurd or Longhorn.

    Ironic how both are named after big fat bovines.

    1. Re:A Hurd of Longhorn! by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Ironic how both are named after big fat bovines.

      Longhorn, it's what's for dinner.

    2. Re:A Hurd of Longhorn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, wouldn't the ultimate irony be if some makes a Linux distro, where the UI is all done as XUL thingies, etc., and they call this distro 'bT' or 'malathion'?

  7. Timed to steal Tiger's thunder? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Methinks Microsoft is out to keep the next version of OS X, which is believed to be shipping at around the same time, from getting too much press.

    1. Re:Timed to steal Tiger's thunder? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one cares about Tiger.

    2. Re:Timed to steal Tiger's thunder? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give me a break. Can OS X run on any other hardware except Apple hardware?

    3. Re:Timed to steal Tiger's thunder? by dave420 · · Score: 1
      Why on earth would they do that? So the Mac uses go out and buy Windows for their macs?? Are you nuts?

      Not everything in the computer world has an alterior motive. Gates isn't scared of Jobs, as Jobs isn't scared of Gates. They both do their own things, and while their worlds are very close together, seldom overlap in any meaningful way.

      If you have Windows, you're not going to be using OSX on your computer. If you have OSX, you're not going to be using Windows.

      Your analogy is like asking if Ford releasing the new Focus at the same time as Pappa John's adding a new pizza to their menues is indicative of some sort of rivalry.

    4. Re:Timed to steal Tiger's thunder? by alanQuatermain · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would they do that? So the Mac uses go out and buy Windows for their macs?? Are you nuts?

      No, it's so that all the news sites are talking about the new Longhorn release, rather than the new Mac OS X release. It's about visibility in the press. Microsoft is large enough that their news will be picked up by a great many more reporters. Let's say that OS X 10.4 and Longhorn Beta are released on the same day. Which do you think is most likely to make the front page? Which is going to get the most column space?

      Being a Mac user myself, I'd like to think that OS X would get that space - if for no other reason than that it's actually shipping, rather than being a preview. However, given the great disparity in market share, there are more people with a vested interest in Longhorn than in the Mac platform, so Longhorn will have the considerable ability to steal (or, to use a better analogy, drown out) Tiger's thunder.

      It's designed so that all those people who might be swayed by Apple's "Long Before Longhorn" tagline, and the ideas behind it, won't attract people waiting for Longhorn. Those folks, instead of looking at Apple, will be looking at the reviews of the Longhorn beta. They're not really trying to entice people away from Tiger, they're trying to stop people looking away from Longhorn.

      Think of it as you & your wife/girlfriend in a restaurant, and when a cute waitress walks past your wife/girlfriend starts playing footsie with you under the table. "Keep your eyes over here, please..."

  8. ...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If someone makes a Duke Nukem joke, I'm going to shoot myself.

    1. Re:...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duke nukem time release jokes are depreciated

      NOW: GNU/HURD JOKES!! ;)

    2. Re:...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
      If someone makes a Duke Nukem joke, I'm going to shoot myself.
      I hear Longhorn will be required for Duke Nukem Forever.

      Oh, you said that to DISCOURAGE DNF jokes? My bad.
    3. Re:...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia, you shoot yourself... err...

      In Soviet Russia, You shoot yourself causes Duke Nukem Joke?

    4. Re:...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia, Longhorn runs on Duke Nukem Forever, which requires a beowulf cluster which runs linux.

    5. Re:...please don't by geggibus · · Score: 1

      In Korea, people who jokes about Duke Nukem has grown old.

    6. Re:...please don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    7. Re:...please don't by CliffH · · Score: 1

      and they are adding this new reveolutionary game that's over 10 years in the making, Duk.... (bang).... oops. Sorry mate...

      --
      sigs are like a box of chocolates, they all suck remove the underscores to email me
    8. Re:...please don't by dourk · · Score: 1

      Now I get it! DNF is racing lingo for Did Not Finish!

      --
      Wake up.
  9. I just hope... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...that they remember to check the ice berg forcast before they ship.

    --
    Beep beep.
  10. Shorthorn? by CaptainPinko · · Score: 1
    As a *nix geek I was excited about Longhorn: Maybe this new OS wouldn't suck? Free software is great, but if I can't get it than software that doesn't suck is the next best thing. It shouldn't like a solid top-down software that head been thought through.. then they kept removing things. With every cut I got more and more disappointed and now am afraid this will turn into a nasty kludge just to make an earlier shipping date... am I the only one who thinks "take your time but don't ship it till it's right?"!!! Perhaps not on /. but in Redmond I'd be afraid so.

    As a result of the cutting I shall dub this OS 'Shorthorn: smaller and less impressive than it ought to be.'

    --
    Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
    1. Re:Shorthorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Or Longshot defined as
      A remote possibility of success, as in It's a long shot that Joan will actually finish the marathon, or He may be a good programmer, but he's a long shot for that job. This expression alludes to the inaccuracy of early firearms, which when shot over a distance rarely hit the target. It is commonly used in horseracing for a bet made at great odds. A related phrase is not by a long shot, meaning “not even remotely,” as in I'll never make it to California in three days, not by a long shot. [Late 1800s]
    2. Re:Shorthorn? by nuclear305 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I do agree. I'm tired of seeing less-than-spectacular releases in the Windows line. WinME? That was pointless.

      How about Longhorn being the "browserless OS?" If they hold true to that it means we'll probably be even more vulnerable to IE exploits--like hijacking our desktop background instead of just our browser homepage.

      I don't understand why Microsoft doesn't redesign their product to focus on 3 things: the kernel, the GUI, and the rest of the apps they ship with Windows.

      The one thing I love about Linux is the fact that the kernel is almost always stable. It rarely crashes. (with the exception of the use of alpha-release drivers or bad system memory) Yes, X may sprout some problems eventually but it doesn't take the whole system down.

      The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to have to worry about my entire OS being vulnerable because IE has been integrated into every possible aspect of my GUI. Keep it simple, keep it segmented in modules.

      If they could ship an OS that had a rock-solid kernel, with a nice GUI shipped with it, and a few apps (IE, OE, etc) shipped as extras on the cd/dvd then I think they would finally have a worthy product on their hands.

    3. Re:Shorthorn? by Swamii · · Score: 1

      then they kept removing things. With every cut I got more and more disappointed

      What has been cut? WinFS from the initial release, sure, cry me a river. But Avalon, Indigo, the new WinFX API, NGSCB, 64 bit support, just to name a few, are all still scheduled to make the final cut.

      --
      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit
    4. Re:Shorthorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whose head? What the fuck are talking about?

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

      If they could ship an OS that had a rock-solid kernel, with a nice GUI shipped with it, and a few apps (IE, OE, etc) shipped as extras on the cd/dvd then I think they would finally have a worthy product on their hands.

      Microsoft didn't get where they are today by making worthy products.

      Why start now?

    6. Re:Shorthorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS.

      Why? Do actually write application software, or are do you just have a fetish for downloading and installing the latest patch of .
      Have you actually fired up a MS programming environment? The number of APIs, features, and subsytems available is astounding (go read MSDN). It makes creating programs for real people easy and economical.

      For some reason the mainstream slashdot crowd fails to grasp this.

    7. Re:Shorthorn? by JesseT · · Score: 1


      I don't understand why Microsoft doesn't redesign their product to focus on 3 things: the kernel, the GUI, and the rest of the apps they ship with Windows. /cite

      Ummm. They did and are doing that. Everything got a complete overhaul. They have a new OS API, known as WinFX (a superset of .NET). WinFX and .NET are integrated into the kernel. The next versions of IE, Office, and even small things like Notepad and Calculator were rewritten using WinFX. And fyi, .NET and WinFX have very strong security models. Do your research before making statements.

    8. Re:Shorthorn? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to have to worry about my entire OS being vulnerable because IE has been integrated into every possible aspect of my GUI. Keep it simple, keep it segmented in modules.

      IE, or rather mshtml.dll, is a module. It is used by other programs. Hence, when there is a vulnerability in IE, it's most likely in mshtml.dll or related support dlls, and so other programs are vulnerable.

      You have your wish, but you're wishing for the wrong thing.

    9. Re:Shorthorn? by geo_2677 · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why Microsoft doesn't redesign their product to focus on 3 things: the kernel, the GUI, and the rest of the apps they ship with Windows.
      ....
      The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to have to worry about my entire OS being vulnerable because IE has been integrated into every possible aspect of my GUI. Keep it simple, keep it segmented in modules

      They consiously took that decision. In a way good for Linux .
      And if you keep it simple how do the marketing guys tell you that its great stuff and that it can do this and that, blah blah.
      Let them do their stuff. Let the Open source folks learn from their mistakes. Then may be some one will have write a book 'How not to write OS and programs' Then it can be renamed LongGone

    10. Re:Shorthorn? by darth_linux · · Score: 1

      but that's not how they maintain dominance. They make your box into a Microsoft repository. Remember their vision - the only software you need somes from them. or as I like to say "If it ain't from Microsoft, it ain't good for ya".

      --
      Power to the Penguin!
    11. Re:Shorthorn? by dave420 · · Score: 1
      Oh dear oh dear. Where to begin...

      Windows ME was a good release of Windows. Not good by today's standards, but good enough for most home users to use office and play their 3d-accelerated games.

      Microsoft has made plenty of inroads about IE/browser hijacking. If you use their anti-spyware software, any hijacking attempts are stopped automatically.

      Your point about not integrating things into the OS is a bit silly. If you want DOS, fine, go use DOS. If you want something that integrates more powerful software into something very useful, use Windows. As I said, IE vulnerabilities aren't a big issue at all. I use IE as my main browser (until firefox is as quick), and I've never experienced any sort of hijacking. No spyware, nothing.

      And your last point is just silly. IE and OE are on the CD, they're just installed by default, as most people want a browser and email client. Oh, and you can choose not to install them if you want, so I fail to see what you're on about.

    12. Re:Shorthorn? by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      "They have a new OS API, known as WinFX (a superset of .NET). WinFX and .NET are integrated into the kernel."

      That's odd. Integrating new things into the kernel?

      The WinFX API is fine; it deserves to be in the kernel, like Win32 and Win16 (probably emulation, by now). But the .NET framework too??

    13. Re:Shorthorn? by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      But MSHTML is vital for IE, "Active Desktop" (ha ha, that was crap) and most importantly the help system. I bet other programs are using it, too.

      Too much integration.

    14. Re:Shorthorn? by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      No, it wasn't. When I put it on my computer, the only thing I noticed was the replacement of the find dialog into a sidepanel of Windows Explorer.

      Funny, they decided to replace that on the next release...

      I imagine they had hardware driver updates too, but no surprise there and you can always download them.

      Err, yes, that's all.

    15. Re:Shorthorn? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      But what's the alternative? Not have those apps able to render HTML? Or use different HTML rendering engines for each of them, increasing bloat, decreasing maintainability, increasing complexity, etc?

      Of *course* mshtml.dll is vital for IE - it's the HTML rendering component!

    16. Re:Shorthorn? by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      Yes, and it's the source of many security problems.

      A lot of those apps could do without a little embedded browser. Winamp's media library comes to mind, and a few help systems too (such as the one in DrScheme).

  11. screenshots by Coneasfast · · Score: 2, Informative

    we all love screenshots

    --
    Marge, get me your address book, 4 beers, and my conversation hat.
    1. Re:screenshots by KevinKnSC · · Score: 1

      Um, aren't most of those just StyleXP themes that include the word "Longhorn"? I don't really think kurdpc.com or overclockers.com are going to have authentic screen shots.

    2. Re:screenshots by yogikoudou · · Score: 0
    3. Re:screenshots by EggMan2000 · · Score: 1
      Most of those screenshots are of Windowblinds Themes , I think.

      A couple near the bottom of the GIS in the parent are actual Longhorn screenshots: Here and Here

      --
      what? what I thought we were in the trust tree in the nest, were we not?
    4. Re:screenshots by omicronish · · Score: 1

      One thing to note is that the Aero experience (the final UI for Longhorn) is still a huge secret to everyone except those actually on the Aero team, so the majority of people working at Microsoft don't know what it looks like as well. However, Longhorn will provide a down-level UI for older clients, so perhaps the current screenshots will be resemble that UI.

    5. Re:screenshots by bonch · · Score: 1

      Gotta love that 3D Longhorn alt-tabbing.

      *hits F9 in Panther and grins*

    6. Re:screenshots by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      That's amazing! It looks so... powerful. So realistic. What will they think of next?

    7. Re:screenshots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used Windowblinds a couple years ago. It's actually a pretty nice product. You can totally change the GUI and make it look like a Mac or OS2, or a bright pink happy anime thing, or even make your desktop look like the matrix.

    8. Re:screenshots by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      Why bother with screenshots if you can have the real thing? ed2k link

    9. Re:screenshots by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      Looks like they've yet to fix any of the grievous interface atrocities and have yet still heaped more crap on top.

      So are there still 30 ways to connect to an ethernet network?

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    10. Re:screenshots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why bother reading about AIDS when you can have the real thing?

  12. Rumor has it... by Tuxedo+Jack · · Score: 4, Funny

    That Longhorn will ship with the full retail version of Duke Nukem Forever.

    --

    Striking fear in the authors of godawful fanfiction, I am here, appearing in darkness, Tuxedo Jack!
    1. Re:Rumor has it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I heard it'd use Gnu/Hurd as a kernel.

    2. Re:Rumor has it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    3. Re:Rumor has it... by sean23007 · · Score: 1
      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
  13. the question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is anyone ever going to fall for any of their over-time support plans again, since many of the people who went for that when it was first offered are now finding that longhorn is going to fall after the end of their plan...

  14. Proof. by inertia187 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Here's proof they intended a 2004 release. Well, maybe it's fake. I found it in 2002.

    --
    A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
  15. It's not their fault, OK? by farmhick · · Score: 2, Funny

    They are trying their best to get that new desktop environment integrated. You know, the Duke Nuk'em Forever Desk'top. It blows viruses away, melts system freezes, and liberates both Gen Failure and Gen P. Fault from the communist zombie insurgent terrorists.

    Is there any wonder that it is taking longer than expected?

    --
    I have to stop wasting so much time reading Slashdot. It's interfering with my crystal meth addiction.
    1. Re:It's not their fault, OK? by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      Is Microsoft following OpenSource now? Linux has had a Doom sysadmin interface for some time now...

  16. Beating Apple's store release to the punch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    ...with a beta

    Well, that's Microsoft for you

  17. Open Source Innovation by InsomniaCity · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The point is, these pushbacks have given open source the chance to make major innovation, and there isn't long left to take this major opportunity.

    My gut feeling is that Longhorn will knock the socks off whatever is out there at the time, unless developers really plan ahead, and come up with innovative features etc.

    Some would say the pendulum is swinging towards Open Source on the desktop at the moment, but I worry that Longhorn could stop that in its tracks.

    --
    You cant make anything foolproof, they'll only invent better fools.
    1. Re:Open Source Innovation by FinestLittleSpace · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah, with all it's promised features being thrown out plus a serious lack of ANY NEW FILESYSTEM it sure will OWN OSS of the time...

    2. Re:Open Source Innovation by InsomniaCity · · Score: 1

      Why does a PHB care if it has a new filesystem? Microsoft will just implement search on top, with some kind of metadata DB stored on the filesystem as a file... and management won't be any the wiser. It'll look good in the demo!

      --
      You cant make anything foolproof, they'll only invent better fools.
    3. Re:Open Source Innovation by FinestLittleSpace · · Score: 1

      Its the point that longhorn was meant to be a new start... and they can't even get the foundation (new file system) which was a big premise for most of this off the ground before launch.

    4. Re:Open Source Innovation by gnuman99 · · Score: 1
      Some would say the pendulum is swinging towards Open Source on the desktop at the moment, but I worry that Longhorn could stop that in its tracks

      Let me think on this........hmmm.....no.

    5. Re:Open Source Innovation by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1
      The point is, these pushbacks have given open source the chance to make major innovation, ...

      How often has open source innovated? Seems like it's mostly cloning. Then again, that's probably exactly one of the major goals, to provide an OSS alternative to everything, I guess.

      My gut feeling is that Longhorn will knock the socks off whatever is out there at the time, ...

      How on earth could it do that? If their fancy file system is still a pipe dream, Avalon/XAML is like XUL (and like the pre XML Visual C++ .rc file -- nothing really new here), Indigo may be a nice web services framework, but they already exist, and will web services even really ever take off? .Net is a JVM/sandbox -- already been done. The blue "aqua" looking GUI has already been done. Maybe the 3D parts of the GUI will knock the socks off some PHB's.

      Some would say the pendulum is swinging towards Open Source on the desktop at the moment, but I worry that Longhorn could stop that in its tracks.

      Why? I don't worry that the popularity of rocky road ice cream will outpace that of butter pecan. Not exactly timeless matters of earth-shattering importance here. I eat and use whichever I feel like when it suits me.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    6. Re:Open Source Innovation by Synbiosis · · Score: 1

      I think Longhorn's main appeal (at least to me) is the Monad CLI.

      To me, the only thing that's appealing about Linux and OSX is the combination of a strong command line interface with a good GUI. But beyond that, neither system has really appealed to me.

      I'm extremely satisified with Windows XP, IMHO, it's the best operating system out there for a moderately experienced computer user. IE isn't *that* bad, you're only in danger if you're a complete and total moron, and the XP implementation of Firefox is the best out of the three. Office runs perfectly fine for me (Anything GTK uses up far too much screen space), and everything runs in an MDI, which I prefer to hanging windows.

      Call me old fashioned or lazy, but I'll live with my minor flaws. I know XP better than anything else. Linux may be better in many aspects, but the amount of time it would take me to become as proficient in Linux as I am in XP (I'm only satisifed as being a power user) would take me several months. Monad will (hopefully) give me the power of the Linux command line with Windows, a system that I already know in great detail.

      Oh, and having a large variety of games to choose from is a nice thing, too.

    7. Re:Open Source Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's sad to think of the number of poor fucks like you MS has created.

      You've been living in crap for years.
      You can't possibly imagine not living in crap.
      You feel there actually are some benefits to living in crap.

      Fucking MS. The damage they've done to the computing world will take decades to overcome.

    8. Re:Open Source Innovation by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      By your own admission you don't know that much about Linux, so it's really hard for you to compare. The fact that you like XP and can use it is fine for you. I don't know what Monad is, but giving you a command line and a GUI is not really new. XP, hell Win95, NT, W2k, W2k3, they all have a command line. Call it DOS or what ever, it's still command line. Often, tasks run better and often don't fail compared to their GUI counterparts. I think everyone has likes and dislikes and more to the point people have things they like to do. There doesn't need to be one to rule them all. Linux offers an alternative, and that in itself is a good thing. For some tasks, Linux will beat Windows. For others, Windows will work better (think games....for now ;) ). I think the OSS community would do well to focus and run. We can get the notoriety by simply beating them at a few battles. The goal should be to get people away from a Wincentric way of seeing computers. Personally, I'll be happy when the local computer store asks me, "Well, do you need that application for Windows, Mac, or Linux." Don't get me wrong, the total bankruptcy of Microsoft would be great! However, that's not likely to happen.

    9. Re:Open Source Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boo-fucking-hoo, little baby AC.

    10. Re:Open Source Innovation by leifm · · Score: 1

      I'd say the pendulum is swinging towards web apps for most things, making the desktop irrelevant. Open source is part of that trend, but so is MS with ASP.NET. I think Longhorn will do well, but only through attrition. And I have a feeling WinFX, Avalon, etc is going to fall flat on its face, viewed as interesting APIs but left pretty much unused because the web's inertia will have pretty much drained any significant interest in rich client development.

      --

      "Windows Me offers tremendous reliability and stability improvements..." -- Paul Thurott
    11. Re:Open Source Innovation by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      My gut feeling is that Longhorn will knock the socks off whatever is out there at the time, unless developers really plan ahead, and come up with innovative features etc.

      What, exactly, is innovative in Longhorn? Looks like everything they are making a big deal out of has been implemented in Mac OS X for almost 2 years and is being implemented into Linux desktop environments now.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    12. Re:Open Source Innovation by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      I run Windows XP. It runs the programs I want to run. I maintain my system well, so I don't have problems.

      I tried out a Linux distro because I was curious. (Mephis) It supposedly booted into a GUI off the CD for installation. It didn't. Got back into XP and after 20 minutes of searching, found the console command to get into a GUI without it failing. I was finally able to install Mepis. Figured out how to get it online, got some programs installed, so I could browse the web with it. Whee. Only problem, was that I couldn't change screen res. 640x480 wasn't going to cut it, and if I changed it, I dropped back to the CLI. Turns out the included ATI drivers didn't work. Looked into getting updated drivers (on the XP box) and after about 45 minutes of searching, realized I would have to recompile the ATI drivers for my distro.

      No clue how to do that, no decent documentation that I could readily find to explain it. Said "Screw this" and went back to the XP box.

      Anyone who says Linux is ready for the masses is an idiot. I'm a fairly technical guy and if it is confusing to me, Joe Consumer's head will explode trying to use it. By no means am I a Microsoft fanboy. Windows sucks for the most part. But it gets the job done with less hassle to setup and maintain.

      Make an OS that is as easy to set up as my toaster, and I'll be impressed.

    13. Re:Open Source Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Longhorn's main appeal (at least to me) is the Monad CLI.

      Wow! You mean in this next release of Windows, Microsoft will finally catch up with 4 decades worth of previous computing knowlege and release a real , useful command line interface? Whatever will they think of next, those crazy innovators?

  18. XP by mboverload · · Score: 4, Insightful

    XP seems fine to me. All my utilities, programs, and games are in working order and I have never had a problem with security. Why exactly should I udgrade? The only reason I stay on Windows is for the games, and unless Micosoft has some magic optimizations it pulls out of its ass, I dont see a new operation system on here anytime soon.

    1. Re:XP by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

      Same here.

    2. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you will upgrade, because Uncle Bill wants more of your money...

    3. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said the same thing. EXCEPT I use computer for ... work.
      Windows 2000 "Professional" does just fine -- new network rules for Windows in our offices though ... they're not allowed to talk to/see the Internet.

      The other work computer, which of course has full access, is the Mac.

      I play games on the Playstation.

    4. Re:XP by koniosis · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact it does have a lot of games optimisations, in one of the key note speaches the Microsoft guy demonstrated running 12 DirectX demo applications and Quake3 at full speed at the same time, where he also showed WinXP died after 4 of the same demo where running and no Quake3. Whever this means anything to games performance is questionable, but it does indicate that Longhorn will play friendly with DirectX far more than XP.

      --
      I spent ages trying to think of sig, but never did :(
    5. Re:XP by ADRA · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I say the same thing, but for Windows 2000. I have yet to find a show stopper at home to upgrade to XP. I don't see myself leaving 2000 on my desktop unless its to Linux (Which is already on file server/laptop).

      --
      Bye!
    6. Re:XP by deadhammer · · Score: 2

      The question of course: were the XP machine and the Longhorn machine identical? Same memory, processor, video card, etc.?

      --
      I'll be honest, we're throwing science against the wall to see what sticks. -Cave Johnson
    7. Re:XP by yamla · · Score: 1

      You'll have to upgrade soon, Windows 2000 hits end of life in June. Though you do get another five years of extended support, and this may be sufficient for you.

      --

      Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.
    8. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I just did a new install of 2k on my new computer, after deleting XP. What does XP offer that 2k doesn't? Nothing. I can live without Playskool widgets.

    9. Re:XP by bonch · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's an interesting problem for Microsoft. There was a reason to switch to OS X over the classic MacOS, but the transition from Windows XP/2000 to Longhorn will seem entirely superfluous. Most of the changes will be under the hood, like the new .NET foundation which will also add performance overhead.

      The interface, called "Aero Glass" (I don't supposed that means it will have shiny highlights on the tops of the widgets, does it? Been there, done that), is supposed to be full 3D-accelerated DirectX visuals. The problem is that a lot of old PCs won't even be able to run it and will end up using the lower visual tier of Longhorn, which is supposed to look more like today's Windows, which again makes you wonder what would be the advantage in upgrading.

      Microsoft waited too long. Windows XP has saturated and stabilized in the market, and everyone has grown quite comfortable with it despite major security issues. As for .NET, how many major developers are actually going to write managed code? Adobe's not going to rewrite Photoshop. Macromedia's not going to rewrite Dreamweaver. id isn't going to be releasing .NET games any time soon. So Microsoft will have to keep supporting Win32 indefinitely anyway. .NET will take charge in the market that Visual Basic currently does, because that's what C# is geared toward.

      The only real thing I was looking forward to in Longhorn was Avalon and WinFS. WinFS won't ship with Longhorn and Apple has already beaten it to the punch with Spotlight, and Avalon and Indigo will be released as backports for both Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. In addition, the .NET runtime also already ships for Windows XP.

      What exactly does Longhorn offer other than a 3D accelerated interface and a big information bar on the side (I guess it's Microsoft's answer to the Dock or something)? I've been following Longhorn for a while, and its advantages have slowly diminished, and now I'm honestly much less interested.

    10. Re:XP by QuantumG · · Score: 1
      Once you use XP you'll go back to Win2k and find it annoying as hell. Off the top of my head:
      • The start menu doesn't keep track of my most commonly used apps.
      • My Computer isn't on the start menu.
      • There's no tab completion on the command line.
      • Some stuff about add/remove programs that I don't remember.
      • Some other stuff about the services control that I don't remember.

      So if you're happy with 2k I strongly suggest you never agree to use an XP box for an extended period of time (say, at your work) cause you'll come home to your 2k box and see all the flaws.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    11. Re:XP by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Same here... Win2K is king... Ubuntu (even if I'm not 100% happy with it, see my journal) is second.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    12. Re:XP by mboverload · · Score: 1

      XP only really increases the usablity and adds a few new features. That's the only reaosn I upgraded. Hell, my dad and brother are still both on 2000.

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

      ClearType font rendering is what I miss. It's truly a drastic difference on LCD monitors.

      Take a screenshot of text from XP with CLearType turned on. Display that screenshot on Win2K/LCD setup next to the same text. The difference is amazing.

    14. Re:XP by jalefkowit · · Score: 2, Informative
      I say the same thing, but for Windows 2000. I have yet to find a show stopper at home to upgrade to XP.

      Me neither -- I'm still running Win2K at home quite happily too. However, it's worth noting that Microsoft has at least one potential "show stopper" in the works for us: according to Microsoft's Windows lifecycle roadmap, "mainstream support" for Windows 2000 Professional will be discontinued on June 30 of this year. After that date only "extended support" will be available (through 2010).

      What's the distinction? According to the lifecycle FAQ, here's what those terms mean:

      • Mainstream support includes all the support options and programs that customers receive today, such as no-charge incident support, paid incident support, support that is charged on an hourly basis, support for warranty claims, and hotfix support...
      • Extended support includes all paid support options and security-related hotfix support that is provided at no charge. Hotfix support that is not security-related requires a separate extended hotfix support contract to be purchased within 90 days after mainstream support ends.

      From a practical home-user perspective, this means that you won't be seeing any more Service Packs or updates for Win2K Pro, unless they are to fix a specific security issue. So it'll be interesting to see whether things like new versions of DirectX continue to be provided for 2000 after this summer or not. Anyone out there with more experience on how Microsoft EOL's products who can shed light on what the prospects for things like that are?

    15. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why exactly should I udgrade? The only reason I stay on Windows is for the games

      What happens when all the new games require Longhorn+?

    16. Re:XP by mboverload · · Score: 1

      Like your journal. I too have problems with the retarded aversion to MP3s and the bitch that is CD/DVD burning in Linux =(

    17. Re:XP by mboverload · · Score: 1

      With a firewall and anti-virus you are pretty secure at present. Dont forget that nerd common sense (why I have never had a virus run on me for at least 4 years even)

    18. Re:XP by mboverload · · Score: 1
      I think you will really have to be shallow to want to upgrade just for the visuals. I don't want a freaking DirectX desktop! How am I supposed to work when DirectX breaks?

      Sure, OSX is pretty, but when you are typing or doing "real" work it wont matter.

    19. Re:XP by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      Others have explained the MP3 aversion....

      CD/DVD burning stays a problem... I still have 24hours before this machine will end up as a Win2K machine. Not that it is bad, but I would have preferred to be Opensource and legal.

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

      "Sure, OSX is pretty, but when you are typing or doing "real" work it wont matter."

      Oh god, what computing stud you must be.

    21. Re:XP by davegust · · Score: 1

      The start menu doesn't keep track of my most commonly used apps

      Sure it does. The Programs list auto-hides the least used entries.

      My Computer isn't on the start menu

      No, it's where god intended it - on the desktop. If you don't want it there, feel free to move it anywhere you want with Tweak UI

      There's no tab completion on the command line.

      Sure there is - it's just not on by default. Once again, Tweak UI.

      Some stuff about add/remove programs that I don't remember.

      Some other stuff about the services control that I don't remember

      Must be real important then.

      XP has very little to offer over 2000 other than the boot recovery features and remote desktop. There's a reason why the version change was only 0.1 over 2000 (5.0 vs. 5.1). For me, the most annoying thing is Microsoft's artifical requirement of XP for HD Media Player support.

    22. Re:XP by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1
      • Some of us detest the hiding of less frequently used menu items, and turn that shit off.
      • My Computer isn't in the Start Menu on my XP Pro (SP1) system here at work. Besides, what would I need that for?
      • Cmd line tab completion can be turned on for W2K with a registry entry -- have that at home.
      A couple of things I remembered having to do to XP so that I wouldn't find it annoying as hell:
      • Turn off the cutesy mommy login page and get back the NT-style one.
      • Turn off some simplified security mode to prevent Grandma from screwing things up, so that I could see what the hell perms on which things were set for which users and to what.
      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    23. Re:XP by jbridge21 · · Score: 1

      The start menu doesn't keep track of my most commonly used apps.

      That's the very first godawful thing I turn off when I'm forced to use an XP machine. Then it's the shitty oversized blue-n-orange window borders, the "web view" control panel etc folder views, the task bar icon grouping (damnit! don't keep changing how the icons are arranged on it! it slows me down!), and the background. Oh, and mouse shadows and all the menu/list/etc animations have to go too. Please see here.

      My Computer isn't on the start menu.

      screw that, [windows key]+E or a shortcut bar explorer icon!

      There's no tab completion on the command line.

      As others have mentioned, Tweak UI.

      One more annoying thing, not that it makes much of a practical difference, the license for XP (and Win2K >= SP3...) says that M$FT is allowed to lookit what programs you have installed and screw with them in order to guarantee WiMP DRM security.

    24. Re:XP by fr1kk · · Score: 0

      The reason to upgrade is because in 3 years, you wont have a choice. With the Activation of Windows in full throttle, what will you do when you need to reinstall / change hardware when their activation servers / support goes dead?

      --
      sig: Playfully doing something difficult, whether useful or not
    25. Re:XP by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      With enough nerd common sense, plus a little willpower, you don't even need the anti-virus crap. I haven't had a virus since my Mac System 6 and 7 days in college, when Apple thought it was a good idea to auto-execute code on every floppy disk that was inserted.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    26. Re:XP by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      What problems do you have with CD/DVD burning? I use K3B and I like it better than any other CD burning software that I've used (even Nero).

    27. Re:XP by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, taskbar icon grouping. Forgot about that one. Seriously, these are all features that you come to depend on when you use XP for an extended period of time. Switching to something like a Mac or GNOME or KDE is fine, it's a fundamentally different OS and you can forget your old habits, but moving from XP to 2k (or as you have experienced, 2k to XP) is just annoying.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    28. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. XP doesn't really do more than 2k (other than ugly teletubbies skins by default, a god ugly start menu and other total crap you can't resist but to disable at first bootup). And a lot of people find the new PPPoE client, WIA and other "new" things really suck compared to the previous OEM ones (WIA truly sucks if you ask me anyways). It does have a few new things (like system restore) though (altough I have that disabled as well), a crappy firewall (disabled too), a annoying security center (same again), ... Hardly anything worth mentionning. But the reason why I use it over 2000 is mainly better drivers for it (for my hardware at least), better ACPI, more stable, new VMR renderers (DirectShow), and a whole bunch of other small things like that you couldn't exactly mention as a "new feature". We're still using 2k at work (moving to 2003 next month supposedly), and I hardly see any differences between it and XP. In fact, I wouldn't really mind going back at all.

    29. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You guys are just commenting on the GUI. You obviously haven't taken the time to learn what the real changes were between 2000 and XP so that you'd have an educated opinion on the subject. If you don't know a subjct, how do you justify making any recommendations to anyone?

      Here's a clue: http://msdn.microsoft.com/msdnmag/issues/01/12/XPK ernel/default.aspx

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

      Going "back" from XP to 2K is *NOT* annoying. It's things like taskbar grouping that actually are. I find XP better overall, but it's new "GUI features" that truly suck. Makes you wish you were using 2K.

    31. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    32. Re:XP by mboverload · · Score: 1

      I need to scan all my downloads, if you know what I mean ;)

    33. Re:XP by matt_maggard · · Score: 1

      MS seems to keep having this problem. I heard the same thing at the release of XP.

      As a Mac OS X user (XP at work), I much prefer the more modest OS upgrades that come out more often at a lower cost (than Windows). This eases the transistion between new versions (less UI differences, more software compatibility, etc).

      It seems that Windows users have to weigh the pros (new features (the ones that haven't been cut), 'newest thing' addiction) against the cons (forced software upgrades for compatibility, relearning the UI, high upgrade cost). Any reason why MS doesn't release more often? The only thing that springs to mind is that IT departments hate upgrades and the cost but if you did it more often and made the upgrades less painful then there wouldn't be such a problem. MS tends to be going this way with their 'subscription' model anyway...

    34. Re:XP by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's not security I would worry about -- it's being able to keep up with the Joneses as regards the Windows platform.

      Example: right now my main use for Windows is as a gaming platform, which I imagine is true for a lot of people. For gaming, Windows 2000 is pretty much functionally equivalent to Windows XP, since things like driver updates, DirectX revisions, etc. are all made available for both 2000 and XP.

      Microsoft could force a lot of people to confront the XP upgrade boogeyman just by deciding to no longer extend this courtesy. We're already seeing this in a few places -- like Windows Media Player 10, which is XP-only.

      So far the XP-only things have all been optional packages; those of us on 2000 can survive just fine with Windows Media Player 9, for example. But if they start cutting 2000 users off from non-optional stuff -- not security fixes, which they say they'll keep coming, but all the various upgrades you need to keep your system current with the "Windows platform" -- then it won't be long until the utility of 2000 will become quite limited.

    35. Re:XP by Zanthrox · · Score: 1

      Well, the "cutesy mommy login page" actually comes in handy from time to time. You don't get to use the fast user switching with the normal login page. (Do with you could do that from the normal login screen though, so you could share a system from several folks in a domain for example..)

      Granted it's less useful if you're the only user of a computer, but I still like to keep seperate work/home accounts on my home box. winkey-l and you're back at the login screen and can switch profiles.

      There's more under-the-hood tweaks that come in handy too. Just try and "net use" a network drive from a telnetted session on a win2k box (if you're not also logged in interactively). XP actually lets you do that, and maintains seperate drive letter mappings per user. In win2k, if anyone has a drive mapped that drive letter is out of commission for all users.

      The new task bar is very handy as well -- I tend to keep a bunch of windows open and it's nice to have them sorted by application.

      So I'll grant it's nothing major..but the eye-candy can be turned off easily enough and there's enough under-the-hood changes to make it nice to have.

    36. Re:XP by Apathetic1 · · Score: 1

      Windows 2000 Pro would still be on the machine I'm posting this from if it weren't for Remote Desktop. Of course, it doesn't hurt that I got a legal copy of XP Pro for free.

      If it weren't for Remote Desktop, I wouldn't put up with all the other crap that got bundled into XP (e.g. Desktop Cleanup Wizard - does anybody actually use that thing??).

      --

      My username does not make me Apathetic. It's irony, get it?

    37. Re:XP by CPUGuy · · Score: 1

      How is it lower cost than Windows?

      It's $129 per upgrade

      Retail price for WinXP Pro Full is $300, upgrade is like $150, and you can get them both much much cheaper.

      And you have to remember, you are paying $129 every year or so.

    38. Re:XP by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      What distro are you using? Ubuntu? Ubuntu doens't come by default with K3B. If I start it, it complains about a .DCOPServer file and then it complains about cdrecord and cdrdao not being run as root. Go figure, I don't login as root when I'm a normal user. Setting it up wasn't easy either because I had to activate the root account. sudo wasn't enough.

      K3B is the only recording program that is "okay" for the normal user. All others are too complicated or command line. (The Ubuntu machine was not intended for me, and that's why I actually look at usability)

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    39. Re:XP by JeremyGL · · Score: 0

      Serious question, not a troll.

      Just how important is Microsoft support for any of the versions of Windows for home users ? OK I can see a large multinational being a bit twitchy with an out of support OS but from a personal point of view I've always found fixes for any of my OS problems using Google. I've still got machines running W95 and W98 which are still fit for purpose so is there any reason why I should shell out more money for a later version just so it's supported ?

    40. Re:XP by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      cleartype?

      --
      Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
    41. Re:XP by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      Sure, OSX is pretty, but when you are typing or doing "real" work it wont matter.

      I dunno. I can spend all day on my iMac and have no eye strain, but after an hour on my XP/NT machines, using a high-quality display, I need to take a break. I've tried just about every setting there is, but no such luck.

      Perhaps we Mac people are jutht too thenthitive. *belch* *scratch* *grunt*

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
    42. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The start menu doesn't keep track of my most commonly used apps.
      That pesky quickstart thing on the menu bar does that nicely (obviously you need to change it manually, but this is easy drag and drop.)

      My Computer isn't on the start menu.
      WindowsKey + E brings up explorer - who needs
      my computer on the start menu?

      There's no tab completion on the command line.
      Yes there is, it just needs to be enabled.
      (Use X-setup.)

      Some stuff about add/remove programs that I don't remember.
      Windows XP still hasn't got this stuff right. May as well keep waiting.

      Some other stuff about the services control that I don't remember.
      Don't know what you mean here, but if you don't remember then it can hardly be a compelling reason to go for XP.

      XP is big, bloated and slow, and I don't want to have to upgrade a perfectly good 1Ghz AMD system in order to be able to run it.

    43. Re:XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'd say you hit the nail on the head there. Which is why I dread Longhorn. Win2k was a well defined consistent enviornment that was probably the pinnacle of what MS will achive for a gui. I have the bad feeling all that is left for us in the future is deeper walks through candyland.

    44. Re:XP by r3m0t · · Score: 1

      The login page is good in terms of how much typing you have to do. Just don't set a password hint.

      I also hate simplified permissions, and the warnings when going to C:\WINXP, C:\Program Files, even just C:\. At least you only need to turn these off once.

      Also, you should show hidden system files to see the pagefile (eg), and you should turn off taskbar grouping (I do anyway, it's annoying and increases the number of clicks for task switching).

    45. Re:XP by yamla · · Score: 1

      Yes. Basically, it is now impossible to hook up a Windows 95 machine to the Internet (at least, and use Internet Explorer) while maintaining due dilligence for security fixes and the like. Thus, if you hook up Windows 95 to the Internet and your computer is infected and sends out spam or infects another computer, you are entirely legally responsible.

      This is not the case with an operating system which still receives security updates, provided you deploy the security updates in a reasonable timeframe. It is also obviously not the case if you do not hook up Windows 95 to the Internet, or if you hook it up behind a firewall, provide antivirus protection, and use a supported browser such as Firefox.

      --

      Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.
    46. Re:XP by yamla · · Score: 1

      Better hardware support and much better gaming support. If you don't plan on adding new hardware to your computer and do not use it for gaming, 2k provides essentially nothing valuable.

      --

      Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.
    47. Re:XP by drew · · Score: 1

      that's exactly what they'll do. i use to use win95 in vmware for browser testing various versions of IE (before i figured out how to run multiple copies of IE on one machine) because it was so small compared to any other versions of windows. when IE 6 came out, it would no longer run on win95, which had recently gone into extended support. newer versions of directX wouldn't install either. microsoft announced some time ago that the next version of internet explorer would only come with longhorn- they've since backed off from that statement (by actions at least if not official announcement) but i wouldn't be surprised to see IE 7 be xp/longhorn only- already all the security improvements made to IE6 were all part of xp sp 2, and not available for other versions of windows (that i am aware of anyway.)

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
  19. A Lornhorn in from Redmond on the desktop by the_mushroom_king · · Score: 0, Troll
    .. and an idiot cowboy from Texas in the White House. This is turing out to be on hell of a year. --TMK

    DISCLAIMER: Any similarity to intelligent or insightful comment in this post is purely coincidental. The author takes no responsibility for the views expressed by the author.

    1. Re:A Lornhorn in from Redmond on the desktop by sconeu · · Score: 1

      This is turing out to be on hell of a year

      That does not compute!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    2. Re:A Lornhorn in from Redmond on the desktop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      --
      People who need govt to enforce their religion must not have much faith in it. Or else they wouldn't need govt to do so.

      So you're against prosecuting MS for anti-trust violations?

  20. Slightly off topic, but... by RootsLINUX · · Score: 1

    Does the phrase "longhorn" have anything to do with the University of Texas at Austin (who's mascot is the Longhorn), or is it just some weird coincidence? If UT and M$ are in cohoots, I'm going to have to transfer schools... :p

    --
    Hero of Allacrost, a FOSS RPG for *NIX/*BSD/OS X/Win
    1. Re:Slightly off topic, but... by generic-man · · Score: 1

      The name suggests so, and the Longhorns' "Hook 'em Horns" salute is sometimes construed as a Satanic gesture, so that would put Microsoft just two degrees away from Satan.

      Sounds about par for the course as far as juvenile Microsoft-hating goes here at Slashdot.

      --
      For more information, click here.
    2. Re:Slightly off topic, but... by ChatHuant · · Score: 2, Informative

      Does the phrase "longhorn" have anything to do with the University of Texas at Austin (who's mascot is the Longhorn)

      It's the name of a saloon in Whistler (a ski resort in Canada), positioned between the Whistler and Blackcomb mountains. Both Whistler and Blackcomb have also been used as code names for various versions of Windows.

    3. Re:Slightly off topic, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "who's" stands for "who is". The correct word is "whose", get it, you, dumb ass...

    4. Re:Slightly off topic, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, given that you can head down to Campus Computers and pick up a copy of XP for 5 bucks because UT paid Microsoft a rather hefty 4 mil licensing fee... yes, yes there are some cahoots. The system isn't named after us though.

  21. APT? by femto · · Score: 1
    Another improvement will come in the way businesses are able to install Windows on large numbers of machines. Today, mass deployment is done through a process known as "ghosting" an image of the operating system. An improved method will come with Longhorn, Montgomery said.

    Hey, Microsoft is ripping off APT!

    1. Re:APT? by Glowing+Fish · · Score: 2, Funny

      Microsoft is also ripping off Debian's release schedule! ::: rimshot :::

      --
      Hopefully I didn't put any [] around my words.
    2. Re:APT? by Nik13 · · Score: 1

      Not sure what it will be based onto, but the old install process is quite outdated. The first file copy stage (press F6 in the next half second to load your storage drivers from a *floppy*) really deserves to go for something more "modern".

      As for replacing ghosting, I'm not sure what they'll replace it with, but the mix of ghosting and unattended installs works OK for me anyhow. Not sure what will really change, or if it will actually be any better.

      --
      ///<sig />
    3. Re:APT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hence we will soon see the rise of a new Microsoft distribution, called Ubundows.

  22. Will it be bloaty??? by anicca · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Having 100+ Gigs is fairly common. Will Longhorn take 20G to install??? Every 'new' windows version has made my 'current' computer seem slow. I expect the same again....

    --
    A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by sconeu · · Score: 1

      You know the saying... "Andy giveth, and Bill taketh away."

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    2. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by Nik13 · · Score: 1

      I never really found the previous "new" versions of windows to be overly bloated (especially if you use the "classic" look, disable unecessary services and such). I ran XP Pro on a old 633MHz system last year (for the kids) and it was almost as fast as a PC 3x the speed (yes, again, minimal background stuff, like system restore off and such). 2003 isn't really slow or bloated either imho (relatively, anyhow).

      But for once I think it's gonna be slow and bloated . Just remember what they used to say about minimum specs, and now the fact that I'd have to upgrade *all* my video cards basically. I want an OS that lets me get the job done (some coding, checking email, play music/videos, type some documents, ...) - not some n00b'ish animated, 3D GUI that requires a 200$ video card and only gets in the way and makes my work slower. I don't want new weird GUIs, the "old" win2k style one does all I need... Last thing I want is skins, and much less 3D/animated stuff, sucking all my CPU cycles and filling my HD.

      What I'd want is new features. A more stable, maintainable, functionnal PC. More/better system utilities/tools, no bundled IE/OE junk anymore, ...

      I think a *LOT* of people will not upgrade to LH, or perhaps move to Linux instead.

      --
      ///<sig />
    3. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... or perhaps move to Linux instead."

      Wishful thinking. Most people don't want to deal with the garbage that is Linux.

    4. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by Erik+K.+Veland · · Score: 1

      Isn't that the truth?

      In contrast every new upgrade of OS X has made my current mac feel faster.

      --
      "I tend to think of OS X as Linux with QA and Taste", James Gosling, creator of Java
    5. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but I may try my hand at one of the BSD's (I'll still keep my W2K around, tho).

    6. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by dave420 · · Score: 1
      Most common linux distros have larger installation footprints than XP does... after all, XP is 400-500megs.

      What's with all the primadonnas on /.? Mention Windows and all their little panties get wet. "waah! waah! linux is better! waah waah!!!" pathetic.

    7. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Having 100+ Gigs is fairly common.

      That's not true. Look at a base or mid-level model from any of the major makers, and you'll see that none of them come with a harddrive nearly that large. Our three month-old Dells came with a 20 Gbyte drive, and the new replacement model from Dell comes with a 40 Gbyte drive.

    8. Re:Will it be bloaty??? by anicca · · Score: 1
      Dude...if I do a fresh install of windows XP it takes over 1.2 Gs.
      From Microsoft: Here's What You Need to Use Windows XP Professional PC with 300 megahertz or higher processor clock speed recommended; 233 MHz minimum required (single or dual processor system);* Intel Pentium/Celeron family, or AMD K6/Athlon/Duron family, or compatible processor recommended 128 megabytes (MB) of RAM or higher recommended (64 MB minimum supported; may limit performance and some features) 1.5 gigabytes (GB) of available hard disk space* * Actual requirements will vary based on your system configuration and the applications and features you choose to install. Additional available hard disk space may be required if you are installing over a network. Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher-resolution video adapter and monitor CD-ROM or DVD drive Keyboard and Microsoft Mouse or compatible pointing device"
      In many ways linux is better. It depends upon what you use your computer for. XP is my favoorite version of windows but its still crap that has caused me a lot of grief. Linux made me have to learn a bunch and since it can't do the job for my desktop yet, I am stuck with XP. I don't hate it(much), just recognise its weaknesses. Spyware/virus scans, need to use ghost backup images, defraging, restarting, registry repairing, hoping one is not compromised...Windows is easy, linux is stable. One can only hope Longhorn is better.
      --
      A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  23. RE: familiar? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Longhorn, the Daikatana of the new millennium!

  24. Carrot, stick, meet donkey. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Nuff sed.

    ;)

  25. "Pay no attention... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...to that spyware and virus free (so far), shipping operating system that you can buy today! Look over here, at this great stuff we'll be selling Real Soon Now!"

    Hopefully Tiger will appear sooner than currently expected, to prevent this.

    1. Re:"Pay no attention... by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      Nah. Bump Tiger back a couple of weeks. While everyone is going on an on about the potential features of Longhorn available next year, Apple throws Tiger at everyone with that it can do NOW and punctures all the Longhorn hype like a balloon full of rotten swamp gas.

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
  26. Nothing to pull people away from the web by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no technology in Longhorn that will convince people to start developing windows-only applications. As it is, I look at all of the people who have written applications to .NET who are shooting themselves given the rise of Apple, Linux, and other non-Microsoft platforms (cell phones, etc.). Some combination of Java and/or the Web is the way to go for the forseeable future. Eye candy is all this is from Microsoft.

    1. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by mingot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is no technology in Longhorn that will convince people to start developing windows-only applications.

      Does there need to be? Seems like the majority of commercial software vendors already only develop for windows. Of course it's not going to convince the current exceptions (Adobe, Oracle, IBM) but then nothing short of a gun to the heads of the CEO's of those companies COULD convince them.

      As it is, I look at all of the people who have written applications to .NET who are shooting themselves given the rise of Apple, Linux, and other non-Microsoft platforms (cell phones, etc.).

      Why? Excepting Linux and OSX there pretty much are no other operating systems that have any signifigant user base. Linux users are not exactly known for rushing out to pay for software. And I don't think there are enough people using apple computers to keep ISVs up at night wishing they had went cross platform, either.

      Some combination of Java and/or the Web is the way to go for the forseeable future.

      I can certainly see benifit in going towards the web, just because of the ease of rolling out changes across an enterprise (update the server, everyone is updated). The cross platform there is just a (nice) side effect, though.

      Just to let you know, though, as soon as OSX or Linux have the market share to make it profitable to develop for them is the day I start developing software for them.

    2. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by RM6f9 · · Score: 1

      Going about things backwards? Imagine with me, if you will, a bootable CD (Damn Small or Knoppix) that also contains the single-player version of a really cool MMORPG - you don't *have* to have Linux installed, but you *do* need to boot from that disk for a play session... After having played it, *then* download the files needed for the online version for some ridiculously small subscription/donation... Watch the OS osmose its way into yet another user's life...

      --
      Take the 90-Day Challenge! http://rwmurker.bodybyvi.com/
    3. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Off-topic clueless noob question (but really short): Will Knoppix work from CD if I unplug all my hard drives? I would only try it if it was guaranteed not to fuck with anything on my current system.

    4. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1
      If .Net enables developing applications that can be (Windows) native or Web-based (with just a recompile with a different switch, or something) which I've gathered is one of the motives (correct me if I'm wrong -- IANA.NetExpert), then there'll still be plenty of development on Windows.

      Also note that if web services/SOA is ever fully realized, then your apps are a combination of web services with a thin-client front-end tying them together, and then what languages/platforms the individual services are implemented in becomes much less relevant.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    5. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by hacker · · Score: 1
      "Linux users are not exactly known for rushing out to pay for software."

      I think I speak for my community (having been a part of it, both as a Linux user and a Linux developer for over a decade, and now president of my LUG), when I say that "Linux users" aren't choosing NOT to pay for software because they don't WANT to, they're not paying for software because they don't HAVE to.

      Just because it is commercial, doesn't mean it is better than the free or non-commercial software out there. Look at some of the VERY successful projects that are given away freely: Apache, PHP, Gaim, Samba, Subversion, Mozilla/Firefox, Plucker and hundreds of other projects.

      Nothing in the commercial space can compare to these, and why would users want to spend money to get something of lesser quality or value. The additional benefit they get, at no cost, is the ability to use the source however they choose, including the ability to sell it, or create their own projects based upon it.

      NO commercial software that I'm aware of, has that level of freedom and flexibility. Can you think of any?

    6. Re:Nothing to pull people away from the web by mingot · · Score: 1

      I think I speak for my community (having been a part of it, both as a Linux user and a Linux developer for over a decade, and now president of my LUG), when I say that "Linux users" aren't choosing NOT to pay for software because they don't WANT to, they're not paying for software because they don't HAVE to.

      So what you're saying is that FOSS is always better than the commercial alternative? Ok. In your case that may be true. Non-developers, for whom the privilage of having the source code means nothing, have a different opinion. If they did not have I'd most certainly be typing this out using Linux and FireFox.

      For YOU, as a developer, there may be nothing that beats FOSS. Any peice of software, no matter how crummy it is compared to a commercial alternative, is better because you can simply add the features you want and fix the problems you encounter.

      But I don't sell to people like you.

      With all of that said, there might come a day when Linux IS ready and all of the applications ARE there. And if, on that day, there is a paying market for development I'll hang up my nifty MS IDE, learn vi and how to build a proper makefile and move on. If there is no market I'll just find something else to do to put food on the table. *shrug*

  27. Oh Great.... by Eskimore_ · · Score: 0, Redundant

    A new OS, rife with vulnrabilities that can only be discovered by the global internet, new device drivers, software incompatibilities, different ways of doing the same windows functions that I have to learn, etc....

    Bah Humbug.

  28. Hardware requirements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet Microsoft is actually on purpose delaying the release of Longhorn so that some people could actually have systems that can run it. I mean, 512MB memory is still the "good workstation" default and didn't Longhorn eat 512MB just to boot? Who on earth would like to use a system that has to go to swap when you launch notepad on a just-booted system?

  29. One game available at launch by Albanach · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Microsoft executives were reported as saying Longhorn will have a single game title available at launch date. "Duke Nukem Forever will define the status of our new operating system amongst gamers" said one exec.

  30. I can't wait by onlyjoking · · Score: 1

    ... to see Longhorn die the death it inevitably will. A DRM OS on which old apps won't run and it requires high spec hardware. Seems like a non-starter in the face of cost-saving open source alternatives. Be assured it won't offer much extra security if it comes outta Redmond. Bring on Longhorn. Time to slay The Beast once and for all.

    1. Re:I can't wait by cnettel · · Score: 1
      on which old apps won't run

      Stop it, please, just stop it. Win32 is not dead. GDI is somewhat dead as the main interface for doing GUI stuff in Windows in the future, but the basis of GDI has been around all since Windows 1.0 (and a painting program before that). They keep it compatible, as an emulation in a texture that's then painted, unless that's changed. They are not breaking everything. The transition from MacOS 9 to MacOS X was more significant, as the kernel and non-GUI APIs are mainly unaltered here.

    2. Re:I can't wait by JhohannaVH · · Score: 1

      But you're forgetting the fact that Microsoft/IBM/Apple/Sun does the same freakin' thing every time they come out with some new slick dealio. That's the way it has alwyas been in the world of technology. Moore's Law. We gotta have *some* OS ready to take on those Dual Core Processors! The only difference here is that Microsoft doesn't *make* PC's. That's what they have everyone else for.

      --
      Sorry man... the Internet pooped on me.
  31. It's pronounced "Longhaul" by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When the world wakes up and sees that Microsoft is asking them to upgrade yet-again they will either 1) jump at the chance or 2) ask what was wrong with XP. I think we need to be there to tell them.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:It's pronounced "Longhaul" by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

      When XP came out, I dont recall any announcement from Microsoft about having to upgrade?! Infact, I recall that the vast majority of 'upgrading' to XP just happened during the normal course of buying a new system as and when required - Win2k or 98 didnt suddenly stop working (did 98 ever start working?). Longhorn will be the same, natural upgrade with new hardware for normal users, those that follow the 'cutting edge' will be buying OS upgrades, and everyone will get on with life.

    2. Re:It's pronounced "Longhaul" by cnettel · · Score: 1
      And mid-2006, XP is five years old. That's close to twice the age of 98 when XP was released (and remember 98SE and Me in-between, even if they didn't tout upgrading to those that much).

      Windows 3.0 (not 3.1) was as old when Windows 95 was released that it looks like XP will be when Longhorn is released. It's not exactly a once-a-year rush.

    3. Re:It's pronounced "Longhaul" by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Blah, it's a stupid "hold back all the features until we have a new product" technique. Microsoft should be offering "great new features" that you can download every 6 months instead of once every 6 years. Now *that's* innovation.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    4. Re:It's pronounced "Longhaul" by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      I asked what was wrong with NT4...but the world moved on, then I asked what was wrong with W2k, and the world moved on... now I ask what is wrong with XP... heck I hate XP.... Don't answer me... The world will move on anyway.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    5. Re:It's pronounced "Longhaul" by Bill+Dog · · Score: 2, Funny

      What are you talking about, they offer "great new features" the first Tuesday of every month! ;-)

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
  32. I wonder... by michaeldot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does Microsoft actually care about Mac OS X at all, whether as a competitive threat or even a comparative yardstick?

    At a recent university talk, Gates claimed that the only OSes that would be around in 10 years would be Windows and Linux. Now that could simply be a snub to Jobs, or it could indicate that he doesn't even consider Mac to be on the radar anymore. With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential in both the predominantly Windows consumer market, or Windows/Linux enterprise market.

    The ironic thing is, that if Mac OS X *were* to be around in 10 years, Microsoft would likely to be making far more money off it than if it disappeared. Why? The high gross margins (80+%) from Office mean that Microsoft often makes more money from a Mac bought with Office than Apple does (the gross margin on a Mac is 20+%).

    With only Linux as an alternative OS, Microsoft would likely make nothing, unless Microsoft plans to start selling software for Linux...

    Personally I think Microsoft does actually pay attention to Apple and uses them as a sort of free R&D lab. However, publicly, Gates seems to deny they're relevant now, and not at all in the future.

    Interesting...

    1. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's different!!!

      Mac OS X -> Macintosh
      Windows -> x86

      Hey... it's different... They aren't competing (you can say x86 & macs are competing, but NOT Windows and Mac OSX)

    2. Re:I wonder... by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 4, Interesting

      With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential

      Check your figures again, please. There's no definition of "market share," either percent-of-sales-per-unit-time or percent-of-total-installed-base, for which that statement could be true. IDC consistently puts Apple around 4%, with an installed base set to exceed 40 million units during the first half of this year. (There are rumors that IDC's next projection is going to uptick sharply on the strength of the Mac mini.)

      When you're talking about a market valued in the tens of billions, the difference between "less than 2%" and the actual figure of four percent is huge.

    3. Re:I wonder... by Epistax · · Score: 1

      I must say that Microsoft and Mac OS are not direct competitors. That would be like a local vendor of fruit in one state being in competition with the local vendor of fruit in another state. Sure you can pick up all your stuff and move, but you probably have other reasons besides the fruit vendor. In this particular case I'll stay in my current state because I have a choice between several fruit venders, where as in the other state there is only one.

    4. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this particular case I'll stay in my current state because I have a choice between several fruit venders, where as in the other state there is only one.

      That's among the stupidest things I have ever heard. And not just because of the metaphor.

      What choice do you have on a PC? Windows and Linux/BSD.
      What choice do you have on a Mac? Mac OS and Linux/BSD.

      You're basically saying that you'd rather play it safe and eat your shitty fruit. That would be fine if you'd admit to it instead of making up some kind of bullshit about not having choice.

    5. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac OS X -> Macintosh
      Windows -> x86

      Hey... it's different... They aren't competing (you can say x86 & macs are competing, but NOT Windows and Mac OSX)


      It you are going to be pedantic about it, the comparison is Mac OS X is to PowerPC as Windows is to x86. There is no Macintosh CPU or Macintosh CPU architecture. Normally, when people say Macs, it refers to the system as a whole, a combo of Mac OS and 68K (in the past) or Mac OS (X) and PowerPC. Kinda like when we say Wintel.

      However, people buy Macs mostly for the OS. In that sense, Mac OS X does compete with Windows.

  33. the register story is old by uujjj · · Score: 3, Funny

    Did anyone notice that the Register story is dated September 2003? Explains how it is talking about "May this year"

  34. Yippee!!!!!! by zmollusc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am as poor as a church mouse whose wife has run off with another mouse, taking all the cheese with her. I am looking forward to Longhorn because then lots of people will upgrade their kit and i get to inherit some newer stuff.
    My most recent hand-me-downs were from guys updating graphics cards for doom3 and HL2.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    1. Re:Yippee!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen to that I bought a Gigabyte nForce2/400 chipset motherboard with an Athlon XP2700+ onboard PLUS 512MB of DDR400 (Kingston HyperX!) AND a Leadtek GeForce 5700 all for the princely sum of £125!!! Bring on the upgraders dude I want a Radeon 9700 Pro :O)

    2. Re:Yippee!!!!!! by hobbesx · · Score: 1
      I am as poor as a church mouse whose wife has run off with another mouse, taking all the cheese with her.

      Wow man, that sucks. Maybe this'll help:


      'Tis better to have

      Cheesed and lost

      Than never to have

      uhm, Cheese at all?

      err... maybe not?

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
  35. Tiger's punch was last year... by timealterer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A June beta release from Microsoft may or may not beat Apple's June final release, but Tiger's punch was the beta DVDs that went to all Worldwide Developers' Conference attendees LAST summer.

    --
    - Allen Pike
    Altering time, one time at a time.
    1. Re:Tiger's punch was last year... by jimmyharris · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the updated pre-release copies of Tiger Server and Client which were mailed out to Select member in the last week or so. I've been testing both and using 10.4 as my primary desktop with few problems.

      And yes, Spotlight is included and works well.

    2. Re:Tiger's punch was last year... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      About the same time as the Longhorn developers preview was released.

    3. Re:Tiger's punch was last year... by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      "A June beta release from Microsoft may or may not beat Apple's June final release, but Tiger's punch was the beta DVDs that went to all Worldwide Developers' Conference attendees LAST summer."

      Microsoft understands how to handle the press. Since the beta will be fresh on the minds of jouralist, when Tiger is release every single article that talks about Tiger will also mention longhorn.

      Remember, wait for longhorn.....

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
  36. Longhorn vs. Sarge? by Glowing+Fish · · Score: 1

    What do you think will be officially released first:

    Longhorn or Sarge?

    Of course, Sarge as it is is already relatively stable and bug free (I had an uptime of 35 days before rebooting to use a new kernel); while I bet that Longhorn will have lots of problems for at least the first six months.

    --
    Hopefully I didn't put any [] around my words.
    1. Re:Longhorn vs. Sarge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sid.

  37. Blizzard vs. Microsoft by snuf23 · · Score: 2, Funny

    How come when a game company like Blizzard says "it will be released when it's ready" everyone applauds their restraint, yet when Windows release dates are up in the air everyone slams Microsoft?

    Oh, maybe it's because Windows still won't be ready when it's shipped...

    --
    Sometimes my arms bend back.
    1. Re:Blizzard vs. Microsoft by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Because Microsoft have vast resources that they can't be bothered to apply?

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    2. Re:Blizzard vs. Microsoft by arkhan_jg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because microsoft don't say 'it'll be out when it's ready'. They give date after after date, breaking them each time.

      And people who've bought the three year subscription 'upgrades free' licences feel like mugs because they listened to microsoft PR and got nothing out of it.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
  38. Stranger things have happened by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Hey, the Red Sox won the World Series. Doom3 and Halo2 were released. Heck, even the Hurd kernel passed a milestone. But I would call down to Hell first and ask if they've had a blizzard recently.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  39. The NEW Malabu Stacy... NOW WITH A HAT! by fireman+sam · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is this exactly not what happened in the episode of the Simpsons episode where Lisa creates a doll called "Lisa Lionheart" only to be knocked out at the last minute with the "New" Malabu Stacy, which was the old Malabu Stacy, but with a hat.

    I guess Microsoft's sales of Malabu Stacys (Windows) is slowing. I guess it is time for them to release a new version "NOW WITH A HAT"

    "(Burns) Hello Smithers, you're quite good at turning me on" - Smithers' computer

    "(Gates) Hello Steve, you're quite good at turning *Windows NT GPF*" - Steve Balmer's computer

    --
    it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    1. Re:The NEW Malabu Stacy... NOW WITH A HAT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If by "Is this exactly not what happened" you mean "Isn't this completely different" yes!

      Consider what Longhorn contains: .NET Framework v2.0
      Indigo
      Avalon

      Let's just pretend that there's nothing else for a second. This is the first time MS will have shipped a workstation OS w/ .NET in it. That represents something like 8 years of work by hundreds(?) of people being put into the OS.

      Indigo again is probably something like 5-7 years of work by hundreds of people. And Avalon is about the same thing too. These times are assuming MS manages to ship in 2006.

      So we're taking around the order of 2000-5000+ people years of development time.

      Now that's forgetting about advances being made in lower levels like the kernel or higher levels like the shell. MS has been working on Longhorn presumably since XP shipped taking off maybe a year or so to work on the service packs. So that's another 5 years of development time by hundreds of people!

      Now imagine if they're forced to cut one of Indigo or Avalon. Even then there's still thousands of person years of development that's gone into the next version of Windows. So it's more than just a new hat.

  40. Uh? by modifried · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Did anyone look at the date of the article? Even in the /. snippet it shows that 2005 is not written in present tense.

    Microsoft delays Longhorn. Again
    By John Leyden
    Published Tuesday 2nd September 2003 10:55 GMT

    1. Re:Uh? by modifried · · Score: 1

      D'oh! That's just the Register article. My bad!

  41. Hey, ease up on the market pressure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Microsoft is far from being the only OS company who has had ever slipped a schedule, or reduced their deliverables. Or have their marketing types try to weasel their way out of it.

    Besides, all that market pressure to release stuff early is what causes developers to lose sleep and relationships. Personally, I don't need a new version of Windows anytime soon. I'd rather wait for a fully baked version before giving my feedback.

    Instead of going through all this fuss and bother, why don't we all give Microsoft whatever rope they feel they need to let them eventually hang themselves properly?

    1. Re:Hey, ease up on the market pressure by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      "all that market pressure to release stuff early"

      Right, MS really has all that market pressure to release stuff early...uh, uh...

      Well, they obviously aren't bending to it, are they?

      Actually, they're real problem is "featuritis". If they didn't feel like loading down the damn OS with crap nobody uses and can't figure out how to use (like Group Policy before Windows Server 2003), they might get a product out on time.

      I got the same problem with Opera. Idiots want to put voice recognition in the damn thing when their CSS support is STILL not complete...

      Wouldn't it be wonderful if product managers had a clue that software should actually do what it is claimed to do and via the standards as well?

      But you're right, we should give them all the time they need to hang themselves - and give Linux more time to take it all away from them...

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  42. Hello.jpg? Try Giver. by Seoulstriker · · Score: 4, Funny
    --
    I am defenseless. Use your button. Mod me down with all of your hatred.
  43. Beating Apple to the punch by Infonaut · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It says a lot about the current state of the Apple/Microsoft relationship that Microsoft would be concerned about beating Apple to the punch. Before OS X in general and Panther specifically, not many people outside of the Mac sphere of interest gave the MacOS much attention. Now you read articles about MacOS in IT magazines, on Slashdot, and even in the mainstream press quite frequently.

    I'm sure Microsoft isn't going to say a word about Tiger, but my guess is they're no longer considering Apple the 98-lb. weakling as they once did.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Beating Apple to the punch by bubba451 · · Score: 1
      I'm sure Microsoft isn't going to say a word about Tiger, but my guess is they're no longer considering Apple the 98-lb. weakling as they once did.

      In Microsoft's mind, Apple is the 98-lb. weakling that bought a nice car, learned how to dress, and is suddenly getting all the cute girls.

  44. Windows Beta? by Danimoth · · Score: 1

    Isn't that a bit of an oxymoron?

    --
    No smoking sigs indoors.
  45. Replacement for SWF, and its implications for Mono by seatscanner · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Mono's implementation of System.Windows.Forms is very very close to a usable state. I'm really thrilled to see the development taking place around Mono. I think Mono's S.W.F.-initiative is more likely to bring Windows applications to Linux than Wine.

    This makes me wonder regarding the status for System.Windows.Forms in Longhorn. Is System.Windows.Forms still the recommended GUI-framework in Longhorn? Is the release of its replacement post-poned?

  46. Benefit of new Linux development method by bstadil · · Score: 1
    Oh wait - this sounds a lot like Linux.

    Strange that no one seem to mention the benefits of the new Linux kernel development model, when the Windows vs Linux debade is brpought up.

    The 3 years of development has now disappered (for now) meaning that on average Linux has gained something like 1.5-2.0 years on its competitors.

    This in addition to being on a much faster improvement trajectory than the Windows / *nix.

    Apple is somewhere in between as they release somewhat often pretty much when they have enough stuff to merit a "sale" / release.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  47. Misleading Summary by Morgahastu · · Score: 5, Informative

    The article linked to, and quoted, was published in September of 2003. There is no new delay to speak of.

    1. Re:Misleading Summary by WindozeSux · · Score: 1

      Maybe the article is comparing what happened in 2003 to today. Since in 2003 when a release date was spoke of it was delayed. Now, they set it for June. So basically, the article(on Slashdot)is trying to make a point. "It's been delayed before and it's most likely going to happen again."

      --
      Fallout 3 will suck.
  48. Microsoft by larry2k · · Score: 0

    Let's see: Microsoft, Micro and soft, I think Bill Gates needs Viagra

    --

    The package said "Windows XP or better. Pentium Class Processor or better"... So I got a Mac with OS X

  49. Upgrading by xeon4life · · Score: 1

    If Windows is still in C:\WINDOWS\system32, my programs still in C:\Program Files, or my documents still in C:\Documents and Settings\Devin\My Documents I wont be upgrading. What a hamper on user interface... Give me /System, /Apps, and /Home PLEASE!

    --
    Real programmers can write assembly code in any language. -- Larry Wall
    1. Re:Upgrading by zoloto · · Score: 1

      this is exactly what I'm doing with my linux distro. not standard, but www.linuxfromscratch.org is helping to change that. and in using hidden symlinks, things will be compatible =)

    2. Re:Upgrading by wideangle · · Score: 1

      One of the reasons \Program Files was so-named is because MSFT wanted to show off long file names in Win95.

      Not a big fan of the defaults either. But you can change 'em with a slipstream disc.

      Or you could play with TweakUI or fiddle with the registry:

      [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\C ur rentVersion]
      "ProgramFilesDir"="D:\\Apps"

      This probably won't change much in Longhorn.

    3. Re:Upgrading by calyptos · · Score: 1

      i recommend using gobohide, its what was going to be used in calyptos. check out http://calyptos.com/images/screenies/shot.png

      --
      http://illhostit.com/ - Webhosting
  50. You're joking, right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reaction will be the same as it's always been. People will buy this just like they bought Windows XP's registration system. When the next big thing comes out from Microsoft, people upgrade. If they didn't, they wouldn't be buying Microsoft products in the first place. Sure, some people will complain for a while, but they'll get used to it.

    The ones who will switch are the ones who are ready to switch already, and Longhorn won't have anything to do with that, save perhaps its price tag.

  51. Release bump by bonch · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't be surprised if Apple bumped up the Tiger release by a few weeks to the beginning of June to stick it to the "developer beta 1" of Longhorn.

  52. Can't wait. :-) by AlgUSF · · Score: 4, Funny

    I bet this will be the most open and secure operating system ever.

    --


    I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
    1. Re:Can't wait. :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It already is. What malwares can run on it? Though, I suspect that this will change when it's no longer vapour.

  53. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck you.

  54. Marketware by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Why release an OS, when releasing the Beta gets your stock to go up, and people to stop talking about all the bugs in your current release? Releasing the finished version will just create all kinds of market-damaging disappointment, instead of all that nifty, marketable hope.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  55. Antivirus Included? by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1

    I wonder if it will have antivirus and anti-spyware bundled in the default install. They bought Giant not so long ago, and now they're getting Sybari. http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/08/yourmoney/m sft.html

    If they're having trouble finding a "gee whiz" selling point to entice buyers to the new system, this might be it. It would also be a good answer to the pirates - a solid reason why your OS would phone home and reactivate itself every few hours.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  56. No, it's redundant. by Farrside · · Score: 1

    No, it's redundant.

  57. In other news... by generationxyu · · Score: 2, Funny

    Half Life 2 is due out this... Oh. Wait...

    --
    I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
  58. Disingenuous quoting of el Reg by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That article is from September 2003, yet the way it's quoted in the summary makes it sound like Longhorn has been delayed again this week, which is not the case.

  59. Release Dates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ya know, businesses that set strict release dates are the ones that get themselves into the most trouble. Microsoft has many times in the past cut very important functionality all in the name of making release dates. This time they appear fairly serious about overhauling their development model and aren't allowing time to be a major factor. I appreciate this move, it shows that they perhaps understand what they need to do.

    As a software developer myself there is nothing worse than when sales or management figures attach arbitrary due dates to something without regard to the necessary effort required. The only release date that should matter is that it's done when it's ready.

    1. Re:Release Dates by phillymjs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Microsoft has many times in the past cut very important functionality all in the name of making release dates. This time they appear fairly serious about overhauling their development model and aren't allowing time to be a major factor.

      Right, that's why they've dropped WinFS from the feature list. Again. What is this, the third Windows version that was supposed to have it?

      ~Philly

  60. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by cnettel · · Score: 1

    I think their "story" is that System.Windows.Forms has good support, maybe a bit better than plain GDI (assuming a bit more about how the stuff in SWF actually accesses things), but Avalon is still fully on its way. It's bad while Mono is making progress, but I would say that a serious rethinking of the drawing model on Windows is needed to get on par with MacOS X in these aspects. They might accomplish that, if it's done properly.

  61. Go-Go-Gadget-Desktop-Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hurry! Nows your chance to take the lead. Iron out the bumps and beat them to the punch.

    1. Re:Go-Go-Gadget-Desktop-Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoopdeefuckingdo

  62. Blam! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now the average IQ of the collective human race has just increased a tiny bit.

    1. Re:Blam! by Yrlec · · Score: 1

      You do know that the IQ-scale is normalized, right?

    2. Re:Blam! by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      You do know that the IQ-scale is normalized, right?

      Damn. I guess his life and death were a total waste, then.

      (Sorry, that was an evil comment. I'm sure the g-grandparent had many sterling qualities. *snicker*)

      (Okay, that's evil again. My bad.)

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
  63. No Credibility. I have the Alpha. by GFLPraxis · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you guys could see the current state of the Longhorn Alpha...
    It's not near ready for Beta yet...

  64. What's the point? by RoLi · · Score: 1
    Without WinFS, there isn't anything interesting left for me. Avalon is just useless eyecandy (so my windows are now 3D-accellerated? So what? Will that make me more productive? Will it empower me? And BTW it will be available for 2K/XP too, so it isn't even a Longhorn-feature.) and DRM is more of a turnoff than a turnon.

    So what's the point?

    Why should anybody upgrade?

    1. Re:What's the point? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      I agree with you completely. However, I think the "avalon will be available for 2k/xp" is patently false.

      Companies like like this all the time: promise a backward-compatible feature, but then claim that their old product isn't good enough to work with the new feature, thus giving all the people that never would have upgraded in the first place but were looking forward to the feature a much larger incentive to upgrade: they'd already invested in the idea of avalon, so they will buy it.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    2. Re:What's the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They've even released a beta SDK thing, and I'm pretty sure it contains the current Avalon implementation for XP/2k. What I'd bet will happen is that the Avalon on XP/2k will not take advantage of 3d hardware or anything fancy like Longhorn will.

    3. Re:What's the point? by JesseT · · Score: 1

      Avalon 1.0 will be shipping for 2K/XP/2K3 in november/december. The Avalon that Longhorn will have will be Avalon 2.0, and will have more features. DRM is just for Windows Media Player formats like ASF and WMV. And the primary use of ASF and WMV right now is through online media stores that let you purchase music and movies. You can still play your MP3s, MPEGs, AVIs, OGGs, OGMs, and FLACs just fine. I think DRM is a bad thing, but people are blowing MS's implementation of it out of proportion. Longhorn has no more support for DRM than does Windows XP.

  65. The biggest allure of Longhorn by Free_Trial_Thinking · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The thing I thought was most revolutionary about longhorn was the database type file system. I think more and more people are seeing the advantages of tags over folders. You'd think someone could build a database style, tagged filesystem in some sort of linux deal. How hard would it be?

    1. Re:The biggest allure of Longhorn by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      How hard would it be?

      Not too hard apparently.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
  66. Actually... by AtOMiCNebula · · Score: 1

    Just one of the articles is from 2003, and that's the one from the Register detailing the past delays. The first article linked to in the summary was posted to CNet on the 7th (yesterday), and the recent CNet post is what everyone on here is talking about.

  67. Parallels to Apple's OS struggles of the past by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....seems to me that this is quite similar to what happened to Apple back in the 90's. Apple kept talking about the next gen operating system and there was delay after delay. While that was happening MS released Win95 and continued to "upgrade" their platform while Apple was never really able to find their way to the new version of their OS - until they went out and bought NeXT.

    Positions are reversed now - Apple has OSX and MS is trying to push out the next generation of their platform. Will this be the point where Apple turns the tide?

    It's disappointing that the Linux desktop story is not better as this would be a good opportunity to take advantage of the delays.

  68. Re:No Credibility. I have the Alpha. by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

    I have seen the alpha (it's sat on the shelf opposit me), and I agree with you.

    --
    How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  69. You miss the point by rewt66 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The point isn't users. The point is developers. Developers, developers, developers, developers...

    /me winces at the sudden karma-dectomy...

    Anyway, the point of Longhorn is, with Indigo and Avalon, to make it easier to develop cool new stuff. Then more cool new stuff gets written for Windows, and so more people buy Windows.

    Want to pre-empt Longhorn? Make some slick open-source developer tools for XML-based user interfaces (can't remember the X-acronym at the moment - XUL or XAML or some such) and web services. Win over the developers. Let them develop the cool new stuff on Linux.

    The users will follow if the new stuff is cool enough. At least, that's been Microsoft's game plan for a long time now, and it's worked pretty well for them...

  70. End of Life... by ecalkin · · Score: 1

    I would bet a fair amount of money that Microsoft will push the end-of-life for W2K back. There are two many large companies that use it, and want to continue to use it.

    Just look at Windows 98se. It's end-of-life (or extended support) was extended at least once and I believe several times.

    There are way too many companies out there that will look at alternatives to XP.

    eric

    1. Re:End of Life... by mboverload · · Score: 1

      If an AWFUL OS like Win98 can get supportpushed by several times then maybe 2000 will be supported for a decade =)

  71. I've said it before, I'll say it again: by Erik+K.+Veland · · Score: 1

    Longtooth

    --
    "I tend to think of OS X as Linux with QA and Taste", James Gosling, creator of Java
  72. Long live longhorn, longhorn is dead by Soong · · Score: 1

    Microsoft should pull a "Copeland", kill Longhorn, "acquire" a competitive OS company, and come out with Superior OS (secretly the formerly competing OS) with a Windows compatibility layer.

    They'll have to try that with BeOS or OS/2, 'cuz Linux and Wine are already there.

    --
    Start Running Better Polls
    1. Re:Long live longhorn, longhorn is dead by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 1

      HTF is the OS/2 kernel better than the NT kernel?

      I'm sick and tired of the people who think that the NT kernel is the issue...that's the one thing Microsoft should *not* get rid of. It's everything on top that needs to go, but all that crap would have to come along to any emulation layer.

      --
      "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
  73. The next two years, will be the last chance to get by melted · · Score: 0, Troll

    The next two years, will be the last chance to get Linux on the consumer desktop.

    Once Longhorn comes out, Microsoft will again be so far ahead, it won't be easy, or even possible, for enthusiasts to catch up. Right now they're essentially standing still. They've put all their efforts into LH, there's nothing going on with XP except for service packs/bugfixes. Now is the perfect time to release a really polished Linux desktop that would be simple to setup and use.

    When Longhorn comes out, Microsoft, and folks who develop for Windows, will surge ahead REALLY fast.

    Here's why:

    1. The entire OS will be accessible through a set of managed APIs. This makes coding 10 times easier and faster, and raises productivity to unprecedented levels. This also makes buffer overflows and some other security issues a thing of the past.

    2. New, resolution independent, vector based, GPU-enabled UI engine. Two years from Longhorn release people will be buying 200+ DPI displays because things look a lot better on them. What's KDE/Gnome users gonna do? That's right, try to discern tiny non-scalable icons on these displays.

    3. Completely new UI, including some significant paradigm changes.

    4. Seamless integration of client and server side (that's what XAML is all about, IMHO). Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine. Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. Just think about the possibilities there.

    5. Reliable Web Services - Indigo, web services that don't suck. More importantly, web service protocol that's supported by the majority of computers in the world (when most people upgrade). And you can bet your ass they will upgrade, just like a couple of years after W95 was released almost everyone ran W95.

    The most important thing is, all of this will be available to Windows users out of the box, without any tweaking/recompiling/downloading dependencies. That's where the real strength of this all is. Developers will be able to rely on this stuff when building next-gen apps and be reasonably sure that if a user runs Longhorn, the app will run there.

    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying Longhorn. Gnome devs have already realised that.

  74. Microsoft OS every 4 years by Harassed · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As chance would have it I was actually at Microsoft's UK campus today and one interesting piece of information that was mentioned was Microsoft's long-term OS strategy which is to release a new full OS refresh every 4 years with a "feature upgrade" every 2 years between releases.

    This means that Windows Server 2003 is due a "feature upgrade" this year (XP had one last year in the form of SP2), with the XP replacement due in 2006 and Longhorn server in 2007. WinFS is likely to be included in a "feature upgrade" to Longhorn sometime in 2009.

    Both Avalon and Indigo are likely to be available for current Windows platforms (2k3 and XP) although WinFS is, as widely publicised already, not going to be available even for the release of Longhorn.http://msdn.microsoft.com/Longhorn/unders tanding/pillars/default.aspx

    Therefore, the chances of WinFS being available for 2000, XP or Windows Server 2003 is unlikely particularly in light of the fact XP mainstream support is due to end next December (2006) and Windows 2000 support actually officially ends in June this year! (see http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh; %5Bln%5D;LifeWin

    The main reason for the WinFS delays, they stated was that they made the decision that its features would also benefit several other key products such as SQLServer and Exchange and the integration with these products/developer teams was worth the delay.

  75. Moving Target Specification? by RayDude · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I suspect that the Longhorn team are victims of the old "moving target specification" problem that we've all dealt with. In other words, they get 80% of the way done and someone says, "Hey! Add this feature I just saw in Linux" or "add this media ability," or "fix this batch of security holes," or "how about making the code compile for both 32 and 64 bit systems," etc etc etc. Once they get 80% done again, the target moves again and they get stuck in a hell that engineers understand and fear. I'm interested to see if there's any features, other than security, that I'm really going to care about. What can Longhorn do that Windows XP SP2 can't do? Or more aptly, since I switched to linux a couple of months back, what can Longhorn do (besides play games) that Linux can't? Raydude

    1. Re:Moving Target Specification? by krray · · Score: 1

      On that note ... what can Windows XP do that Windows 2000 can't? There's a good reason I suppose that in our organizations that we've gone from 98se (which we didn't want anyway) to Windows 2000 and stopped buying Microsoft products.

      We're a Mac shop now.

  76. The real question is .. by KwKSilver · · Score: 1

    What kind of psycho runs 12 applications and plays Quake 3 at the same time? reminds me of the marketing-droid who first tried to sell me on XP: "I had 100 instances of media player running at the same time, no problem" Swell. I seldom listen to 100 songs or watch 100 videos at the same time. Maybe I'm just a retard. I dunno.

    --
    If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
    1. Re:The real question is .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow ... way to miss the point!

  77. What I really want to know is - by Magickcat · · Score: 1

    Will it run Duke Nukem Forever?

    --

    Si tacuisses philosophus mansisses. If you had kept quiet, you would have remained a philosopher.

  78. serious anti-trust issues there... by Run4yourlives · · Score: 1

    not to say they won't do it, but symantec and mcaffee are not netscape...

  79. Win/Debian?? by kill+-9+$RANDOM · · Score: 0, Troll
    I think you meant the following:
    • Unstable
    • Unstable
    • Unstable
    1. Re:Win/Debian?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually...

      Unstable

      REALLY Unstable

      OMFG IT ACTUALLY BOOTED

  80. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by maztuhblastah · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Once Longhorn comes out, Microsoft will again be so far ahead, it won't be easy, or even possible, for enthusiasts to catch up.

    Hi Mr. Troll...have some food:


    1. The entire OS will be accessible through a set of managed APIs. This makes coding 10 times easier and faster, and raises productivity to unprecedented levels. This also makes buffer overflows and some other security issues a thing of the past.


    Good idea...let's call them shared libraries. They can handle all the functions that a modern program will need. We'll put them in a central location, like a "lib" folder, and then release their header files in a "devel" (short for developer) package. This means that any program writer will be able to see exactly what functions he needs to use. We'll also put all our trust in the security of one developer, and forget security as our responsibility.

    2. New, resolution independent, vector based, GPU-enabled UI engine.... What's KDE/Gnome users gonna do? That's right, try to discern tiny non-scalable icons on these displays.

    That's right...those damn communists will have to develop SVG Icons to compete.

    3. Completely new UI, including some significant paradigm changes.

    Because we all know that a new UI is far more important than stability, performance, security, ease of use, scalability, compatibility, ease of development, and speed of patch releases...right? Then again, maybe changing to a 3d environment will make it easier for new users, after all, computers haven't been using 2d interfaces for the last 20-some years, right?

    Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine.

    Just like, oh, I don't know...Java? Wait... Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them.... oh...I get it, just like a whole Java application. Got it. Silly me, I thought Java was only for applets...
    Just think about the possibilities there.Wait! I've heard this before... the possibility is ActiveX...seamless integration of pr0n toolbars^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H client and server, huh?

    web service protocol that's supported by the majority of computers in the world (when most people upgrade).
    Standard...oh yeah, like TCP/IP, SSL, SSH, Telnet, UDP, and all those other standards...(too many to list)

    The most important thing is, all of this will be available to Windows users out of the box, without any tweaking/recompiling/downloading dependencies
    Yeah...clicking the icon for Synaptic was getting to be a pain in the ass. I also got pretty tired of having several gigs worth of...well, all the programs I need...included on the installation disks.
    Developers will be able to rely on this stuff when building next-gen apps and be reasonably sure that if a user runs Longhorn, the app will run there.
    Yeah, let's see how many DLL's we can cram into the system32 folder, eh? Until DLL's are gone (ahem...notafuckingchanceinhell...ahem), there will still be DLL hell.


    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks.

    Are you out of your fucking mind? MS copied Fisher-Price, not vice versa...
    It's time to start copying Longhorn.
    You know, you're right...let's copy a product that has to have a final specifications sheet, or even a concrete release date. Even better, let's copy our own innovations.

    Now that the troll's full, I may as well poke it a bit:

    That was by far one of the most uneducated, poorly cocnceived fanboy responses that I have ever read. Even people like Dvorak and Thurrot take more time to look at the status quo before proclaiming innovation.

    Cheers,

    -maztuh

  81. Preview of Longhorn by amichalo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A Preview of Longhorn is available here.

    A rather thorough documentation of the future featureset is available
    here.

    --
    I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
  82. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by I_redwolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1. The entire OS will be accessible through a set of managed APIs. This makes coding 10 times easier and faster, and raises productivity to unprecedented levels. This also makes buffer overflows and some other security issues a thing of the past.

    "Managed APIs". I can see where this is going already.

    2. New, resolution independent, vector based, GPU-enabled UI engine. Two years from Longhorn release people will be buying 200+ DPI displays because things look a lot better on them. What's KDE/Gnome users gonna do? That's right, try to discern tiny non-scalable icons on these displays.

    Gnome/KDE already support SVG. So gnome/kde have scalable fonts/icons.. right now, today. Not only that but work is already being done in this respect http://cairographics.org/introduction.

    3. Completely new UI, including some significant paradigm changes.

    PARA DIG EM! Yeah.. when I wanna be wowed by UI i'll use Enlightenement or OSX. Suprisingly nothing from Microsoft has ever impressed me in that department. I mean, the screenshots I've seen of gnome/kde/enlightenment/osx/xfce. Microsoft needs to hire new UI designers.. I mean, seriously.

    4. Seamless integration of client and server side (that's what XAML is all about, IMHO). Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine. Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. Just think about the possibilities there.

    Mozilla and XML. Thats what Mozilla is all about. Your webapps will actually run regular ole XML on your machine. Kind of like google mail, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. I'm living in the present by the way.. Just incase you were wondering.

    5. Reliable Web Services - Indigo, web services that don't suck. More importantly, web service protocol that's supported by the majority of computers in the world (when most people upgrade). And you can bet your ass they will upgrade, just like a couple of years after W95 was released almost everyone ran W95.

    Reliable Web Services? Web service protocol? So whats that called? HTMP? is that going to be ontop of HTTP? Making it more reliable and supported worldwide (after everyone switches from HTTP). Bet my ass i'll upgrade for a protocol, just like when I upgraded for ftp!

    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying Longhorn. Gnome devs have already realised that.

    What you say?! Stop copying XP and start copying Longhorn?! Why my lad, you can't copy what doesn't exist.

    Seriously though, I hate Microsoft and if they had anything genuinely original coming out in Longhorn i'd probably be interested. Especially if it's good technology. To date, i'm hearing about stuff people have either already implemented or wrote about. Things that have been discussed by numerous people over the years. The innovation isn't happening at Microsoft, it's happening elsewhere. It's not even an attractive company to work for nowadays and i'd be hard pressed to say they've ever invented anything original.

    I mean, if I wanted to do original shit i'd have to go to work for anyone other than Microsoft.

  83. Mod down as moronic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People will try to make anything they don't like seem like 1984 here.

  84. Copy OS X, not Longhorn by Nice2Cats · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I don't know if you've sat down in front of an Apple lately, but all of the supposedly cool stuff about Longhorn you describe would seem to me to be already out there in Panther, if not Tiger at the latest. Therefore, your statement:

    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying Longhorn. Gnome devs have already realised that.

    should be modified to It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying OS X. Unfortunately, nobody from KDE or Gnome seems to realize this.

    For one thing, somebody has to figure out a way to start doing graphics on the GPU with vanilla X11 pretty soon -- Tiger is going to make everything else look like mud this year already, and when Windows figures out that trick in 2006 or 2007 or whenever, BSD and Linux will just about be the only ugly kids left on the block. This might not matter for servers etc, but on the desktop, looks count.

    1. Re:Copy OS X, not Longhorn by kayak334 · · Score: 0, Troll

      It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying OS X. Unfortunately, nobody from KDE or Gnome seems to realize this.

      Well.. I just have to respond to that. Look, not everyone thinks that OSX looks nice. No, really. It's true. Some of us think it looks worse than XP ::gasp::. These are all opinions, of course. Besides, if everyone copied OSX (or XP, or whatever) then what would be the point? All the OSes would look the same.

    2. Re:Copy OS X, not Longhorn by loopkin · · Score: 1

      actually another project is getting there close.

      that's what's cool about free software: the choice. soon there will be several distros based on GNUStep, and trying to get the best of OSX world into Linux. so the ones who like OSX will choose these ones, and the others will go Novell-SuSE/Mandrake :-)

  85. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by naden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. The entire OS will be accessible through a set of managed APIs. This makes coding 10 times easier and faster, and raises productivity to unprecedented levels. This also makes buffer overflows and some other security issues a thing of the past.

    I call bullshit. 10 times easier to develop/faster - I think not. And managed APIs whilst they may reduce the incidents of buffer overflows will not automagically solve your security problems. The fact is .Net is great, but not that great.

    2. New, resolution independent, vector based, GPU-enabled UI engine. Two years from Longhorn release people will be buying 200+ DPI displays because things look a lot better on them. What's KDE/Gnome users gonna do? That's right, try to discern tiny non-scalable icons on these displays.

    And who are going to be buying these new 200+ DPI machines ? I surely doubt the ordinary user is going to find a need to view their word documents in super high quality. So do explain what is going to be the driver of these displays ?

    3. Completely new UI, including some significant paradigm changes.

    Completely new ? And what lose the ability of their installed base to jump right in and use the system. What about the significant investments in training done by companies ? The fact is Longhorn will be 95% identical to Windows XP simply because it has to be. If it isn't and businesses have to invest serious money in retraining staff, then why not retrain them in how to use Linux/OpenOffice ?

    4. Seamless integration of client and server side (that's what XAML is all about, IMHO). Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine. Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. Just think about the possibilities there.

    Whilst your thinking about the possibilities, some of us are actually implementing it. Java/Flash are already heavily used and Google is only just showing that JS/DHTML can be used to do amazing stuff. And they all work cross-platform.

    The fact is developers can't target XAML so long as they have they have a significant number of end users that are running Windows 95/98/Linux/Mac/Firefox etc etc.

    5. Reliable Web Services - Indigo, web services that don't suck. More importantly, web service protocol that's supported by the majority of computers in the world (when most people upgrade). And you can bet your ass they will upgrade, just like a couple of years after W95 was released almost everyone ran W95.

    Web Services like CORBA is a developer's technology. Most end users won't know what web services is and why it is useful. You've been drinking the Microsoft kool-aid if you think end users are going to upgrade because of it. And Web Services works just as well on other platforms as well you know. Some even require little to no programming.

    The most important thing is, all of this will be available to Windows users out of the box, without any tweaking/recompiling/downloading dependencies. That's where the real strength of this all is. Developers will be able to rely on this stuff when building next-gen apps and be reasonably sure that if a user runs Longhorn, the app will run there.

    Bzzt. Except that when Longhorn comes out your going to have a even more fragmented Windows market (95/98/XP/Longhorn). Which means that as a developer you want to use the technology that will target the most number of platforms i.e. Win32. This is a huge problem for Microsoft and is why more Longhorn technologes are being backported to XP.

    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying Longhorn. Gnome devs have already realised that.

    WRONG. It is time for Linux to start making itself more and more interoperable with Windows XP. To the point where businesses will sidegrad

    --
    Funtage Factor: Purple
  86. OS X makes Windows look bad by Nice2Cats · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Does Microsoft actually care about Mac OS X at all, whether as a competitive threat or even a comparative yardstick?

    I would certainly think so, because OS X shows people what can be done with computers -- it shows them that viruses, trojans, and other malware aren't acts of God, but a preventable result of bad technology; that computers don't have to crash; that drag'n drop can do so much more; that Plug and Play can be more than an empty marketing slogan; and finally that computers can actually look cool. In short, Apple makes Windows machines look bad by comparison, and with the iPod and Mac mini actually penetrating the mainstream, this can't be good for Microsoft.

    Futhermore, I think your comment

    With less than 2% marketshare, Mac OS X is pretty much inconsequential in both the predominantly Windows consumer market, or Windows/Linux enterprise market.

    shows a widespread but flawed view of the computer world: Market share is all that matters. In fact, look at Porsche: Pissy market share, but great cars and -- more important -- great financial performance of the company. Apple's stock is doing just fine, thank you, while Microsoft's is starting to underperform to the point where they are now paying dividend. Comparing Microsoft to Apple makes just as little sense as comparing GM to Porsche and then saying that Porsche is hopeless because they don't have a large percentage of the mass-market.

    In fact, at least up to the Mac mini, that was exactly the point.

    1. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by ColMustard · · Score: 1
      In fact, look at Porsche...
      Saw this coming. It's impossible to bring up Apple's market share without at least one fanboy reminding us all of the beloved car analogy.
      --
      Moof.
    2. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by strider44 · · Score: 1

      while Microsoft's is starting to underperform to the point where they are now paying dividend.

      You do know that Microsoft made record profits last quarter don't you? They can't be underperforming that badly...

    3. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by dr.badass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Saw this coming. It's impossible to bring up Apple's market share without at least one fanboy reminding us all of the beloved car analogy.

      Good design is good design.

      Software, hardware, cars, typefaces, guns, knives, tools, chairs, buildings, bridges, watches -- you name it.

      Apple just happens to be the only personal computer maker with a significant investment in good design. Of course they will draw comparisons to makers in other industries with similar investments in good design.

      Getting back to market share, the OP is pretty much right. Market share is only important in regards to competition. A company with 90% of a market can still tank. Selling the absolute most units is not the only path to success -- there is more than one way to run a business. A company with 3% of the market can still be profitable, which is the only real sign of success.

      In fact, it should be obvious that most companies, in most industries, don't have very large shares of their respective markets. There wouldn't be very many companies if there were.

      (You may wonder why companies with good design tend to not have large market shares. It's not because of price, which most people leap at the chance to criticize. Price is subject to supply and demand. It's because most people have bad taste. If you don't think that most people have bad taste, please explain the following: reality television, Britney Spears, Wal-Mart, Taco Bell, Jerry Springer, fanny packs, George W. Bush, AOL, and most of human culture since the dawn of time.)

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    4. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by kayak334 · · Score: 1

      It's because most people have bad taste. If you don't think that most people have bad taste, please explain the following: reality television, Britney Spears, Wal-Mart, Taco Bell, Jerry Springer, fanny packs, George W. Bush, AOL, and most of human culture since the dawn of time.

      Ok, I'll bite. I find it slightly impossible that "most" people can posess bad taste. It's kind of disreguarding the fact that "taste" is totally subjective. Sure, I think a lot of those things you listed are shitty, but that doesn't mean that most people have bad taste. It just means that my taste differs from most people. Call that "good taste" if you will, but I don't agree. Besides, Britney Spears is pretty hot man...hehe.

    5. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by ColMustard · · Score: 1

      Preaching to the choir. Save your fingers. I know market share is meaningless. I just find it amusing how this analogy comes up every single time--although I did enjoy how Porsche was used in place of BMW; that was a nice touch.

      --
      Moof.
    6. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by Nice2Cats · · Score: 1
      You do know that Microsoft made record profits last quarter don't you? They can't be underperforming that badly...

      There is a difference between the profit a company makes and the performance of the stock on Wall Street. In an ideal universe, the two would be the same, but the stock market looks to future growth, not past profits. And that is exactly where Microsoft's problem is from a broker's point of view -- there is no way that the company is going to have double-digit growth again, it can't say boo without anti-trust lawyers jumping on them, and Linux and OS X are breathing down their necks (well -- for a sensitive pea-under-mattress kind of neck at least). Where is growth going to come from?

      Yes, they are making lots of money. But their stock is doing worse than the Nasdaq average if (and only if) I remember correctly. If not, my apologies to Gates and friends.

    7. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by qoa · · Score: 1
      I would certainly think so, because OS X shows people what can be done with computers -- it shows them that viruses, trojans, and other malware aren't acts of God, but a preventable result of bad technology; that computers don't have to crash; that drag'n drop can do so much more; that Plug and Play can be more than an empty marketing slogan; and finally that computers can actually look cool
      It's really worth a virus writer's time to try to infect 2% of computers. This is a tired argument. Of course windows gets hit with more of them. It's like aiming for an apple with arrow, or aiming for house, which is easier to hit?
      --
      Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
    8. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by qoa · · Score: 1

      Gah, "It's really not worth... That should read. I will use preview, I will use preview, I will use preview.

      --
      Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
    9. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by karakal · · Score: 1

      It is not only that. It is not really very effective to write Viruses for an Apple-PC. I use them for a long time and I understand some of the techniques they used in their Operating-System. So it is not only because of there little market-share (if you look, where Macs are used, they are a perfect target, IMHO)

    10. Re:OS X makes Windows look bad by karakal · · Score: 1

      > Besides, Britney Spears is pretty hot man...hehe. Yeah, but that's not the fact, she should be famous. She should be famous for singing, because she sells herself as a singer. The problem is not (only) bad taste. Maybe people don't think enough (oh yeah, not only maybe, that's for sure)...

  87. 64? 32? 8 Bit? by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    And which incarnation of Longhorn will this be? I read last year they plan on two versions. Considering people have been waiting on XP 64bit for the Opteron for over two years how can anybody take anything Sloth says seriously? Cnet claims now that they will be releasing a 'near final' RC 2 of XP 64Pro at the end of June. Hmmm.. timing a coincidence? story

  88. 2 is in the pipeline... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed the Gnome Devs already have realized that Longhorn should be next targetted. In fact, they've almost rendered your second complaint null and void. Could anyone miss this story from three days ago? As noted: the Gnome devs have the underpinnings of Gnome successfully implemented over a generalized vector rendering library, which will have as a backend a hardware accelerated composition library. This integration is the second step in the FOSS answer to your second warning. The first was SVG icons, which have been fully functional since Gnome 2.4. I can't speak for KDE, but I imagine they're reacting similarly.

    Apple got to the advanced desktop first. FOSS will be second. I'll be surprised if Microsoft doesn't come in a slow third. Heck, Reiser 4 will be ready with metadata delivery long before WinFS is.

    Cheerleading session over.

  89. Re:Hello.jpg? Try Giver. by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

    You don't think that picture is anything but a joke do you? Or more specifically, the implication of that dotted line. I wear pants like that all the time, and while I am of course very well endowed (;]), what you're seeing in that picture is merely a normal fold in the pants.

    --
    Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
  90. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately, Linux on the desktop has gone nowhere and will go nowhere.

    When it comes to routine maintenance tasks, such as adding a video card, connecting a camera, or upgrading an installed program, even Windows 95 was easier. Ten years later, Linux desktop evironments don't even have a serviceable imitation of the Windows 95 Device Manager! Linux desktop apps use 127 widget sets and don't adhere to UI standards, which frustrates users on a daily basis.

    The bottom line is that crossing the distance between "quirky prototype" and "smooth and steady" requires a huge amount of drudgerous labor, and in the open source world, the drudgerous labor doesn't get done because it's no fun.

    Sadly, Linux is doomed to continued irrelevance in the desktop market.

  91. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by sunami · · Score: 2

    there's nothing going on with XP except for service packs/bugfixes
    Uhhh, isn't that all that ever goes on with any development after its release?

    On the rest, I completely agree, expect that I disagree on some parts.

    The vector based display is GREAT. This has been happening in games for a long time, I was wondering how long it would take to evolve onto the desktop environment.

    As of currently, though, everything else has not been implemeted in any of the alpha releases, so I can't comment on whether or not those work or suck. Esentially, the Alpha Longhorn release is XP with a different color scheme, and slightly different log-in screen. Also, the "security center" has returned to it's W2K form, where there are several options to select from, rather than simply giving the task manager.

    As for the W95 part, that was true for a small amount of time. Shortly after, when W98 became good, W98 SE became a very popular OS. Microsoft has since done a lot to upgrade W2K, which is what I currently use. Of course, it helps that most mal-ware is targeted at XP, and not W2K.

  92. HL2 and Longhorn Paralellism? by Ericzombie · · Score: 1

    Hmmm. Longhorn being delayed for a months again? For us gamers, it sounds a lot like the delays for HL2, and dare I bring TFC2 into question? First this, then that, 6 months here, a little 1 month there, and boom! You're 2 years off date. Grrr. Why don't people just give late estimations and make people happier by releasing their products ahead of scheduled time, or god forbid they use that extra time to work out the bugs in the software more instead of releasing slews of updates to their software at the time of release?

  93. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You got it backwards on the trolling. He was just stating an opinion. You're the one being an asshole.

  94. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by ash5g · · Score: 1

    I'd have to agree with the parent completely. Linux has those features planned, but they're only sort of there and not going anywhere fast. Longhorn should make things a lot easier, just as .Net has. I still see Linux as going far in the server world, but the desktop is likely to be Longhorn.

  95. More MS Posturing by Dracos · · Score: 1

    This is an attempt to make Longhorn appear more imminent than it actually is.

    I'm convinced Longhorn will be released when now() + 2 years == now()

    However, this doesn't mean we can sit on our laurels and wait for OSS to find it's own way onto the desktop.

  96. Re:Hello.jpg? Try Giver. by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

    I think you pissed the fact that the poster was making a joke...

  97. Literary critic, you ain't. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    No, 1984 is not "one of the most important books ever written," unless you expand your list to include tens of thousands of books.

    I won't debate what is a "most important book". What criteria? etc.

    Regardless, 1984 is one of the most influental books of the last century.

    Too many people point to 1984 as an illustration of the insidiousness of totalitarianism, when what they completely miss is the fact that 1984 is a book about the insidious of totalitarianism. It takes the insidiousness of totalitarianism as a given. The book doesn't contain a discussion about whether the slope is slippery or not; it just assumes that the slope is slippery and tells a story based on that premise.

    I believe you're missing the point of narrative. Narrative is not a discourse on a topic with cites. It builds upon common culture to illustrate a given belivable situation, by way of story evolution.

    That you call it a failing that Blair (Orwell) failed to elucidate paths to totalitarianism, with references, op cit. is to ignore not only the prima face evident truth of what he was talking about, but also the context in which he was saying it, and the fact that a narrative can speak on several levels. I don't deny that a lot of people misuse the text, but you're wrong to hold it to a different standard than the one for which it was intended.

    A novel is not a historical document, except, sometimes, after the fact.

    Somebody who reads 1984 and thinks that he then has something insightful to say about language or society is like somebody who reads Beat to Quarters and thinks that he then can sail a tall ship around Cape Horn.

    To put this in a contextually useful analogy, this statement reads like someone who read "Linux for Dummies" and then wrote an oped about the stupidity of the Open Source movement, 'cause it doesn't take into account the cost curves of extant proprietary development, analyse job losses in SV due to cyclic developments, or forcast potential problems in legal doctrine if OS takes off..

    --AC, only because of the machine I'm on; I'm 'abulafia' hereabouts.

  98. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a retarded comeback. Not a single point you makes has any technical merit whatsoever. Way to make Linux users look like foaming morons.

  99. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by JesseT · · Score: 2, Informative

    This makes me wonder regarding the status for System.Windows.Forms in Longhorn. Is System.Windows.Forms still the recommended GUI-framework in Longhorn? Is the release of its replacement post-poned? System.Windows.Forms and GDI+ (System.Drawing) are still fully supported in Longhorn, and right now are the recommended way to begin transitioning your applications towards Longhorn. However, Longhorn has an entirely knew API known as WinFX, which is a superset of the .NET Framework. The new GUI is a vector-based 2D and 3D compositing system known as Avalon. Avalon is built on top of DirectX. Avalon, DirectX, and GDI+ are known collectively as the Windows Graphics Foundation or WGF. Avalon has a much larger scope over System.Windows.Forms, and if you would like take a glimpse at all of the new stuff (the new namespaces added under System.Windows), then check out the WinFX API Reference. WinFX is a quite a big step up from traditional Win32 programming. Mono has stated on their roadmap that it is too early to tell if they will support the technologies in Longhorn, but chances are, they eventually will. Avalon seems to be more hardware and platform agnostic than System.Windows.Forms. Things like HWNDs are now hidden behind a polymorphic class interface, and that's just the beginning. You really need to check it out to understand how it works. Anyway, stuff like that should make it easier to port to things like Mac OS X, Linux, *BSD, and so on.

  100. Time != $$$ by ReeprFlame · · Score: 1

    For microsoft this time, and for the next OS, and for all the previous ones, they should wait until they have a functional, working piece of software. Wait for a 2010 release. The community as a whole will be better off! And who knows, by then Linux may go mainstream!

  101. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

    4. Seamless integration of client and server side (that's what XAML is all about, IMHO). Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine. Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. Just think about the possibilities there.

    You have heard of XUL haven't you. It's been on the street of years. XAML is XUL minus the Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Why MS decided not to go with CSS is interesting if not revealing.

    I am developing a cross platform client/server data acquisition controller app right now in XUL and have been quite surprised at its maturity. I like how content, presentation and code are partitioned into separate components - this is well thought out.

    With the addition of the xmlhttprequest() capability it is a piece of cake to use apache/cgi and the language of your choice on your server end and xul, javascript and mozilla as your rich client.

    Mozilla's XUL approach is vindicated by microsoft's XAML intentions. However the lack of CSS support in XAML is, I belive, a mistake.

  102. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by JesseT · · Score: 1

    Sorry for the bad formatting. /. stripped my newlines!

  103. Bill Gates Confirms It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BSD is dying...

  104. Re:Hello.jpg? Try Giver. by TheVidiot · · Score: 1

    I wear pants like that all the time

    I HOPE that you are well endowed, if that is your usual choice of fashion.

  105. Way to miss the problem by Mitchell+Mebane · · Score: 1

    The other thing they need to do is stop integrating software into the OS. I can't stress this enough. I don't want to have to worry about my entire OS being vulnerable because IE has been integrated into every possible aspect of my GUI. Keep it simple, keep it segmented in modules.

    The problem is not that IE is integrated into Windows, the problem is that IE is a piece of shit. KDE is an example of a highly integrated desktop done right.

    --

    The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
    --Aristotle
  106. Re:No Credibility. I have the Alpha. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, you mean the one released six months ago? Or something in the past several weeks?

  107. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by idiotdevel · · Score: 1

    That's a really good point. In fact, I just saw this application, which recently came out, named FileScope (www.filescope.com); and I noticed it mentioned that's completely in C# and it will run under Linux with Mono, using SWF. Other developers will do something like this as well... the Mono people should try to implement Avalon stuff as well.

  108. Re:No Credibility. I have the Alpha. by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

    Since when did software not being ready stop them from shipping?

  109. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by bmgoau · · Score: 1

    your an ass hole u know that.

  110. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by peachawat · · Score: 1

    Paul Thurrott? Is that you?

  111. Can longhorn run on a piece of junk. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ie something without a 3d card underpowered.

    Microsoft has made the same mistacks as enlightment verses the other windows managers on UNIX. Enlightment used to much power.

    Opensource could mean getting another 3 to 4 years out the hardware in the field. Longhorn will require new hardware.

  112. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Feeding troll with a troll - I think I'd better run patent this idea!

  113. Re:Replacement for SWF, and its implications for M by jazzmans · · Score: 1

    you just chose the wrong format.

    always preview.

    jaz

    --
    Life is what happens to you while you are busy making other plans. No-one sees motorcycles
  114. Hold on, Love by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Please spell it correctly.

    Cheers

  115. not really by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    Database-driven filesystems are sorta like nuclear fusion.

    Not really. Several companies, including IBM, have been shipping database-driven file systems for decades in successful commercial products (!).

    They are like nuclear fusion in that people think they are a panacea, while they really are no more than a special-purpose solution for a niche market, a solution that creates at least as many problems as it solves.

  116. Apple R&D by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    Personally I think Microsoft does actually pay attention to Apple and uses them as a sort of free R&D lab.

    Apple used to spend lots of money on R&D and Microsoft nothing. That was when Microsoft was taking Apple's ideas.

    These days, Apple doesn't even have a research lab anymore, while Microsoft has the largest CS research lab and has one of the most impressive groups of researchers around anywhere.

    1. Re:Apple R&D by tehshen · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has the largest CS research lab and has one of the most impressive groups of researchers around anywhere.

      What does it have to show for it, though?

      --
      Guy asked me for a quarter for a cup of coffee. So I bit him.
  117. 10GHz CPUs aren't available yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this thing going to need a few Cells to run? Cell has DRM built in, so it would be perfect.

    More restrictions make Free Software look better and better.

  118. History of Windows Longhorne by adeydas · · Score: 1

    Here are some of the announcements that MS might make about Windows Longhorne:

    Before it releases:
    1. It is the most secured Windows ever.
    2. We are trying to eliminate the small bugs so that it provides you trouble free computing.

    After it releases:
    1. Bug discovered was a flaw in Windows core code, needs major security fixes.

    When nothing works:
    1. The problems caused was not entirely Microsoft's fault. The viruses and trojans came from third party softwares.

    Welcome to Microsoft Windows!

  119. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I call bullshit.

    Please stop saying that.

  120. Re:No Credibility. I have the Alpha. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How delightfully redundant. The ever so clever MS bash.

  121. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by ookaze · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Once Longhorn comes out, Microsoft will again be so far ahead, it won't be easy, or even possible, for enthusiasts to catch up. Right now they're essentially standing still. They've put all their efforts into LH, there's nothing going on with XP except for service packs/bugfixes. Now is the perfect time to release a really polished Linux desktop that would be simple to setup and use.

    I hope MS will be far ahead of WinXP with LH, because the polished Linux desktops were released in 2001 (the time I switched, as WinXP had become unusable when compared to a Gnome or KDE desktop), and are gradually improving ever since.

    When Longhorn comes out, Microsoft, and folks who develop for Windows, will surge ahead REALLY fast.
    Here's why:
    1. The entire OS will be accessible through a set of managed APIs. This makes coding 10 times easier and faster, and raises productivity to unprecedented levels. This also makes buffer overflows and some other security issues a thing of the past.


    No clue wishful thinking. I'm not impressed. The Windows architecture is flawed already. No amount of code can fix it. Redesigning Windows (for multiuser and for the internet) would be far better.

    2. New, resolution independent, vector based, GPU-enabled UI engine. Two years from Longhorn release people will be buying 200+ DPI displays because things look a lot better on them. What's KDE/Gnome users gonna do? That's right, try to discern tiny non-scalable icons on these displays.

    Actually, I started using beautiful scalable (SVG) icons and fonts at worst in 2002 on my Gnome desktop ... You and LongHorn are pretty late I must say.
    So, on my 100 dpi 22" monitor (in 1600x1200), the desktop is pretty sharp and the icons and fonts are like they should be, even if I change resolution. I bet it will be the same with 200+ dpi monitors.

    3. Completely new UI, including some significant paradigm changes.

    Do you mean MS actually invented something ? That will not be a ripoff of Mac OS X, Linux or other desktops ? Now I'm impressed.
    I've seen nothing of the kind till now, but I suppose it is secret.

    4. Seamless integration of client and server side (that's what XAML is all about, IMHO). Your webapps will actually run sandboxed .NET code on your machine. Kind of like applets, but the entire webapp will be built out of them. Just think about the possibilities there.

    I'm a user, I have no need for your webapps. And client and server should not be integrated either, that is nonsense. The server should run the app, not me, so I do not need anything sandboxed. I think of the possibilities for a lot of virus yes.

    5. Reliable Web Services - Indigo, web services that don't suck. More importantly, web service protocol that's supported by the majority of computers in the world (when most people upgrade). And you can bet your ass they will upgrade, just like a couple of years after W95 was released almost everyone ran W95.

    I fail to understand how you can talk about "web service protocol". What is that, isn't it HTTP ? It is an open protocol, like they all should be on the internet. The internet is not MSN you know, that is a world for everyone, not just for Windows users.

    The most important thing is, all of this will be available to Windows users out of the box, without any tweaking/recompiling/downloading dependencies. That's where the real strength of this all is. Developers will be able to rely on this stuff when building next-gen apps and be reasonably sure that if a user runs Longhorn, the app will run there.

    Your description looks like what is already present in Windows now : ActiveX, Direct X, ...
    I see no improvement. Will it all be open ? That would be an improvement.

    It's time to stop copying Windows XP, folks. It's time to start copying Longhorn. Gnome devs have already realised that.

    Who is copying Windows XP or

  122. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow! *g* liek omg lol!!!!11!!!

  123. Micro$oft should take a que... by Zab+UvWxy · · Score: 1

    ...from id, and just say "Longhorn - When It's Done".

    In all seriousness, I don't understand what the delay is. Avalon and Indigo are, last I heard, pretty much done, and WinFS has been taken out of the Longhorn plan and is on the back burner for at least another 3 years; so I ask, in an open-letter-type-way, what the hell is the problem in releasing this POS?

    Really, what, aside from these two new "major" components, are the major new features in this release of Windoze? Anyone?

    --
    "I don't get it." -- ObviousGuy
    1. Re:Micro$oft should take a que... by Zab+UvWxy · · Score: 1

      Damn... meant to say "cue".

      --
      "I don't get it." -- ObviousGuy
  124. Re:The next two years, will be the last chance to by suezz · · Score: 1

    The next two years, will be the last chance to get Linux on the consumer desktop. no fanboy - linux will still be around in two, five, or twelve years because it is open source. it doesn't need a profit to survive. I don't care what paradigm shift, innovation microsoft supposedly comes up with and patents - linux will always be a good open standard solid computing environment. If corporations were smart they would shift now. I work in a very big corporation and I have debian on my sunblade at my desk and I do everything I need to do on it with linux. I am sure the secretary across the hall would be able to also except it isn't the "desktop standard" - one last thing is the wonderful intranet pages that were written with only internet explorer. I am tired - i am not even going start on that

  125. Longdelay/Mozilla ? by now3djp · · Score: 1

    Let us hope for the sake of people stuck using MS-Windows that Microsoft Longdelay ships with Mozilla or Firefox as standard.

    See Internet Explorer Extinction blog post for what I pointed out on this topic back on 2004-10-16.

    now3djp

  126. June 2005, 2006, 2007? by peter303 · · Score: 1

    'uf said.

  127. Fuck Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    McDonalds, FUCK YEAH!
    Wal-Mart, FUCK YEAH!
    The Gap, FUCK YEAH!
    Baseball, FUCK YEAH!
    NFL, FUCK, YEAH!
    Rock and roll, FUCK YEAH!
    The Internet, FUCK YEAH!
    Slavery, FUCK YEAH!

    FUCK YEAH!

    Starbucks, FUCK YEAH!
    Disney world, FUCK YEAH!
    Porno, FUCK YEAH!
    Valium, FUCK YEAH!
    Reeboks, FUCK YEAH!
    Fake Tits, FUCK YEAH!
    Sushi, FUCK YEAH!
    Taco Bell, FUCK YEAH!
    Rodeos, FUCK YEAH!
    Bed bath and beyond (Fuck yeah, Fuck yeah)

    Liberty, FUCK YEAH!
    White Slips, FUCK YEAH!
    The Alamo, FUCK YEAH!
    Band-aids, FUCK YEAH!
    Las Vegas, FUCK YEAH!
    Christmas, FUCK YEAH!
    Immigrants, FUCK YEAH!
    Popeye, FUCK YEAH!
    Democrats, FUCK YEAH!
    Republicans (republicans)
    (fuck yeah, fuck yeah)
    Sportsmanship
    Books

  128. The answer is Search. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

    What exactly does Longhorn offer other than a 3D accelerated interface and a big information bar on the side?

    State of the art search technologies. Longhorn is the mother of the technology also used for Gnome's Beagle and Dashboard, and it will ship with an excellent interface for their search tools (probably much better than Apple's Spotlight).

    Microsoft "Stuff I've Seen" interface will probably deprecate the current hierarchical filesystem for most end users, and integrated desktop + internet search will fight Google the same way than IExplorer fought Netscape.

    --
    Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
    1. Re:The answer is Search. by ssstraub · · Score: 1

      State of the art search technologies. Longhorn is the mother of the technology also used for Gnome's Beagle and Dashboard, and it will ship with an excellent interface for their search tools (probably much better than Apple's Spotlight).

      Microsoft "Stuff I've Seen" interface will probably deprecate the current hierarchical filesystem for most end users, and integrated desktop + internet search will fight Google the same way than IExplorer fought Netscape.



      Ok, I call BS.

      Look at the default XP file search, complete with a freaking time wasting dog animation. Almost as useful as Clippy. This really shows me that Microsoft has a clue what their doing when it comes to search interfaces. Yep, they really improved that over previous Windows searches... NOT!

      Saying they are going to take on Google is completely laughable when you look at that example.

    2. Re:The answer is Search. by TuringTest · · Score: 1

      Ok, have you read what is "Stuff I've Seen" before calling BS?

      I never talked about Windows XP, so stop flaming.

      --
      Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
  129. ignoring good and evil? by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    I don't think I made the jump to ignoring the good and evil.

    I said that, in the event that a 'good' institution used 'evil' methods -- and I understand that it isn't clearly cut, and even that this 'grey area' commentary is used as an excuse -- then they are no better than the 'evil' people they seek to remove.

    Jack Bauer is both a hero and the dirtiest player in the book. I think it is right that he's brought to justice for his actions and face the consequences. It's not okay to say "well done, you stopped the nasty people, take a holiday".

    1. Re:ignoring good and evil? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      I don't think I made the jump to ignoring the good and evil.

      You said, "If we take a step back from what the goals of the institution are." You did, in fact, make the jump. If you want to backtrack from that position, though, that's fine with me.

      in the event that a 'good' institution used 'evil' methods ... then they are no better than the 'evil' people they seek to remove

      And that's where you're wrong. Because moral context matters. You're suggesting that a person who kills in self defense should be subject to the same penalty as someone who kills out of malice, a proposition which is obviously bogus.

      If I were to tie your hands and feet, put you in a small room and keep you there for 25 years, it would be very bad. But if you're a criminal and I'm a prison guard, then it's okay.

      Intent matters. Moral context matters. You can't just say "Well, let's ignore the moral context and look only at a thin slice of reality." That's reductionistic, and it leads to false conclusions.

      Jack Bauer is both a hero and the dirtiest player in the book.

      I'm sorry, I don't get the allusion.

    2. Re:ignoring good and evil? by wild_berry · · Score: 1

      [M]oral context matters. You're suggesting that a person who kills in self defense should be subject to the same penalty as someone who kills out of malice, a proposition which is obviously bogus

      I understand your perspective but I don't agree with it: in your example, someone ends up dead in both cases. That's obvious. But what of the example set by Ghandi and Martin Luther King who did not respond in self defence to the power wielded against them. Many people died in both causes (one is the freeing India of my government and the other having the US actually follow its "all men equal under God"), but the clarity of the injustices to the innocent people by both (democratic) institutions helped make clear the need for change.

      Moral context is a difficult one. I understand why you think it necessary, but unfortunately we have to ask whose moral context is the one that matters? For example, I don't see the need for someone to have the right to bear arms (which the U.S. Constitution states strictly as the right to bear arms as part of an organised militia for defence), but you may disagree with me, on the ground that it saves your life when mine is not at risk.

    3. Re:ignoring good and evil? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      But what of the example set by Ghandi and Martin Luther King

      Bad example. Both of those men were murdered. If they'd exercised self defense --or had been in a position to do so -- against their would-be assassins, they would have been spared their fates.

      but unfortunately we have to ask whose moral context is the one that matters?

      Sigh. That's just more valueless relativism. I'm afraid you've missed the point completely.

  130. Can we stop using the Register for sources? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only is this Register story from 17 months ago, its also the same kind of opinionated, biased, poorly edited crap that everything that poor excuse for journalism produces. When are we going to stop giving them links from Slashdot?

  131. point by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    Ghandi and Luther King are good examples: they didn't need to defend themselves and the crimes they fought against were apparent.

    Relativism is unavoidable: we live lives relative to others. I could construct an example of crime committed between two people that, as the story unfolds, the victim is the other person. Ultimately we are left in the position of perpetrators of crime against those less fortunate than us in the rest of the world.

    What was your point? That Chomsky is unjustified and unreliable in Manufacturing Consent? Or that governments who kill their citizens by capital punishment (to suppress crime -- the major justification of capital punishment) or those who kill to suppress opposition to those in power are different kettles of fish because of an argument about moral context? (Who gives them the right to claim a higher moral context than any other regime?)

    Or that there is a difference between a free society and a totalitarian society? I'll give you that, but don't kid yourself about the perverting influence of the private interests supporting any government, even your own.

    1. Re:point by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 1

      Ghandi and Luther King are good examples: they didn't need to defend themselves

      Sigh. They were murdered. They certainly did need to defend themselves. They just chose not to, and died at the hands of assassins.

      Relativism is unavoidable

      Heh. An absolutist take on relativism. That's good irony.

      What was your point?

      That when Noam Chomsky stops talking about the intricate details of linguistic theory and starts talking about actual events, he lies. A lot. He lies in fact, and he lies by omission. My point was that people who are looking for truth or insight should avoid reading anything Chomsky says on the subjects of history or politics.

      Unfortunately, for many it's too late. You, for example, have been poisoned. You no longer see the difference between capital punishment and murder. You deny that this distinction even exists. Your mind has been poisoned. You've been perverted into something just slightly less than human.

      That makes me sad.

  132. Re:Hello.jpg? Try Giver. by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

    It's called "dork chic" and it's a big hit with the ladies. Well, the chat room ladies. Okay, it's a big hit with my mom.

    --
    Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
  133. oh dear. by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    >Relativism is unavoidable
    Heh. An absolutist take on relativism. That's good irony.

    To be frank, mine is an incongruous statement. It's not ironical. See here.

    My point was that people who are looking for truth or insight should avoid reading anything Chomsky says on the subjects of history or politics.
    What if he just has a perspective that is different to yours? Is there no room in your world for that? Aren't people allowed to think differently to you? (mumbles: crusader for liberty and freedom, my foot! ;-) )

    You no longer see the difference between capital punishment and murder.
    I choose to label capital punishment as state-sponsored murder. Do you believe it's okay for a government to punish people by death for severe infringement of their laws? What about adultery or apostasy in the Islamic Sharia system? How is that different to the 'righteous' acts of stopping the life of a killer in the USA?

    I see both as devaluing human life in such a way that the system wins but humankind do not, and consider both examples (Sharia and U.S. law) to be abuses on citizens. It's this devaluing of human life that allows people to march into foreign countries with guns blazing, or to pack a truck with explosives and park it under a government building, as happened in Oklahoma. When we stop devaluing human life and seek to value and nourish it, then we have a reason to avoid killing and to follow the noble statements made that recognise the value of all human life.

    Unfortunately, for many it's too late. You, for example, have been poisoned. You no longer see the difference between capital punishment and murder. You deny that this distinction even exists. Your mind has been poisoned. You've been perverted into something just slightly less than human.

    Thank you for debating with me. And considering me worthy of having this discourse with, despite the fact you think I'm slightly less than human. :-P (I will let you make your own mind up about who has been poisoned by what.)

    In case you have made assumptions about my attitude and actions with respect to morality and charity in the world we live, may I clarify: I give to charity and I volunteer my time. Right and Wrong are distinctions that aren't helpful to my life: more- and less-helpful, along with more- and less-appropriate guide me to seek to follow my conscience about what is the best for everyone.

    I say this because I think that each person has to find their own way through life because the government, any religious order, their friends or their family cannot do it for them. Consequently each person must be the judge of whether or not the institutions around them (from those who supply them with food, news and employment to those who protect and serve them) are trustworthy and are doing a good job. I think it is essential that people are both skeptical and critical to avoid being 'robbed blind' by those wishing to gain advantage over them.

    1. Re:oh dear. by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Having just caught up on this thread, I see now why the other guy gave up on you. You're just rambling here. For starters, anybody who would pedantically lecture somebody else on the meaning of "irony" by providing a link to Wikipedia is probably not somebody I, personally, would want to spend any time with. But let's ignore that and see what happens.

      What if he just has a perspective that is different to yours?

      I'm pretty sure what he was saying was that there are absolutes. It is not possible to dismiss the fallacy of moral equivalence as being just a matter of different perspectives. There are absolute rights and absolute wrongs, and (for example) communism is just an absolute wrong. Refusing to even acknowledge this distinction in a comparison of a free society and a communist insurgency is a lie of omission.

      If he wasn't trying to say that, then I'm trying to say that. Because it clearly needs to be said.

      I choose to label capital punishment as state-sponsored murder.

      But don't you see? You don't just get to arbitrarily put words to things. Capital punishment is not murder, by definition, because murder is the unlawful killing of a person. Calling capital punishment "murder" is just distorting the issue by using inappropriate terms solely to milk them for connotative impact.

      Do you believe it's okay for a government to punish people by death for severe infringement of their laws?

      Yes.

      What about adultery or apostasy in the Islamic Sharia system?

      If the law against adultery were applied with a guarantee of equal protection, then it would be legitimate. It isn't, so it's not. And no, apostasy can never be a crime, because that would trample all over the freedom of religion.

      How is that different to the 'righteous' acts of stopping the life of a killer in the USA?

      The differences are obvious. Do you not see them? Equal protection ...fundamental civil liberties ...do these ideas mean anything to you?

      It's this devaluing of human life that allows people to march into foreign countries with guns blazing, or to pack a truck with explosives and park it under a government building

      See what I mean? You just equated the liberation of an enslaved nation with the mass murder of hundreds of innocent people. You just declared that, to you, these things are precisely the same. This is obviously wrong, just like comparing watermelons to waterskis is obviously wrong. Why don't you see that it's obviously wrong?

      despite the fact you think I'm slightly less than human

      I've gotta go with As Seen here. The ability to tell right from wrong is a fundamental part of being human. At the very least, you've got a serious gap in your socialization.

      Right and Wrong are distinctions that aren't helpful to my life

      Sigh. The arrogance. That's like denying that up and down exist because "they aren't helpful to my life." Nobody asked you if they were helpful to your life, you little brat. These are natural properties that exist whether or not you think they're too red-state for your delicate sensibilities.

      You would, in fact, make a perfect Chomsky reader. You've got just the right combination of ignorance and arrogance that he needs you to have in order to plant his backwards ideas in your head. Your soulless brain is fertile ground for his perversions. Off you go. Be a good little disciple. Question everything, but don't ever make a value judgment, because the only true philosophy is nihilism!

  134. airplanes were always fifty years away too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Airplanes were fifty years away for hundreds of years .. until 1903.

    In the case of people ridiculinh nuclear fusion .. a fifty, hundred or even two hundred year delay in a schedule doesn't mean it's not going to happen.

    People always prefer being naysayers.

    There are enough examples in history of delayed things that people gave up on suddenly coming true.

    A recent example is the Boston Red Sox winning.